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The Nawab of Avadh's hunting cheetahs and their caretakers

Emily Eden1844

Asian Art Museum

Asian Art Museum
San Francisco, United States

In the description on the reverse side of this print, Emily Eden identified as leopards the two animals she portrayed. In fact,
they were cheetahs, animals that had long been trained for use in royal hunts. According to Eden, the ruler (nawab) of Avadh had sent these cheetahs and their attendants to accompany her brother, Lord Auckland, then the Governor-General of India, on a procession.
As the use of the rifle in South Asia became increasingly popular in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, these once-prized hunting animals themselves became the object of hunts; in fact, they were hunted to extinction in this region. In 1947 the last three cheetahs in India were shot by a maharaja.

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  • Title: The Nawab of Avadh's hunting cheetahs and their caretakers
  • Creator: Emily Eden (British, 1797 - 1869) (Artist),J. Dickenson and Son (British) (Publisher),Lowes Cato Dickenson (British, 1819 - 1908) (Printer)
  • Date Created: 1844
  • Physical Dimensions: H. 22 in x W. 17 1/2 in, H. 55.9 cm x W. 44.4 cm
  • Rights: Public Domain
  • Medium: Chromolithograph, hand painted on paper with printed commentary text on the reverse
  • Credit Line: Asian Art Museum, Gift of the Kapany Collection, 1998.63.15
Asian Art Museum

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