French Institute of Pondicherry


The French Institute of Pondicherry UMIFRE 21 is a French research centre in Puducherry, India, under the joint supervision of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the French National Centre for Scientific Research. It is the largest of the 26 research centres under this dual umbrella. It is also part of the research unit 3330 "Savoirs et Mondes Indiens" of the CNRS, along with the Centre de Sciences Humaines in New Delhi.

History

Established under the terms of the Treaty of Cession of French Territories in India, the French Institute of Pondicherry was inaugurated on 21 March 1955 under the name "Institut Français d'Indologie". It was engaged, under the leadership of its first director, in the study of Indian civilization and culture, and more particularly in the history and the religions of South India.
This culture had to be replaced in its natural environment – at least that was what Nehru encouraged the IFP to implement. Hence a department of Ecology was created to collect information on the conditions and evolution of the environment in South India with its focus on the Western Ghats, one of the world’s 34 hotspots for biodiversity.
With the setting up of the department of Social Sciences in 1988, the institute extended its interest to the evolution and dynamics of the Indian society.
The Laboratory of Applied Informatics and Geomatics was set up in the 1990s. In 2017 it became the department GeoSMIT.
The institute has a library with 70,000 books and more than 120 journals received currently. It is open to the public.

Fields of research

RESEARCH: field work and data collection, organization of scientific events, response to calls for projects, publication of books and academic articles...
TRAINING: receiving students on internship, master, doctoral and post-doctoral students from France and other countries.
EXPERTISE: manuscript analysis, pollen study for archaeology, Smart Cities project of the Government of Puducherry, collaboration with the Agence Française de Développement... This last mission is growing. More generally, IFP is open to any partnership with companies, foundations and other organizations: sponsorship, research collaborations or expertise - financing projects, PhDs, chairs, etc.

Support structures for research

• The library: Its collection comprises 70,000 books and 800 journals, of which 140 are regularly subscribed; library open to all.
. 8500 palm-leaf manuscripts ; 1144 transcripts, many of them being published with critical edition.
. A collection of 140,000 photographs, of temples and edifices in South India notably. The international police is making use of it for tracking stolen statues. Another collection is being built, on the history of family photography in Tamil Nadu.
. Pollen slide collection : 22,000 slides in 15,000 tropical plant species.
. The Herbarium houses nearly 23,000 specimens.
. Nearly 3,000 maps on India and South and Southeast Asia, around 1,200 topographic maps dating from the first half of the 20th century and an equal number of topographic maps at the metric scale obtained from the Survey of India and covering most of the Indian subcontinent. Around 500 thematic maps of other South and Southeast Asian countries at highly varying scales, mainly from the 1950s, are preserved.

Publications

The IFP's research results are circulated in publications:
. In international peer-reviewed journals;
. By the institute itself: book series and multimedia CD-ROMs….
. The IFP is developing portals and apps for a large audience. They are often based on the principle of interactive "citizen science".
. The institute publishes a news bulletin Pattrika in collaboration with the CSH in Delhi and the EFEO. Its Newsletter appears bimonthly.
. The institute organizes events that are of international academic level but are also suitable for the general public.

The manuscripts

With respect to its branch of research in Indology, the French Institute of Pondicherry has a collection of 8,600 Hindu religious manuscripts and similar records, forming part of India’s National Mission for Manuscripts. Comprising 8,187 ancient palm-leaf bundles, 360 paper codices and 1,144 recent paper transcripts, it is the largest collection of manuscripts primarily transmitting texts of the Saiva Siddhanta tradition of Hinduism.
The collection was started in 1955 by the institute's founder-director, Jean Filliozat, who desired to explain the Hindu temple and what happens in it. The manuscripts were gathered from collections of temples, priests and monasteries across South India and brought to the institute with the intention of preserving, transcribing and translating them. Four volumes of a catalogue describing in detail the contents of 4,000 texts transmitted in 475 of the palm-leaf bundles were published in 1986, 1987, 1990 and 2002. Cataloguing has continued using flatbed scanning and digital photography technology in conjunction with a computerized database.

Contents of the collection

The collection was registered in UNESCO's World Memories in July 2005 and has been declared a national treasure of India by the Indian government. The institute was declared a "Manuscript Resource Centre" in 2004.

Personnel

The personnel of the IFP consists of about 70 staff:
The institute welcomes researchers and research assistants on project contract and financed by outside sources, as well as experienced researchers and students of all nationalities associated with the projects of the institute and carrying out resident study.

Partnership agreements

• Partnerships with major French research institutions such as the CIRAD, EFEO, INALCO, IRD and EHESS, as well as French local authorities such as Centre-Val de Loire region, etc.
. Several Memoranda of Agreement with academic institutions including the Universities of Toronto, Eastern University, Bordeaux, Vedic University, Manipal... Tripartite Memoranda of Understanding associating the IFP and Pondicherry University with the universities of Limoges or Bordeaux 3 facilitate student exchanges between India and France.

Budget

Half of the budget comes from grants from the IFP’s supervisory authorities. The rest comes from external sources: European and French public funds, international funds, but also Indian sources. Private funding is also increasing.

The premises

• A majestic colonial building by the sea.
. Usable area of and spaces available to rent for hosting events: equipped conference room, garden, terrace.