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15 January

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15 January 1784

The Institutional Beginning of Interpreting Ancient Land Ownership in the Subcontinent

The Institutional Beginning of Interpreting Ancient Land Ownership in the Subcontinent

Exactly 242 years ago, on 15 January 1784, the Asiatic Society of Bengal was founded in Calcutta by Sir William Jones. On the same day, the Society convened its first formal meeting. The institution emerged as the earliest organised centre in the subcontinent dedicated to the systematic study of ancient manuscripts, archaeology, and geographical knowledge relating to land ownership and territorial organisation.

In the subcontinent, the concept of land ownership was never confined solely to oral tradition. From ancient and medieval periods onward, land related information was preserved through a variety of written and material sources.

During the eras of Mohenjo-daro, Harappa, and early Taxila, land ownership and registration did not exist in the modern sense of individual title or legal transfer. Nevertheless, land was not without structure or regulation. In the urban centres of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa, land administration functioned under state control. Entire cities were organised through deliberate planning, grid based layouts, standardised measurements, and clearly defined boundaries. Houses, streets, and urban blocks were constructed according to predetermined plans, demonstrating that land distribution and use were governed by administrative systems rather than customary practice. In this period, land was regarded as the property of the state or city, while individuals held rights of use rather than absolute ownership.

In later periods, particularly during the era of Taxila, the state began granting land to religious and educational institutions. These grants were formally recorded on stone inscriptions or copper plates. Such written records of land grants and boundary demarcation formed the earliest foundations of structured land registration, ownership documentation, and systems of transfer in subsequent eras.

In ancient South Asia, whenever a ruler or state authority granted land to an individual, family, religious institution, or administrative body, the decision was accorded legal authority by engraving it on copper plates or stone inscriptions. These records functioned as the equivalent of land registers or title documents of their time, detailing boundaries, ownership rights, and royal seals.

Established on 15 January 1784, the Asiatic Society of Bengal collected these ancient documents, land grants, boundary inscriptions, and local maps and organised them on a scientific basis. Scholars associated with the Society studied, decoded, and compiled land grants recorded on copper plates and stone inscriptions, demonstrating that principles of land ownership, boundary definition, and transfer had existed in written form across the subcontinent for centuries.

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These copper plates and stone inscriptions functioned as the official legal records of ancient societies.They documented land ownership, royal decrees, grants, and judicial decisions, as paper either did not yet exist or was not regarded as durable or reliable.Simply put:They were the registries, land records, and formal government documents of their time.

This structured body of geographical and historical knowledge subsequently provided the intellectual foundation for scientific survey initiatives, most notably the Great Trigonometrical Survey. Through this process, accurate land measurement and systematic mapping became possible, laying the groundwork for modern land record systems.

The extensive scholarly material assembled by the Asiatic Society provided the British administration with the basis upon which official institutions for scientific land measurement, boundary demarcation, and systematic cartography were established throughout the subcontinent.

These historical records and geographical terminologies later informed major projects such as the Survey of India and the Great Trigonometrical Survey. The modern systems of land registration, land settlement, revenue mapping, and digital land records in use today would not have been possible without these ancient material sources and the scholarly work undertaken by the Asiatic Society.

According to historians of land and geography, 15 January 1784 marks the beginning of a systematic process through which the territory of the subcontinent began to be formally documented, a development that may be regarded as the earliest precursor to contemporary digital land record systems.

▪️Syed Shayan Real Estate Archive

▪ Reference(s):

The Asiatic Society of Bengal
The Asiatic Society: 1784–1984
Official commemorative publication of the Asiatic Society, Calcutta
Matthew H. Edney Mapping an Empire: The Geographical Construction of British India, 1765–1843 University of Chicago Press
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