Establishment of QIP Center at Department of Mechanical Engineering indiaeducationdiary.in - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from indiaeducationdiary.in Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The manuscripts housed in public repositories and private collections are in dire need of conservation due to a lack of resources and awareness. This concern was highlighted at an awareness workshop by the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH), Kashmir Chapter. M. Salim Beg, the event organizer, emphasized the vulnerability of these manuscripts, which serve as crucial links to Kashmir's rich history, written in languages like Sanskrit, Persian, and Kashmiri. Despite their significance, many manuscripts suffer from neglect and damage, prompting efforts by INTACH to provide conservation services and training programs. Legal provisions exist, but more awareness and action are needed to protect this invaluable cultural heritage.
With Srinagar finally joining UNESCO’s 50-city global creative network for ‘craft and folk art’, the real challenges for the policymakers and stakeholders is to discover ways and means for reviving Cashmere’s golden era when Paris and London would wait for Srinagar consignments to make its f.
AMU Climbs Seven Positions to Top 10 in NIRF University Rankings 2021 indiaeducationdiary.in - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from indiaeducationdiary.in Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Dr Kim Ati Wagner, a Danish-British historian of colonial India, received a peculiar email sitting in his London office in 2014. It was from an old English couple who owned The Lord Clyde pub in Kent, a county in England.
They wrote that they had discovered a human skull hidden under a bundle of unused boxes and crates in 1963. The skull was missing its lower jaw, the few remaining teeth it had were loose, and a note was found lodged in its eye socket.
The note, written in elegant 19th-century handwriting, read:
“Skull of Havildar “Alum Bheg”, 46th Regt. Bengal N. Infantry who was blown away from a gun, amongst several others of his Regt. He was a principal leader in the mutiny of 1857 & of a most ruffianly disposition. He took possession (at the head of a small party) of the road leading to the fort, to which place all the Europeans were hurrying for safety. His party surprised and killed Dr Graham shooting him in his buggy by the side of his daughter. His next v