Rajat Ghai
April 19, 2013 Last Updated at 21:36 IST
Wildlife enthusiasts will soon be able to see the lion in Madhya Pradesh also. Rajat Ghai traces the big cat's journey in India down the ages.
Once upon a kingdom
From Vedic and Biblical times to the 19th century AD, the Asiatic Lion (Panthera leo persica)
roamed over a swathe of Asia, from Turkey in the west to Bihar in the
east, and from the Caucusus in the north to the Narmada river in the
south. In the Indian subcontinent, the lion lorded over Punjab (Pakistan
and India), Sindh, Baluchistan, Haryana, Delhi, Rajasthan, Uttar
Pradesh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Bihar and Jharkhand.
Lions in the subcontinent largely inhabited dry, tree-covered Savannah
and low-scrub jungle in comparison to the Bengal Tiger which inhabited
mature-tree forests.
Ancient India
The lion's impact on South Asian history, culture and art is
significant. Mahesh Rangarajan notes in his paper 'From princely symbol
to conservation icon: A political history of the lion in India': "It
(the lion) was perhaps only rivalled in its power over the human
imagination in India by the tiger." Adds Divyabhanusinh Chavda, author
of The Story of Asia's Lions: "In the Vedic period, you had Narasimha ("Man-Lion"), the fourth of the Dashavatara of
Lord Vishnu. The Buddha was known as 'Shakya Simha', the Lion of the
Shakyas. His first sermon at Sarnath has been likened to (and is known
as) by Buddhists as 'Simhanada' (Lion Roar). The lion is also the symbol
of Mahavira. And we, of course, know of Emperor Ashoka's association
with the lion."
According to legend, 2,500 years ago, Vijaya, a disinherited Indian
prince migrated to the island of Lanka with 700 followers. Vijaya's
grandfather was a lion. His descendants, the Sinhala ('Lion people'),
are today the majority ethnic group on the island, the flag of which is
emblazoned with a lion too.
Medieval India
From 500 AD, Rajput princes across India started adopting the title
Simha instead of the classical Varman. Today, we know this surname as
'Singh', most commonly associated with Rajputs and Sikhs.
Lions find constant reference in the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal periods
too. Sher Shah Suri, the Afghan warlord from Bihar who dethroned
Humayun, reportedly acquired the name 'Sher' after killing a lion with
his bare hands. The Mughals, Persianised Turko-Mongols from Central
Asia, used the regal Persian Sher-o-Khurshid ('Lion and Sun') as their
personal coat-of-arms.
The Leonine Holocaust
Lions in India were never maneaters like their African cousins, but were
notorious cattle thieves. They were also hunted for sport. "Colonel
James Skinner (1778 -1841), the famous founder of Skinner's Horse and
builder of Delhi's St James' Church, is recorded as shooting lions on
horseback. Another officer, Andrew Fraser killed 84 lions," says Chavda.
"In 1810, a General Mundy shot a lion near Hansi (modern Haryana). In
the first half of the 1800s, British soldiers stationed at a cantonment
in Deesa (North Gujarat) are recorded as spearing lions. And the
all-time record in lion hunting in India goes to George Acland Smith, an
officer who shot 300 lions near Delhi in 1857, on the eve of the Sepoy
Mutiny," he adds.
Soldiers of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the Sikh sovereign of the Punjab, are
recorded killing lions with bayonets in Lahore in the 1830s. In
Patiala, hunting lions was an annual affair in which "400 horsemen beat
vast plains teeming with antelope and Nilgai" (Rangarajan).
The End
All this killing eventually did its job. Region after region recorded
local extinctions: Bahawalpur (1800), Palamau (1814), Haryana, Baroda
and Ahmedabad (1830), Sindh (1842) and Gwalior (1872).
By 1890, when Prince Victor Albert visited India, the only place where
he could find lions was the Gir forest in Kathiawar, where politics
between three feuding princely states (Junagadh, Bhavnagar and Baroda)
and the British Government in Bombay ensured safety for lions. Later,
the Nawabs of Junagadh took on the task of preserving lions in Gir,
where they survive till today.
http://www.business-standard.com/article/beyond-business/the-lion-s-homecoming-113041901111_1.html
English language news articles from year 2007 plus find out everything about Asiatic Lion and Gir Forest. Latest News, Useful Articles, Links, Photos, Video Clips and Gujarati News of Gir Wildlife Sanctuary (Geer / Gir Forest - Home of Critically Endangered Species Asiatic Lion; Gir Lion; Panthera Leo Persica ; Indian Lion (Local Name 'SAVAJ' / 'SINH' / 'VANRAJ') located in South-Western Gujarat, State of INDIA), Big Cats, Wildlife, Conservation and Environment.
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