Tigers

Current Status: Endangered

China and Tibet circa 1283

Marco Polo (Henry Yule and Henri Cordier 3d Edition), The Travels of Marco Polo, 1903, 1920, Chapter XLIV: Concerning the Province and City of Sindafu, Chapter XLV: Concerning the Province of Tebet.

When you leave this city you travel for five days across a country of plains and valleys, finding plenty of villages and hamlets, and the people of which live by husbandry. There are numbers of wild beasts, lions [tigers*], and bears, and such like.

….

In this region you find quantities of canes, full three palms in girth and fifteen paces in length …. And let me tell you that merchants and other travellers through that country are wont at nightfall to gather these canes and make fires of them; for as they burn they make such loud reports that the lions [tigers] and bears and other wild beasts are greatly frightened, and make off as fast as possible; in fact nothing will induce them to come nigh a fire of that sort. So you see the travellers make those fires to protect themselves and their cattle from the wild beasts which have so greatly multiplied since the devastation of the country. And ’tis this great multiplication of the wild beasts that prevents the country from being reoccupied. In fact but for the help of these canes, which make such a noise in burning that the beasts are terrified and kept at a distance, no one would be able even to travel through the land.

I will tell you how it is that the canes make such a noise…. After they have been awhile burning they burst asunder, and this makes such a loud report that you might hear it ten miles off.

[*Marco Polo “lions” are probably tigers. Steven G. Haw, Some Problematic Animals in Marco Polo’s Description of the World, University of Oxford, 2019, chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/334560632.pdf accessed 11/30/2022.]

**********

Thailand 1822

Finlayson, George, The Mission to Siam, and Hué the Capital of Cochin China, in the Years 1821-2, John Murray, London, 1826, p. 263.

The Royal Tiger is extremely common in the interior parts of the country. Their bones, as well as skins, constitute a considerable article of commerce with China; and, from the very great numbers in which they are exposed for sale, we may infer their frequency…. The Black Tiger is by no means rare. Both this and the former, I consider smaller than the Bengal Tiger.

**********

India [Salsette Island] circa 1849

Anna Harriette Leonowens, Life and Travel in India, Henry T. Coates & Co., Philadelphia, 1897, p. 54.

At another small village, named Viarè, we came upon what seemed a jungle, open in some parts and in others densely thick, abounding in hyenas, tigers, panthers, and the wild-boar; passing through this with anything but pleasurable feelings, we reached Toolsey….