Doji bara famine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Map of India (1765) shows the Northern Circars, Hyderabad (Nizam), Maratha Kingdom, Gujarat, and Marwar (Southern Rajputana), all affected by the Doji bara famine.
Map of India (1765) shows the Northern Circars, Hyderabad (Nizam), Maratha Kingdom, Gujarat, and Marwar (Southern Rajputana), all affected by the Doji bara famine.

The Doji bara famine (or Skull famine) of 1791-92 in South Asia was brought on by a major El Niño event lasting from 1789 CE to 1795 CE and producing prolonged droughts.[1] The El Niño event, recorded by William Roxburgh, a surgeon with the British East India Company, in a series of pioneering meteorological observations, caused the failure of the South Asian monsoon for four consecutive years starting in 1789.[2]

The resulting famine, which was severe, caused widespread mortality in Hyderabad, Southern Maratha Kingdom, Deccan, Gujarat, and Marwar (then all ruled by Indian rulers).[3] In regions like the Madras Presidency (governed by the East India Company), where the famine was less severe,[3] and where records were kept, half the population perished in some districts, such as in the Northern Circars.[4] In other areas, such as Bijapur, although no records were kept, both the famine and the year 1791 came to be known in folklore as the Doji bora or the "skull famine," on account, it was said, of the ground being "covered with the skulls of the unburied dead."[4] As in the Chalisa famine of a decade earlier, many areas were depopulated from death or migration. It is thought that a total of 11 million people may have died during the years 1789–1792 as a result of starvation or accompanying epidemics of disease.[5]

[edit] Notes

[edit] References

[edit] See also