VIJAYANAGARA   RESEARCH   PROJECT
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History of the Project
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Team at Work

January 1980 signals the genesis of the project, when the London based architectural historian Dr George Michell began work at the site together with a small group of architecture students, and John Gollings, an Australian architectural photographer. They joined Drs Pierre-Silvain and Vasundhara Filliozat, a husband and wife scholarly team, whose investigation of the Vitthala temple and inscriptional record of the site was already underway. The preliminary drawings and photographs produced at this time the basis of a Marg publication, Splendours of the Vijayanagara Empire -- Hampi. (See Publications)

In 1981, Michell persuaded the American archaeologist Dr John M. Fritz to come to Vijayanagara to develop the archaeological side of the investigation. Fritz then became co-director of the team and co-founder of the Vijayanagara Research Project. Meanwhile, architecture and archaeology students from Indian, Australian and British schools were recruited to help with the documentation work, with fresh groups of students coming each year.

In 1982, we began a cooperative relationship with the Government of Karnataka Department of Archaeology and Museums, then directed by Dr M.S. Nagaraja Rao, which provide accommodation and other logistical support. Permission to undertake the work was granted by the Government of India and the American Institute of Indian Studies in Delhi administered grant funds.

As the Vijayanagara Research Project developed, the scope of the documentation work intensified until a large proportion of the site was covered. A number of younger scholars were attracted to Vijayanagara and took up their own research projects. This resulted in PhDs on particular aspects of the site, such as earthenware ceramics (Carla B. Sinopoli), hydraulic works (Dominic Davison-Jenkins), pilgrimage (Alexandra Mack), agricultural intensification (Katherine B. Morrison), Anegondi (Sugandha Purandare) and religious traditions (Anila Verghese). Many of these studies have now been published. (See Publications) Senior scholars from different disciplines, including historians, linguists, anthropologists and art historians, also visited the site. The co-directors benefited from lively discussions with them in the field. Meanwhile, Fritz and Michell lectured frequently at universities in India, Australia, the UK and the US, thereby maintaining ongoing interest in the Project and a seemingly inexhaustible stream of volunteer contributors.

Fieldwork at Vijayanagara continued without any major interruption through the 1980s and 1990s, until more than 20 years had passed, by which time the co-directors felt that sufficient data had been collected. Also by this time, the major source of funding work in India – local currency granted by the Special Foreign Currency Fund of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington – was exhausted. It was time to round up the fieldwork and settle down to writing up the data, a process that is ongoing. While quite a number of studies have already been published in our Monograph Series, more are in preparation or are planned for the future.

 
   

©2005 Vijayanagara Research Project

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