MAN-EATERS: Champawat Tiger

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @StormWalker101
    @StormWalker101 2 года назад +2818

    Many people sympathize with the tigress which is not wrong but Jim also understood that one man's wrongdoing caused the suffering for many men and women. Which is also not fair. Tigers are incredible creatures. Terrifyingly powerful and cunningly intelligent. On top of that they hold grudges.

    • @kaberigomes2117
      @kaberigomes2117 2 года назад +3

      Tigers are majestic animals.However, In a fight of survival, humans can extinct any animal we wish to select. If humans act like animals aka the tigers, and give them taste of the same medicine, they will be wiped out of earth in 1 month.
      So the man-eater had to taught the lesson, of who is true Apex predictor.
      Humans are true Devils. And tigers should now inculcate fear in their DNA, as natural instincts to fear humans.

    • @kaberigomes2117
      @kaberigomes2117 2 года назад +1

      @Dhhajhfhfjdjsjjssk And how is what i said nonsense. Deers fear tigers, snakes fear bird. Thousands of year of evolution, instilled fear in them. Now it's time, Tigers fear humans in the natural process.
      Fear your predator.

    • @kaberigomes2117
      @kaberigomes2117 2 года назад +1

      @Dhhajhfhfjdjsjjssk Since we have intellect, use it to understand. Several animals throughout human history has gone extinct as well. Did it completely destroy the ecosystem.? No. If tigers get extinct we will use our ingenuity to fix the problem, if it arises.
      And tigers are not, Humans are the apex predators. Don't forget Humans came from caves, and were hunters only. Just by inventing modern ways of living, humans doesn't become anything else.

    • @deborrahshiffer9582
      @deborrahshiffer9582 2 года назад

      Yes they do that's a fact, people hurt her badly & didn't track her to finish what he started. Human was to blame of course, stupid man, can't stop crying

    • @pepelucho1751
      @pepelucho1751 2 года назад +46

      Top droor. It's amazing how quickly we stopped worrying about tigers, and how we have to help them live. Top droor indeed

  • @jackbuendgen389
    @jackbuendgen389 Год назад +837

    India named their first national park after Jim Corbet. It is now one of the best places on earth to see tigers.

    • @kashutosh9132
      @kashutosh9132 Год назад +23

      ​@Bakasur Kumbhkarna
      You are wrong
      Ramsharan is right

    • @kashutosh9132
      @kashutosh9132 Год назад +10

      @Bakasur Kumbhkarna
      2 vs 1

    • @kashutosh9132
      @kashutosh9132 Год назад +15

      @Bakasur Kumbhkarna
      Me and u

    • @kashutosh9132
      @kashutosh9132 Год назад +22

      @Bakasur Kumbhkarna
      Then don't reply lol
      If u don't care

    • @vivekkarwa5828
      @vivekkarwa5828 Год назад +10

      @Bakasur Kumbhkarna u are wrong and people care and laughing🤣 at u

  • @shafinnilav4135
    @shafinnilav4135 2 года назад +2305

    'Her jaw, completely shattered on top and below, was a cry against humanity.'
    That line was so moving! The narrator did a wonderful job.

    • @sahusumit47
      @sahusumit47 2 года назад +19

      But tiger was killing humans

    • @SiD19884
      @SiD19884 2 года назад +77

      @@sahusumit47 so?

    • @sahusumit47
      @sahusumit47 2 года назад +35

      @@SiD19884 Well then why should humans show humanity

    • @newyorkersliverentfree
      @newyorkersliverentfree 2 года назад +166

      @@sahusumit47 they're saying that a hunter previously shot the tiger in the mouth. That's why the tiger started hunting humans.

    • @taniak4509
      @taniak4509 2 года назад +110

      @@sahusumit47 because the tiger was killing humans because of human stupidity.

  • @electricalife
    @electricalife 2 года назад +266

    "Tigers are known to hold a grudge." That's comforting.

    • @deadinthebed963
      @deadinthebed963 2 года назад +8

      Its of NO comfort to this poor Tigress. Humana hild FAR more grudges AND for FAR FAR longer.

    • @rankingresearchdata
      @rankingresearchdata 11 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@deadinthebed963dude get some brain ! Why do You people justify the death of innocent victims ? It's the British who killed 100,000 tigers in 170 years and other millions of animals

    • @Filthyanimalyeh
      @Filthyanimalyeh 9 месяцев назад

      I'd say that's bollocks

    • @Filthyanimalyeh
      @Filthyanimalyeh 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@rankingresearchdatawhat's that got to do with anything lol

    • @ironbutterfly6835
      @ironbutterfly6835 7 месяцев назад

      @@Filthyanimalyehit’s not true

  • @JayakrishnanNairOmana
    @JayakrishnanNairOmana Год назад +181

    3:16 I have read the books by Jim Corbett. He specifically states that the reason he asked the bounty to be removed was because he had heard of very bad experiences when many amateur hunters are all hunting in the same area for the same animal, where stealth is required. He was worried about getting shot by mistake while he was stalking the tigress. It is not because he sympathized with the animal and thought it would be honorable to decline the bounty.

    • @andrewhatton1606
      @andrewhatton1606 10 месяцев назад

      You seem Indian dose this still happen??

    • @JayakrishnanNairOmana
      @JayakrishnanNairOmana 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@andrewhatton1606 yes absolutely. In the Sundarban jungles alone we lose about 40 to 100 people a year to tigers.

    • @andrewhatton1606
      @andrewhatton1606 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@JayakrishnanNairOmana thank you for the info and the response. I hope you all can find away to stop it. Human life is more important than any animal.

    • @JayakrishnanNairOmana
      @JayakrishnanNairOmana 10 месяцев назад +30

      @@andrewhatton1606 not when you have 1.4 billion humans lives to spare compared to a few thousand tigers. The sundarban residents have been officially declared as tiger kill -i.e., if you live there, you have declared yourself as meat for tigers and the government accepts your decision.

    • @JayakrishnanNairOmana
      @JayakrishnanNairOmana 10 месяцев назад

      @@andrewhatton1606 there needs to be some ways to keep the tigers from going extinct, and poor indians who are as well dead than living in extreme poverty is the answer. The government allows them to stay in this area where they have over 30% risk of getting mauled or killed by tigers as sacrifice and a way to control human population and prop up the tiger population. In other words, government is feeding poor humans to tigers so they can (a) get tourist revenue from keeping tigers from going extinct, and (b) control human population explosion as experienced by rest of India. If you ever visit the shithole called as India, know that the cheapest commodity here is the lives of poor children.

  • @mikeross4
    @mikeross4 3 года назад +1496

    Jim Corbett had an intimate knowledge of India, it’s people and wildlife and his books are well worth reading for his descriptions of the jungle and its human and animal inhabitants.

    • @animal-rights
      @animal-rights 3 года назад +11

      Well he was born in India so ...

    • @mikeross4
      @mikeross4 3 года назад +83

      @@animal-rights : Lots of people were born in India but very few had his depth of knowledge of its wildlife, so what is your point? Have you read any of his books?

    • @Kibernautas
      @Kibernautas 2 года назад

      @@animal-rights Man eating tiger have rights, rights to be shot dead.

    • @benjonesthe3rd200
      @benjonesthe3rd200 2 года назад +1

      Yeah I’m trying to figure out how many books he has . It’s fascinating

    • @ZoofSkillzFishing
      @ZoofSkillzFishing 2 года назад +28

      Watching this video was as if I was living through Apartheid all over again. Glorifying oppressors and the local population is demonized. How many Britishers shot, maimed and killed hundreds of tigers... Leave alone the atrocities they committed to several locals in their own lands... A terrible perspective of a horrible situation.

  • @SamuelJamesNary
    @SamuelJamesNary 3 года назад +1439

    The most intriguing thing is that Corbet displayed some element of being a "naturalist" even before he began the hunt for the Champawat Tigress in hypothesizing that the tigress' attacks were likely caused by age or injury even before starting the hunt. He simply couldn't confirm it until after he'd killed the tigress to find the years old injury to the jaw and teeth.

    • @SamuelJamesNary
      @SamuelJamesNary 2 года назад +65

      @Ree Tard - For tigers... injury is going to be the thing that drives most tigers to become man-eaters. In fact, in the early 1900s, most of the tigers that men like Jim Corbett hunted throughout India were found to have had some crippling injury that had likely occurred before they turned to hunting man.
      And when we look at things that tigers typically hunt... that may make sense. For normally, tigers prefer to hunt medium to large ungulate mammals. Some have the potential for very swift movement and thus could potentially escape a healthy tiger. Some are very strong and could be difficult to kill if the tigers don't have all their natural weapons. Thus, wanting to live, they will turn to what is easier to hunt and kill.
      Though injury wouldn't be the only reason for tigers to turn to man-eating. In some cases, there could be situations where something else has killed off large numbers of people and the tiger has just scavenged the corpses. Things like wars, floods, or diseases could provide them with very easy food if they find it. They thus get a taste for human flesh, and because many of the Indian parks allow people from nearby villages to gather thatch or wood or honey FROM the park, there is the potential for there to be conflict and a tiger that already has a taste may well decide to take a human that probably won't know the tiger is there.
      There could also be a case for a lack of food. Some of the animals that tigers normally hunt, like guar, are ALSO endangered due to habitat destruction and thus may not be available. And a tiger that is hungry... may simply take what is available. Man may not be their first choice, but if it's the only animal available... they'll eat what they can.
      As for "the loss of cubs..." that would depend on the situation and the circumstances under which a tigress has lost her cubs. For tigers, like all wild cats, practice infanticide in which males will KILL and eat the cubs that aren't related to them, which serves to bring the tigress back into heat to then carry that male's offspring. And while tigers have been reported to carry grudges, that doesn't appear to relate to issues within the species. If a tigress knows humans have killed her cubs, it's possible. There is a report that a poacher in Siberia killed a deer that a Siberian Tiger was hunting or drove it off of a kill... the tiger then tracked down where the poacher's cabin was, wrecked it and then killed the poacher when he returned to it. But in a hypothetical case where a tigress has killed a human out of vengeance, there could be the case in which it makes the kill and then just leaves the body without eating it.

    • @SamuelJamesNary
      @SamuelJamesNary 2 года назад +18

      @@JUICE16111 - Human rage really wasn't a condition that played into what happened with the Champawat Tigress turning "man-eater." Yes, she was shot by a low powered rifle that did damage to her teeth, but that is more the result of British colonial policy following the rebellions in India in the mid 1800s. Thus, Nepal likely didn't have access to more powerful weaponry resulting from earlier human/human conflict.
      And at the same time, given the cultural reverence for the tiger that his held among Hindus, as a result of its connections to the god Shiva, the goddess Durga, and in some ways a forest/jungle deity in its own right, I doubt that the tiger as a species has really endured the sort of hatred that the wolf has endured in Europe in contrast. However, that doesn't change that the Bengal Tiger is an apex predator that could easily pose a threat to people or herders for any reason. In this, my best guess is that the man who first shot the Champawat Tigress was a herder who had discovered the tigress after she had killed one of his cattle or was stalking his cattle. He fired a hasty shot in fear and when that was enough to get the tigress to flee, he didn't go chasing after a now wounded animal to put it down.
      And from there, the attacks on humans by the Champawat Tigress began, which stemmed from that wound having broken two canine teeth, and with one providing constant pain going down to the root of the tooth. Now, in theory, it is possible that veterinary medicine could have been used... but we must remember that the Champawat Tigress was NOT an escaped zoo animal. This was a wild tigress, and in 1903, issues with wild animals were not likely to be taken to the lengths to provide medical care... particularly in a region as remote as western Nepal and northern India. Thus, even in more developed countries, wild animals that caused such problems, it was likely that the problem animal would be killed to spare the aggravation and required work... Because we're still talking about an animal that is by nature predatory and weighs over 300 pounds.
      And given that this was in 1903 when the attacks on humans began, it should also be noted that the nature of the medicine of the time may not have been able to fix the problem. In this, even if Nepal or India were to pay to have veterinary care provided for a wild tigress... about all they'd likely do is remove the damaged teeth and thus alleviate the pain that she was in as a result of the injury. Thus, while she wouldn't be in pain, she'd still be missing two crucial weapons... which is something that various rescue shelters in the modern day have noted with tigers confiscated from domestic owners. In that the owner recognizes those canines or claws as a weapon and then decides to remove them with the theory that removing the canine teeth will make it more docile. However, what's often happened with these privately owned tigers is that they've become MORE aggressive because without their weapons they feel more insecure and unsafe. They can't intimidate someone by baring their teeth and thus become more aggressive.

    • @lilrara1291
      @lilrara1291 2 года назад +3

      @Mr. Millions for a injury like that,for sure.Yet a lot of times it’s just because people are food

    • @SamuelJamesNary
      @SamuelJamesNary 2 года назад +7

      @@lilrara1291 - That really isn't the case for tigers. Yes, they are more powerful than humans, but if they actively saw man as food there would be a greater number of attacks, regardless of injury or other circumstances. You'd thus see large numbers of humans being killed and eaten by young and healthy tigers.
      And this doesn't really happen. Fatal attacks have occurred, and this has included peopled people being eaten, but there has been a of other circumstances around the incidents in question. This has largely related to things like the age and health of the tiger in question with the elderly and injured the most likely to turn man-eater, because they cannot catch or kill their preferred prey anymore.
      The story of Broken Tail, the son of Machli is a good example of this. It was expected that this young male tiger would take over Ranthambore National Park in India from his mother. For aside from a broken tail, he was healthy and had displayed many of the traits that made his mother famous. Yet, shortly after reaching maturity, he vanished from Ranthambore. There were no signs of a fight or injury that would explain the disappearance...
      Then sometime later came a report of a tiger being struck by a train. When rangers could identify the animal... they found that the tiger in question was Broken Tail. He had journeyed hundreds of miles from where he was born, went through areas that were heavily populated by people and herders... and as some researchers found out, it's likely that Broken Tail had run ins with people along the way... but NO attacks. One man interviewed for a PBS Nature documentary said he'd been on a motor bike, came across a tiger by surprise and he fled in one direction and the tiger fled in the other direction. There was no attack. Which only further makes Broken Tail's story tragic in that he wasn't some vicious man-eater, could have taken over the park he was born in, and died in an accident.
      And while, yes, Broken Tail does represent an individual tiger and thus not completely representative of the entire species... that doesn't mean that the Bengal Tiger sees man as food. And in fact, researchers have looked into what Bengal Tigers hunt and have found that their preference is for ungulates, which humans are not. And in one park in the Bengal Tiger's range, analysis found that over 70% of the tiger's diet in that park came from the Sambar Deer alone.
      Do, fatal attacks on humans occur? Yes, but they are the result of rather specific circumstances. In the case of the Champawat Tigress it was injury from a gunshot. In some cases, regarding attacks on man in Nepal in more recent years it's been the result of tiger-on-tiger fights in which the defeated one has suffered injuries and that it couldn't overcome otherwise. And in places like the Sundarbans, where the tigers have seemed abnormally aggressive, the high salinity of the water in the region has been attributed to the attacks, as once the rangers began constructing more freshwater ponds, the number of fatal human attacks went down.
      In this, while the Bengal Tiger is more than capable of killing man, outside of some very specific circumstances, it doesn't see us as food. For if they did see us as food... they'd be brazen enough to walk into villages, grab someone out of their home and wouldn't go too far away. And this has not been observed with any known man-eating tiger. Not even the Champawat Tigress went into the villages to kill people. They were always attacked OUTSIDE the villages.

    • @lilrara1291
      @lilrara1291 2 года назад +2

      @@SamuelJamesNary what I’m saying is not every man eater is injured to the point the prey on humans.Some are just time and place.And in some places where tigers inhabit,they do see humans as apart of their prey selection

  • @chandramoulibhattacharya1144
    @chandramoulibhattacharya1144 3 года назад +1372

    I like Corbett, for he was a man of honour. Unlike most English people he worked for the village people and not for money and most importantly despite hunting man eaters he respected tigers as a species and showed them great respect and reverence as worthy animals (once again unusual a bit rare for an Englishman those days) and always treated his man eater victims with sympathy reminding us of the suffering they had to endure. Humans are responsible for mass genocide of big cats. British officers and the Maharajahs hunted without sense, sometimes one single person would claim 400 tigers. They got away with such acts: common villagers paid the price, as did the villainized tigers!

    • @adurpandya2742
      @adurpandya2742 3 года назад +91

      @Pavan Kumar Makes me furious. There used to be a hundred thousand tigers in India alone before the british. Same with rhinos.

    • @yugen3968
      @yugen3968 3 года назад +35

      @Pavan Kumar Abe aankh ke andhe, where TF did he say that "Indians" had a "tradition" of downing tigers??? If anything he says the common folk suffered due to the elites' carelessness. Learn to drive before getting on the nationalist bandwagon.

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 3 года назад +28

      British did have a bounty on them for some time, that changed to managed licensed hunting that seemed sustainable. That is open to interpretation if statistics contradict it.
      But the main cause of tigers (and much other faunas) demise was Indians overpopulation destroying the habitat (and shooting reserves preserved this). They overgrazed it with their skinny cattle, tigers substituted cattle for the wild game the Indians killed off immediately after independence, and the Indians poisoned the tigers. A few Maharajahs maintained shooting preserves that ironically probably contributed to saving the species. And some Indians remained professional poachers.
      India has now made marvellous progress to adapt to the current situation and deserves credit for protecting it's wonderful remnant wildlife as best it can with the pressure of its overpopulation. Blame the British might be fashionable, but doesn't stand up to scrutiny.

    • @adurpandya2742
      @adurpandya2742 3 года назад +79

      @@johnmead8437 There is no such thing as sustainable managed licensed hunting. Animal populations of all types skyrocketed in India since the british left, and this is along with a skyrocketing Indian population.
      The smallest bit of scrutiny would overturn everything you said. It’s the same story everywhere the british go - hunt everything to extinction or near extinction, and then blame those countries for making those animals endangered. And the brits have the audacity to say this despite the british isles being an ecologicial disaster.

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 3 года назад +9

      @@adurpandya2742 The smallest bit of scrutiny is obviously insufficient More comprehensive examination of the issue will show wildlife populations plunged from independence to after Project Tiger became fashionable, when some relevant protection was applied to the remnant.
      There are many examples worldwide where this protects wildlife with hunting value better than reserves do. Although having scant respect for managed hunting it serves a purpose, and is superior in many (not all) circumstances to protect the populations so surplus can be hunted.
      The idealists meantime selectively watch the human greed and breed effect on creatures like the White Rhino etc.

  • @kunalm15
    @kunalm15 2 года назад +238

    Jim Corbett was an honorable man. There is a reason a national park is named after him in India.

    • @TheKamaljoshi16
      @TheKamaljoshi16 Год назад +10

      British is the reason

    • @KushalG08
      @KushalG08 Год назад +15

      Bro it was renamed from hailey national park to corbett national park.. Our beloved pt Nehru was prime minister then... Please dont blame british 9 yrs after independence... And any guy who have read corbett literature know who hailey was and how corbett viewed him....

    • @giv-0234
      @giv-0234 Год назад

      Uttarakhand

    • @digitalbath6057
      @digitalbath6057 Год назад

      ​@@KushalG08 beloved, hahaha you must be in school. Nehru, Gandhi were all British Stooges. Nehru was a top class bootlicker and a womanizer. Many of his action has resulted in deaths of thousands and loss of land.

    • @dustybawls7085
      @dustybawls7085 Год назад +3

      Dosent matter he was human who worked for the nature for the people

  • @stephenduplantier2151
    @stephenduplantier2151 2 года назад +288

    I read Corbett’s Man Eaters of Kumaon when I was 12, a very long time ago. His exciting true takes were mesmerising. What comes across so strongly was his skill and bravery, and especially his ethical responsibility for the animals. This is a well-made documentary that well captures Corbett’s style.

    • @andy99ish
      @andy99ish 2 года назад +2

      I also read his book. Corbett made no grand moral issue out of killing man eaters. On the other hand he was aware that tigers are not "evil" and briefly explains that in his book. The narration of this video is heavily anthropomorphic. Tiger the cruel devil vs. Tiger the noble victim. Irritating.

    • @tr3bmanta
      @tr3bmanta Год назад

      there is nothing brave in shooting animals with a gun. if he fistfight the tiger it would be fair, and yes, brave. you need to get eaten by a tiger to see that you are NOTHING. weak.

    • @hussainahmed8108
      @hussainahmed8108 Год назад +1

      So did I! Really put me on a path to find a true balance with nature.

    • @tyronevaldez-kruger5313
      @tyronevaldez-kruger5313 Год назад

      Speaking of ethical responsibility, Corbett kept the coat of the tigress as a trophy. The tigress would have the decency to eat his skin for a full belly

    • @sleepyproduction7166
      @sleepyproduction7166 Год назад

      @@tyronevaldez-kruger5313 you are a loon

  • @dennisfordii9737
    @dennisfordii9737 3 года назад +619

    That brought me to tears . Tears for all those who died such a terrifying and horrible death. Tears for those who lost a wife, a husband , a daughter , a son . And Tears for the tiger. A tiger that were it not for some man's indifference, laziness , stupidity would probably have lived a normal tiger life . Thank you for sharing this.

    • @vikasshelke5544
      @vikasshelke5544 2 года назад +7

      Tiger protected it's jungle ,it's humans who encroached jungles. Why are human population ever increasing and where is space for there resources and why should animals and other species pay the price by going to extinction?

    • @Nevercared
      @Nevercared 2 года назад +3

      @@vikasshelke5544 spot on hit the nail on the head.

    • @Kibernautas
      @Kibernautas 2 года назад +12

      @@vikasshelke5544 Tigers were hunting people for few hundreds thousands of years, why are you crying that humans are hunting tigers for a few hundreds of years? Just because we are finally more successful?

    • @andrefromelpasotexas3236
      @andrefromelpasotexas3236 2 года назад +1

      @@KibernautasVikas is pointing out the fact that most people don’t respect nature and the other animals that share this world.

    • @Kibernautas
      @Kibernautas 2 года назад +10

      @@andrefromelpasotexas3236 And I am pointing out the fact that any animal, that go to be maneater, must be eliminated. That is law of nature too.

  • @gatheringleaves
    @gatheringleaves 3 года назад +617

    What a sadly tragic tale, the Champawat maneater wasn't so much a Devil as a victim of man's cruelty. Not saying those people deserved to die either, but to point her out as a mindless killer is to blatantly disregard the reality of the situation

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  3 года назад +87

      Exactly! Which is why I love Jim Corbett so much. He was a hunter, but he was an animal activist who helped established one of the first National Parks of India, today it's used as a type of tiger sanctuary. He really loved animals, and made sure to emphasis the rarity of large carnivores turning on humans purely out of malicious intent. If you ever get a chance, you should read some of his books! There are some hair-raising stories in there!

    • @gatheringleaves
      @gatheringleaves 3 года назад +12

      @@AbsurdandFantastical I might actually do that

    • @thetruth-n8x
      @thetruth-n8x 3 года назад +31

      @ Infinite Sky
      There's an African proverb
      " Until the Lion learns how to write every story will glorify the hunter "
      Corbet had a passion for hunting wild animals and named them man eaters.

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 3 года назад +8

      @@AbsurdandFantastical He was also one who didn't embellish his accounts and add imagined emotive anthropomorphic exaggerated interpretations, unless of course the source of the information for the detail about the tigers injury can be provided.
      Corbett interpreted its' injury as caused by a bullet, depriving it of canines on one side. If any record exists (other that this channel) of that being a cause for it suffering ongoing pain and malice, or damaged jaw etc, this source would be of interest. The lack of canines made it difficult to catch its' normal prey so it supplemented it with humans, something that causes most man-eating cats (not all, some apparently are lazy or like the taste, particularly leopards). Put simply, hunger.
      Corbett took notice of such detail, e.g. he described ongoing suffering in detail when describing the Mohan tiger episode.

    • @nayanmolla32
      @nayanmolla32 3 года назад

      ❤️👍🏻

  • @BeneathTheGold
    @BeneathTheGold 3 года назад +148

    “…he could not allow the villagers to hack her to pieces….. her pelt was far too valuable…”

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  3 года назад +9

      LOLLOL!

    • @thetruth-n8x
      @thetruth-n8x 3 года назад +3

      @ Happy Bee
      You are absolutely right bro 🙌

    • @prasunchandrakar6020
      @prasunchandrakar6020 2 года назад +3

      "But he showoffed himself by carrying her from village to village." What a naturalist.😂😂 dick

    • @ayush885
      @ayush885 2 года назад +10

      @@prasunchandrakar6020 maybe it was to give confidence to the villagers, to make them believe that 'The Devil' was really dead.

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 2 года назад +4

      Would be priceless today. Some bits of history are golden idols and art, stone art etc. That one was a biological specimen.

  • @maryc.dalton1284
    @maryc.dalton1284 Год назад +42

    Jim Corbett's writings are wonderful. I first read "The Man-Eaters of Kumaon" (in which he tells the story of the Champawat Tigress) as an adolescent. Then I read it again a few years ago and found it had lost none of its appeal. Corbett had a realistic, but very humane attitude towards the man-eaters he tracked; one senses that he loved and admired big cats. But he also cared about people. His simple telling of the story of the woman begging the tigress to let her sister go and take her instead is heartbreaking.

    • @doncorleone3901
      @doncorleone3901 11 месяцев назад

      Have you read Kenneth Anderson? How do you compare his writing to Cornett's?

  • @aanchalpatyal7386
    @aanchalpatyal7386 2 года назад +80

    I am currently reading one of the very famous book written by Jim Corbett. Man eaters of Kumaon. I must say i am in love with sir Jim corbette's work.. for his experiences tells a lot about those man eaters and their behaviours...

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 2 года назад +5

      It's not a novel...
      Another of his books, Jungle Lore, is an excellent account of the time and situations he experienced.

    • @mujahidal-deen2195
      @mujahidal-deen2195 2 года назад

      Gore lie all the time.. they cause problems then act like they are the only ones who can fix them.. i wouldnt believe what a gora tells you

    • @mostwantedadrian
      @mostwantedadrian 2 года назад +5

      I can't believe how well he explained the location and situation. Huge respect for Jim Corbett. I just love his books.

    • @sugoi9680
      @sugoi9680 Год назад +4

      @Bakasur Kumbhkarna Cope

    • @antepa112
      @antepa112 Год назад +4

      @bablubaban008 He is the greatest hunter of all time and he saved lives of hundreds of people by single handedly bringing down some of the deadliest man eaters ever. He deserves all the respect he can get. Also it's hypocritical when people call these hunters out for hunting while they eat meat and are no better than hunters

  • @lmajor7843
    @lmajor7843 3 года назад +164

    I have heard this story before, being familiar with the life story of Jim Corbett. However, I would just like to praise the work of the narrator of this episode. She has a beautiful voice.

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  2 года назад +9

      Thank you! :D ♥

    • @mazrio128
      @mazrio128 2 года назад +8

      That’s my ex wife. We made it to the alter but when she was asked to say “I do” she started narrating a man-eating tiger video”. It was …strange? Idk

  • @slackerofhell
    @slackerofhell 2 года назад +100

    So some dude shot this tiger and left it to suffer the rest of it's life? That's so sad. What a total bastard.

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 2 года назад +7

      MIght be. Might also be an accident by an unlucky wonderful person. Either way not intentional, nor known whether a local native hunter of a sporting hunter. Both who could be careless and callous.

  • @v.gopalakrishnan350
    @v.gopalakrishnan350 3 года назад +561

    GB Shaw sarcastically observed:
    " When a man hunts a tiger, he calls it sport but when a tiger hunts a man he calls it a man-eater! "
    Comments of some show how right GB Shaw was!

    • @deborrahshiffer9582
      @deborrahshiffer9582 2 года назад +32

      We are the worst for killing, people are the cruelest animal of all

    • @petiteplaine7439
      @petiteplaine7439 2 года назад +17

      Who knows how tiger calls the hunter....a tiger-eater ? One has to speak from their perspective 🤷‍♀️

    • @avinashagawane835
      @avinashagawane835 2 года назад +5

      Felt bad for all those animals

    • @joshrichards9121
      @joshrichards9121 2 года назад +3

      These attacks seem to stem from human population growing into animal habitats. Imagine the number of tiger related deaths if their numbers were not brought down. Not only close quarter living between man and beast, but also a large population of tigers would inevitably resort to humans as food when it’s natural prey thins out.

    • @sergiolaurencio7534
      @sergiolaurencio7534 2 года назад

      @@joshrichards9121 agree on that, the majority is oír fault. And this animal are predator and if they saw us as easy prey and they are hungry, don't doubt it,

  • @rew4640
    @rew4640 2 года назад +22

    I don't believe this story could have been told any better. Being an advocate for the tigress, and for mankind simultaneously!! very well done!!

  • @bobyoung1698
    @bobyoung1698 2 года назад +82

    I remember reading about Corbett when I was a child. "Maneaters of Kumaon" I think it was, and I was struck by how humane he was when dispatching these killers. In almost every case the tiger had been injured and was no longer able to hunt in a normal fashion.

  • @zooemperor3954
    @zooemperor3954 3 года назад +655

    As a person whose favorite big cat is the tiger along with the jaguar, this video really made me sympathize with the animal. A victim of humanity’s cruelty.

    • @thetruth-n8x
      @thetruth-n8x 3 года назад +37

      @ Zoo Emperor
      You are absolutely right about what you commented. Never believe a British man. There's an African proverb " Until the Lion learns how to write every story will glorify the hunter."

    • @TheOriginalFrankMatthews
      @TheOriginalFrankMatthews 3 года назад +4

      Shut up

    • @justin94431
      @justin94431 3 года назад

      @AARYAN too ugly he will stare few secs and leave

    • @PSAV76
      @PSAV76 3 года назад +7

      @AARYAN Tiger is a Hero and should've taken more!!

    • @kpczg162
      @kpczg162 3 года назад +66

      @@PSAV76 starting with you

  • @barryrobinson2408
    @barryrobinson2408 3 года назад +71

    nice vid. jim corbett was born in india . he was an exceptional man. he was a pioneer of conservation of the jungle and the animals that dwell in them .as one who has spent time in the area where he lived and hunted maneater i recommend his books highly.

  • @SurinderSingh-io4uh
    @SurinderSingh-io4uh 3 года назад +167

    My uncle own farming land in UP. He lives in the middle of tigers habitats. He says that he never bothers tigers and tigers never bother him.

    • @fatimarandhawa3791
      @fatimarandhawa3791 2 года назад

      well how else would they glorify their illegal occupation of the Indian subcontinent

    • @fatimarandhawa3791
      @fatimarandhawa3791 2 года назад

      @Dhhajhfhfjdjsjjssk true!

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 2 года назад +3

      Corbett (& many of the "old" tiger hunters) records the same, except in exceptional circumstances. That seems consistent, particularly when the locals accept tigers eat animals because they have to, and less livestock are killed where wild game is available for tigers..

    • @KingSpartan95
      @KingSpartan95 2 года назад +16

      I guess those tigers aren't hungry enough.

    • @seguefischlin
      @seguefischlin 2 года назад +14

      I lived near GoKarna, Karnataka for several months, living on Half Moon Beach but visiting internet cafés and teaching yoga to travellers on Om Beach. The foot path between them went up and overland through forest then down to the other beach. The local villagers were terrified to walk this path at night. I was always the only human I would see on the path after dark. While it was true that many times I encountered a large mammal (from the soft heavy footfalls and snorting I think some sort of bear), he or she always remained just out of sight of me and mainly sounded annoyed and also almost as fearful of me as I was of him/her. And so we maintained an uneasy truce all those months, both of us clearly not wanting any trouble to come of my brief intrusions into their territory. I always made sure that I had a good flashlight with me and walked with alertness but also swiftness on the well-worn path, to make it clear that I had no interest in lingering and in disturbing this creature any more than necessary. I also made sure to walk loudly, or sing, so that the creature would not be startled by me and would know I was coming. I could tell that this creature did NOT like to be surprised, and that it made them feel unsafe. The creature seemed to understand my intentions and there was never an incident. For me, watching this video informs me as to why perhaps the locals are so terrified of the forest at night; because they have a genetic memory of such times in the past in India when such incidents were much more common to occur.

  • @Strype13
    @Strype13 2 года назад +229

    Holy shit. When you said it had the most human kills by a single animal, I was expecting maybe something in the 15-20 range... and was still ready to be surprised by that. When you alluded to it being well over 400, my brain almost exploded. 🤯 That's just as incredible as it is tragic. Wow.

    • @MusMasi
      @MusMasi 2 года назад +29

      not a surprise if it was active for 4 years or more, it means it ate nothing else over that time because it was too injured to really hunt what it would normally.

    • @Strype13
      @Strype13 2 года назад +39

      @@MusMasi Well, yeah. It makes perfect sense from the standpoint of having a serious injury and eating whatever it found to be sustainable. The surprising part is the fact that it managed to tally up over 400 human kills without being killed itself.

    • @MusMasi
      @MusMasi 2 года назад +17

      @@Strype13 `tigers can be stealthy, cunning and humans are vulnerable

    • @jkjkjkjkjk537
      @jkjkjkjkjk537 2 года назад +10

      @@Strype13 It's home is still largely unexplored even today. On the foot hills of the Himalayas are dense jungles that haven't
      seen the light of modernization to this day. It's impossible to build proper roads because of land slides and what not. Imagine what it was like a 100 years ago. The only way for a person to travel from one village to the other is by foot and a tiger is at it's deadliest in dense jungles like those. No wonder it claimed 436 victims before being killed by Corbett.

    • @Strype13
      @Strype13 2 года назад +9

      @@sethmutenda6351 Yeah, I'm aware of how effective they are at predation -- I just wouldn't really expect one to be able to achieve that many human kills without being taken out by humans who got sick & tired of losing community members to such a ferocious beast. I suppose the area it occurred is what allowed the numbers to get so high -- because I feel like any community that had access to firearms, or at least had a way to communicate with someone who did (and would be willing to provide some help) would have found a way to put an end to that reign of terror long before the number of victims got that high.

  • @antepa112
    @antepa112 Год назад +38

    Jim Corbett is a damn legend. Man single handedly took down some of the biggest man eaters ever.

  • @swordofthedawn6495
    @swordofthedawn6495 2 года назад +50

    This story carries a great lesson for all of us.

  • @chucknora4194
    @chucknora4194 2 года назад +15

    The Man Eaters of Kumaon - the book by JC was an excellent book and a favorite read for me in my youth! An amazing book about Man Eating Tigers. This man’s descriptions were incredible! So easy to read. So easy to believe in the malevolent behavior of these tigers was most always do hunger and unable to catch its normal prey.

  • @TJSaw
    @TJSaw Год назад +12

    Imagine a movie on the life of Jim Corbett. Would be a masterpiece.

  • @Niftynorm1
    @Niftynorm1 2 года назад +77

    Jim Corbett was not as the narrator said 'a young inexperienced man'. He was a very experienced hunter who had hunted all his life. This hunt took quite some time to finish. He was a naturalist and later in life became a serious photographer both still and movie.

    • @ergwehgr
      @ergwehgr Год назад

      shh youre not supposed to say the white man hunted and killed animals for fun

    • @chooton5113
      @chooton5113 Год назад

      Ever seen the series jungle Jim? Some base off him ..

  • @rararazzamatazz
    @rararazzamatazz 11 месяцев назад +8

    When I read the title "When the Devil came to India", I thought the video must be about the British Coloniser 😅

  • @coolbleu27
    @coolbleu27 2 года назад +66

    To understand the real gravity at the time , one must read Jim Corbett’s “Man eaters or Kumaon” & “More man eaters of Kumoan” , those are fantastic books and will give goosebumps far greater that what one feels listening to this video… of course this clip ain’t bad but the book is at least 10 times better.

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  2 года назад +8

      I agree 100% The books are amazing, and Jim Corbett is a great story-teller! For the sake of pacing, I had to leave out one or two events, so if you can find the books, read them - they're damned amazing! (Thanks for checking out the vid :D)

  • @manishswami1234
    @manishswami1234 Год назад +78

    He killed only 400 but humans (British and Indian kings) killed 40000 tigers. By god's grace now we have 3400 tigers all over India ❤

    • @redlizerad8268
      @redlizerad8268 Год назад +11

      Im glad to hear that Tigers in India have recovered more or less by now. Its a shame that the same can’t be said about China. Northwestern China was the birth place of Tigers but now all of our indigenous population of tigers have gone extinct. There is a incredibly small population of Siberian tigers still in our Northeastern regions that emigrated from Russia. Hopefully we will have more tigers too in the future.

    • @sethn8784
      @sethn8784 5 месяцев назад +1

      Because chinese poached them all for TCM. ​@redlizerad8268

    • @rahatzaman8120
      @rahatzaman8120 4 месяца назад +4

      Great job by the Indian govt as a Bangladeshi I wish India can preserve our majestic Bengal tiger species.

    • @Shiva-nx1tn
      @Shiva-nx1tn 4 дня назад

      ​@@rahatzaman8120just for your Kind information bengal tiger have nothing to do specific with bengal

    • @rahatzaman8120
      @rahatzaman8120 4 дня назад

      @@Shiva-nx1tn yes it can be found everywhere in the Indian subcontinent.

  • @edward9643
    @edward9643 2 года назад +26

    I heard another version where the reason for removing the bounty was to ensure his safety from the bullets of other hunters who might inadvertently shoot him - as happens with trigger happy bounty hunters with dollar signs in their eyes

    • @jkjkjkjkjk537
      @jkjkjkjkjk537 2 года назад +5

      Yup. It was one of his conditions for taking up the hunt actually. He wanted all the bounties removed so that there will be no friendly fire. He actually got it signed by the district collector (Highest administrative authority of a district in British India). It was well detailed in Corbett's own book "Man eaters of Kumaon".

  • @pankzoli
    @pankzoli 2 года назад +189

    As a native of champawat district,i want to take one other important thing to consider that along with this tigress which operated in centre of the district and killed 436 human beings in both Nepal and Champawat,there was a man eating leopard which operated at the same time in Panar Valley which borders between current champawat and almora district,,this leopard also killed more than 400 people alone in that time almora district(in that time champawat Used to come under almora district)was killed after Jim Corbett killed this champawat man eating tigress.

    • @vishwanathchandrasekaran3053
      @vishwanathchandrasekaran3053 2 года назад +18

      Have read Corbett's account of Panar leopard. The fact it was active in a more remote place compared to the Rudraprayag leopard made it less known . It was also one of his earlier hunts when weapons at his disposal

    • @jerrenbaltazarr5151
      @jerrenbaltazarr5151 2 года назад +3

      I don't understand why they wait for those animals to kill so many people before they put them down. Some one have to be changed for such lack of human consideration.

    • @ghagzor
      @ghagzor 2 года назад

      @@jerrenbaltazarr5151 shut up. There's way too many of you undesirables and too few tigers

    • @KushalG08
      @KushalG08 Год назад +23

      ​​@@jerrenbaltazarr5151 .... What's your age bro🤣🤣... Your great grandfather might not have been born in 1914....see some realistic long documentaries rather than short RUclips reels

    • @redlizerad8268
      @redlizerad8268 Год назад +8

      @@jerrenbaltazarr5151 This has a lot to do with the lack of communication at the time. I wondered the same thing how this Tigress was able to kill 436 people before being put down. I then researched and it showed that this tigress was originally from Nepal and after killing villagers it was essentially chased over the borders by the Nepalese army into India. And through evading hunters it developed a massive territory hopping between villages to hunt people. Champwat was basically the centre of its territory so it was seen the most there. The first documented kill happened in 1900 and the tigress was shot dead in 1907. So it’s also not like it happened through a short period of time. That’s roughly 63 kills a year spread between multiple villages and 2 different countries. It was a elusive animal for sure

  • @georgefloydspaceshuttlepro1839
    @georgefloydspaceshuttlepro1839 Год назад +4

    Corbett was in incredible shape. He'd go on fifty mile marches in the Himalayan foothills in April (the hot time of India) up and down hills all day just to get to a village where a recent maneater visited.

  • @maheshmahi5455
    @maheshmahi5455 3 года назад +44

    Sad that the tiger was died and also happy at the same time that the villagers were out of terror...RIP to the victims and tiger 😪

    • @johnrockyryan
      @johnrockyryan Год назад

      Exactly well said

    • @rankingresearchdata
      @rankingresearchdata 11 месяцев назад

      Rip to tigress ? She was the devil and killed innocent civilians like a villain kill random civilians for one person's cause. Blame the British who killed 100k Tigers and British hunter who wounded tigress

  • @v.gopalakrishnan350
    @v.gopalakrishnan350 3 года назад +56

    The tiger hunted for survival whereas the callous human who wounded her and left her to suffer was after her fur!
    Who is the devil here?

    • @yoanjun3997
      @yoanjun3997 2 года назад +14

      humans will do mindless shit to other animals and call it 'the food chain' well then, a tiger eating you is also part of the food chain, Chad.

    • @deborrahshiffer9582
      @deborrahshiffer9582 2 года назад +2

      The human is the monster leaving her to such pain, despicable & I've been shot with a small boar shotgun, shattered 2 & half inches in my leg they wanted to cut it off at the knee, parents wouldn't let them so I know how it feels, poor tiger & she didn't have a hospital to help her

    • @romeostojka7232
      @romeostojka7232 2 года назад +5

      @@deborrahshiffer9582 are u high or something. You realise this tiger was aggressively attacking humans who were innocent the heck u want? To not hunt the tiger And tiger just go and attack humans. What about u go live with tigers instead of with us humans. Since u empathy more with tigers then with humans.

    • @islamisthetruthforever1323
      @islamisthetruthforever1323 Год назад +1

      Animals are Animals don't know cruelty they need survive and she probably did it for a reason like it's animal thing they don't know cruelty leave Animals alone

    • @johnrockyryan
      @johnrockyryan Год назад +1

      ​@@yoanjun3997exactly you cant have it one way some humans need to realise that we are not the only thing on this earth that deserves to live

  • @qjtvaddict
    @qjtvaddict 3 года назад +24

    So basically crippling tigers turn them into man eaters

    • @BigJordan92708
      @BigJordan92708 3 года назад +9

      Yep without its 2 canines it won’t be able to kill the big usually prey, so it adapted an unfortunately killed 436 ppl, just shows how useless humans are against top predators without our weapons.

    • @mmarcjp5057
      @mmarcjp5057 3 года назад +4

      @sahil shrestha that’s why we have brain. Yes we may be physically weak compared to them but the shit we can build can whipped out all animals on the planet. That’s not even something to be proud of.

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 3 года назад

      A really common pattern, not exclusive though. Old age, fights etc also cause it, and some cats simply take what is easy, often starting on cattle and progressing to humans.
      Most of that nonsense was cured by Indian Independence when licensed hunting lost its' administrators, about the same time cattle herders discovered agricultural insecticides worked to prevent further cattle losses when applied to kills. So hunters get the blame for overgrazing and poisoning by the natives.
      The belated efforts at protection probably stool face the same issues, and deserve credit for preventing extinction of tigers, particularly with the oriental medicine trade rife

  • @RATsClasses
    @RATsClasses 2 года назад +11

    Jim corbett's book features in my top 10 books. Had read this story in 2005 n then earlier this year during my corona days. V well narrated. What a beautiful voice

    • @Sssthpok
      @Sssthpok 9 месяцев назад +1

      agree - he wrote in clear and humble style. Love his books.

  • @nuelreview5636
    @nuelreview5636 Год назад +6

    Wow I’m in awe and sad for the Tiger. It was traumatized and hurt. I never heard about Corbett but I’ll research. This narrator did a beautiful job too with her wonderful voice❤

  • @solidtv6211
    @solidtv6211 2 года назад +21

    That’s amazing the tiger remembers those who have done him wrong. Makes sense for him to kill that many ppl, when humans have been hunting them since forever

  • @risboturbide9396
    @risboturbide9396 3 года назад +46

    This is a great video! The narration is perfect 👌👍

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  3 года назад +1

      Ah! Thanks! I tried to add some effects this time around, I'm so glad it worked 😄

    • @risboturbide9396
      @risboturbide9396 3 года назад +1

      @@AbsurdandFantastical you did great! Sometimes RUclips is a form of Art; your video is.

    • @sheepsfoot2
      @sheepsfoot2 2 года назад

      @@risboturbide9396 She doesn't pronounce Corbett the right way but she does have a lovely articulate voice !

  • @kingsridge
    @kingsridge 2 года назад +3

    Geez, those poor sisters... Just the thought of a person chasing and pleading with a tiger to eat them alive instead of their loved one--then, have it vanish before your eyes, while knowing it's eating your family....That hits real different.

  • @JediRouge
    @JediRouge 2 года назад +12

    Found out about this lone beast on face book about fifteen minutes ago. Me wanting to know the her origin story only to find out because it was due to some lazy hunter... got angry from that part and my eyes tears when she spoke about how the Hunter felt after realizing the cause of the incident to the mute woman... now I want to read the book.

    • @Dhfhucudu
      @Dhfhucudu 3 месяца назад

      We r the real beasts.

  • @mattalley4330
    @mattalley4330 Год назад +7

    "I was benevolent and good. Misery made me a fiend."
    The creature, in Mary Shelly's Frankenstein. A great description of what happened here. Many people suffered due to the actions of one fool, who created a monster.

    • @justmejenny7986
      @justmejenny7986 Год назад

      I still don't think she was a monster. She was doing what she needed to survive.

    • @mattalley4330
      @mattalley4330 Год назад

      @@justmejenny7986 She killed hundreds of people, but it was one foolish human who indirectly caused this.

  • @BeneathTheGold
    @BeneathTheGold 3 года назад +24

    Its almost always lame or injured big cats that start preying on people. People are slow and easy to catch and dont really have any natural defenses. Its suprising they dont prey on humans more often

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  3 года назад +14

      Except for Leopards, apparently. They begin to prey on people when they develop a taste for humans. Same with lions. They'll eat humans if they're easy to eat.

    • @BeneathTheGold
      @BeneathTheGold 3 года назад +2

      @@AbsurdandFantastical which they are.

    • @BeneathTheGold
      @BeneathTheGold 3 года назад +1

      @sahil shrestha obviously. They wait until theres one or two and even better for them- if theres small children. Theyr predators, they select the weakest easiest meal.they can even tell when potential prey is injured. Thats how predators roll

    • @Chepicoro
      @Chepicoro 3 года назад +2

      @sahil shrestha also we tend to exterminate everything that for whatever reason prey on us

    • @RaviShankar-et3xc
      @RaviShankar-et3xc 3 года назад +4

      The main reason is ecologically they have a predefined set of prey and they try to stick to it. The first attack on human would be mostly of either curiosity or desperation. Once they got a taste and further chances to understand that this prey is weak and they can keep sticking to this diet then its a different story. And also with more social predators like Lions you can also add an additional reason of territorial reasons. It might not interested in eating but definitely wanting to eliminate a oddly looking new threat.
      For example some predators go for the livestock outright even though there is a weaker prey human coming along with it until unless they know about our profile.
      For any animals its either fight or flight when they see something new. A cat might run away from you, an elephant might try to trample you and in the same way a carnivore would either run or try to finish you. It doesn't mean that it hunted you for a meal. So its very important for us to give them their space.

  • @strawbyicing
    @strawbyicing 2 года назад +6

    This is a sad tragic and interesting story . Poor girl . This people did not deserve to die because of one cruel man’s mistakes . That pathetic hunter caused so much death and sorrow for the people , and that beautiful tigress . She was miserable and in constant pain . atleast Jim understood that no one here deserved any of this fatality , and that the tigress was only in pain and suffering years , which is why she went insane and sought vengeance on mankind .

  • @saravanananamalai1114
    @saravanananamalai1114 2 года назад +19

    I read about this story while in school which was a bit different. When the tiger pounced on him Corbett lost his rifle and he had to snatch the rifle from another person and shoot the tiger. Corbett was not just a hunter, he loved and respected animals. He respected the tiger for all its majesty.

  • @inspirationalquotes9469
    @inspirationalquotes9469 2 года назад +5

    I have read almost all books by Mr Jim Corbett. I appreciate your presentation. Great job.

  • @mikefisher4834
    @mikefisher4834 2 года назад +12

    I’ve heard about the Tsavo man eaters in Africa but I never knew about this tiger in India The stories are scarily similar but the two lions in Kenya were hunting railroad workers The Tsavo lion attacks happened only 9 years before these attacks💯

    • @Mark-rc4wz
      @Mark-rc4wz 2 года назад

      So many more in reality
      ruclips.net/video/0akLMqTT6mM/видео.html

    • @jarhead11691
      @jarhead11691 2 года назад +1

      You have no idea about the Tigers of India. Search Bengal Tigers of Sunderbans. I can tell you stories about them

    • @oftaps
      @oftaps 2 года назад

      Tiger was eating Indians in India and the Lions were also eating Indians(railroad labourers) in Africa.

    • @jarhead11691
      @jarhead11691 2 года назад

      @@oftaps yeah 😅

    • @redlizerad8268
      @redlizerad8268 Год назад

      It was a similar time in history that’s why. Man was beginning to take over more and more of the animals territory so conflicts are inevitable. Only 8 years after this the Sankebetsu brown bear incident happened in Hokkaido, Japan. A brown bear that woke up from hibernation brutally killed 9 people in only 6 days.

  • @tatata1543
    @tatata1543 2 года назад +4

    Man Eaters was one of the first books I read, it opened up the world to me. I love that book even now.

  • @akashgaikwad3942
    @akashgaikwad3942 2 года назад +5

    The narrator is absolutely amazing. What a soothing voice . I wish she could have read the whole man eating leopard of rudraprayag.

  • @ranerohit1205
    @ranerohit1205 2 года назад +25

    Corbett, what a legend! I'm here after reading the book. Ace hunter and a writer par excellence. He literally transports you 100 years back along with him, he had the gift of vivid description
    The photo shown is of the batchelor of Powalgarh, an exceptionally large tiger , not the Champawat tigress.

  • @kingheisenberg674
    @kingheisenberg674 3 месяца назад +1

    jim corbett wrote a book about this tiger , read it he was not only an amazing conservationist but also a brilliant writer

  • @achalsawarkar6994
    @achalsawarkar6994 2 года назад +15

    Jim Corbett had once stated that the Tiger is a large hearted Gentleman, (no offense to the tigress she is large hearted too.
    My father served with the Indian Forest service and I have been fortunate to meet and experience this magnificent creation on number of occasions.
    Jim Corbetts the Bachelor of Pawalgarh is another riveting encounter this Tiger was an unusually large one and said to have measured 3.23 meters long.

  • @delshawnmcdaniel2828
    @delshawnmcdaniel2828 3 года назад +34

    Great story but Corbet didn’t stop the villagers from chopping her up out of decency and respect for the tigress, he stopped them because he wanted her fur

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  2 года назад +10

      True XD But I think it could also have been a little bit more psychological? The tiger had turned into a monster (in their eyes) so it could be a sort of 'don't turn into monsters yourselves' type of thing. But yeah, the pelt was probably worth a pretty penny XD

  • @regancarter2269
    @regancarter2269 2 года назад +7

    such a human move.. the tiger will honestly stalk you with some integrity and the human resorts to trickery

  • @mnal5gex
    @mnal5gex 2 года назад +9

    This reminds me of the lion twins of Africa that had killed so many villagers. The movie based on it was “The Ghost in the Darkness”. Great movie. There should be a movie based on this. A whole series of man eating animals should be made like that film based on these animals. It would be amazing to hear the stories of these creatures.

    • @Alucard-lz2hb
      @Alucard-lz2hb Год назад

      You mean the Tsavo Man Eaters? Yeah that was actually when some Indian and African construction workers were building a railway (This was when the British were colonizing Kenya I believe), two maneless male lions attacked the workers at night.

  • @kudos6642
    @kudos6642 2 года назад +101

    The reason behind the extremely low population of tigers in India is the fact that during the British raj, way too many tigers were killed in the name of sport at the hands of the British hunters and some unworthy maharajas. Nature’s wrath was bound to fall upon humanity for the crimes it has committed. It’s quite rare to see a person like Jim Corbett who held utmost respect for nature and served not the British but nature and humanity itself. I pray to lord to bless the fallen souls of these tigers as well as the humans who had to pay the price of others’ misdeeds.

    • @gunner9936
      @gunner9936 2 года назад

      Add one more gifts of the basterd brits gave to us

    • @vergil4816
      @vergil4816 2 года назад +7

      Nature's wrath? Our wrath should be unleashed upon that evil primitive scheming entity. Nature is the ultimate villian .

    • @lindadesposito3771
      @lindadesposito3771 2 года назад +7

      @@vergil4816 I think we have done enough in that area, haven't you? I hope you are still alive when climate change has changed most of the world into a wasteland and we are all climate refugees.

    • @benzelwasington4059
      @benzelwasington4059 2 года назад +3

      @@vergil4816 feeling small ? Cause your nothing in the eye of nature

    • @vergil4816
      @vergil4816 2 года назад

      @@lindadesposito3771 We have done enough? We were built by nature for this. A predatory species designed to suck out last bit of valuable resources from planet after planet. The scheming nature has desires to spread out through us.

  • @MiraTheWarlock
    @MiraTheWarlock Год назад +4

    I sympathize with the tiger, but with a man eater with the body count of 436, MOST OF THEM CHILDREN, cannot be allowed live. Not to mention reason she's hunting humans was because she was in too much pain to hunt her usual prey. A full meal would never fix that pain. It was best for everyone, including her, that she was put down

  • @krutantsatam1310
    @krutantsatam1310 2 года назад +7

    Well Jim Corbett did a great work for villagers of champavat. I had gone through his book Man-eaters of Kumaon

  • @EmzZone42
    @EmzZone42 3 года назад +16

    Poor thing sorry for all who lost their lives but I feel for the Tiger it happens but as long as their left alone and respected a Tiger will rarely attack without good reason ie like her situation or grudge RESPECT NATURE IT WILL RESPECT YOU

    • @thetruth-n8x
      @thetruth-n8x 3 года назад +1

      You are absolutely right about nature and it's children

    • @ethanstewart728
      @ethanstewart728 2 года назад

      @@thetruth-n8x aren't humans also nature's children

    • @fabiofernandes9122
      @fabiofernandes9122 2 года назад +2

      naive statement, theres no sutch thing has respect in the wild life theres only survival. each living creature only cares about itself. tigers dont care if respect them or not, (mostly because they dont know what that even is) they only care about surviving.

    • @johnrockyryan
      @johnrockyryan Год назад

      Exactly Feel for both feel for the innocent humans that got there lives taken away unfairly and feel for the tiger that was being Hunted by an incompetent hunter that started this whole horrible mess

  • @toufiq-ul-alam6475
    @toufiq-ul-alam6475 2 года назад +3

    many years ago..when I was a kid...my time passed reading the stories of Brave Jim Corbet.

  • @kaytlinjustis5643
    @kaytlinjustis5643 Год назад +2

    This was the third Man-Eater documentary I've listened to, and it's possibly the most heart-breaking all around. Most animals only hunt us as prey due to desperation, starvation and injury, or a combination of all three. While I'm not a huge fan of bears, I DO know that they are opportunists, and will go after what they'll think is an easy meal, especially when WE go into THEIR territory! While I plan to become a hunter someday, I cannot bear the though of something suffering the rest of their lives because someone is a poor shot, or like those monsters who hunt for blood money, wasting lives because they believe it to be a 'sport'! Advanced tech or not, we still live in a hunter/prey world; you can be lucky, or unlucky going into a territory not your own. Hunting itself is a necessity to an animal without quick access to food, and to destroy that livelihood is unforgivable, especially when you don't think of what MIGHT happen should the hunted escape with a grudge! I'm glad the man who ended this horrible tragedy was able to give everyone, including the tigress some dignity, instead of allowing a mob of hurt, angry people to hack her to pieces as if their lives were worthless! That man has earned my respect!

  • @sham8444
    @sham8444 2 года назад +4

    Always been fascinated by this story great job in bringing it to life in this video very well crafted

  • @paulhomsy2751
    @paulhomsy2751 2 года назад +19

    It wasn't the hunter's cruelty that cause the carnage, it was the hunter's cowardice for not finishing the job. If it was too much for him as it would be for most to finish that job, he had no business shooting the tigress in the first place. To accuse the hunter of cruelty is somewhat disconnected from the sad reality.

    • @StormWalker101
      @StormWalker101 2 года назад +7

      I have a feeling that the hunter assumed that he got a decent shot, which I would say was not a bad shot, considering he almost gt the head and that the Tigeress would die of its injuries. Which unfortunately for the hunter as well for over 400 other people and their families did not end very well. Nature's fury is fierce. It will not distinguish between good people or bad people. It will only see us as one of the many species.

    • @TheNemesis442
      @TheNemesis442 2 года назад +5

      how do we know it wasn't self defense? for all they knew, they shot the tiger and it ran off....don't be so quick to rush to judgement.

    • @benzelwasington4059
      @benzelwasington4059 2 года назад +2

      @@TheNemesis442 Yea hes right every hunter knows How important is to find the shoot animel there is No excuses for this

    • @TheNemesis442
      @TheNemesis442 2 года назад

      @@benzelwasington4059 you shouldn't jump to conclusions without knowing both sides. doing so is just plain stupidity.

  • @petergrundy8081
    @petergrundy8081 2 года назад +6

    Surely the most stunning deadly beautiful animal nature has created in this era

  • @terrencemathew7389
    @terrencemathew7389 3 года назад +4

    The Champawat Devil... It is indeed sad that so many people lost their lives, but my heart also goes out to this Devil. Makes me wonder, Shaitan sach me kaun hai? - Who is the real devil?

  • @nirvanaj1010
    @nirvanaj1010 2 года назад +4

    I read about the champawat tigress from Jim Corbett’s biography . Really a fascinating story

  • @sjames304
    @sjames304 2 года назад +2

    Jim Corbett's "Maneater of Kumaon" is a must-read for fans of this sort of story. Corbett was a stud.

  • @Fadedecho1
    @Fadedecho1 3 года назад +9

    Very impressive story. Really tells the story of intervention between human and big cats. Tysm for sharing ❤

  • @studentchallenge5663
    @studentchallenge5663 3 года назад +26

    What a beautiful narration. Your voice is extremely soothing to hear!

  • @KishorePandey
    @KishorePandey 3 года назад +5

    Champawat is a district in the Indian state of Uttarakhand.

  • @deepakghosh5502
    @deepakghosh5502 Год назад +2

    Jim Corbet was one of the greatest and noblest hunters. A great personality with full knowledge of villages in Himalayan foothills and surrounding forests. He had great linking for nature, animals and villagers.

    • @loose2550
      @loose2550 Год назад

      No hunter can be called noble or great. Killing beautiful nature for fun is the lowest of the low

  • @rogerramjet7567
    @rogerramjet7567 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have read all of Corbets books. They are all well worth reading 👍👍😀

  • @Artster8489
    @Artster8489 3 года назад +9

    You have to imagine the number more than 400 in a low populated area like damn right they were shitting their pants for four days.

  • @sgt_joker1313
    @sgt_joker1313 3 года назад +6

    I get so excited when your videos pop up

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  3 года назад

      Oh, wow! Thanks! 😀 I'm always so happy when you comment!

    • @sgt_joker1313
      @sgt_joker1313 3 года назад +1

      @@AbsurdandFantastical shit I might be a little late but I'll always comment

  • @kevinsimons518
    @kevinsimons518 3 года назад +25

    Funny, nobody ever talks about the animals killed by people

    • @thetruth-n8x
      @thetruth-n8x 3 года назад +6

      @ Kevin Simon's
      There's an African proverb
      " Until the Lion learns how to write every story will glorify the hunter "
      I think you got it.

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 3 года назад

      Many many do in fact.
      And their versions of some are as embellished to their predetermined opinions of the factors involved as this narration trends to in some places.
      Wild animals have suffered seriously due to one over-riding factor that affects probably every other natural feature detrimentally: human overpopulation.
      Until this is reduced about 5 fold future generations of humans have a bleak future.
      Try telling that to geriatric wealthy Orientals craving tigers genitals to assist their libido

  • @ytubepuppy
    @ytubepuppy Год назад +1

    Jim Corbett's book "Temple Tiger" is a pretty good read on the subject of man-eaters.

  • @shubhamsemwal2071
    @shubhamsemwal2071 Год назад +2

    The skin of that tigress is still preserved at the Forest Research Institute in Dehradun. Also Jim Corbett killed another tiger which had killed some 200 people in the Rudraprayag district in Uttarakhand state where Champawat district is also located. There is a bust of Jim Corbett in Rudraprayag where he is hailed as a hero.

  • @griffinyy
    @griffinyy 3 года назад +17

    My cat loving self loved this video and found it very enjoyable to watch :D

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  3 года назад +2

      Awe! Do you have a cat? I have one at home, she is a Bombay called Licorice 😀

    • @griffinyy
      @griffinyy 3 года назад +3

      @@AbsurdandFantastical actually, yes I do ! C.J, kitty, and my two new additions to my family, Jewel and Griffin ( my profile pic is griffin around two weeks of age I’m pretty sure :D)

    • @americangangsterlock1550
      @americangangsterlock1550 3 года назад

      cats as pets are so overrated.. If you need to declaw them or walk around on your toes to not piss them off.. That tells me they aren't worth as being good pets. Rodents make for better pets than shitty house cats...

    • @jaydutta7711
      @jaydutta7711 3 года назад +5

      @@americangangsterlock1550 STFU, declawing cat is a crime. It's animal abuse.

    • @ricktaylor3748
      @ricktaylor3748 3 года назад

      @@AbsurdandFantastical I have a Himalayan. I see him a layan on my truck or him a layan on my porch....lol. I LOVE cats.

  • @khemrajsingh541
    @khemrajsingh541 3 года назад +8

    Maybe she killed so many people in revenge for other tigers that were murdered by the hands of evil human beings. To give humans a taste of their own medicine. Many innocent people may have died due to tigers but many tigers also died due to the hands of humans.

    • @fabiofernandes9122
      @fabiofernandes9122 2 года назад +2

      what did the indian villagers had to do with the killing of the tigers?.

  • @joshiabhinav
    @joshiabhinav 3 года назад +17

    interesting .want to see more of these . and also Man eaters of Tsavo

    • @ryu9687
      @ryu9687 3 года назад +5

      Watch bob gymlan. Dude made a hour long episode about it

    • @joshiabhinav
      @joshiabhinav 3 года назад

      @@ryu9687 thanks will watch

    • @joshiabhinav
      @joshiabhinav 3 года назад

      @@ryu9687 where's the link mate

    • @YvetteArby
      @YvetteArby 3 года назад +1

      @@joshiabhinav ruclips.net/video/mAKxcNQpiSg/видео.html

    • @dannyduggan4324
      @dannyduggan4324 2 года назад

      Ghost and The Darkness is a great movie about it.

  • @CaptainOhYeah55
    @CaptainOhYeah55 Год назад +1

    Tiger literally went out like Emile did from the end of Halo Reach - “I’m ready, how about you!!!”

  • @michaellynch8709
    @michaellynch8709 Год назад +2

    this really should be made into a film by a director who understands

  • @recovering_rider
    @recovering_rider 2 года назад +3

    The beautiful painting of Corbett aiming at a tiger at 8:14 I believe is of the Chowgarh Tigress.

    • @AbsurdandFantastical
      @AbsurdandFantastical  2 года назад +2

      Hey! That didn't slip by you XD I was aware it was the wrong one, but it fitted the scene so I decided to use it. Thanks for checking out the vid KM!

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 2 года назад +1

      @@AbsurdandFantastical Might be a bit more artistic/dramatic license applied too...

  • @GamerTigerBonsu
    @GamerTigerBonsu 3 года назад +4

    this gave me chills
    it’s scary

  • @Yoda3000
    @Yoda3000 2 года назад +7

    There honestly is no good or evil here. The tiger killed and ate people in order to survive. It was necessary to kill it to stop any further destruction. The tiger's shattered jaws could also be after it began killing people and a hunter tried to kill it but it escaped. Tigers are known to hunt humans once they lose their ability to hunt fast or powerful creatures like buffaloes, deers etc either due to old age or injuries

    • @antepa112
      @antepa112 Год назад

      There is no really goo and evil in animals, since almsot all of them hunt on instinct and hunger.

  • @johndyson4109
    @johndyson4109 11 месяцев назад +2

    Corbett alighned his energy and did what needed to be done. He took the money factor away and had a proper mindset..

  • @Cold_Coffee758
    @Cold_Coffee758 Год назад +1

    Though this story was older, But after hearing this story it gave me chills 🥶🥶

  • @ronswanson398
    @ronswanson398 2 года назад +4

    Now do the ManEaters of Tsavo aka The Ghost and the Darkness.

  • @bobsmith-qz2pv
    @bobsmith-qz2pv 3 года назад +8

    There is no such thing as monsters only humans

  • @shawnthompson2303
    @shawnthompson2303 3 года назад +5

    "Clever girl...."

  • @hajibrownnfnit8359
    @hajibrownnfnit8359 Год назад +2

    The Title was when the devil came to India ; I was expecting a Documentary about the British and the Royals.

  • @bc9629
    @bc9629 Год назад +1

    Even elephants hold grudges believe or not ! There were so many stories from my village where some men have harrassed their elephants to carry heavy logs and one fine day when the elephant got loose , it literally smashed only that particular to death . It's crazy how some of these animals can have such a grudge

  • @TheScaryTruthCatalyst
    @TheScaryTruthCatalyst 2 года назад +4

    This narration is excellent. I couldn't stop listening. Great work!

  • @assumptionisthemotherofall2402
    @assumptionisthemotherofall2402 3 года назад +5

    Damn and I thought the “Ghost and the Darkness “ were bad ass

    • @akashsuresh1369
      @akashsuresh1369 3 года назад +2

      You have yet to hear the stories of other man eaters in India.

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 3 года назад +2

      @@akashsuresh1369 Yep, the Tsavo lions were amateurs

    • @akashsuresh1369
      @akashsuresh1369 3 года назад

      @@johnmead8437 i lived in a place in south india called Wayanad. (Kenneth Anderson killed a Maneater there). I got off the place and was in Bangalore. 6 months after I left to Blore.. a Maneater killed 2 people there. The second victim close to a road way between a tea plantation. I once walked all alone on that road broad daylight and no vehicles to help me.

  • @seanmeaney6154
    @seanmeaney6154 2 года назад +3

    I find Tigers beautifully frightening. If that makes sense 🤔... anyway, on land they are close to a perfect killing machine. I find them fascinating

  • @kaz9781
    @kaz9781 11 месяцев назад +1

    I've read about this , apparently this tigress had 2 broken canines and could not hunt her normal prey causing her to resort to humans which were far easier to hunt and kill , this is probably what turned her into a man eater, tigers are great predators and must be respected but for one to actively prey on humans is almost unheard of , and most attacks happen due to human negligence, not actual predation

  • @r.h.6249
    @r.h.6249 2 года назад +2

    Its ironic that now in India ne of the most famous and biggest tiger reserves national park is named after Jim Corbett who used to hunt them