77 Rare Drawings by Schlagintweit Brothers Show India 170 Years Ago
Rare Schlagintweit Drawings Reveal India of 170 Years Ago

Dehradun: A rare collection of 77 drawings by the Schlagintweit brothers is offering visitors a glimpse of India as it was nearly 170 years ago. The exhibition, underway at the Doon Library and Research Centre, has been curated by Hermann Kreutzmann of Freie University of Berlin and historian Shekhar Pathak.

Exhibition Details and Collaboration

"The idea to bring these paintings home was conceived over 10 years ago in Munich. It materialised through intense collaboration and coordination," Pathak told TOI. The drawings are on display from May 2 to May 8, between 11am and 6.30pm.

The Schlagintweit Brothers and Their Journey

Made by German geologists Hermann, Adolph and Robert Schlagintweit, the paintings depict landscapes, glaciers, trees, buildings and settlements across different regions. The brothers, already known for their mountaineering skills and research in the European Alps, came into contact with geographer Alexander von Humboldt in Berlin. Impressed by their scientific ability, Humboldt encouraged their work. With financial support from the King of Prussia, the brothers travelled across India between 1854 and 1857 as part of a scientific survey mission organised by the East India Company.

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The Schlagintweit brothers covered nearly 18,000 miles, travelling across mountains and plains in different seasons and adapting routes when access was restricted. Their work includes depictions of Kedarnath, Nainital and its surrounding mountains, Baltistan and Ladakh, Assam and the Khasi Hills, and the trans-Himalaya. They also documented places of worship, bridges, rivers and housing and settlements, showing how local materials and climate shaped building styles.

Realistic Insight into Historical India

"Most painters of those times were trying to romanticise India but the German scholars' drawings provide a very realistic insight into what India was 170 years ago," said historian Lokesh Ohri, adding the brothers first clicked photos and then sketched on top of the photos' negatives. "Then they painted the views based on those sketches," he said.

Pointing to paintings of Baltistan and Ladakh, Pathak said, "We can also see how the drawings help trace changes over time. This is how these glaciers were 170 years ago, today we have a river flowing through here."

Significance for Environmental and Historical Study

Highlighting their significance, Ohri said, "In the Kedarnath drawing, we can see marshy land around the temple. The term 'Kedar' itself means marshy land. Today, the area around the temple has been concretised. These drawings show what excessive human interference has done to such sites over the years."

The exhibition opened on Saturday and will run until Friday. Entry is free, and it is open to all from 11am to 6.30pm.

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