It would seem safe to say that the story of modern Indian cartography is also that of colonialism. Indeed Manosi Lahiri&rsquos visual feast of a book Mapping India works with just that premise. Even the earliest map in this book, the fascinating one drawn by Ptolemy over two thousand years ago, arrived on the heels of empire, and trade. Jump a millennia and a half to 1571 to one of the first atlases to be made in Europe featuring the subcontinent, and the context is no different. Budding European colonial powers were trading in greater volumes with the East. This meant, at first, maps of shipping routes, and then maps of the countries themselves. India, with its fabled riches and mythical geography, soon occupied pride of place in cartographical representations of the East.