A seminar on north Malabar local history and women’s movements drew academics, officials and local historians to St John’s CSI Church on the second day of the Kannur Heritage Festival. The event presented fresh perspectives on the region’s past and sought to place local narratives alongside mainstream historical accounts.
North Malabar local history
The seminar was inaugurated by Kadannappally Ramachandran, Minister for Registration, Museum, Archaeology and Archives. E. Dineshan, Director of the Department of Archaeology, presided over the session, which formed part of the wider Kannur Heritage Festival organised by the departments of Archaeology, Archives and Museums.
In a keynote titled ‘Heritage as Living History’, Dr Malavika Binny, Assistant Professor of History at Kannur University, challenged the common misconception that local history has only limited relevance. She argued that north Malabar local history carries equal weight to broader narratives when it presents identifiable contexts and meanings that help explain social and political change.
“Local histories reveal the everyday choices and networks that shape larger events,” Dr Binny said. She highlighted the role of community records, oral testimony and archival material in reconstructing the experiences of women and marginal groups who have been underrepresented in official histories.
The seminar also focussed on women’s movements in the region. Speakers examined how gendered social reforms and grassroots organising in north Malabar contributed to shifts in education, labour and political participation. Delegates discussed the importance of documenting women’s activism to produce a fuller account of regional developments.
At the concluding session, historian Dr Hussain Randathani delivered a lecture on the migration of the Thangal lineage in Kerala, with specific reference to the Bukhari Thangal family. His research traced migration routes and the social networks that sustained religious and cultural identity across generations. The session, chaired by Narayanan Kavumbayi, prompted questions about the interplay between migration, lineage and local political life.
Organisers said the seminar aimed to encourage collaboration between university departments, state archives and local heritage groups. Speakers called for improved conservation of documents, wider access to municipal records and community-led projects to record oral histories. These measures, they said, would strengthen the evidence base for north Malabar local history and make it more accessible to researchers and the public.
The Kannur Heritage Festival continues through to January 6 and features exhibitions, walking tours and public talks that showcase regional archaeology and cultural heritage. Organisers said they hoped the seminar would inspire similar events that bring local history into public view and inform policy on cultural preservation.
Delegates noted that placing local narratives at the centre of study does not diminish national history, but rather enriches it by adding detail, voices and contexts that are often missing from broader accounts. The seminar underlined a growing interest in community-based research and the need to integrate local archives into academic inquiry.
Key Takeaways:
- Seminar at Kannur Heritage Festival emphasised the importance of North Malabar local history for broader historical understanding.
- Keynote by Dr Malavika Binny argued local history has equal relevance when it carries clear contexts and meanings.
- Session on migration of the Thangal lineage by Dr Hussain Randathani offered fresh perspectives on regional movement and identity.

















