Bengal Brigadiers ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
Bengal Brigadiers ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ

@Bangadhipati

15 Tweets 34 reads Feb 11, 2022
๐Ÿ”ด #Thread
๐Ÿ‘‘ Lions of Bengal: Historical presence of African Lions in Rarh-Bangla
(1/n)
Felis leo bengalensis proposed by Edward Turner Bennett in 1829 was a lion kept in the menagerie of the Tower of London. Bennett's essay contains a drawing titled 'Bengal lion'.
(2/n)
In the 19th century, several zoologists described lion zoological specimens from other parts of Asia. Whether it is various tales or ancient texts, the adverse forest of West Bengal comes up again and again.
(3/n)
Traces of the ancient lion of Bengal are still found in the Sushuniya hills. There is also an ancient temple of Narsinghdev, which indicates the roaming lions.
(4/n)
According to a report by the Zoological Survey of India, thousands of years ago, innumerable lions were roaming the forests of Purulia, Bankura, Birbhum, Bardhaman & Paschim Medinipur.
(5/n)
In the Buddhist text Mahฤvamล›a, the existence of lions in the country of Rarh [Lal-Ladh (Ladh in Tamil pronunciation) or Lal (in Sinhala pronunciation)].
There was a kingdom in Rarhbanga named Sinhapura (เฆธเฆฟเฆ‚เฆนเฆชเงเฆฐ/เคธเคฟเค‚เค˜เคพเคชเฅเคฐ) that's today's Singur in Hooghly, WB.
(6/n)
Mahฤvamล›a also mentions Princess Suppadevi left Vanga to seek an independent life & joined a caravan headed for Magadha, which was attacked by Sinha ("lion") in a forest in the Lala (Rarh) region of Bengal. Sinha was attracted to her & she caressed him, mindful of prophecy
(7/n)
The Bengali Prince Vijaya Singha of Sinhapura had arrived in Tambapaแน‡แน‡ฤซ of Lanka on 22 April 544 BC with his 700 followers
He conquered Lanka defeating Yakshas, crowned as Monarch & named the island Sinhala
The Lion in the Sri Lankan flag is from the lion totem of Rarh
(8/n)
During the 16th-17th centuries in the dense forests of Birbhum, Bardhaman, Purulia, Bankura, various wild animals including lions used to roam. This is proved by the fact that Sinhapura or Singhbhum janapad of greater Rarh is the oldest of the modes.
(9/n)
In Thomas Roe's 'Travels of the Mughal Empire', it's mentioned that Ali Quli, the faujdar of the Mughal period, earned the title of Sher Afghan by hunting lions in the middle jungles of Bardhaman. (10/n)
That is to say, there is evidence that there were lions in the average forest even in 1615 and at that time part of West Bardhaman and Birbhum including Lakshmannagar were called Shergarh Parganas under the Mughal rule.
(11/n)
The river Sinharan is named after the Singharanya forest in this region. The river Sinharan used to flow through this Singharanya channel. In other words, there is evidence that enough lions could be found in that area at that time.
(12/n)
Also, WIKICHAMSOC mentions in the inscriptions that the eastern part of Greater Bengal, that is the Rarha of the past, was also seen by the eighteenth century as the king of beasts. Later, deforestation and the introduction of gun hunters led to complete extinction.
(13/n)
Moreover, in various ancient legends, the lion is closely associated with different places and characters of Bengal. The lion, for example, is closely related to the ancient Kajangal. Which is not the case with any other place in the country.
(14/n)
โšซ References-
Bennett, E. T. (1829). The Tower Menagerie, Comprising the Natural History of the Animals Contained in That Establishment; W.
Prehistoric Bengal- Paresh Chandra Dasgupta. Page 52
Thomas Roe: Travels of The Mughal Empire.
ยฉ @Bangadhipati ๐Ÿค @Gaudeshwar
(15/n)

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