2nd Obaid Siddiqi Lecture | Archives@NCBS and NLSIU | 16 July 2026
Conference Hall (Ground Floor), Training Centre, NLSIU
Registration here.
Thursday, July 16, 2026, 5:30 pm
Open to the public.
The 2nd Obaid Siddiqui Lecture of 2026 will be hosted at NLSIU, Bengaluru in collaboration with Archives at NCBS.
Please carry a government-issued ID when you arrive at the NLS Main Gate.
Walking the Dotted Line: Mapping Borders Before the Nation
Dr. Samira Sheikh, Obaid Siddiqi Chair in the History and Culture of Science, 2025-26
Thursday, July 16, 2026, 5.30pm
Conference Hall (Ground Floor), Training Centre, National Law School
Indian surveyors walked the territories they mapped, armed with precise strides and bamboo rods. Astronomers measured locations in the sky and on land. Seafarers plotted rhumb lines between ports and along coasts. But few marked political boundaries on their maps. This second lecture explores what it meant when such boundaries began to appear in Indian cartography. Do pioneering mapmaker Sadanand’s dotted lines in 1780 mark a moment when mapping became newly legal, administrative, and extractive?
About the Speaker
Dr Samira Sheikh is a historian of South Asia and Associate Professor of History at Vanderbilt University. She is currently the Fifth Obaid Siddiqi Chair at the Archives at NCBS. Her research focuses on early modern and modern western India, with particular attention to Gujarat, riverine and coastal histories, mapping, and the social worlds of trade, labour, and governance. She is the author of Forging a Region: Sultans, Traders, and Pilgrims in Gujarat, 1200–1500 and is currently working on two book projects on mapping and mapmaking in South Asia. Her work combines archival research with spatial and digital methods to rethink how Indian spaces were historically known and made.
More information please visit Obaid Siddiqui Lectures 2026.