Mysore: Difference between revisions
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== Taxidermy in Mysore == | == Taxidermy in Mysore == | ||
Van Ingen and Van Ingen, based in Mysore was a leading taxidermy company . According to the Winter 2009 | Van Ingen and Van Ingen, based in Mysore was a leading taxidermy company . According to the Winter 2009 Newsletter of [http://www.bl.uk/supportus/friends.html Friends Of The British Library], which introduces a proposed talk by Dr Pat A Morris author of [http://www.anglebooks.com/product.php/19630/van-ingen---van-ingen--artists-in-taxidermy-/8659a03469ff54fd0ec01f55b545f ''Van Ingen and Van Ingen: Artists in Taxidermy''], “This factory once employed 150 people, processing 400 tigers and 600 leopards each year” The factory operated from about 1900. It ceased to trade in 1990s but business had been in decline since the 1960s due to the laws restricting the hunting of endangered species – which included tigers. Further information can be found in the Wikipedia article [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_Ingen_%26_Van_Ingen Van Ingen & Van Ingen]. | ||
== External links == | == External links == |
Revision as of 08:49, 7 January 2010
Mysore | |
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[[Image:|250px| ]] | |
Presidency: Madras | |
Coordinates: | 12.3033°N, 76.645866°E |
Altitude: | 763 m (2,503 ft) |
Present Day Details | |
Place Name: | Mysore |
State/Province: | Karnataka |
Country: | India |
Transport links | |
Mysore-Arsikere Railway Mysore-Nanjangud Railway Mysore State Railway |
"Mysore, capital of the state of Mysore, India, 10 miles S.W. of Seringapatam on the Mysore State Railway."
Taxidermy in Mysore
Van Ingen and Van Ingen, based in Mysore was a leading taxidermy company . According to the Winter 2009 Newsletter of Friends Of The British Library, which introduces a proposed talk by Dr Pat A Morris author of Van Ingen and Van Ingen: Artists in Taxidermy, “This factory once employed 150 people, processing 400 tigers and 600 leopards each year” The factory operated from about 1900. It ceased to trade in 1990s but business had been in decline since the 1960s due to the laws restricting the hunting of endangered species – which included tigers. Further information can be found in the Wikipedia article Van Ingen & Van Ingen.
External links
"Mysore, India (Capital)" Love to Know 1911.
"Mysore" Wikipedia.