English, asked by moosamir777351, 5 months ago

character sketch if jim corbette in lalaji​

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Answered by bhandarepranay05
2

Answer:

जिम कॉर्बेट (इ.स. १८७५-इ.स. १९५५) हे नरभक्षक वाघ व त्यांच्या शिकारींच्या हकीकती लिहिणारे आयरिश वंशाचे हिंदुस्थानात जन्मलेले एक विश्वविख्यात शिकारी व लेखक होते. एकूण १९ वाघ आणि १४ बिबट्यांची शिकार जिम यांनी केली.

Jim Corbett ( 1875 - 1955 ) was a world-renowned Indian-born hunter and writer of Irish descent who wrote the facts about man-eating tigers and their prey. A total of 19 tigers and 14 leopards were hunted by Jim.

Edward James "Jim" Corbett was born on July 25 , CE 1875 on the Himalayan valley of the mountain ranges of kumauem near Nainital (the current Uttarakhand state), was here. He was the eighth child of Christopher and Mary Jane Corbett. Before Jim was born, his father, Christopher, got a job as a postmaster in Nainital. He also had a house at Kaladhungi. All the families stayed there for the summer holidays. From an early age, Jim had a fascination with wildlife. Day after day, he hangs on a tree and captures what is happening in the forest with his eyes. This habit benefited him greatly in later life. After his father's untimely death, Jim's older brother, Tom, got a job at a post office in Nainital, and the whole family stayed there.

Jim received his schooling at the Oak Openings School in Nainital and his higher education at St. Joseph's College. After graduation, Jim got a job in Bengal and Northwestern Railway Punjab.

Jim Corbett, a native hunter, soon realized that the number of natural tigers and other large wildlife in the wild was declining. So they used cameras instead of guns to capture tigers and other wildlife. They only hunted man- eating tigers and leopards . Between 1907 and 1938, they killed dozens of tigers and leopards, killing about 1,500 people. The man-eating tiger of Champawat killed 436 people while the man-eating leopard of Panar killed 400 people. All the books written by Jim about these and other similar cannibals and their other experiences in the jungle resounded around the world. They have been translated into about 27 languages of the world.

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