Aryan Invasion Hypothesis

S.A.T.A

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When I studied history in my school and college years I never heard of Indo-Aryan Migration theory, but of Aryan invasion theory. Any how what I've learnt is that Harappa and Mohenjodaro was NOT an Aryan civilization. The early indus-valley civilization didn't have horses, didn't know use of iron etc.

So this sudden change of theory is tad confusing to me. I don't know much, but in today's india we find many people whose physical attributes are blend of many roots - Mongolic, Aryan, afro etc. Particularly in northern and north-eastern india, people have a very good likeness to aryan root, but in eastern india mongolic attributes and southern india others are more prominent.

If Aryans were native of Indian sub-continent, wouldn't there have been more presence in other parts of india as well? If they migrated from India, why didn't they go south at all?

Also, Veda, Upanishad etc has many resemblance to Old testament of Jews, which may indicate that there root can be same. Like Noah's ark to Matsavatar.

Also, Veda doesn't speak about deities which was present in earlier indus valley civilization as different totems and likely blended with Aryan religion when Aryan's got in touch with Indus Valley civilization.

Anyway these new theories in my opinion is same as the theory that Buddha's origin was in Ukraine (or something, can't remember properly).
Agreed that the out of Indian theory is the most untenable in the Indo-Aryan debate and something which even the Indigenists don't want to postulate.However it must be said that based on genetic studies of major population groups in the Indian subcontinent and the available Archaeological data,even migration into the subcontinent is equally untenable.

Old testaments are a product of semetic culture,semetic language groups have nothing in common with the Indo-European language family,hence they cannot be compared.Upanishads are entirely a later Vedic corpus and hence out of scope for any foreign input.

There is lot of debate whether the Indo-Aryan group and the Harappan group even made any substantive cultural contact to establish cross cultural input.The Archaeological deposts in India that is most commonly associated ith the Vedic Aryan are the painted Grew Ware(PGW)deposits which mostly occur at levels that are much later to Late Harrapan(LH) levels,by atleast 200-300 years and except at one site at Bhagwanpura(Haryana),there is no clear over lap between the LH and PDW deposits......

Infact it was this lack of interaction in Archaeological deposits that first raised questions about the so called Warrior Aryans destroying Harappan cities theory.We know next to nothing about the harappan religious life and certainly nothing about their contribution to subsequent cultural groups that succeeded them.Perhaps they followed the fertility goddess cult.interestingly various mature Harappan sites during excavations have turned what looks like ritual fire altars,which the some have (hastily ofcourse)found it conveniently similar to Vedic/Hindu Homa fire altars..

Coming to other material artifacts,its true that the Vedic society clearly represented a culture which gave prominence to the Horse,whose presence is most conspicuously absent in the Harappan cultural records,but it also must said that harappan Archaeological records have yielded Horse bones,though not in great numbers.Moreover we are reasonable certain that the Rg vedic period(which by the fact of being the earliest of Vedas,represents the early IA phase)was pre Iron age(the RgVedic term for metal is "Ayas" which means metal,while in the later historical period metal(mostly Iron)is referred as KrsnaAyas(Black metal)
 

Flint

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Any given day, I will give precedence to 'genetic studies' over other theories because they don't lie and cannot be manipulated, while on the other hand if one has to take into account 'linguistic theories' there is lot of scope for manipulation and hyperboles without any clinching physical evidence.
Well as the names suggest, linguistic theories are good for tracing the origins of language and the meaning of words, where as genetic studies are good for tracing the origins of people.

I'm not sure what you mean by "they don't lie and cannot be manipulated."

Lets consider a simple example - if we took only genetic evidence into consideration, the British never came to India because their genetic imprint is negligible. Yet, the linguistic evidence of British influence in the form of spoken English is quite easy to find.
 

S.A.T.A

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I think the challenge will be to reconcile the linguistic theories with the genetic studies.
In fact they already have.instead of a mass displacement of indigenous population groups by migrating IA,the migration theory suggests that migrating group must have been very small to make a dent on the local gene pool,but materially and culturally superior in terms of social organization and military to establish socio-political dominance......

Hence the multiple wave theory.......
 

Daredevil

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Well as the names suggest, linguistic theories are good for tracing the origins of language and the meaning of words, where as genetic studies are good for tracing the origins of people.

I'm not sure what you mean by "they don't lie and cannot be manipulated."

Lets consider a simple example - if we took only genetic evidence into consideration, the British never came to India because their genetic imprint is negligible. Yet, the linguistic evidence of British influence in the form of spoken English is quite easy to find.
Well, the basis for Aryan invasion theory is linguistics based theories without any physical evidence but with anecdotal evidence. If Aryans have indeed migrated to Indian sub-continent, there is no doubt there should be some form of genetic evidence linking it. OTOH, we cannot say Aryans (present day north indians) have migrated to and settled in India just based on similarities in linguistics.

British have stayed for too short a time (and they haven't settled unlike Aryan invasion theory) to leave any genetic imprint behind while they have certainly influenced spoken english. But you have to remember British have invaded in recent times and everybody knows it.

Since linguistics is highly mutable compared to genes when you consider a time scale of ten thousand years, it is difficult to take just this aspect to support the claims of invasion by anyone.
 

Flint

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In fact they already have.instead of a mass displacement of indigenous population groups by migrating IA,the migration theory suggests that migrating group must have been very small to make a dent on the local gene pool,but materially and culturally superior in terms of social organization and military to establish socio-political dominance......

Hence the multiple wave theory.......
That definitely seems to be the logical conclusion.
 

Flint

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Well, the basis for Aryan invasion theory is linguistics based theories without any physical evidence but with anecdotal evidence. If Aryans have indeed migrated to Indian sub-continent, there is no doubt there should be some form of genetic evidence linking it. OTOH, we cannot say Aryans (present day north indians) have migrated to and settled in India just based on similarities in linguistics.
There is physical evidence in the form of burial mounds and other ancient settlements discovered in the NW part of the subcontinent (i.e. Pakistan). I don't think there's any anecdotal evidence because that's pretty muchi impossible.

Regarding North Indians, there have been multiple migrations of tribes from Central Asia into the Indian subcontinent throughout history, the most prominent examples being the Mughals, but there's very little evidence that any large migrations took place before the Rig Vedic period.

British have stayed for too short a time (and they haven't settled unlike Aryan invasion theory) to leave any genetic imprint behind while they have certainly influenced spoken english. But you have to remember British have invaded in recent times and everybody knows it.
They did settle - they built their bungalows and garrisons didn't they? And in significant numbers as well, but they didn't intermix with the local populace, hence the lack of genetic evidence.

There is a small population of Anglo-Indians, but their numbers are too tiny to make a dent in the genetic makeup of the subcontinent.

Of course, everybody knows that the British were here, but when I used this example it was under the assumption that we would disregard that glaring fact while taking only genetic and linguistic evidence into consideration for the purposes of our discussion.


Since linguistics is highly mutable compared to genes when you consider a time scale of ten thousand years, it is difficult to take just this aspect to support the claims of invasion by anyone.
An invasion doesn't necessarily have to leave a genetic imprint - that's precisely the conclusion you come to when you look at the British empire, or for that matter the Mughal empire that came before it.

A small population of "elite" who do or do not intermarry with the "natives" can significantly influence the culture of a people, again taking the Mughals and Brits both as examples.

However, it is equally plausible that the Aryan tribes never looted and pillaged as described colourfully by some authors, perhaps they came as settlers in small numbers and established themselves at the top of the social pecking order, thus significantly influencing the culture of that region.
 

ShyAngel

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I read during my early student days that India was called "Aryavrata" during the earlier days and that was mentioned as a "proof" against the AIT!

True or not, it has been lapped up by some who try to equate the Aryans with the other invaders like Turks, Arabs etc. and claim that they have the same claim to the land as the earlier Aryan "invaders"!
Arya means nobel man in sanskrit. So what does the full form of aryavarta means? Land of nobel man? Just wondering....lol
 

S.A.T.A

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However on the flip side of the migration argument,one must ask how different Migration would have been from an out right invasion and displacement of local social structure.When we are talking about the late Bronze age India we are talking about clustered population groups,part of a highly organized and socio-culturally developed civilization and living in highly developed urban semi urban centers........

At the height of its mature phase,the IVC's demographic scale is postulated to be around 10 million.That's a lot of people.The IVC archaeological records in the post mature phase shows nothing remotely suggesting a foreign invasion or war leading to sudden displacement of its core population group(hence the suggestion of migration against invasion)

Its unlikely that the any migrating group renowned for military technological sophistication(riding on horse back and horse driven chariots)would have peacefully assumed domination over such a highly organized and sophisticated culture,without resorting to warfare.

peaceful migration and assimilation is mirage in historical records,why should it be true for migrating IA.moreover even in the Archaeological records there is clear lack of interaction between these two groups.most of the oldest PGW deposits(which is believed to represent the earliest Vedic phase) are to be found in the yamuna-Ganga doab region.Even more interestingly many of the LH sites excavated in Gujarat and Maharashtra have been dated to as late as 1300 BCE,this period is well into the middle-late Vedic Phase.

Huge disconnect there!
 

Flint

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^Well it would seem that there was very little interaction between the Harappans and the Central Asian migrants at all. The IVC people would have migrated eastwards due to other factors like climate change (the dry Ghaggar-Hakra channel as evidence) into the Gangetic plains.
Perhaps its this climate change that brought about the end of the Harappan civilization and their sophisticated way of life rather than any invasions.

There's a question to consider: Was there a pre-existing culture other than the Harappan one in the Gangetic plains?
 

S.A.T.A

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^Well it would seem that there was very little interaction between the Harappans and the Central Asian migrants at all. The IVC people would have migrated eastwards due to other factors like climate change (the dry Ghaggar-Hakra channel as evidence) into the Gangetic plains.
Perhaps its this climate change that brought about the end of the Harappan civilization and their sophisticated way of life rather than any invasions.

There's a question to consider: Was there a pre-existing culture other than the Harappan one in the Gangetic plains?
No doubt in the absence of any evidence of invasion, natural causes must ascribed to the decline of the mature IVC phase.But we cannot conclude the whole population abandoned the sites.the post mature phase in harappa is represented by the cemetery H culture.The cemetery H people,based on their cephalic metrics(skeletal structures)the same as the people of the mature phase and their settlements are in close proximity to the by then abandoned mature phase sites(no doubt the Cemetery H also shows presence of new cephalic types and material culture is generally inferior to the Mature phase)

While the post harappan phase gives evidence of expansion,but the older sites continued to be occupied.considering the number of sites that have been found along the paleo channel of the Ghaggar-Hakra,its drying up around 2000-1900BCE must have serious ecological impact on the IVC sites based long its banks,and their subsequent abandonment could have had cascading ripple affects on the rest of the IVC.

Here is the interesting part.Rg veda is clearly aware and makes numerous mention of a major river system(Saraswati) between Sutlej and Yamuna and based on hydrological evidence and studying its pealeo channels,only the ancient greater Ghaggar-Hakra can account for such a river system.Rg vedic phase is Mostly before the drying up of the Saraswati(paleo Ghaggar-Hakra) and the earliest post vedic literature,like the epic Mahabharata,only know of a Saraswati which has already dried up and not reaching the sea anymore.

If we propose that the post Mature Harappan population moved to the Yamuna-Gangetc basin following the drying up of the greater Ghaggar-Hakra,could the post Vedic group have been part of this eastward migration.This could also mean that the Rgvedic IA population was perhaps one of the constituent of the IVC population group(during the mature phase)

Yes the Ganga-yamuna doab region had two indigenous cultures,OCP and the Copper hoard culture, during the middle Bronze age.the Ochre Colored pottery culture(OCP) was coterminous to the Mature Harappan phase and decidedly semi urban or non urban,however some late OCP levels show IVC influence,but its mostly non IVC.The Copper hoard is more of mystery.basically its hoard of copper implements and tools and no other cultural or habitation deposits.earlier it was thought to be connected to the IA,but now recent discoveries(like the site at Sinauli) have clearly shown links to the older OCP culture.
 

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Chapter 4. Transcendental Knowledge given in Sanskrit
TEXT 1 -Bhagwad Gita

sri-bhagavan uvaca
imam vivasvate yogam
proktavan aham avyayam
vivasvan manave praha
manur iksvakave 'bravit

SYNONYMS

sri-bhagavan uvaca--the Supreme Personality of Godhead said; imam--this; vivasvate--unto the sun-god; yogam--the science of one's relationship to the Supreme; proktavan--instructed; aham--I; avyayam--imperishable; vivasvan--Vivasvan (the sun-god's name); manave--unto the father of mankind (of the name Vaivasvata); praha--told; manuh--the father of mankind; iksvakave--unto King Iksvaku; abravit--said.
TRANSLATION

The Blessed Lord said: I instructed this imperishable science of yoga to the sun-god, Vivasvan, and Vivasvan instructed it to Manu, the father of mankind, and Manu in turn instructed it to Iksvaku.
PURPORT

Herein we find the history of the Bhagavad-gita traced from a remote time when it was delivered to the royal order, the kings of all planets. This science is especially meant for the protection of the inhabitants, and therefore the royal order should understand it in order to be able to rule the citizens and protect them from the material bondage to lust. Human life is meant for cultivation of spiritual knowledge, in eternal relationship with the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and the executive heads of all states and all planets are obliged to impart this lesson to the citizens by education, culture and devotion.

ALL THE MAJOR CIVILIZATIONS LIKE MAYANS,IRISH DRUIDS,EGYPTIAN,AZTEC ETC USED THE SANSKRIT NAME FOR THEIR TOWNS AND CITIES.ALL THE RELIGIOUS TERMINOLOGIES ARE SANSKRIT BUT THE PEOPLE OF THOSE CIVILIZATION HAD A DIFFERENT LANGUAGE.OBVIOUSLY THE RELIGION WAS GIVEN TO ALL THE KINGS AND SPIRITUAL BEINGS IN SANSKRIT-THE INDO ARYAN LANGUAGE.
 

S.A.T.A

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^^
What in Zeus name is the above post supposed to mean..............
 

Flint

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ALL THE MAJOR CIVILIZATIONS LIKE MAYANS,IRISH DRUIDS,EGYPTIAN,AZTEC ETC USED THE SANSKRIT NAME FOR THEIR TOWNS AND CITIES.ALL THE RELIGIOUS TERMINOLOGIES ARE SANSKRIT BUT THE PEOPLE OF THOSE CIVILIZATION HAD A DIFFERENT LANGUAGE.OBVIOUSLY THE RELIGION WAS GIVEN TO ALL THE KINGS AND SPIRITUAL BEINGS IN SANSKRIT-THE INDO ARYAN LANGUAGE.
Sigh - why can't we be comfortable with who we are?

Indians either loath themselves, or adamantly state that every human achievement originated in India. There doesn't seem to be a middle ground.
 

S.A.T.A

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I dont want to qualify my remark and appear judgmental,but you and rashidi appear to argue from the same spectrum of the debate,only that both of you are at the extreme & opposite ends of it.For Rashidi the entire historical chronology follows the contours of the white and black race relations and all non European origin civilization become Black by default(or vice versa).You argue that all civilization that was not Semitic and that built temples and housed idols of their Gods and Goddesses have to be Hindu.

Such an oversimplification of vast body of study in Humanities is distasteful.
 

hinduismglance

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It is not about Indian contribution.

Sigh - why can't we be comfortable with who we are?

Indians either loath themselves, or adamantly state that every human achievement originated in India. There doesn't seem to be a middle ground.
My message from Bhagwad Gita is very clear that the knowledge of religion was given throughtout the world by God himself.Did I mention that the Hindu or the Indian gave the knowledge.
 

Singh

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The Aryan Debate: Horse

The Aryan Debate: Horse



n 1974, archaeologists J. P. Joshi and A. K. Sharma found horse bones in Surkotada, a Harappan site in Gujarat. This was a sensational discovery: first, it was the bones of a horse and second, it was dated to the period 2265 B.C.E. to 1480 B.C.E, which corresponds to the Mature Harappan period[1].

Finding horse remains, especially from India, are always controversial. For example, one of the earliest claims of horse is dated to 4500 B.C.E in the Aravalli range in Rajasthan – the same place from where the Harappans got their copper. This period is the same time when horse was first domesticated in the world. So there are questions: was the artifact obtained from a Bronze Age level even though the site was Neolithic? Was it really a horse — the Equus Caballus —rather than a donkey or onager.?

Due to the large size of bones and teeth of an onager, it is hard to distinguish it from a horse. Also sometimes the reports that come with excavations have insufficient measurements, drawings, and photographs required for independent assessment[1]. Due to this the findings are always suspect; it is always concluded that the horse arrived quite late to India.

Such questions arise because in the Indo-Aryan debate — if Vedic civilization pre-dated, co-existed or followed the Harappan civilization — a key factor is the horse. In this debate the main argument against Harappa being Indo-Aryan can be summarized as follows.

1. According to the popular version of Indian pre-history, horse — an animal not native to India — was bought to India by the Indo-Aryans when they came in 1500 B.C.E. There is no evidence of horse in India before 1500 B.C.E.
2. Among the numerous seals found in Harappa there is none which represent a horse, while other animals like the bull, buffalo, and goat are represented.
3. In Rg Veda, the horse (asva) has cultural and religious significance. Since there is absence of horse in Harappa, it can only mean that the Vedic people arrived after the decline of the Harappan civilization.

The find at Surkotada upset this narrative because it crossed a lakshman rekha into Mature Harappan and also violated the threshold for the Indo-Aryan arrival. Hence the findings themselves became suspect – at least till 1991.

The eminent archaeozoologist, Sandor Bokonyi, was in Pune to attend a workshop on ‘Prehistoric contacts between South Asia and Africa’ at the Deccan College. Following the conference he spent some time in Delhi where the Excavation Branch of the ASI showed him the finds from Surkotada which consisted of six samples, mostly teeth. After examining the artifacts, he concluded that they were not of a half-ass, but a real domesticated horse[7].

(Onager)

In 1994, Richard Meadow and Ajita Patel examined the same remains in Purana Quila and came to a different conclusion. They thought the samples came from an onager and not the true horse. Meadow believes that horses could have come to the region, maybe by 2000 B.C.E since there is figurine evidence and painted shreds in Swat, but the find from Surkotada was not it. Richard Meadow raised his objections to Sandor Bokonyi during a conference in Konstanz, Germany, but Bokonyi was not convinced[5].

To understand how controversial the issue of dating horse India is, we have to look at another story. In 1971, K. R Alur found horse bones from a Neolithic site in Hallur, Karnataka and they were dated between 1500 and 1300 B.C.E. Alur’s report sparked a controversy and he was asked to clarify his find since it went against the prevalent belief that Aryans introduced the horse around 1500 B.C.E. A re-excavation of Hallur was done and 21 years later Allur reported that he had indeed found the true horse and he could not deny or alter this scientific fact[1].

Besides these, there have been other finds as well which includes horse teeth from Baluchistan dating to a pre-Harappan level, from Allahabad (2265 – 1480 B.C.E) [1], horse bones dated between 2450 and 2000 B.C.E in Chambal Valley[2], and an upper molar from Kalibangan[3]. Horse remains have been found in other locations — in Mohenjo-daro, Rupar, Inamgaon, and Kalibangan —- but they all are from a later period.

Also, E.J.H Mackay in 1931 and R.E.M.Wheeler in 1968 found terracotta models of animals in Mohenjo-daro and one of them was the horse. From this Wheeler concluded that the horse was known from an earlier period in Baluchistan. Thus, from a complete absence of horse, we see little evidence of horse remains around the subcontinent, but not quite a lot. Maybe horse bones are lying undiscovered in various bags in Indian museums[1].

If horse bones date to a period much earlier than the proposed Indo-Aryan arrival, who bought them? Did the Aryans come much before than expected — maybe before the decline of the Indus valley area? In fact one theory argues just that. According to this version, two Indo-Aryan groups — the Dasas and Panis — arrived around 2100 B.C.E from the steppes via Central Asia bringing horses with them. Fine. If the Indo-Aryans arrived earlier does this mean that the date of Rg Veda can be pushed to an earlier date than 1200 B.C.E? The theory says, the folks who came in 2100 B.C.E were not the composers of the Veda; they came in a second wave, a couple of centuries later[4]1.

While such justifications fit in data with a pre-defined conclusion, there are few points that need to be addressed.

* Why are there so few horse remains and depictions of horse in India prior to 1500 B.C.E?
* If horses were not bought by the Indo-Aryans in the first wave of migration, then who did?

The HARP has been excavating in Harappa for more than two decades; we have not heard of any breaking news from there. Hence we need to find out why there are such few remains of horses in India whereas we have found remains of cattle, goats, fish and sheep.

Whenever we read such a list, we also need to pay attention to what is missing in this. Thus we find that there are few remains of elephants and camels, two animals which were present in Harappa. A possible explanation is that while sheep, goat and fish were eaten by Harappans, elephants, camels and horses were not and hence the remains are not found in the urban areas in large numbers[2]. Regarding the lack of depictions of horses in seals, we also find that the cow and camel too are not depicted, even though a large number of bones have been found[1].

(Pasupati Seal)

But if the Indo-Aryans bought the horses shouldn’t we see an explosion of horse remains and depiction of horse in art after 1500 B.C.E? In fact horse remains are rare even after 1500 B.C.E. Also, it is around the Mauryan period – around 350 B.C.E – that the depictions of horse and lion gains popularity[2]. Thus the time period 2000 – 1500 B.C.E was not significant regarding the arrival of horse in India. So much for that.

Thus if horses did not arrive in a Big Bang moment, how did they end up in the subcontinent. To begin with, the horse, a rare animal, is not native to India: there are no wild horses in India; we only have the lambi race ka ghoda. Even as late as the 11th and 13th century CE, horses were imported: Marikkars controlled the horse tradewith Arabia and supplied them to Muslim rulers and Vijayanagara.

The people of the subcontinent had trade relations with the external world much before 1500 B.C.E. Also the trade relations between various parts of India and the Near East, dating as far back as 4000 BCE with the find of cotton in Dhuwelia and carnelian bead in Mesopotamia in the third millennium BCE, showed that trade need not introduce a cultural change or introduce new people. Isn’t it possible that the horse too arrived just like that due to the trade relations with Central Asia? [1]2

Finally, consider this: is the horse required to identify a site as Indo-Aryan? The Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex is another Indo-Aryan site where the horse was depicted in grave goods was never found in large numbers in excavations. But this lack of horse bones did not prevent scholars from identifying it as an Indo-Aryan culture, so why not the Indus valley?[1].

References & Notes
============

1. Edwin Bryant, The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate (Oxford University Press, USA, 2004).
2. Michel Danino, The Horse and the Aryan Debate, Journal of Indian History and Culture September 2006, no. 13: 33-59.
3. B.B. Lal, The Truant Horse Clears the Hurdles,in The Aryan Debate edited by Thomas R. Trautmann (Oxford University Press, USA), 230-233
4. Asko Parpola, The Horse and the Language of the Indus Civilization,in The Aryan Debate edited by Thomas R. Trautmann (Oxford University Press, USA), 234-236.
5. Richard H. Meadow and Ajita Patel, “Comment on ‘Horse Remains from Surkotada’,” in The Aryan Debate edited by Thomas R. Trautmann (Oxford University Press, USA), 243-250.
6. David Anthony, “The Domestication of the Horse in Asia,” in The Aryan Debate edited by Thomas R. Trautmann (Oxford University Press, USA), 251 -253.
7. Sandor Bokonyi, Horse Remains from Surkotada, in The Aryan Debate edited by Thomas R. Trautmann (Oxford University Press, USA), 237 -242.

The Aryan Debate: Horse | varnam
 

S.A.T.A

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To borrow Prof Witzel's expression(referred in a different context)there has been too much horse play with regards to the IVC, Indo-Aryans and the Horse.to begin it was and continuous to be disingenuous to base the entire premise of Indo-Aryan migration(or assert their autochonous nature)on evidence of domestication of horse in Bronze age India.

Despite the fact that Horse bones(still contested)and horse figurines have been discovered in IVC sites like Surkotrada , Lothal, malvan(including in non IVC non-IA Kayastha and Ahar culture in central India)these discoveries should lead us to conclude that domesticated horse was know to early Bronze age India.infact many of such discoveries(esp at Lothal)have been dated to the post-mature Harappan phase,which the Migrationtionist contend represents a period when the IA speakers have already intruded into IVC sites.

Based on isolated discoveries it would be far fetched to conclude that IVC indeed had domesticated horses.We have o admit that domesticated Horse,even it was known to the IVC people,is conspicuous by its absence in the IVC cultural iconography and material deposits.attempt to somehow score the IA debate by associating IVC with domesticated horses(messrs Rajaram & Jha et al)must be completely avoided.

Indo-Aryans and their culture is not all about domesticated horses.
 

Rayala

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The myth of aryan invasions of india


THE MYTH OF ARYAN INVASIONS OF INDIA

Dr. MADAN LAL GOEL
UNIVERSITY OF WEST FLORIDA


The often perceived and frequently quoted racial division in India between the fairer Aryan North and the darker Dravidian South is pernicious and dangerous. The British gave currency to this view of racial divide in India. It was part of their “divide and rule” strategy. The Northern people in India got especially sucked into this interpretation of history because it made the “Aryan” northerners appear racially closer to the white races of Europe. This viewpoint is also popular in Sri Lanka, where the Singhalese believe that they are descendants of Aryans from the North of India and that Tamils of Sri Lanka are not.
This short article summarizes recent scholarship on the Aryan invasion theory. New interpretations of ancient Indian history do not accept the view that Aryans entered India from the outside. New information rejects the notion that the Dravidian people were the conquered races, or that the Dravidians were pushed down south by the invading Aryans.
Sri Aurobindo (1872-1950), a scholar of Latin and Greek as well as of Sanskrit, debunked this theory of the North-South racial divide in India. Sri Aurobindo did not subscribe to the theory that the languages of North and South India are unrelated. Sri Aurobindo’s study of the Tamil led him to discover that the original connection between the Sanskrit and Tamil languages was “far closer and more extensive than is usually supposed.” These languages are “two divergent families derived from one lost primitive tongue.” And, “My first study of Tamil words had brought me to what seemed a clue to the very origins and structure of the ancient Sanskrit tongue.” –See The Secret of the Veda, V 10, the Centenary Edition, p 36, 46. Sri Aurobindo also noted that a large part of the vocabulary of the South Indian languages (Tamil, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam) is common with Sanskrit.
For anyone who seriously wishes to pursue the topic of north-south division in India in the light of Sri Aurobindo, I recommend K. D. Sethna’s The Problem of Aryan Origins, New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, 1980 and 1992. Also recommended are the following two titles. Rewriting Indian History by Francois Gautier, New Delhi, Vikas Publishers, 1996, and The Invasion That Never Was by Michael Danino and Sujata Nahar, published by Mira Aditi, 1996.
Hindus collectively have no memory of an Aryan invasion of India that supposedly took place around 1,500 B.C. Hindu epics do not mention any such invasion. Surely, the extensive Hindu literature would describe the Aryan invasions if such had indeed taken place.
Some people misread Ramayana as describing an invasion of the South by a Northern prince. The Indian epic Ramayana narrates Rama’s tale, who invaded the Island of Lanka to rescue his wife Sita. Sita had been forcibly abducted by Ravana to the island of Lanka. Nowhere does Ramayana characterize Ravana as belonging to an alien or an inferior race. Ravana was a

scholar of the Vedas and was called a Chaturvedi, a knower of the four Vedas. Ravana belonged to the same stock as the victorious Rama.
People who give credence to an Aryan invasion of India cite archeological evidence as proof. Among the thousands of clay seals that have been found in the region of Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro (the sites of the Indus Valley Civilization, supposedly the home originally of the Dravidian people), no seals depict the horse or the wheel. In contrast, Aryans were known to have the horse and the chariot. From this evidence it is concluded that the Aryans conquered the people of the Indus valley through the use of the chariot and the horse. K. D. Sethna in his book cited above disputes this evidence. Some seals depicting the wheel have indeed been discovered at the Harappan archeological sites. The wheel was known to the people of the Indus Valley.
Francois Gautier cites recent research which indicates that the script on the Indus seals is of Sanskrit lineage. This proves that the people of Harappa belonged to a much older Vedic age.
The recent discovery of the dried-up Saraswati river further negates the Aryan invasion theory. Satellite photography from outer space shows the existence of a dried-up river bed in Northern India. The archeological evidence indicates that the river dried up several thousand years ago, much before 1,500 B.C., the date ascribed to Aryan invasions. Saraswati is mentioned numerous times in the Vedic scriptures of the Aryans, indicating that these people lived in India during very ancient times.
Recent DNA evidence further negates the Aryan invasion theory. Dr. Subhash Kak summarizes recent research as follows:

Advances in genetics have made it possible to trace ancient migrations. It is now generally accepted that modern man arose in Africa about 200,000 years ago and from there spread first into India and Southeast Asia by coastal migration that probably included some boat crossings. There are several estimates of the time when this spread into India took place. According to the geneticist Stephen Oppenheimer, settlements in India appear about 90,000 years ago. From India there were later northeastern and northwestern migrations into Eurasia and the Far East.
The new findings turn on its head the previous view of the origin of Indians. The earlier view, popular in Indian history books, was that the Indian population came in two waves from the northwest around four or five thousand years ago, displacing the earlier aboriginals, descendents of regional archaic groups. . .
The new view is that subsequent to the rise of modern mankind in Africa, it found a second home in India, which is the point of migration for the populations of Europe, North Africa, China and Japan. The migrants in India slowly adapted to the wide climatic conditions in the sub-continent (from the tropical to the extreme

cold of the Himalayan region) leading to the rise of the Caucasoid and the Mongoloid races. . .
When the theory of the Aryan invasions into India is replaced by an “Out of India” viewpoint, one can readily explain regularities in languages that are spread widely. Linguists see connections between India and languages that extend to distant lands.


An invasion of India from the outside around 1,500 B. C. did not occur. Recent scholarship does not deny that the people in India had relations with other Indo-European people in Asia and Europe. There was a belt stretching from India to the Mediterranean inhabited by a people who spoke related languages, known as the Indo-European languages. Sanskrit is the oldest known language in this family and may appropriately be called as the Mother of Indo-European languages. English is an Indo-European language.
Those who seek to foster the unity of India need to emphasize its unity, not its division. In the great cultural and religious history of India, important contributions have come forth from every region in the nation. The vast Ganga-Jamuna plain in the North of India is indeed the ancient heartland of Hinduism. This is the seat of Ayodhya (Bihar), Mathura and Vrindavan (UP), Kurukshetra (Haryana), and Indraprasatha (Delhi). The Great Mahabharata war was fought in the northern plains.
The 8th to the 13th century revival in Hinduism originated in the South. Sankaracharya from Kerala laid the foundation of modern day Hinduism. Sankara traveled to many parts of India and established centers of teaching and learning in various parts of the country. Sankara wrote extensive commentaries on Brahma Sutras, Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita, which are standard texts for Hindus. Ramanuja fromTamilnad and Madhava from Karnataka initiated the Bhakti movement, which spread to many parts of the country, both North and South. Chaitanya Mahaprabhu from Bengal, Mirabai from Rajasthan, Tulsidas from U.P, Guru Nanak from Punjab, Jnaneshwar from Maharashtra, Jaideva (author of Gita Govinda) from Orissa, have all contributed to Hindu religion.
The four Hindu holy places and pilgrimage sites (Tirathas and Dhams) at Badri Nath, Rameshwaram, Puri, and Dwarka are located in four corners of India: north, south, east and west. Every pious Hindu aspires to visit the four Dhams in one’s lifetime.
Some people equate Sanskrit with Hindi language and the Devanagri script. According to Swami Dayananda Saraswati, founder of Arsha Vidya Gurukulum in Pennsylvania and a Sanskrit scholar, Sanskrit language originally did not have its own script. It was written in a variety of local scripts. The writing of Sanskrit in the Devanagri script is a later development in history.
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An Aryan invasion of India from the outside around 1,500 B. C. did not occur. People of North and South India have lived together in peace as two branches of one family since antiquity. People who talk of an Aryan conquest of India parrot the 19th century British viewpoint and do disservice to the cause of unity of India.
I have removed all links from the above post because I am not authorised to post any links as I have not reached a certain number of posts.
 

Sabir

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There are evidences, people in IVC were shifting eastwards due to some unknown reason. But it is still unknown what caused the decline of the oldest civilization of the world. There is no proof that they were invasion of Aryans from north in Indus Valley Civilization. But it is quite clear that 'rural society' of early Aryans in India was quite different from IVC which was an Urban civilization and should not be considered a continuation of the same. I read somewhere, Rigveda do not mention two important things of India- Tiger and Rice. So some people argue those had been composed before the Aryans settled in Indian plane. S.A.T.A can you put some light on whether any archaeological evidences of Bronze age has been found in India other than in Sindhu region.
 

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