Sunday, July 7, 2013

Establishing food regimes in the central Himalayas

Nehru Memorial Museum and Library
cordially invites you to a Weekly Seminar


at 3.00 pm on Tuesday, 9 July, 2013
in the Seminar Room, First Floor, Library Building

on

‘Katyuris of Uttarakhand:
Establishing food regimes in the
central Himalayas from pre-history to circa.14CE’

by

Dr. Vasudha Pande,
                                 Fellow, NMML

Abstract:
Katyuris are the much celebrated Kings of Uttarakhand. The narrative of the Katyuri state marks the shift from pre-history to history --- with copper plates, inscriptions, architectural works and folklore. Despite the great interest expressed in the Katyuri state system, little attention is paid to the most momentous contribution of the Katyuris—the shift to settled, terraced cultivation and the emergence of petty peasant production.  Since Uttarakhand as defined today is a specific construct, the presentation will not restrict itself to this geographical unit. It will explore regions contiguous with present day Uttarakhand –Nepal in the east, Tarai in the south, Tibet in the north and Himachal in the west. Articulated in terms of river valley systems it will extend from the Karnali in the east to Kali, to Ganga, to Yamuna up to Sutlej in the west. By spreading the net wide, we hope to document the gradual, piecemeal change in terms of resource utilization by hunter gatherers, fishing communities, pastoral groups, and those practicing trans-humance in this part of the Himalayan mountains.
This paper will try to explain the Katyuri period, roughly defined from the 9th-14th CE as a momentous conjuncture which successfully stitched together the various food production systems then prevalent in the Central Himalayas. This brought about an increase in population and productivity. The emergence of agriculture is transformative and the result of many cumulative changes in production strategies, technology, demography, and adaptation to specific niches. How did this happen, what precipitated this transition? The Himalayas provide a wide variety of habitats across different altitudinal zones, what kinds of adaptive strategies did humans adopt in this landscape? How did these then interact with each other?

Speaker:
Dr. Vasudha Pande has been teaching at the Lady Shri Ram College for Women since 1987.  Se has worked on Kumaon and has witten on different aspects of the history of the region, which includes a study of the colonial architectural heritage of Nainital.  She has also written on Family and Law in colonial Kumaon. She is currently Fellow, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library researching on Environmental History of Uttarakhand.

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