Tipu’s Tiger: Historical and present significance
Tipu’s Tiger, the mechanical musical toy constructed for the Tipu Sultan, ruler of Mysore in South India from 1782-1799, has fascinated humanity for centuries, proving to be quite a controversial artefact.
Although many suggestions have been put forward, the Tiger remains cryptic; bearing no inscription or credible origin. When operated, the Tiger exposes the inner pipe organ as the twinned growls and groans of beast and man sound out of the object.
It is widely thought that the commission was inspired by the death of Briton, Hugh Munro; killed by a tiger in 1792, and whose father was a division commander during a battle in the Second Anglo-Mysore War, in which Tipu Sultan’s father was defeated. So not only a means by which to amuse his morbid humour, the Tiger can be ‘seen to represent symbolic retribution for this defeat’, and Tipu Sultan’s 'metaphorical expression of his political ambitions’ to triumph over the position of the British in India. In fact, 'Tiger of Mysore’ was his self proclaimed title, and according to the V&A, Tipu Sultan had quite a thing for tigers; 'tigers and symbols adorned most of his possessions…hand weapons decorated with gold tiger heads…live tigers were kept in the city and there were stories of prisoners thrown into the tiger pits.’
Interestingly, his morbid fantasy as an explanation for the nature of the toy is supported by his own treatment of his British war prisoners between 1780-1784. He kept them imprisoned, subjecting them to humiliating and excruciating circumcisions; a rarity for Europeans and more commonly practised on Islam converts. Not that forced conversion seemed to be his ploy, rather Tipu Sultan’s belittling of British manhood is interpreted as a statement of personal violence.
For the ruler of Mysore, the Tiger mauling the man was a gruesome amusement, a symbol of his fantasies of victory; and being right in the midst of British extension of dominion in India, and inevitably, an arch enemy of and great threat to the East India Company, which was engaged in this enterprise, war between the company and the Mysore establishment became unavoidable. However, as the British killed him and stormed his palace, during the Siege of Seringapatam in 1799, Tipu Sultan’s beloved Tiger acquired new meanings, especially in Britain where it was brought back as plunder, becoming a museum artefact. It went on display in London’s East India House in 1808, where it remained until its transfer to the V&A in 1879.
The Tiger holds many different meanings for different people to this day. For some people in India now, British oppression and imperialism is associated with the Tiger, and Tipu is seen as a kind of freedom fighter or nationalist. And curiously, it has become a favourite exhibit of the museum in Britian; the bloodthirsty tiger, hungry to tear apart the European man - a symbol of hope of victory for India. 'It’s either a really twisted form of nationalism, or just goes to show you how powerful our love of gruesome curiosities really is.’
http://ridiculouslyinteresting.com/2013/07/23/tipus-tiger/
http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/tipus-tiger
http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/t/tippoos-tiger/