
Location
Located in the Bay of Bengal,
this group of 572 islands lies
193 km away from Cape Negrais in
Myanmar, 1255 km from Calcutta,
and 1190 km from Chennai. The
two important groups of islets
are Ritchie's Archipelago and
Labyrinth Islands. The Nicobar
Islands are located to the south
of the Andamans, 121 km from the
Little Andaman Island. Of the
total 572 islands, only 36
islands are inhabited. The
Islands are located between the
latitudes 6° to 14° North and
longitudes 92° to 94° East.
Physical Features
The Andaman and Nicobar Islands
comprise around 572 islands
formed by a submarine mountain
range, which separates the Bay
of Bengal from the Andaman Sea.
The islands attain maximum
altitude at Saddle Peak (730 m),
formed mainly of limestone,
sandstone, and clay.
Climate
The islands have a tropical
climate. There is medium to
heavy rain during the monsoon,
in the months from May to mid
September and November to mid
December. There is no extreme
climate except rains and
tropical storms in late summer
often cause heavy damage.
Flora
and Fauna
The canopied rain forests of the
islands harbor 3,000 species of
plants including mangroves,
epiphytes (130 ferns, 100
orchids), palms, woody climbers,
timbers (teak, mahogany, Andaman
paduk) and a wide variety of
tropical fruits. Marine fauna is
diverse including a wide variety
of tropical fish and coral.
Considering the diversity and
uniqueness of fauna and flora
and the fragile nature of the
eco-system here, 96
sanctuaries
spread over 466.218 sq km and
nine National Parks spread over
1153.938 sq km have been
notified on these islands.
History
Little is known historically
about Andaman and Nicobar, a
cluster of around 572 islands of
which less than 50 are
populated, stretching from the
southern tip of Burma all the
way down south till Sumatra in
Indonesia. It is believed that
Marco Polo was among the first
from the West to set foot on one
of the islands. Kanhoji Angre, a
Maratha admiral had his base on
the island in the early 18th
century. From there, he attacked
passing Portuguese, Dutch and
English merchant vessels on
their way to or from their
various Asian colonies. In 1713,
his navy even succeeded in
capturing the yacht of the
British Governor of Bombay.
Despite many efforts by the
British and later a joint
military force of British and
Portuguese naval forces, Kanhoji
Angre was never defeated. He
died in 1729.
The British established their
first colony in the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands in 1789, which
was abandoned in 1796. The
British finally annexed the
islands in the 19th century
adding them to their empire.
They turned it into a penal
colony for Indian freedom
fighters. The construction of
the infamous Cellular Jail was
completed in 1908. Hundreds of
anti-British Indians were
tortured to death or simply
executed here. With the Second
World War, Japanese troops
occupied the islands and the
local tribes initiated guerrilla
activities to drive them out.
When India achieved independence
in 1947, the Andaman and Nicobar
Islands were incorporated into
the Indian Union.
PEOPLE
Ethnicity
Due to consistent emphasis of
the government on progress and
its encouragement to the
mainlanders to settle there has
resulted in the local tribes
becoming a minority group in
their own land.
The indigenous tribes are
distinguished in two groups: the
Onge, Sentinelese, Jarawa and
Andamanese of Negroid descent
living on the Andaman Islands
and the Shompen and Nicobarese
of Mongoloid descent living in
the Nicobar Islands. Most of the
tribes are on the verge of
extinction. This sad destiny
will most likely hit the
Andamanese tribe first since
their number is as low as
thirty. The Sentinelese is the
least studied tribe still living
in isolation on the North
Sentinel Island. Their number is
estimated at 250. Outsiders
attempting to make contact with
them are driven away with bows
and arrows. They continue to
maintain a unique lifestyle
living in harmony with nature
just as they have done for
thousands of years.
Arts
and Crafts
The main crafts of the Andaman &
Nicobar Islands include shell
and exotic woods crafted for the
tourists, palm mats, and
beautiful natural shells. Due to
the fear of over exploitation of
the Islands' natural resources,
trade of some products is now
banned.
Attire
Being far removed from the
present civilization, the
aboriginal people did not wear
any clothes till recently. The
Sentinelese do not wear anything
even now while the Jarawas use
only adornments of bark and
shell, like necklaces, arm
bands, waist bands etc. The
Shompens are semi nomadic and
cover their body below the waist
only. The people of Car Nicobar
Island have totally given up the
traditional dress of tassel or
coconut leaf petticoat and now
wear modern clothes. The Onges
survived without dress for
centuries but have gradually
adapted to the dress code of the
mainland. Use of traditional
items of adornment like
necklaces made of shell,
waistbands and headbands of bark
fiber are now restricted to
ceremonial occasions.
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