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Mapping empire: A century of maps at Mumbai's Asiatic Society

Mapped, a new exhibition at the Asiatic Society of Mumbai, provides a visceral sense of how cartography helped make colonial empires.

May 07, 2023 / 14:15 IST
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Map of U.P and Bihar made from the Great Trigonometrical Series
Map of UP and Bihar, made from the Great Trigonometrical Series.

What did the first nearly accurate map of India look like? How did the British set about painstakingly mapping this massive country even as they coveted and claimed large tracts of it as their own? What was the scale of this imperial project? One might have a fair idea of how all of this happened — thanks to John Keay, who wrote The Great Arc all those years ago — but Mapped, a new exhibition at the Asiatic Society of Mumbai, provides a deeper, more visceral sense of how cartography helped make colonial empires.

Curated by heritage management company Past Perfect, the exhibition unfurls a century of surveys undertaken by the British, including, of course, The Great Trignometric Survey (GTS), the numerous marine and eventually revenue and other administrative surveys.

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44E Gulf of Cambay triangulated: A Marine Survey Map of the Gulf of Kutch.

An entire story involving conquest, power play, and espionage plays out through the maps that belong to the Asiatic Library’s collection and are part of a larger Cartographic Conservation project that kicked off in 2019, says Deepti Anand, co-founder of Past Perfect. And it all started, in a way, with James Renell, who made the first nearly accurate map of India in 1788.