On returning to India, he first taught at the
Aligarh Muslim University and later at the
University of Calcutta. He turned to journalism in 1925 as editor of the
Hindustan Times. and
Zhou Enlai. For the next 20 years, Madhava Panikkar served the Princely States, becoming secretary to the chancellor of the
Chamber of Princes. He also served as the foreign minister of the state of
Patiala and as foreign minister of
Bikaner, and became the
dewan of Bikaner in 1944. He served in China until 1952, building a relationship with
Chiang Kai-shek, and remaining there through the Communist takeover in 1949 and the following period. He wrote of his experiences in the book
In Two Chinas (1955). This period also saw the completion of his work
Asia and Western Dominance (1953). He subsequently served as ambassador to Egypt (1952–1953), and France (1956–1959), before a severe stroke forced him to return to India. He remained nominated member of
Rajya Sabha (1959-1961). On recovering, he took up his academic career again, becoming Vice-Chancellor of Jammu and
Kashmir University (1961-1963), Srinagar and later of
Mysore University (1963-1964). During his political career Panikkar continued to publish articles and poems, and also translated several Greek plays into
Malayalam verse. ==Academics and scholarship==