roadrunner
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It shows that around 327 BC, the greeks learnt about the existence of a land
beyond their current idea of India.
And before 300 BC, noone referred to the region of modern day India, as "India". India was a name given to the Indus Valley by foreigners at the tme, so when the ancient Greeks refer to "India" in their texts prior to 300 BC (eg, the Gandara civilization, the IVC, the Vedic period etc), all these referrals are to Pakistani history and not Bharati history. So why do your websites try and make out that these referrals are to Indian/Bharati history? Why in fact do your website try and refer to history that occurred within the borders of Pakistan as “Indian history”? Surely this is the history of Pakistan is it not?
Alexander himself met Chandragupta Maurya, who later ruled the Mauryan empire and overthrew the Nandas.
Right, this isn't the point. The point is that prior to Alexander, all the historical accounts of the Greeks, the Romans, or whoever, were of Pakistani history. None of it was Indian. Therefore, why refer to these as Indian? Let’s not get into the fact that later “Indian” history could also be Pakistani.
Well done!! You have made another one of you sweeping and grossly incorrect statements!!
What is incorrect about it? Prior to 300 BC, noone in the outside world knew of Bharat (modern India), the only thing they knew of India, was what happened within Pakistan's borders. How is this a "sweeping generalization that is grossly incorrect?"
Herodotus lived in 440 BC, before Greek conquests.
Yes, which is precisely why until Alexander's time, noone knew of modern day Bharat, and believed it to be a desolate land (Alexander did no step foot in India because he was nearly defeated within Pakistan).
327 BCE to be precise.
After that,
In 303 BCE, Seleucus I led an army to the Indus, where he encountered Chandragupta.
The confrontation ended with a peace treaty, and "an intermarriage agreement" , meaning either a dynastic marriage or an agreement for intermarriage between Indians and Greeks.
Accordingly, Seleucus ceded to Chandragupta his northwestern territories, possibly as far as Arachosia(Pakistan and Southern Afghanistan) and received 500 war elephants (which played a key role in the victory of Seleucus at the Battle of Ipsus):
Around that time, Megasthenes described India in 300 BCE in the quote i gave earlier.
Megasthenes also travelled all around India as far as Pataliputra (Patna) and Madurai (Pandya Kingdom), and recorded descriptions of his travels.
Here's a quote about Megasthenes by Arrian:
"Megasthenes lived with Sibyrtius, satrap of Arachosia, and often speaks of his visiting Sandracottus (Chandragupta), the king of the Indians."
Clearly, he describes Chandragupta as the king of the Indians.
By your own accounts, when Magasthenes was writing his books, he was using the term "Indian" to mean anyone from within the Indus Valley (Pakistan), as well as those from within Northern India. Now what Megasthenes writes might be part of today's India's history, but it might also be a part of today's Pakistani history. However, before this, all the history including IVC, Vedic period, Gandara that was described (the real heyday of "Indian" history), all occurred within modern day Pakistan's borders.
From the above, it is apparent that the Greeks knew of India as the land "east of the Indus" by the year 300BCE.
And Gandhara was at its peak around 500 BC. Can you count chronologically?
The verse you quoted is one one of many.
the Majority of the verses, especially the earlier ones, mention Saraswati in them and talk of it as the greatest river of all.
Later verses diminish the Saraswati and give more importance to the Indus. This is considered as an indication that the Saraswati river was drying up.
Well, that’s a theory. The identity of the Saraswati could also be the Helmand, but let’s assume it’s the one running to the East of the Indus in parallel with it. If you read the Rig Veda, how many chapters refer to Indra? I hope you, even with your views, will accept that Indra is the main God of the Rig Veda. Where do you think the name “Indra” comes from? I’ll tell you. From the “INDus”, or the Sindhu River, as referenced in the Rig Veda. If the Saraswati was so prominent as you claim, the Vedic people would not have been quoting verses referring to Indra in 50% of the chapters. There is a God, Saraswat or something, but this God receives virtually no mention in the Rig Veda (perhaps a bit, but not comparable to Indra). So, what this boils down to, is your claim that Saraswati is most important to the Vedic people, despite Indra, the God of the Indus River being the most prominent being in the Rig Veda. I suspect some Hindutva fanatic, or previous Hindu extremist has added the 2 verses in chapter 7 in the Rig Veda, because it makes no sense to have a book devoted to the Indus (Indra), and then for two anomalous verses in chapter 7, you have the contradiction that the Saraswati was the most important. It does not make sense, and the Vedic people were obviously literate enough to think.
But I should say that even the Saraswati, if indeed it is the parallel river system to the East of the Indus, runs mainly through Pakistan. If you include the whole of Punjab as part of Pakistan (which it should have been imo, then you get ZERO Indus or Saraswati running through India. Fact of the matter is without a shadow of a doubt, the Vedic people were MAINLY located in Pakistan, and the only place they might have overlapped into India would have been on the fringes of the Punjab. Even Afghanistan could claim IVC and Vedic history from Pakistan like this. Today’s borders are artificial, and each civilization overlaps to a certain extent. However, there can be little doubt that the majority of Pakistan was the home of the Vedic people, whilst only a minority of India (a fringe region) was home to the Vedic people.
The Indus is mentioned very less.
You perhaps mistake the word "saptasindhu" for Indus.
Saptasindhu refers to the Saraswati and six other rivers, with Saraswati being the most prominent.
I’m not mistaking anything. The references in the Rig Veda to “Sindhu” refer to the Indus. Here is the Rig Vedic quote on the Indus, clearly mentioning its prominence.
1. THE singer, O ye Waters in Vivasvān's place, shall tell your grandeur forth that is beyond compare.
The Rivers have come forward triply, seven and seven. Sindhu in might surpasses all the streams that flow.
2 Varuṇa cut the channels for thy forward course, O Sindhu, when thou rannest on to win the race.
Thou speedest o’er precipitous ridges of the earth, when thou art Lord and Leader of these moving floods.
3 His roar is lifted up to heaven above the earth: he puts forth endless vigour with a flash of light.
Like floods of rain that fall in thunder from the cloud, so Sindhu rushes on bellowing like a bull.
4 Like mothers to their calves, like milch kine with their milk, so, Sindhu, unto thee the roaring rivers run.
Thou leadest as a warrior king thine army's wings what time thou comest in the van of these swift streams.
5 Favour ye this my laud, O Gan!gā, Yamunā, O Sutudri, Paruṣṇī and Sarasvatī:
With Asikni, Vitasta, O Marudvrdha, O Ārjīkīya with Susoma hear my call.
6 First with Trstama thou art eager to flow forth, with Rasā, and Susartu, and with Svetya here,
With Kubha; and with these, Sindhu and Mehatnu, thou seekest in thy course Krumu and Gomati.
7 Flashing and whitely-gleaming in her mightiness, she moves along her ample volumes through the realms,
Most active of the active, Sindhu unrestrained, like to a dappled mare, beautiful, fair to see.
8 Rich in good steeds is Sindhu, rich in cars and robes, rich in gold, nobly-fashioned, rich in ample wealth.
Blest Silamavati and young Urnavati invest themselves with raiment rich in store of sweets.
9 Sindhu hath yoked her car, light-rolling, drawn by steeds, and with that car shall she win booty in this fight.
So have I praised its power, mighty and unrestrained, of independent glory, roaring as it runs.
Rig Veda: Rig-Veda, Book 10: HYMN LXXV. The Rivers.
Why do you think that over half the Rig Veda has books on the God, Indra? A God that is named after the Indus River?
David Frawley mentions them as Sindhu, Ashikni, Parushni, Sarasvati, Yamuna, Ganga and Sarayu.
Bullshyt. The Ganga is a minor River. The 7 rivers are the Indus, its 5 tributaries, and the Saraswati most likely. Noone believes the Ganges to be one of the rivers of the Sapta Sindhu.
Saraswati, Satadru (Sutlej), Vipasa (Beas), Asikni (Chenab), Parosni (Ravi), Vitasta (Jhelum) and Sindhu (Indus).
The Saraswati:- Where lies the mystery
The Ganges receives virtually no mention in the Rig Veda. Frawley is a Hindu convert and avid Hindutva fanatic. It’s well known he has an institute on Hinduism and te main beneficiaries of such an institution would be Hindutva fanatics. He is not neutral, and noone (except Hindutva) would agree the Ganges to be a part of the 7 rivers. It’s an illogical theory.
The Vedic descriptions match the region of modern Northern Punjab.
The Vedic descriptions match the whole of Pakistan. Not a single bit of India in fact. Only a minority of India is described. The Kabul River is mentioned in there too. The main river systems however are centred on todays Pakistan.
Also, the people described are nomadic, so we can't really put a specific location to them.
Good grief, the Vedic people weren’t like gypsies living in caravans, you know!. They had a home, and whilst they did move around sometime, they were not shifting their homeland constantly. They were nomadic in the sense the Vedic people were immigrating and emigrating, North and South, into and out of the Vedic region.
That is incorrect. The Saraswati is given prime importance ,except toward later verses.
Except book 7, where else is the Saraswati given “prime importance”? Why do you think Indra is mentioned in almost every verse of the Rig Veda, and Saravaat is mentioned perhaps only once or twice?
Vedic people were nomadic. So, they can't be ascribed to any one side of the border.
They travelled as far as the Ganges.
Weak argument. One or two tribes did migrate to the Ganges and set up shop later in the Vedic period. But the Vedic homeland never went that far. The Vedic homeland is described pretty much as all of Pakistan, and up till the Yamuna as the Eastern border at the height of Vedic power. Basically the Eastern border of Punjab and all of Pakistan. This is the commonly accepted theory. Migration to the Ganges was negligible. You can see this by the way people look, and even their genetics.
Also, they seem to have regarded the Saraswati river as the most important, jjudging by the Rigveda.
The Saraswati references in the Rig Veda are most likely manipulated by later Hindus. You, and the Hindutva ned to come up with an explanation as to why Indra was the most popular God, and Sarasvaat receives only a passing mention. Why would the Vedic people name their most popular God after a weaker river?
More likely is the following map:
That map is bull. It’s made by someone off wiki. Cemetary H never went into India even.
Anyhoe Cemetary H was not culturally Vedic, and not Rig Vedic. The Gandharan grave system was in fact Vedic. Gandhara never went into today’s Bharat in the slightest, so thankfully it’s something you guys cannot leech, and it’s good proof of Rig Vedic ancestry in Pakistan. (I totally acknowledge later Vedas being composed in Bharat by Bharatis, but not the Rig Veda, which is the Veda of the Rig Vedic Aryans).
The Painted Gray Ware culture is correctly a fully Indian (Bharati) thing, but it is not a Rig Vedic culture.
I don't know what you mean by aryans. There is no civilization or people called aryans.
Gandharan is located geographically outside India. But its cultural center lay to the east.
Lol, so Gandharan culture lay in Bharat now? Joke. Gandharan culture, if anything came from the North and West. Much of the Buddhist stuff was not the same as the Buddhist stuff going on elsewhere because it was developed separately in Pakistan and led to the two schools of Buddhist though (the Pakistani developed one became the major one and travelled to China, Japan and so on) (Mahayana), the South Indian/Tamil/Sri Lankan thought travelled to Cambodia (Theravada).