
In the simmering heat of the 1890s, as India toiled under colonial rule, one man’s dream glimmered with the promise of transformation—Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata, a successful industrialist, was dreaming big, and he was dreaming ahead. But this wasn’t just about steel or mills. It was about minds. About building a world-class university in India—an institution that would serve as a beacon for scientific research and national progress.

A Spiritual Spark: When Tata Met Vivekananda
Legend has it that the idea found divine reinforcement on a sea voyage from Japan to the U.S. in 1893. Tata found himself in the company of a young monk—Swami Vivekananda. Their discussion was anything but ordinary. As waves crashed against the hull, the conversation flowed through philosophy, science, and India’s dire need for both.
Tata asked the monk what could best serve India. Vivekananda’s answer? “Science and education.” He stressed that a scientific temperament, rooted in Indian values and empowered with modern tools, could change the destiny of the country.
This meeting left an indelible mark on Tata. He returned not just with new business ideas, but with a mission to build an institution that could marry modern science with Indian intellect. Thus, the seeds of what would become the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) were sown.

An Idea Needs Land—and Allies
But an idea, no matter how visionary, needs ground to stand on—quite literally. Tata poured his personal wealth into this dream. The princely state of Mysore rose to the occasion. The Regent Queen Maharani Kempananjammani Vani Vilasa Sannidhana, ruling on behalf of her young son Krishnaraja Wadiyar, gifted 371 acres and 16 guntas of land in Bangalore, plus financial assistance for the institute’s founding and sustenance.
Even the British colonial government, not known for spontaneous generosity, pitched in. But Jamsetji wouldn’t live to see his dream take physical shape—he passed away in 1904. Still, the embers of his vision were glowing too bright to fade.
Birth of a Scientific Giant
On 27 May 1909, following a resolution by the Government of India, the Indian Institute of Science was born. The English chemist Morris Travers was appointed as its first director, and the Institute opened its doors to 24 students in 1911.
The humble beginnings featured just two departments—General and Applied Chemistry, and Electrical Technology. Yet even then, the Institute was wired for impact. Under the urging of Sir M Visvesvaraya, Dewan of Mysore and Council member, early research focused on solving India’s practical problems. This led to the establishment of six industrial ventures within five years, including the now-iconic soap and sandalwood oil factories in Bangalore and Mysore.

Scientific Titans Walk These Halls
By the 1930s, the Physics department was being helmed by none other than Sir C.V. Raman, India’s first Nobel Laureate in the sciences. He went on to become IISc’s first Indian Director in 1933. Under his leadership, the Institute’s reputation soared.

Over the decades, a constellation of brilliant minds walked IISc’s hallowed halls—Homi J. Bhabha, Vikram Sarabhai, Kamala Sohonie, C.N.R. Rao, and many others. Together, they shaped India’s future—from nuclear power to nutrition science, from satellite launches to materials research.
War Effort and Wartime Innovation
During World War II, IISc took a break from pure academia to do some heavy lifting—literally. It helped in training military personnel, manufacturing war materials, and collaborating with Hindustan Aircraft Limited (now HAL) to maintain Allied planes. It was science in service of survival.

This wartime period also triggered an engineering boom. New departments were added, including Aeronautical Engineering, Metallurgy, and Mechanical Engineering.
The Dhawan Era: Rocket Fuel for Research
Fast forward to the 1960s through the early 80s, and the Institute was under the transformative leadership of Satish Dhawan, an aerospace genius who also chaired ISRO. IISc exploded into new disciplines: materials science, automation, molecular biophysics, and theoretical studies. It wasn’t just about research anymore—it was about relevance.
His brainchild, ASTRA (Application of Science and Technology to Rural Areas), embodied this ethos. Today, it lives on as the Centre for Sustainable Technologies.
The New Millennium: A New Chapter
In the 21st century, IISc broke new ground—literally. It launched its undergraduate programme, expanded into brain research, nanoscience, hypersonics, and more. The Institute also established a massive 1,500-acre campus in Challakere, Chitradurga district, Karnataka, broadening its scientific footprint.
It also became a hub for start-ups and innovation, blending academia with industry in a powerful synergy.
A Global Scientific Landmark
Over the years, IISc has played host to a who’s who of global thinkers: Gandhi, Queen Elizabeth, Ho Chi Minh, Nikita Khrushchev, James Watson, and prime ministers from Nehru to Modi. It’s not just an Indian institution—it’s a global scientific lighthouse.

A Legacy Forged in Faith and Fire
From the spiritual spark of a monk’s wisdom to the steel resolve of an industrialist, IISc’s origin is a beautiful paradox—science born from faith. Swami Vivekananda once said, “Education is the manifestation of perfection already in man.” At IISc, that perfection is still unfolding.
More than a century later, the Institute remains a living tribute to those who dared to dream beyond their time—proving that true progress lies not just in discovery, but in determination, diversity, and the courage to imagine.