Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation

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Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation

Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation

@midf_org

Building India's unified, Unicode-compliant knowledge infrastructure for manuscripts and inscriptions

India Se unió Ocak 2026
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Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation
In a single endowed village, the Kakatiyas established: Free hospital & maternity care Public college — open to all Feeding house serving every caste Daughters could inherit land. By law. Not an exception. Standard policy. In 13th-century India.
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Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation
A stone pillar in Andhra Pradesh, carved in AD 1261, recorded something extraordinary. The Malkapuram Inscription — issued under the Kakatiya dynasty — wasn't just a land grant. It was a governance model. A welfare system. Built into stone.
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Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation
Today, the work of conservation requires sovereign digital infrastructure. In Dharwad, a five-member unit named Pratnakīrti—led by Keyur Karagudari, the last disciple of the late epigraphist Dr. Shrinivas Ritti—is digitizing Epigraphia Indica into an AI-ready repository.
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Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation
Look at what was moving through this port: Sandalwood. Pearls. Rose water. Ivory. Silk. Coral. Pepper. Copper. Medieval India wasn't participating in global trade. It was anchoring it.
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Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation
India had free trade zones. In the 13th century. Written in stone. In 1244 CE, a king carved what may be the world's earliest maritime trade protection law onto a temple pillar in Andhra Pradesh.
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Manuscripts & Inscriptions Digitization Foundation
In the 7th century CE, a king carved music onto a rock. Not a song. Actual notation — seven ragas, in Sanskrit, chiseled into a hillside in Tamil Nadu. It predates the next major treatise on Indian music by six centuries. Most people have never heard of it.
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