Shikargah
Shikargah (Hindi: शिकारगाह śikārgāh), from Persian shikārgāh meaning shikār hunting + gāh ground, is often described as a hunting ground where 'qamargah' or encircling of game occurs, an overtone of war exercise performed within a controlled arena of flora and fauna to create easier shooting and camping for hunting party.
.jpg.webp)
Mughals evolved it in India from their hunting traditions of Central Asia. On such occasions unresolved matters of courts were settled which included conspiration and preparation for mutinying, raising of invasion forces.[1]


British continued to entertain their dignitaries with tiger hunts at these Shikargah.
.JPG.webp)
Jim Corbett National Park established in 1932 was first Shikargah among five national parks during British India, by banning hunting through Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972 India preserved its Shikargahs. Today it boasts 104 national parks, 551 Wildlife Sanctuaries, 131 Marine Protected Areas, 18 Biosphere Reserves, 88 Conservation Reserves and 127 Community Reserves, covering a total of 1,65,088.57 sq km. In total, there are 870 Protected Areas which make 5.06% of the geographical area of the country.[3]
Chronicled Shikargah
Terrorizing wild beasts were often tamed by Mughals who considered themselves as protectors of people, sources record over seventy shikargahs situated in mountainous forests, deserts, Indo-Gangetic floodplains, rocky outcrops, and coastlands.[4]
- Agra Shikargah, Uttar Pradesh [lower-alpha 1] [lower-alpha 2]
- Ajmer Ana Sagar Lake, Nur Chashma Shikargah, Rajasthan [lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 4]
- Burhanpur Bagh-i Zaynabad Shikargah, Madhya Pradesh [lower-alpha 5]
- Hissar-i-Firuza Shikargah, Haryana [lower-alpha 6]
- Narwar Shikargah [lower-alpha 7]
- Pakpattan Shikargah Pakistan [lower-alpha 8]
- Mahemdavad Shikargah Ahmedabad, Gujrat [lower-alpha 9]
- Palam, Delhi Shikargah, New Delhi
- Sheikhupura (Jahangirpur/Jahangirabad) Shikargah, Lahore, Pakistan [lower-alpha 10]
Neglected Shikargah
- Tral Shikargah At the junction of the Wasturwan Mountain and Kherwon surrounding forests and snow-clad peaks. The Aru spring flows down from the Kolahoi glacier beyond Lidderwat while the Sheshnag from glaciers along the great Himalayas. At the union of the streams flowing from the Jehlum is Shikargah. Located at adjoining villages of Koil, Rathsuna, Buchu, Saimu, Kamla, Haerbuchu, Pinglish, Larbal and Chudu.[5]
- Jaunti Shikargah Close to Rohtak Road, Jaunti is surrounded by Chatesar on the north, Garhi Rindhala on the south, Ladpur on the east and Kanonda, Khairpur and Mukundpur in Haryana on the western side was established in 1650 by Shahjahan.[6]

Notes
- Abu’l-Fazl, Ain-i-Akbari, vol. 1, 297 mentions Simawali, Samugarh, Dahra, Jalesar, Rupbas, Bari, Somauli, Alapur, Simawali, Bhatinda, Sunnam, and Bhatnir as favoured shikargahs and manzil-gahs near Agra; The Bayaz-i khwushbu’i, a seventeenth century handbook for Mughal noblemen, mentions Dahra Bagh as a hunting garden where Mughal emperors encamped and hunted on numerous occasions, and which was frequented by Jahangir.
- Mundy, Sketches, pages:37–41, 48–51; Mundy mentions shikargahs in the vicinity of major cities such as Lucknow (37–41), Fatehgarh (48–51), and Belaspore (73). Captain Mundy recorded the above facts during Governor General Henry Hardinge's pre-1857 tennure, the biggest tiger hunt which has not been met since 1911 was done by Henry Hardinge's grandson Lord Hardinge then Viceroy of India (1910-1916), who shot a tiger than measured 11 feet and 6 inches.
- A painting attributed to Nanha portrays Jahangir and Rana Karan of Mewar 1615, at Anasagar c.1623, R316/S.163
- Bailey, ‘Sweet-Smelling Notebook’, pages:132–33 mentions Jahangir hunting regularly in the favored Nur Chashma (Hafiz-Jamal) hunting garden near Ajmer; See Jahangir, Tuzuk, vol. 1, pages:182, 232, 234, vol. 2, pages:75–76. ; Jahangir, Jahangirnama, page:202 mentions Jahangir hunting at Nur-Chasma 38 times between 1613 and 1616.
- Awrangabadi and Ibn Shahnavaz, Ma'asir al-umara, vol. 1, page:158 mentions Shah Jahan hunting lions in shikargah, Burhanpur, 1630. Painting attributed to Daulat, c.1635, the Windsor Padshahnama, f.220b,RCIN 1005025.au.
- Akbar captures his first cheetah in 1560, Hissar Firuza shikargah. Painting by Tulsi and Narayan, c.1590–95. From an Akbarnama manuscript, IS.2:2-1896
- Abu’l-Fazl and Khwaja Nizam al-Din mention Akbar’s early forays into Gujarat to capture wild elephants in mid-1564 in the forests around Narwar and Gwalior a halting place
- Abu’l-Fazl, Akbarnama, vol. 2, page:522 mentions that in 1571 Akbar had a similar spiritual experience at Pakpattan after visiting a Sufi saint; Painting by Miskina with Mansur portrays Akbar hunting in a qamargha ring in Lahore in 1567, c.1586, IS 2:56-1896; by Sarwan, c.1586, IS 2:55–1896. From an Akbarnama manuscript.
- Abu’l-Fazl, Ain-i-Akbari, vol. 2, 248 mentions Mahmud Tughlaq as founder of Mahemdavad Shikargah
- Jahangir, Jahangirnama, page 69;Jahangir, Tuzk-e-Jahangiri, vol. 1, pages:90–91, vol. 2, pages:182 ; Jahangir, Tuzk-e-Jahangiri, pages: 44, 318 ; See also Catherine Asher, Architecture of Mughal India (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), pages:125–27 and 205. In 1607, Jahangir ordered the construction of a hunting tower, the Hiran Minar, dedicated to the memory of his favourite pet antelope which included a gateway, four corner pavilions, and an octagonal baradari pavilion at the end of a causeway in the middle of the large man-made reservoir He also built the village of Jahangirpur and fort by 1620.
References
- Parpia, Shaha. "Reordering Nature: Power Politics in the Mughal Shikargah:International Journal of Islamic Architecture". Research Gate. pp. 39–66. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
- "The problem with India's man-eating tigers". Retrieved 21 November 2019.
- "The National Parks and Wildlife Sanctuaries of India". indianwildlife. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
- Folsom, John; Richards. "The Formulation of Imperial Authority Under Akbar and Jahangir". Cambridge University Press. p. 286.
- "Shikargah Re-opened". Kashmir Life. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
- "Mughal Shikargah falls prey to time". TOI. Retrieved 5 August 2015.