List of individual elephants


The following is a list of culturally or scientifically notable elephants.

Actors

Fame by proxy to owner

Wild elephants

Working elephants

Circus elephants

Carrying elephants

Trained/rescue elephants (kumki)

War elephants

Notorious elephants

  • Arikomban, a rogue elephant in Kerala; tranquillized by the Kerala wildlife department and herded into a truck using four kumki elephants and sent to the Periyar Tiger Reserve on 29 April 2023.
  • Black Diamond, Indian elephant with Al G. Barnes Circus; killed four people and was subsequently shot dead in 1929.
  • Dhurbe, wild elephant responsible for the deaths of at least 15 people; considered at large as of September 2025 although reportedly the same elephant was fitted with a radiocollar in Chitwan National Park.
  • Kolakolli, Indian rogue elephant accused of killing 12 people in and around Peppara over a span of seven to eight years; caught and died in captivity in 2006.
  • Mary, was a circus elephant who was executed on 13 September 1916 in Erwin, Tennessee. She was hanged by a railroad derrick car at the Clinchfield Railroad yard. This is the only known elephant hanging in history. Mary, who toured with the Sparks World Famous Shows circus, killed her inexperienced keeper, Walter "Red" Eldridge, on 12 September 1916 during a circus parade in nearby Kingsport, Tennessee.
  • Osama (or Usama) bin Laden – refers to at least three different killer elephants: the first was a rogue elephant which killed at least 27 people in India from 2004 until being shot dead in 2006. The second, blamed for killing 11 people, was killed in 2008. The last, also known as "Laden", killed 5 people before being caught and dying in captivity in 2019 from undisclosed causes.
  • Padayappa, a wild elephant in Munnar known for its frequent incursions into residential areas.
  • Rajje, performing elephant that escaped into the streets of Lansing, Michigan, and was killed by gunfire.
  • Topsy, elephant who, in 1902, while with the Forepaugh Circus, killed a spectator who burned her trunk with a lit cigar. In 1903, the owners of Coney Island's Luna Park where she ended up claimed they could no longer keep her, culling her with poison, electrocution, and strangling. The Edison Manufacturing movie company shot a film of the execution called Electrocuting an Elephant.
  • Tyke, circus elephant who, on 20 August 1994, in Honolulu, Hawaii, killed her trainer Allen Campbell and seriously injured her groomer, Dallas Beckwith, during a Circus International performance before hundreds of horrified spectators. Tyke then bolted from the arena and ran through downtown streets of Kakaako for more than 30 minutes. Police fired 86 shots at Tyke, who eventually collapsed from the wounds and died.

Temple elephants

Zoo elephants

Other

  • Motola, an Asian elephant in Thailand who stepped on a landmine in 1999; survived and walked on three legs for a number of years until she was fitted with a prosthetic foot.
  • Motty, only confirmed Asian/African hybrid elephant; survived for just 10 days at the Chester Zoo in England.
  • Queenie, noted in the late 1950s and early 1960s for waterskiing for entertainment in the United States.
  • Tuffi, young female elephant who fell from Wuppertal's suspended monorail into the river Wupper in Germany on 21 July 1950; she survived the fall.

Longevity claims

  • Kottoor Soman, retired kumki born circa 1942, was incorrectly represented to be the oldest-living elephant in the world in 2020. In fact, the longest-known lived elephant in the world at the time was Vatsala, a female elephant who lived in the Panna Tiger Reserve in Madhya Pradesh, India. Vatsala died on 9 July 2025, believed to be at least 100 years old.
  • Yoyo, African elephant resident of the Barcelona Zoo, who, at her death in 2024 at 54 years of age, was purported to be the longest-living captive African elephant.