Ezilon Directory  Submit Articles
 Author Login


Community News & Articles 
 
 World News
 Africa
 Asia
 Australia
 Central America
 Europe
 Middle East
 New Zealand
 North America
 South America
 United Kingdom
 India
 Caribbean
 Ireland
 
 Sports News
 Basketball
 Football
 Soccer
 Others
 Golfing
 Hunting
 
 Entertainment
 Movies
 Music
 Television
 Games
 
 Internet Articles
 Internet Design Articles
 Internet Marketing Tips
 Search Engine Help
 
 Fashion Articles and News
 Women Fashion
 Men's Fashion
 
 Health Articles and News
 Health and Beauty
 Diseases
 
 Weight Loss / Management
 
 Social and Cultural Issues
 Wedding
 Dating
 Relationships
 
 Women Issues and Articles
 
 Business and Industry
 Real Estate Properties
 Travel and Holidays
 Insurance
 Loans
 Stock and Trading
 Investing
 Legal
 
 Science & Technology
 Telephony and Voip
 MP3 and iPod
 Conferencing Calling
 
 Environment
 
 Finance and Business
 
 Home & Family
 Food and Cooking
 Crafts
 Decorations
 
 United Nation
 
 Men Issues
Search

World News : Asia Last Updated: Nov 2nd, 2009 - 17:32:57


The man-eater and the last of the great white hunters
By Tom Anderson
Nov 13, 2005, 11:59

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
(Independent News & Media) - One of the most remarkable confrontations ever between man and beast is the subject of the first television drama from the BBC's natural history unit.

The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag, on air next month, is set in the summer of 1926, when the hunter Jim Corbett set out to track and kill a rogue leopard that was to eat 126 people. His legendary jungle guile and ultimate success made him a hero in India to this day.

The saga has its origins in the flu pandemic that swept the world in the wake of the first world war. When the outbreak reached the North Indian Himalaya region of Gharwal, a 500-square mile area of rocky gorges, low-lying jungle and mountain villages, corpses were consigned to plague pits. It is believed that feeding on these gave the leopard a taste for human flesh.

The first report of a villager missing from Rudra-prayag, an ancient town in the foothills of the Himalayas, was in 1918. What proved to be an eight-year reign of terror had begun, the leopard getting bolder with every passing year. For the last three years the victims were taken from inside their homes. The man-eater learned to silently push down bamboo doors and climb through windows before escaping into the night.

A bounty of 10,000 rupees, more than £1,000, a great deal of money at that time, was offered, and hunters flocked in, but all attempts to kill the animal failed. Questions were asked in Parliament. The area was in a state of terror.

When Corbett arrived in Rudraprayag he was already a hunter with a hard-won reputation for physical bravery, skill and marksmanship. The son of a postmaster, he was born at the hill station of Nainital in the Kumaon hills of North India in 1875. Of British descent, he was educated locally and was, to all intents and purposes, Indian. He hunted from the age of eight and spent summers alone in the jungle, where he trained his hearing and eyesight, learned to move silently and developed the "jungle sense" that warned him of predators. His imitations of jungle animals were so convincing, they would draw predators and other hunters.
Corbett always refused money for killing man-eaters, and made no exception at Rudraprayag. Although he had risked his life many times tracking rogue animals, he felt only pity for his prey; many tigers and leopards had turned man-eater because they had been wounded but not finished off by trophy-hunters. Corbett's only stipulation was that all other hunters left the area.

Hetracked the leopard for months, but it pulled the bait out of traps and ate without any ill-effect the corpses that Corbett and poisoned with cyanide. The animal had a sixth sense as uncanny as the man hunting it, and would avoid eating goats left as bait if he sensed the hunter's presence. Corbett once waited for three weeks in a tower that overlooked a wooden bridge normally favoured by the leopard. The day after he gave up, the man-eater crossed the bridge again and killed villagers. Corbett began to feel that he was now the prey, finding paw prints that showed the animal had been tracking him.

The leopard became more cunning still, once silently taking a man in the time it took his friend to stoop for a dropped pipe.

The months-long battle of wits came to an end when Corbett camped for 10 nights in a mango tree. The hunter heard a terrified goat's bell jangling, shone his torch and saw the leopard. The torch failed immediately but the split second of illumination was enough: Corbett shot it dead. He felt no elation, he later wrote; the leopard had committed crimes "not against the laws of nature, but against the laws of man."

By the time of his death in 1957, Corbett dispatched 12 big catswho had killed at least 1,500 people. In 1959, a national park was dedicated to him, and in 1968, one of five subspecies of tigers was dubbed panthera tigris corbetti in his honour.

Top of Page

 

Post an instant comment or a suggestion to the above article or news

Note: You can use the above link to form a new discussion forum, place your opinion and discuss events, politics, articles, environment, fashion, health, internet, search engines, marketing, movies, music, religion and any other topic.

Asia
Latest Headlines
» China fumes at latest U.S. arms sales to Taiwan
» Philippine massacre suspect pleads not guilty to murder
» Thai army clears camp ahead of Hmong repatriation
» China targets political foes after dissident trial
» More cash to protect troops in Afghanistan
» Pakistan seizes main Taliban bases
» Obama prods China on yuan, but Hu silent on issue
» IMF head eyes global currency change
» NATO, Afghans claim to kill 130 Taliban in Kunduz
» Karzai says he's addressing corruption