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the word "india" refers to present day pakistan

not just bharat.. mauryas were from present day swat pakistan, got educated in taxila.
Mauryans were not from present day Swat, the dynasty originated from the region around Bihar or Bengal. It was the chief advisor, Chanakaya who was from Taxila. Although he was a great scholar, he should not be revered, as he assisted the Mauryans in subjugating his own people.
 
Indeed although he never used the name 'India' which is a English. In Megasthenes time even the English language hade not evolved. Also he defined a region, a geography rather than a country as we understand it today. Something like Magreb, Balkans, Europe etc

The issue is not the name or even the etymology. I only have a problem with this when citizens of the modern state Bharat use the tag 'India' to claim anything and everything that name carried from the past. That is mental gymnastics intended to apporopriate the heritage/history of a entire geography as belonging to the Bharat Republic.That is the issue. It's simple cheating.

It would be like modern Romanians claim everything Roman because they carry the name 'Roman-ia' and then tell the Italians they did not even exist 150 years ago.
He detailed it in his book, called 'indika'. That's close enough to English for me. Closer than Hindustan I must say.

I could say the same about you, you inherited a part of the land that once used to have different philosophies.
Take this as one big corporation, like TATA, it started small a textile industry then Chemicals, grown into a huge corporation and one day, the textile division decided to leave. It doesn't mean TATA Holdings must forfeit its name to this textile industry just because that was the beginning and TATA is not defined by its textile industry anymore.

There is some difference in the Roman comparison too we said Pakistan didn't exist because it didn't, before you guys proposed land for Muslims.

And what is your confusion. British India was not Indian republic. What you deluded. Look at flow chart below. Should make it clear even to a kindergarten kid.


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Fact: Myanmar, Bangla, India, Pakistan are equal successor states of British India.
Knowingly or unknowingly your Fact part is spelled right. But names on your map is wrong. Bangla was Pakistan too. British Raj just means British Rule. The territory was called British India as per British records, no matter how many times you post this map on PDF, those written records don't change.

British India got divided into India, Pakistan, and Burma.
 
Mauryans were not from present day Swat, the dynasty originated from the region around Bihar or Bengal. It was the chief advisor, Chanakaya who was from Taxila. Although he was a great scholar, he should not be revered, as he assisted the Mauryans in subjugating his own people.

To be accurate somewhere between Chitral and Swat.You can crosscheck .Bihar /Bengal was where they accumulated wealth,therefore it became central to the kingdom.


Do you think im paying respect to either Mauryans or Chankyas? Im actually indiferrent.
Im just stating history as it is.. from Greek sources...though history from those times are always up for debate however I would prefer greek over so-called vedic era sources any day which were never documented and were passed by the word of mouth.
 
Mauryas from swat ..... oh boy kahan se laate ho bhai ye knowledge....

So seems like Nandas were from Lahore
not just bharat.. mauryas were from present day swat pakistan, got educated in taxila.
Porus was from present day Jehlum Pakistan.
 
Mauryans were not from present day Swat, the dynasty originated from the region around Bihar or Bengal. It was the chief advisor, Chanakaya who was from Taxila. Although he was a great scholar, he should not be revered, as he assisted the Mauryans in subjugating his own people.

Mauryas from swat ..... oh boy kahan se laate ho bhai ye knowledge....

So seems like Nandas were from Lahore


Based on Plutarch's evidence, historians state Sandrokottas Maurya(belonged to the Ashvaka (q.v.) or Assakenoi clan of Swat/Kunar valley (modern Mer-coh or Koh-I-Mor — the Meros of the classical writings).


Dr D.B. Spooner, the official excavator of Pataliputra (Bihar),also believes that Mauryas (Chandragupta, Ashoka) were Iranians ( Journnal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 1915, (Pt.II) , p.406, Dr D.B. Spooner).
 
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...Maurya was never a dynasty started from some eleite , Chandraguta (first king of Maurya) was just a ruler actual ruler was Kautilya who hates nands(Dhananand) who was actual ruler of Patliputra ....

Maurya frkm Swat , Tipu sultan from Punjab
Based on Plutarch's evidence, historians state Sandrokottas Maurya(belonged to the Ashvaka (q.v.) or Assakenoi clan of Swat/Kunar valley (modern Mer-coh or Koh-I-Mor — the Meros of the classical writings).
 
...Maurya was never a dynasty started from some eleite , Chandraguta (first king of Maurya) was just a ruler actual ruler was Kautilya who hates nands(Dhananand) who was actual ruler of Patliputra ....

Maurya frkm Swat , Tipu sultan from Punjab
Dont target the messenger.. the problme is this will destroy the akhand bharat project therefore it brings criticism from UP folks but no counter narrative.
Tipu was mixed blood his forefathers migrated to south from east punjab area.
Dr D.B. Spooner who excavated Patliputra also believes that Mauryas (Chandragupta, Ashoka) were Iranians ( Journnal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 1915, (Pt.II) , p.406, Dr D.B. Spooner).
 
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also believes that Mauryas (Chandragupta, Ashoka) were Iranians ( Journnal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 1915, (Pt.II) , p.406, Dr D.B. Spooner).

Mesopotamians migrated to Indus valley to start agriculture for the first time. Prior to that , Indus inhabitants were Hunter-gatherers just like elsewhere in the Himalayan Sub-continent.. Even the Brahmi letters and language of Vedas is closer to Avestani Persian. Indus valley settlements were largely Perso-Mesopotemian but that heritage had been hijacked by British sponsored local Indians in their own versions of history. There are ample of evidence. One must read contemporary research papers instead of holding onto rotten colonial propagandas.
 
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And what do you think the people in modern day Pakistan were before the advent of Islam??

If not Hindus or Buddhists.....what else were they??
The people of modern-day Pakistan prior to the advent and introduction of Islam primarily followed forms of Buddhism that were heavily influenced by both foreign and indigenous traditions/beliefs.

Did Muhammad bin Qasim conquer Mars or Hindu Sindh??
Sindh was not Hindu during the invasion of Muhammad bin Qasim.

Though the dynasty that ruled Sindh during this era was Hindu, the first and only Hindu dynasty of Sindh; lasting only around 80 years, and gaining power by usurping the Buddhist Rai King, the people were overwhelmingly Buddhist. Their attempts to impose the caste system and Brahmanism was met with fierce opposition and their rule was defined by constant revolts.

Hence why during the invasion of Muhammad bin Qasim, his army was inflated by locals who flocked to join him in overthrowing this oppressive dynasty.

what that land was called, its a good question. i dont have any answer.. from arab perspective, it was hind.
but others - i would like to know
conclusion - land before pakistan was never hindustan
There was no standard name for the Indus region, it had many terms that varied throughout time. Meluha, Sapta Sindhava, Aratta, Sind, etc... are among many.

Ganga...undefined by the Greeks....as far as I know.
The Gangetic region was typically referred to as Gangaridai by later Greek and Roman geographers who came to know of the region.

And what did Sindhis practice before Islam??? They practiced Hinduism so they're Hindus.
As I stated before, the people of Sindh prior to Islam's introduction were primarily Buddhist.

Buddhism came after Hinduism....please stop spreading bs...Buddhism and Hinduism co-existed in modern day Pakistan in ancient times.....and what do you think being a pagan means???
Although there were various eras and instances in which Buddhism and Hinduism coeval to each other within modern-day Pakistan. It is wrong to make the blanket assumption that they co-existed together.

Even though Hinduism in modern-day Pakistan was quite insignificant and minuscule compared to Buddhism, there were still religious tensions that were often violent. An example being the Alchon King Mihirakula, who converted to Hinduism and destroyed over a thousand stupas in Gandhara alone.

thats why you are not in this league dude..buddhism was here from before As A RELIGION....whereas hinduism existed as a CULTURE before it.
which included many things like caste and roles.
Hinduism never existed as culture.

Prior to Buddhism our ancestors primarily followed early Vedism which is distinct and even conflicting to Hinduism.

Regarding the caste system, this social structure has always been rejected by our ancestors; as seen in various historic sources. From the times of the Rigveda to the modern era, our social structure has always been centered on extended kinship with no defined or static hierarchy.

"Gangadesh" means nothing to me, me being someone from the Deccan. Even though I am an Internationalist I am irritated by someone attaching to me the badlands of UP.
So you are perfectly fine with 'India', a term originating from the Indus river. But have qualms with 'Gangadesh', referring to a region and river that is significantly closer in proximity and culture to South India?

but he wrongly says Sapta Sindhu means land of seven rivers, but it simply means "seven rivers" or more specifically the tributaries of Indus
'Sapta Sindhu' is a mistranslation and grammatically wrong, as 'Sindhu' is not plural. The correct term is 'Sapta Sindhava' and most certainly defined a geographic area.

Just as 'Punjab' today means 'Land of the Five Rivers', despite it's literal definition as 'Five waters/rivers'.

Sapta-Sindhava was used in reference to the region that held the 'Seven Rivers': Sarasvati/Haraxvati (Helmand River), Kubha (Kabul River) and the tributaries of the Indus; Shutudri/Sutlej, Parushni/Ravi, Ashikni/Chenab, Vitasta/Jhelum, Vipasha/Beas.

Vedic clans never knew anything about Punjab, or Panchanada (actual name of Punjab) this name came nearly a thousand years later.
Punjab was included under 'Sapta Sindhava' by the early Vedic Aryans; I'm not sure what you mean by 'Vedic clans never knew anything about Punjab', this is a gross fallacy.

Sindhu, Kashmira and Kambojas were not vedic Clans, Kambojas were considered 'mlecha' or outcastes.
That simply depends on what source you look at.

The divergence between the original Vedic Aryans that inhabited the Indus Region, and several of the frontier tribes (late Vedic period) that migrated into the Gangetic region, adopting much of the culture/traditions of the natives as well as mixing with them, birthed contradictory and conflicting views.

As the followers of the later 'Gangetic Vedism' had a new and different definition of what constituted 'Vedic'. The tribes of the Indus region were no longer 'Vedic' to them.

As seen in this excerpt:

“that (region) where these five rivers, emerging from the mountains flow, this Aratta (country) is called Balhika where the Arya should not stay even for two days”.

"The regions are called by the name of Aratta. The people residing there are called the Vahikas. (VIII.30.47) The lowest of brahmanas also are residing there from very remote times. They are without the Veda and without knowledge, without sacrifice and without the power to assist at other's sacrifices. They are all fallen and many amongst them have been begotten by Shudras upon other peoples' girls. The gods never accept any gifts from them. The Prasthalas, the Madras, the Gandharas, the Arattas, those called Khasas, the Vasatis, the Sindhus and the Sauviras are as blamable in their practices.'" (VIII.30.74) "

All the tribes named in that quote were the major tribes of the Indus Region. Prasthalas were located in East Punjab, Madras were based in North Punjab, Gandharas were based primarily around KPK but also extended to Afghanistan and Punjab, the Arattas is the collective name for all these peoples, the Khasas resided in Kashmir, Sindhus inhabited West Sindh and South Punjab, Sauviras made up east of Sindh and we do not know much about the Vasatis.

Carefully missed Megasthenes (290BC), who approximated the shape of India to be a close quadrilateral with sea surrounding it. Besides the Persians never determined the Boundary of their version of H or I ndia. They just considered people living beyond the River as Hindu.
As I stated before, there was no standard term; each geographer had their own definition of the region(s).

What is your confusion? Pakistan was partitioned from British India. There was no Pakistani before 1947.
Indeed, we got our independence from a product of foreign imperialism.

Though you are correct that 'Pakistani' as a nationality was non-existent prior to 1947; the name itself was conceived as a blanket term for the regions known as;
Punjab
Afghania
Kashmir
Sindh
balochisTAN

Regions which hold thousands of years of history. To say that we 'randomly poofed' into existence in 1947, with no history or heritage, is simply fallacious.

We are the result of a federation of peoples and regions, held together by a loose affinity of culture, heritage, history, religion, geography, etc... stemming millenniums; that decided to not be a part of a 'forceful marriage', contracted by foreigners (the British).

This reply on reddit sums it up quite well.

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So called Indus-Pakistanis are free to migrate to India and start practicing idol worships over their just like their pagan ancestors did.
We love our deen and there is absolutely nothing wrong in reclaiming our heritage. It's quite ironic to see psuedo-Islamists, who seven decades ago, fought tooth and nail against the creation of Pakistan and referred to Muhammad Ali Jinnah as 'Kafir e Azam' are telling us to migrate to India.

There is nothing to be proud of ancient Indus Vally which could be seen as an icon of ancient 'Jahilyat'. Not civilization.
There is everything to be proud of our heritage. You do not even recognize them as a civilization, yet they had a better sewage system than our current modern state and that is only the tip of the iceberg.

Indeed although he never used the name 'India' which is a English. In Megasthenes time even the English language hade not evolved. Also he defined a region, a geography rather than a country as we understand it today. Something like Magreb, Balkans, Europe etc

The issue is not the name or even the etymology. I only have a problem with this when citizens of the modern state Bharat use the tag 'India' to claim anything and everything that name carried from the past. That is mental gymnastics intended to apporopriate the heritage/history of a entire geography as belonging to the Bharat Republic.That is the issue. It's simple cheating.

It would be like modern Romanians claim everything Roman because they carry the name 'Roman-ia' and then tell the Italians they did not even exist 150 years ago.
Fantastic analogies.

And FYI Taxila was ruled by Ambhi who literally surrendered in front of Alexander ..so surrender seems to be genetic
Referring to Ambhi's alliance with Alexander as 'surrender' is irrational and it is quite odd and illogical to see people chastise him for doing so.

There was absolutely no way a city-state would be able to stand against the most powerful Empire of it's time, nor was there any tactical reasoning in doing so.

Taxila aligning with the Macedonians was a well-calculated and strategic move, not only did they realize that there was no attainable objective in fighting the Macedonians and even if they were able achieve victory in the slim chance, they would be at a significantly weaker footing against their adversaries to the East, they also saw the Macedonians as an opportunity to quell the unruly tribes beyond the Jhelum river.

I don't see anything wrong in doing what they had to do.

Based on Plutarch's evidence, historians state Sandrokottas Maurya(belonged to the Ashvaka (q.v.) or Assakenoi clan of Swat/Kunar valley (modern Mer-coh or Koh-I-Mor — the Meros of the classical writings).


Dr D.B. Spooner, the official excavator of Pataliputra (Bihar),also believes that Mauryas (Chandragupta, Ashoka) were Iranians ( Journnal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 1915, (Pt.II) , p.406, Dr D.B. Spooner).

Dont target the messenger.. the problme is this will destroy the akhand bharat project therefore it brings criticism from UP folks but no counter narrative.
Tipu was mixed blood his forefathers migrated to south from east punjab area.
also believes that Mauryas (Chandragupta, Ashoka) were Iranians ( Journnal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 1915, (Pt.II) , p.406, Dr D.B. Spooner).
These are primarily fringe theories and there is no scholarly consensus supporting them. We shouldn't do what the Indians are doing and claim the heritage of the other country.
 
Chandragupta Maurya was from Cheecho Ki Maliyan and his in laws were from Mandi Jamkay Chhatha.:lol:
 
'Sapta Sindhu' is a mistranslation and grammatically wrong, as 'Sindhu' is not plural. The correct term is 'Sapta Sindhava' and most certainly defined a geographic area.

Just as 'Punjab' today means 'Land of the Five Rivers', despite it's literal definition as 'Five waters/rivers'.

Sapta-Sindhava was used in reference to the region that held the 'Seven Rivers': Sarasvati/Haraxvati (Helmand River), Kubha (Kabul River) and the tributaries of the Indus; Shutudri/Sutlej, Parushni/Ravi, Ashikni/Chenab, Vitasta/Jhelum, Vipasha/Beas.
haha no. Sapta Sindhu is grammatically correct (Don't even try to explain Sanskrit grammar). You can't say if it defined Geographical region or seven rivers unless you read a full sentence. Generic term Sapta Sindhu means seven rivers. Sapta Sindhava sounds like an incomplete sentence.

Sarasvati is not Helmand river, Rig Veda clearly says Saraswati river is in between Yamuna and Sutlej and flows from the west. That river dead, maybe due to some natural event.
Punjab was included under 'Sapta Sindhava' by the early Vedic Aryans; I'm not sure what you mean by 'Vedic clans never knew anything about Punjab', this is a gross fallacy.
The first mention of Punjab (Panchanada) comes in Mahabharata, the epic comes much later, that is after the Vedas, a lot of references can be found to Upanishads too meaning, Upanishads exist when the epic was written.

I'm curious, are you trying to contradict for the sake of it?
That simply depends on what source you look at.

The divergence between the original Vedic Aryans that inhabited the Indus Region, and several of the frontier tribes (late Vedic period) that migrated into the Gangetic region, adopting much of the culture/traditions of the natives as well as mixing with them, birthed contradictory and conflicting views.

As the followers of the later 'Gangetic Vedism' had a new and different definition of what constituted 'Vedic'. The tribes of the Indus region were no longer 'Vedic' to them.
The divergence happened when Vedic clans stopped being Vedic. Those who do not follow it become outcastes, as Kambojas did.
There is no "regional" vedism that sounds stupid, the Vedas didn't go through any conflicting views but a lot of texts have been later written in reference to the Vedas. The core texts are still the four Vedas.
 
So you are perfectly fine with 'India', a term originating from the Indus river. But have qualms with 'Gangadesh', referring to a region and river that is significantly closer in proximity and culture to South India?

I am fine with "India" which was the unifying term that the Brits called their realm.

Or indeed the "Indian Subcontinent" which can refer to a near-future status of this region that shall mean the same Progressive political system which governs India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka, while at the same time these countries remaining independent republics. This arrangement would be like how pre-2003 Iraq and Syria were ( governed by the Ba'ath system ) while remaining two independent republics.
 
India is Bharat

Bharatvarsh is the Indian subcontinent.

Pakistan is part of Bharatvarsh
 
No, we are not fine with the term india or indian sub continent. We are very happy called to be Pakistani. We are a separate nation with nothing common to indians.
in ancient age and also in history these regions are always separate states
" Sindh, hind , Bengal"
So we don't want this british ruling logic of common state and common name. Your state always run on propaganda, but this has no more influence on Pakistani people. So keep your logic with yourself.
I am fine with "India" which was the unifying term that the Brits called their realm.

Or indeed the "Indian Subcontinent" which can refer to a near-future status of this region that shall mean the same Progressive political system which governs India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka, while at the same time these countries remaining independent republics. This arrangement would be like how pre-2003 Iraq and Syria were ( governed by the Ba'ath system ) while remaining two independent republics.
 
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We are a separate nation with nothing common to indians.

That is not true. We can immediately see that through Ghulam Ali, Zeba Bakhtiar, Salma Agha, Fawad khan, Humaima Malik, Javed Sheikh, Ali Zafar, Mawra Hocaine, Mahira Khan, Atif Aslam, Adnan Sami, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Raahat Fateh Ali Khan easily working in Indian films. And Shilpa Shukla, Nandita Das and Naseeruddin Shah easily working in Pakistani films.

I have watched Pakistani comedy stage shows and I could identify with them. Pakistani cinemas have played Hindi films like Raid because they could identify with these films.

Watch this interview of the Indian actress, Swara Bhaskar, on her trip to Pakistan. The interview is on the Pakistani show Mazaat Raat.

As for the political entities called India and Pakistan, they can continue with those names but what I want is that these two should have Progressive poltical systems, which would be to their benefit. The main issue between the two countries is Kashmir and this issue needs a political solution. Here's my contribution towards that :

1. Let India and Pakistan both become governed by the same Progressive / Socialist Direct Democracy system, while remaining two independent countries. This will be like how pre-2003 Iraq and Syria were, both governed by Ba'ath ideology while remaining two independent republics.

2. Let the India-administered Kashmir remain with India and Pakistan-administered Kashmir remain with Pakistan.

3. Convert the LoC into an International Border which is passable by passport for the reasons of trade, tourism and family visits.
This will remove most of the militant ideology surrounding the Kashmir issue. The only remaining militantism will be of the Regressive religious sort and that can be sorted out by both countries.

And this will also have the great effect of bringing both countries to a Progressive political system and governance.

@Talwar e Pakistan ^^^
 
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