Joe Shearer
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I will try to explain, @Indus Pakistan , why it seemed necessary to call a halt to the flood of rubbish coming from some of your acolytes who obviously haven't brought to the subject your own insight and erudition, but have simply used this topic as an opportunity to buttress very insecure personalities. Look, for instance, from the very populist account of the OP, at these examples; while you might well look at them as weaponry with which to defeat enemies of the cause and build up the concept of a transcendental Pakistan, a nation in embryo for three thousand years, others see them as gospel truth, as you intended all along. These observations are necessarily addressed to you; the canaille hardly matter:
Ancient India was at least as far East as Pataliputra, as the account of Megasthenes, the Greek Ambassador to the Maurya court at Pataliputra, suggests; he named his book Indika, as I have already mentioned. I really dislike propaganda spread by the uneducated.
...as distinct from the cowardice of the dhoti-wearing poltroons across the Beas? How strange can this straining to achieve an identity get?
Is it your case, in saying these rather desperate things, that it was different in the rest of India? That only ascetics in Taxila were austere, that only the tribes of the Punjab and Sind were pure and simple? Is there any evidence for your statements, or is it just that you so desperately want to lay claim to heritage issues, some heritage, any heritage?
He set out for Babylon, reached Babylon and died there after a very short illness.
What is the basis for this assertion? (I am not using the word 'bizarre' because repeated use devalues it; in examining this note, its use might have been continuous without remission).
Alexander went through the Persian provinces that existed, in his effort to pacify the eastern provinces, also in an effort to quell Bessus, the Satrap who had the Persian Emperor killed.
Starting east of the heartland, as amateur historians might consider it, the Achaemenid Empire had the following provinces:
The curious part is that we readily accept the Greek assertion that these were provinces under the Achaemenids, but when it comes to the Battle of Hydaspes, suddenly the same sources are found unreliable.
TO BE CONTINUED. Continued. 12 noon.
What is THAT supposed to mean?
More home-made history, with about the same effects on the human nervous system as its Tennessee Valley moonshine counterpart.
TO BE CONTINUED.
"It is clear from classical accounts of Alexander's campaign that the Greeks were not unimpressed by what they saw in India (i.e. Sindhu or Indus Valley or Pakistan -- ancient India was in Pakistan region, not present day India).
Ancient India was at least as far East as Pataliputra, as the account of Megasthenes, the Greek Ambassador to the Maurya court at Pataliputra, suggests; he named his book Indika, as I have already mentioned. I really dislike propaganda spread by the uneducated.
They much admired the courage
of the Indian (Pakistani) troops,
...as distinct from the cowardice of the dhoti-wearing poltroons across the Beas? How strange can this straining to achieve an identity get?
..the austerity of the ascetics whom they met at Taxila and the purity and simplicity of the tribes of the Punjab and Sind.
Is it your case, in saying these rather desperate things, that it was different in the rest of India? That only ascetics in Taxila were austere, that only the tribes of the Punjab and Sind were pure and simple? Is there any evidence for your statements, or is it just that you so desperately want to lay claim to heritage issues, some heritage, any heritage?
What- ever the immediate cause, by reaching Beas Alexander had almost touched the eastern-most frontier of the traditional boundaries of Pakistan and accomplished his mission. It was but logical that he should return. He came down through the entire length of Pakistan, crossed the Hub River near Karachi and departed for home dying on the way.
He set out for Babylon, reached Babylon and died there after a very short illness.
Alexander's invasion of this area and the extent of his journey again boldly highlight the fact that Pakistan's present boundaries were almost the same in those days. From Hindu Kush, Dir and Swat to the banks of the Beas and down to Karachi - this entire area was one single geographical, political and cultural bloc under the suzerainty of the Persians.
What is the basis for this assertion? (I am not using the word 'bizarre' because repeated use devalues it; in examining this note, its use might have been continuous without remission).
Alexander went through the Persian provinces that existed, in his effort to pacify the eastern provinces, also in an effort to quell Bessus, the Satrap who had the Persian Emperor killed.
Starting east of the heartland, as amateur historians might consider it, the Achaemenid Empire had the following provinces:
- Hyrcania
- Partha
- Dahae
- Chorasmaea
- Aria
- Massagetae
- Sogdia
- Bactria
- Drangiana
- Arachosia
- Amyrgoi
- Gandhara
- Sattagydia
- Hindush
- Gedrosia
The curious part is that we readily accept the Greek assertion that these were provinces under the Achaemenids, but when it comes to the Battle of Hydaspes, suddenly the same sources are found unreliable.
It will also be recalled that this was the same area as covered by the Indus Valley Civilization which continued to remain separate from India through the ages. Alexander's halt and return from the bank of the Beas is not without significance in this context. "The sphere of Persian influence in these early times can hardly have reached beyond the realm of the Indus and its affluents.
What is THAT supposed to mean?
- Does it mean that India had nothing to do with the Indus Valley Civilisation? If so, where did the founders come from? Or are you not aware in the first place, thereby setting yourself up for the disastrous question of who they were?
- Did the former inhabitants of the IVC crumble into dust after the IVC declined and vanished? Was there a mass extinction, as happened to the Mastodon? Have you ever heard of Northern Grey Painted Ware? (Hint: It was the most martial among the shards of pottery found on ancient Indian sites).
- The incursion of the Indo-Aryan speaking migrants occurred sometime between 1700 and 1500 BC. By then the IVC was already in terminal decline, and from the archaeological remains and carbon dating, it appears that the culture did not continue beyond 1300 BC. So what were the people here doing, between 1500 BC and 516 BC?
The redeeming feature of this period that stands out distinctly is that Pakistan, again, was NOT a part of India and was affiliated to a western power. We have seen that whether during (a) the Indus Valley Civilization 3000 B.C. - 1500 B.C. or (b) during the period of Aryan settlement 1500 B.C. - 1000 B.C. or (c) during the half a millennium period after further Aryan migrations eastward 1000 B.C. - 500 B.C. or (d) during its affiliation with the Achaemenian Empire 500 - 325 B.C., Pakistan was all along a separate entity having nothing to do with India. The period covered by these four chapters of its history is from 3000 B.C. to 325 B.C., i.e., about two thousand seven hundred years.
More home-made history, with about the same effects on the human nervous system as its Tennessee Valley moonshine counterpart.
- The Indus Valley Civilisation was set up in the first place by a mixed people; even a cursory acquaintance of the current state of knowledge in genetics about the origins of the inhabitants of the Indus Valley Civilisation will give robust rebuttals of the pseudo-history cited above.
- The second period of urban growth was not restricted to the Ganges Valley; it extended all over India, other than Tamilakam (look it up, chelas). The cities and towns ruled over by petty rulers encountered during Alexander's campaign were set up precisely in this period, between 1500 BC and 500 BC and even longer after; Alexander happened along only in 326 BC.
TO BE CONTINUED.
The immediate impact of Alexander's invasion on Pakistan was faint and inconsequential.
Fortunately for India, at this opportune moment a man from Punjab, Chandragupta Maurya, was able to set up a strong government in the Gangetic Valley which extended its sway over most of northern India.
Alexander's successor Seleucus who had yet to grid his loins and muster his forces after the Dictator's sudden and unexpected demise, was prevailed upon by diplomacy to cede Pakistan to Chandragupta peacefully, avoiding the sufferings of war whose outcome seemed uncertain to him. Pakistan, as such, became a part of India's Maurya Empire in 300 BC without war. This was the first time in history that Pakistan was looking eastward and the first time it had become part of India and ruled by India. But strangely indeed, shortly afterwards, the third Mauryan Emperor, Asoka, became Buddhist and Pakistan did not have to smart under Hinduism for long. Though incorporated in the Indian Empire, Pakistan escaped Hindu rule. Under Asoka's missionary activities she adopted Buddhism and was to remain largely Buddhist till the arrival of Muslims.
Pakistan's ties with India were severed barely a hundred years later in about 200 BC when the Greek King Demetrius, already in control of the areas beyond Hindu Kush with his capital at Bactria (Balkh in northern Afghanistan), pounced upon Pakistan at the very first opportunity. Within a few years (190-180 BC) Demetrius took over a considerable portion of the Indus basin. This ushered in the golden period of Graeco-Bactrians who had their capital in Taxila. This new state also embraced almost the whole of present day Pakistan within its eastern boundary extending up to Sutlej; had an independent existance and again looked westward having hardly anything to do with India. The greatest Graeco-Bactrian king was Menander who was a Buddhist and ruled from 160-140 BC.
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