Digitisation of ORI’s rare manuscripts begins
News, Top Stories

Digitisation of ORI’s rare manuscripts begins

May 17, 2022

Mysore/Mysuru: The first stage of conserving rare and priceless palm leaf scripts and paper manuscripts of many centuries stored at Oriental Research Institute (ORI), governed by the University of Mysore (UoM), has begun.

ORI, established 130 years ago, is a repository of about 70,000 manuscripts that date back to more than 700 years in languages including Sanskrit, Kannada, Tamil and Telugu. It also has 41,000 rare printed and other types of manuscripts. These manuscripts of ancient and mediaeval India are preserved by way of literary works and treatise on various subjects. UoM has signed an MoU (Memorandum of Understanding) with Bengaluru’s Mythic Society for digitisation of manuscripts.

Taking forward the MoU, the digitisation has begun under the leadership of V. Nagaraj, Honorary Secretary, Mythic Society.

As per the MoU, ORI palm-leaf manuscripts  will be cleaned and a regular process for cleaning and preserving them will be put in place while the catalogue of titles that include palm leaf manuscripts, handwritten works and collection of printed works will be made available to the public.

Also, all the palm leaf works and books will be image-scanned and preserved in a safe place, while the images will be put for crowd-sourced text digitisation. The Mythic Society is a 112-year-old institution and has expertise in the conservation and digitisation of palm leaf and paper manuscripts.

Rs. 1 crore project

The estimated cost of the project at ORI is Rs. 1 crore and initial estimates say that it will take about two years to complete the digitisation process. The only and fully extant volume of Kautilya’s Arthashastra that throws light on the polity and statecraft in ancient India, was discovered at ORI in 1905 by scholar Rudrapatna Shamasastry, who published it. Until then, its existence was known only by references in other ancient works.

READ ALSO  101st Annual Convocation of University of Mysore held: Pandemic taught us compassion: CSIR DG

The conservation and digitisation process has begun with over 20 students from the Department of Ancient History and Archaeology and Museology and Department of Sanskrit, Maharaja’s College under the leadership of Dr. Rohitha Eswer, Assistant Professor in the Department. Dr. Jayasimha is the research convener of the project.

Fumigation Chamber

The manuscripts are first cleaned with brushes and placed in a fumigation chamber to improve longevity of these manuscripts. The ORI is the first institute in South India to adopt this technology before digitisation. For fumigation, the manuscripts will be placed inside the Fumigation Chamber to make them free from dust and termites. At one time, around 20-25 manuscripts could be fumigated. With this simple technology, these manuscripts may be preserved for another 400-500 years.

Lemon grass oil application

Later, lemon grass (Cymbopogon citratus) oil is applied to the fumigated manuscripts and dried for some time. Lemon grass oil has a mild citrus flavour with a sweetish taste. It does not contain any residues and due to its smell, moths and insects stay away. The oil also smoothens the manuscripts to ensure longevity.

The next process involves wrapping the manuscripts in a red cotton cloth before digitisation. After the manuscripts dry following lemon grass oil application, starch content is completely removed from the red cloth to ensure that there is no moisture. The digitisation process is taken up after this.

Image-scanning and uploading

The manuscripts are image-scanned with a flat-bed scanner and the photocopy machine is not used. Palm leaf works will be identified and their unicode digitisation will be undertaken with the help of manuscript readers. The scanned copies are then converted to formats including PDF, jpeg and PNG and uploaded on the website. ORI will have an exclusive and independent portal. “Now ORI gets a steady stream of researchers from India and all over the world to study the rare manuscripts. Once the digitisation process is complete, research scholars can refer to the catalogued manuscripts on the portal and glean information,” ORI Director Dr. Ramapriya told Star of Mysore.

ONE COMMENT ON THIS POST To “Digitisation of ORI’s rare manuscripts begins”

  1. Viswanath says:

    Congratulations, Great Start for much awaited important project under the patronage of Mythic Society led by V Nagaraj

ABOUT

Mysuru’s favorite and largest circulated English evening daily has kept the citizens of Mysuru informed and entertained since 1978. Over the past 45 years, Star of Mysore has been the newspaper that Mysureans reach for every evening to know about the happenings in Mysuru city. The newspaper has feature rich articles and dedicated pages targeted at readers across the demographic spectrum of Mysuru city. With a readership of over 2,50,000 Star of Mysore has been the best connection between it’s readers and their leaders; between advertisers and customers; between Mysuru and Mysureans.

CONTACT

Academy News Papers Private Limited, Publishers, Star of Mysore & Mysuru Mithra, 15-C, Industrial ‘A’ Layout, Bannimantap, Mysuru-570015. Phone no. – 0821 249 6520

To advertise on Star of Mysore, email us at

Online Edition: [email protected]
Print Editon: [email protected]
For News/Press Release: [email protected]