Great Game and Mapping of The Himalayas
Great Game and Mapping of The Himalayas
Great Game and Mapping of The Himalayas
Holy Spies
&
Clandestine
mapping of
Himalayas
Threat
Threat
There remained a
singular problem with
this plan: Napoleon had
no idea of the geography
of India. For that matter,
the British realized,
neither did they.
More than two centuries
of involvement in the
nation of India hadnt
garnered any knowledge
of the internal geography
of the landscape; the
British had previously
confined themselves to
Training
Holy Spies
KinthupaSikkimese
punditexploredTibet
inthelate19th
century
Holy Spies
Intelligence Equipment
Special sextants hidden in secret
compartments of boxes.
Thermometers hidden in walking sticks.
Disguised compasses.
A prayer wheel that the pundit could
pretend to be praying with, caused other
travellers to politely ignore them but the
prayer wheel, they found, was never
searched or examined so could contain all
the notes to record the mission in a long
sheet of paper.
Liquid mercury carried in a cowrie shell to
allow the creation of a level when poured
into a wooden bowl. The level was needed
to establish certain trigonometric readings
with their secret theodolites.
Perhaps at times they would have
memorised their observations as mantras,
Intelligence Equipment
Concealed pockets were added to the Pundit's
clothing False bottoms, in which the sextants
could be hidden, were built into the chests
which most native travellers carried.
The Pundits had been trained to march at
even and exact pace and calculate distance
accordingly, over all terrain. They would count
their paces all day in order to determine
distance travelled.
To count them,
they used what
looked like
aBuddhist
rosary, called
amala, but
instead of the
usual 108 beads
had 100, every
tenth being
Achievements
Nain Singh located the altitude of Lhasa, eastern extremity of Lake
Pangong, provided additional details of the Tibetan goldfields,
mapped a large number of new lakes and rivers, and confirmed the
existence of a chain of snow peaks to the north of the Tsangpo. More
information on the course of this river through Tibet had been
discovered. The route through Tawang to Assam had been charted
for the first time.
1865-66 :Kathmandu Lhasa
Mansarovar Lake.
1867 :Origin of Sutlej and Indus
rivers, and Thok Jalung (Tibet).
1870 :Douglas Forsyths First
Yarkand Kashgar Mission.
1873 :Douglas Forsyths Second
Yarkand Kashgar Mission.
1874-75 :Leh Lhasa Tawang
(Assam).
For Singh, this turned out to be a journey of 2,500 miles (4,000 kilometres),
or about 2.5 million paces. By the time he returned to India, he had surveyed
some 1,200 miles, and
Recognition
Sir Clements Markham, then president of the Royal Geographical Society,
praised Singh as the greatest scientific traveller that India has produced. He
was awarded the RGS Patrons Medal and was hailed as a hero in scientific
circles in Britain and India. He said this was as all fine and well, but he would
have preferred a gold watch to replace the one stolen by a Pathan merchant.
In 1868, Nain Singh was presented with an inscribedgold
chronometer/watchby theRoyal Geographic Society(RGS), London.
In 1876, Nain Singhs achievements were announced in the Geographical
Magzine.
In 1877, Nain Singh was awarded with the Victoria / Patrons Gold Medal by
theRoyal Geographic Society (RGS), London.
In 1877, Nain Singh was presented with an inscribedgold
chronometer/watchby theSociety of Geographers of Paris.
In 1877, the British government awarded him with the title ofCompanion of
the Indian Empire(C.I.E.)!
In 1877, the British government honoured him with a grant of a village
inRohilkhand (Bareilly)asJagir, and 1000 rupees inrevenue.
On 27th June 2004, anIndian postage stampfeaturing Nain Singh was issued
commemorating his role in theGreat Trigonometrical Surveyby
theIndiangovernment,after about 139 years since his achievement!
Aftermath
At least two pundits never returned, whilst a third was
sold into slavery, although he eventually escaped. In all,
their clandestine journeys were to provide a wealth of
geographical intelligence over twenty years which
Montgomerie and his fellow cartographers at Dehra Dun
used to fill in many of the no-go areas on the British maps
of Central Asia.
The arduous work of the pundits continued long after the
death of Montgomerie.
By the time of the final expedition in 1892-93 the pundits
had travelled more than 25,000 miles across a number of
territories including Afghanistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim,
Burma, Chinese Turkestan and Tibet.
Their successes in Tibet inspired many non-native
explorers, who travelled from Britain, Russia and
References
Panditon ka pandit :Nain Singh Rawat ,National BookTrust
Asia ki Peeth Par: Pandit Nain Singh Rawated. Uma Bhatt &
Shekhar Pathak, Naini Tal, 2006
Peter Hopkirk,Trespassers on the Roof of the World
Jules Stewart, Spying for the Raj: The Pundits and the Mapping
of the Himalaya
Peter Hopkirk, The Great Game: On Secret Service in High Asia,
OUP
Matthew Edney ,Mapping an Empire - The Geographical Construction
of British India, 1765-1843
Report of a Route-Survey Made by Pundit__, from Nepal to Lhasa, and
Thence Through the Upper Valley of the Brahmaputra to Its Source T.G.
MontgomerieandPunditJournal of the Royal Geographical Society of
LondonVol.38(1868),pp.129-219
Geographical Magazine, Spies in monks clothing , September
2011.