2009 The idea for Mimamsa was conceptualised in September 2008. The first edition, which took place in January and February 2009 included only colleges from Pune, though a college from Hyderabad also participated. The prelims had no online registration process and included only on the spot entries. The Mains were planned to have 4 finalists, a tradition that has been continued till date. Five colleges participated, out of which the finalists were:
Fergusson College, Institute of Bioinformatics and Biotechnology (IBB), Garware College, and Wadia College.
Institute of Bioinformatics and Biotechnology, Pune emerged as the runner-up in Mimamsa 2009 and Fergusson College, Pune emerged as the winner.
2010 Mimamsa 2010 followed the same pattern as that of the previous year. It was expanded to the cities of Mumbai, Nasik and Hyderabad, in addition to Pune. The prelims witnessed a dozen teams competing for the top 4 positions, and 50 participants in the individual category for the top 5 spots. Institute of Bioinformatics and Biotechnology, Pune emerged as the winner in Mimamsa 2010. The individual winner was Yashoda Chandorkar from Fergusson College, Pune.
2011 Mimamsa 2011 was the first time the individual entries were scrapped. The centres were the same as 2010, i.e. Mumbai, Nasik Hyderabad and Pune. Out of 84 teams in the prelims,
BITS Pilani Hyderabad,
Osmania Medical College,
Fergusson College and
University of Hyderabad made it to the top four finalists and were selected for the Mimamsa mains.
Osmania Medical College of Hyderabad emerged as the winner in Mimamsa 2011.
2012 Mimamsa 2012 was expanded to cover nine cities all over India. The centres were Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Chennai, Delhi, Mumbai, Nagpur, Kolkata and Hyderabad, in addition to the host city, Pune. 142 teams participated in the prelims. The team comprising students of the
Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru, emerged as the winners of Mimamsa 2012.
2013 Mimamsa 2013 covered seven cities across the country, Pune, Bengaluru, Chennai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Mumbai. IISc Bengaluru emerged as the winner.
CENTRE TOPPERS: 2014 Mimamsa 2014 covered seven cities and IISc Bengaluru emerged as the winner.
2015 Mimamsa 2015 prelims saw a participation of 250 teams in 9 centres across India – Pune, Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Ahmedabad and Thiruvananthapuram. IISc Bengaluru emerged as the winner.
2021 Prelims was held via online version of centres on 14 March 2021 at 20 zones all over the country.
2023 Prelims was held virtually in remote-proctored mode on 29 January 2023. The top 4 qualifying teams participated in the challenging finals which was held in the month of April'23 at the
IISER Pune campus.
IISc Bangalore wins the competition followed by
IIT Delhi and
IIT Madras in the first-runner up and 2nd runner-up positions respectively.
2024 No updates on this yet! ==General overview==