|
NB. The footnotes for this article are linked to
a separate footnote
page.
Introduction
Tacitus, the classical Roman writer, claimed to have described
past events and personalities in his works sine ira et studio,
free from hostility and bias. This motto has guided serious historians
through the ages, and it became their highest ambition to write
history 'objectively', distancing themselves from opinions held
by interested parties.
The ideal was not always followed, as we know. We have
seen twentieth century governments commissioning re-writings of
the histories of their countries from the standpoint of their own
ideologies. Like the court-chroniclers of former times, some contemporary
academic historians wrote unashamedly biased accounts of events
and redesigned the past accordingly.
When, in the wake of World War II the nations of Asia
and Africa gained independence, their intellectuals became aware
of the fact that their histories had been written by representatives
of the colonial powers which they had opposed. More often than not
they discovered that all traditional accounts of their own past
had been brushed aside by the 'official' historians as so much myth
and fairytale. Often lacking their own academically trained historians-or
worse, only possessing native historians who had taken over the
views of the colonial masters-the discontent with existing histories
of their countries expressed itself often in vernacular works that
lacked the academic credentials necessary to make an impact on professional
historians.
The situation is slowly changing. A new generation of
scholars who grew up in post-colonial times and who do not share
the former biases, scholars in command of the tools of the trade-intimacy
with the languages involved, familiarity with the culture of their
countries, respect for the indigenous traditions-are rewriting the
histories of their countries.
Nowhere is this more evident than in India. India had
a tradition of learning and scholarship much older and vaster than
the European countries that, from the sixteenth century onwards,
became its political masters. Indian scholars are rewriting the
history of India today.
The Aryan Invasion Theory and the Old Chronology
One of the major points of revision concerns the so called 'Aryan
invasion theory', often referred to as 'colonial-missionary', implying
that it was the brainchild of conquerors of foreign colonies who
could not but imagine that all higher culture had to come from outside
'backward' India, and who likewise assumed that a religion could
only spread through a politically supported missionary effort.
While not buying into the more sinister version of this
revision, which accuses the inventors of the Aryan invasion theory
of malice and cynicism, there is no doubt that early European attempts
to explain the presence of Indians in India had much to with the
commonly held Biblical belief that humankind originated from one
pair of humans- Adam and Eve to be precise (their common birth date
was believed to be c.4005 BCE)-and that all peoples on earth descended
from one of the sons of Noah, the only human to survive the Great
Flood (dated at 2500 BCE). The only problem seemed to be to connect
peoples not mentioned in Chapter 10 of Genesis ['The Peopling of
the Earth'] with one of the Biblical genealogical lists.
One such example of a Christian historian attempting
to explain the presence of Indians in India is the famous Abbé Dubois
(1770-1848), whose long sojourn in India (1792-1823) enabled him
to collect a large amount of interesting materials concerning the
customs and traditions of the Hindus. His (French) manuscript was
bought by the British East India Company and appeared in an English
translation under the title Hindu Manners, Customs and Ceremonies
in 1897 with a Prefatory Note by the Right Hon. F. Max Müller.2
Abbé Dubois, loath 'to oppose [his] conjectures to [the Indians']
absurd fables' categorically stated:
It is practically admitted that India was inhabited very soon
after the Deluge, which made a desert of the whole world. The
fact that it was so close to the plains of Sennaar, where Noah's
descendants remained stationary so long, as well as its good climate
and the fertility of the country, soon led to its settlement.
Rejecting other scholars' opinions which linked the Indians to
Egyptian or Arabic origins, he ventured to suggest them 'to be descendents
not of Shem, as many argue, but of Japhet'. He explains: 'According
to my theory they reached India from the north, and I should place
the first abode of their ancestors in the neighbourhood of the Caucasus.'3
The reasons he provides to substantiate his theory are utterly unconvincing-but
he goes on to build the rest of his migration theory (not yet an
'Aryan' migration theory) on this shaky foundation.
Max Müller (1823-1903), who was largely responsible for the 'Aryan
invasion theory' and the 'old chronology', was too close in spirit
and time to this kind of thinking, not to have adopted it fairly
unquestioningly. In his Prefatory Note he praises the work of Abbé
Dubois as a 'trustworthy authority. . .which will always retain
its value.'
That a great deal of early British Indology was motivated by Christian
missionary considerations, is no secret. The famous and important
Boden Chair for Sanskrit at the University of Oxford was founded
by Colonel Boden in 1811 with the explicit object 'to promote the
translation of the Scriptures into Sanskrit, so as to enable his
countrymen to proceed in the conversion of the natives of India
to the Christian Religion'.4 Max Müller, in a letter to his wife wrote
in 1886: 'The translation of the Veda will hereafter tell to a great
extent on the fate of India and on the growth of millions of souls
in that country. It is the root of their religion, and to show them
what the root is, I feel sure, is the only way of uprooting all
that has sprung from it during the last 3 000 years.'5
When the affinity between many European languages and Sanskrit
became a commonly accepted notion, scholars almost automatically
concluded that the Sanskrit speaking ancestors of the present day
Indians were to be found somewhere halfway between India and the
Western borders of Europe-Northern Germany, Scandinavia, Southern
Russia, the Pamir-from which they invaded the Punjab. (It is also
worth noting that the early armchair scholars who conceived these
grandiose migration theories, had no actual knowledge of the terrain
their 'Aryan invaders' were supposed to have transversed, the passes
they were supposed to have crossed, or the various climates they
were believed to have been living in). Assuming that the Vedic Indians
were semi-nomadic warriors and cattle-breeders, it fitted the picture,
when Mohenjo Daro and Harappa were discovered, to also assume that
these were the cities the Aryan invaders destroyed under the leadership
of their god Indra, the 'city-destroyer', and that the dark-skinned
indigenous people were the ones on whom they imposed their religion
and their caste system.
Western scholars decided to apply their own methodologies and,
in the absence of reliable evidence, postulated a timeframe for
Indian history on the basis of conjectures. Considering the traditional
dates for the life of Gautama, the Buddha, as fairly well established
in the sixth century BCE, supposedly pre-Buddhist Indian records
were placed in a sequence that seemed plausible to philologists.
Accepting on linguistic grounds the traditional claims that the
Rigveda was the oldest Indian literary document, Max Müller allowing
a time-span of two hundred years each for the formation of every
class of Vedic literature, and assuming that the Vedic period had
come to an end by the time of the Buddha, established the following
sequence that was widely accepted:
Rigveda c. 1200 BCE
Yajurveda,Samaveda,Atharvaveda, c. 1000 BCE
Brahmanas, c. 800 BCE
Aranyakas,Upanishads, c. 600 BCE
Max Müller himself conceded the purely conjectural nature of the
Vedic chronology, and in the last work published shortly before
his death, The Six Systems of Indian Philosophy, admitted:
'Whatever may be the date of the Vedic hymns, whether 1500 or 15
000 BCE, they have their own unique place and stand by themselves
in the literature of the world' (p.35). There were, even in Max
Müller's time, Western and Indian scholars, such as Moriz Winternitz
and Bal Gangadhar Tilak, who disagreed with his chronology and postulated
a much higher age for the Rigveda.
Indian scholars pointed out all along that there was no reference
in the Veda of a migration from outside India, that all the geographical
features mentioned in the Rigveda are those of north-western
India and that there was no archaeological evidence whatsoever for
the Aryan invasion theory. On the other side there were references
to constellations in Vedic works whose timeframe could be calculated.
The dates arrived at, however, 4500 BCE for one observation in the
Rigveda, 3200 BCE for a date in the Shatapatha Brahmana,
seemed far too remote to be acceptable, especially if one assumed-as
many nineteenth century scholars did, that the world was only about
6 000 years old and that the flood had taken place only 4 500 years
ago.
Debunking the Aryan Invasion Theory: The New Chronology
Contemporary Indian scholars, admittedly motivated not only
by academic interests, vehemently reject what they call the 'colonial-missionary
Aryan invasion theory'. They accuse its originators of superimposing-for
a reason-the purpose and process of the colonial conquest of India
by the Western powers in modern times onto the beginnings of Indian
civilisation: as the Europeans came to India as bearers of a supposedly
superior civilisation and a higher religion, so the original Aryans
were assumed to have invaded a country on which they imposed their
culture and their religion.
A recent major work offers 'seventeen arguments: why the Aryan
invasion never happened'.6
It may be worthwhile summarising and analysing them briefly:
- The Aryan invasion model is largely based on linguistic conjectures
which are unjustified (and wrong). Languages develop much more
slowly than assumed by nineteenth century scholars. According
to Renfrew speakers of Indo-European languages may have lived
in Anatolia as early as 7000 BCE
- The supposed large-scale migrations of Aryan people in the second
millennium BCE first into Western Asia and then into northern
India (by 1500 BCE) cannot be maintained in view of the fact that
the Hittites were in Anatolia already by 2200 BCE and the Kassites
and Mitanni had kings and dynasties by 1600 BCE
- There is no memory of an invasion or of large-scale migration
in the records of Ancient India-neither in the Vedas, Buddhist
or Jain writings, nor in Tamil literature. The fauna and flora,
the geography and the climate described in the Rigveda
are that of Northern India.
- There is a striking cultural continuity between the archaeological
artefacts of the Indus-Saraswati civilisation and subsequent Indian
society and culture: a continuity of religious ideas, arts, crafts,
architecture, system of weights and measures.
- The archaeological finds of Mehrgarh (copper, cattle, barley)
reveal a culture similar to that of the Vedic Indians. Contrary
to former interpretations, the Rigveda shows not a nomadic
but an urban culture (purusa as derived from pur vasa = town-dweller).
- The Aryan invasion theory was based on the assumption that a
nomadic people in possession of horses and chariots defeated an
urban civilisation that did not know horses, and that horses are
depicted only from the middle of the second millennium onwards.
Meanwhile archaeological evidence for horses has been found in
Harappan and pre-Harappan sites; drawings of horses have been
found in paleolithic caves in India; drawings of riders on horses
dated c. 4300 BCE have been found in Ukraina. Horsedrawn war chariots
are not typical for nomadic breeders but for urban civilisations.
- The racial diversity found in skeletons in the cities of the
Indus civilisation is the same as in India today; there is no
evidence of the coming of a new race.
- The Rigveda describes a river system in North India that
is pre-1900 BCE in the case of the Saraswati river, and pre-2600
BCE in the case of the Drishadvati river. Vedic literature shows
a population shift from the Saraswati (Rigveda) to the
Ganges (Brahmanas and Puranas), also evidenced by
archaeological finds.
- The astronomical references in the Rigveda are based
on a Pleiades-Krittika (Taurean) calendar of c. 2500 BCE when
Vedic astronomy and mathematics were well-developed sciences (again,
not a feature of a nomadic people).
- The Indus cities were not destroyed by invaders but deserted
by their inhabitants because of desertification of the area. Strabo
(Geography XV.1.19) reports that Aristobulos had seen thousands
of villages and towns deserted because the Indus had changed its
course.
- The battles described in the Rigveda were not fought
between invaders and natives but between people belonging to the
same culture.
- Excavations in Dwaraka have lead to the discovery of a site
larger than Mohenjodaro, dated c. 1500 BCE with architectural
structures, use of iron, a script halfway between Harappan and
Brahmi. Dwarka has been associated with Krishna and the end of
the Vedic period.
- A continuity in the morphology of scripts: Harappan, Brahmi,
Devanagari.
- Vedic ayas, formerly translated as 'iron,' probably meant copper
or bronze. Iron was found in India before 1500 BCE in Kashmir
and Dwaraka.
- The Puranic dynastic lists with over 120 kings in one Vedic
dynasty alone, fit well into the 'new chronology'. They date back
to the third millennium BCE Greek accounts tell of Indian royal
lists going back to the seventh millennium BCE.
- The Rigveda itself shows an advanced and sophisticated
culture, the product of a long development, 'a civilisation that
could not have been delivered to India on horseback' (p.160).
- Painted Gray Ware culture in the western Gangetic plains, dated
ca 1100 BCE has been found connected to (earlier) Black and Red
Ware etc.
Let us consider some of these arguments in some detail. As often
remarked, there is no hint in the Veda of a migration of the people
that considered it its own sacred tradition. It would be strange
indeed if the Vedic Indians had lost all recollection of such a
momentous event in supposedly relatively recent times- much more
recent, for instance, than the migration of Abraham and his people
which is well attested and frequently referred to in the Bible.
In addition, as has been established recently through satellite
photography and geological investigations, the Saraswati, the mightiest
river known to the Rigvedic Indians, along whose banks they established
numerous major settlements, had dried out completely by 1900 BCE-four
centuries before the Aryans were supposed to have invaded India.
One can hardly argue for the establishment of Aryan villages along
a dry river bed.
When the first remnants of the ruins of the so-called Indus civilisation
came to light in the early part of our century, the proponents of
the Aryan invasion theory believed they had found the missing archaeological
evidence: here were the 'mighty forts' and the 'great cities' which
the war-like Indra of the Rigveda was said to have conquered
and destroyed. Then it emerged that nobody had destroyed these cities
and no evidence of wars of conquest came to light: floods and droughts
had made it impossible to sustain large populations in the area
and the people of Mohenjo Daro, Harappa and other places had migrated
to more hospitable areas. Ongoing archaeological research has not
only extended the area of the Indus-civilisation but has also shown
a transition of its later phases to the Gangetic culture. Archeo-geographers
have established that a drought lasting two to three hundred years
devastated a wide belt of land from Anatolia through Mesopotamia
to Northern India around 2300 BCE to 2000 BCE.
Based on this type of evidence and extrapolating from the Vedic
texts, a new story of the origins of Hinduism is emerging that reflects
the self-consciousness of Hindus and which attempts to replace the
'colonial-missionary Aryan invasion theory' by a vision of 'India
as the Cradle of Civilisation.' This new theory considers the Indus-civilisation
as a late Vedic phenomenon and pushes the (inner-Indian) beginnings
of the Vedic age back by several thousands of years. One of the
reasons for considering the Indus civilisation 'Vedic' is the evidence
of town-planning and architectural design that required a fairly
advanced algebraic geometry-of the type preserved in the Vedic Shulvasutras.
The widely respected historian of mathematics A. Seidenberg came
to the conclusion, after studying the geometry used in building
the Egyptian pyramids and the Mesopotamian citadels, that it reflected
a derivative geometry-a geometry derived from the Vedic Shulva-sutras.
If that is so, then the knowledge ('Veda') on which the construction
of Harappa and Mohenjo Daro is based, cannot be later than that
civilisation itself.7
While the Rigveda has always been held to be the oldest
literary document of India and was considered to have preserved
the oldest form of Sanskrit, Indians have not taken it to be the
source for their early history. The Itihasa-Purana served
that purpose. The language of these works is more recent than that
of the Vedas and the time of their final redaction is much later
than the fixation of the Vedic canon. However, they contain detailed
information about ancient events and personalities that form part
of Indian history. The Ancients, like Herodotus, the father of Greek
histo-riography, did not separate story from history. Nor did they
question their sources but tended to juxtapose various pieces of
evidence without critically sifting it. Thus we cannot read Itihasa-Purana
as the equivalent of a modern textbook of Indian history but rather
as a storybook containing information with interpretation, facts
and fiction. Indians, however, always took genealogies quite seriously
and we can presume that the Puranic lists of dynasties, like the
lists of paramparas in the Upanishads relate the names
of real rulers in the correct sequence. On these assumptions we
can tentatively reconstruct Indian history to a time around 4500
BCE.
A key element in the revision of Ancient Indian History was the
recent discovery of Mehrgarh, a settlement in the Hindukush area,
that was continuously inhabited for several thousand years from
c. 7000 BCE onwards. This discovery has extended Indian history
for several thousands of years before the fairly well dateable Indus
civilisation.8
New Chronologies
Pulling together available archaeological evidence as it is
available today, the American anthropologist James G. Schaffer developed
the following chronology of early Indian civilisation:
- Early food-producing era (c. 6500-5000 BCE): no pottery.
- Regionalisation era (5000-2600 BCE): distinct regional styles
of pottery and other artefacts.
- Integration era (2600-1900 BCE) : cultural homogeneity and emergence
of urban centres like Mohenjo daro and Harappa.
- Localisation era (1900-1300 BCE ) blending of patterns from
the integration era with regional ceramic styles.
The Indian archaeologist S.P. Gupta proposed this cultural sequencing:
- Pre-ceramic Neolithic (8000-600 BCE)
- Ceramic Neolithic (6000-5000 BCE)
- Chalcolithic (5000-3000 BCE )
- Early Bronze Age (3000-1900 BCE)
- Late Bronze Age ( 1900-1200 BCE)
- Early Iron Age (1200-800 BCE)
- Late Iron cultures
According to these specialists, there is no break in the cultural
development from 8000 BCE onwards, no indication of a major change,
as an invasion from outside would certainly be.
A more detailed 'New Chronology' of Ancient India, locating names
of kings and tribes mentioned in the Vedas and Puranas, according
to Rajarama9 looks somewhat
like this:
4500 BCE: Mandhatri's victory over the Drohyus, alluded to in
the Puranas.
4000 BCE Rigveda (excepting books 1 and 10)
3700 BCE Battle of Ten Kings (referred to in the Rigveda) Beginning
of Puranic dynastic lists: Agastya, the messenger of Vedic religion
in the Dravida country. Vasistha, his younger brother, author
of Vedic works. Rama and Ramayana.
3600 BCEYajur-, Sama-, Atharvaveda: Completion of Vedic
Canon.
3100 BCE Age of Krishna and Vyasa. Mahabharata War. Early Mahabharata.
3000 BCEShatapathabrahmana, Shulvasutras, Yajnavalkyasutra,
Panini, author of the Ashtadhyayi, Yaska, author of the
Nirukta.
2900 BCE Rise of the civilisations of Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia
and the Indus-Sarasvati doab.
2200 BCE beginning of large-scale drought: decline of Harappa.
2000 BCE End of Vedic age.
1900 BCE Saraswati completely dried out: end of Harappa.
Texts like the Rigveda, the Shatapathabrahmana and
others contain references to eclipses as well as to sidereal markers
of the beginning of seasons, which allow us by backward calculation,
to determine the time of their composition. Experts assure us that
to falsify these dates would have been impossible before the computer
age.
Old verses new? Or scientists verses philologists?
We are left, at present, with two widely differing versions
of Ancient Indian History, with two radically divergent sets of
chronology and with a great deal of polemic from both sides. Those
who defend the Aryan invasion theory and the chronology associated
with it accuse the proponents of the 'New Chronology' of indulging
in Hindu chauvinism. The latter suspect the former of entertaining
'colonial-missionary' prejudices and denying originality to the
indigenous Indians. The new element that has entered the debate
is scientific investigations. While the older theory rested on exclusively
philological arguments, the new theory includes astronomical, geological,
mathematical and archaeological evidence. On the whole, the latter
seems to rest on better foundations. Not only were the philological
arguments from the very beginning based more on strong assertions
and bold guesses, civilisations both ancient and contemporary comprise
more than literature alone. In addition, purely philologically trained
scholars-namely grammarians-are not able to make sense of technical
language and of scientific information contained even in the texts
they study.
Consider today's scientific literature. It abounds with Greek and
Latin technical terms, it contains an abundance of formulae composed
of Greek and Hebrew letters. If scholars with a background in the
classical languages were to read such works, they might be able
to come up with some acceptable translations of technical terms
into modern English but they would hardly be able to really make
sense of most of what they read and they certainly would not extract
the information which the authors of these works wished to convey
to people trained in their specialities. The situation is not too
different with regard to ancient Indian texts. The admission of
some of the best scholars (like Geldner, who in his translation
of the Rigveda, considered the best so far, declares many passages
'darker than the darkest oracle' or Gonda, who considered the Rigveda
basically untranslatable) of being unable to make sense of a great
many texts-and the refusal of most to go beyond a grammatical and
etymological analysis of these-indicates a deeper problem. The Ancients
were not only poets and litterateurs, but they also had their sciences
and their technical skills, their secrets and their conventions
that are not self-evident to someone not sharing their world. Some
progress has been made in deciphering medical and astronomical literature
of a later age, in reading architectural and arts-related materials.
However, much of the technical meaning of the oldest Vedic literature
still eludes us.
The Rigveda-a code?
The computer scientist and Indologist Subhash Kak believes he
has rediscovered the 'Vedic Code' which allows him to extract from
the structure, as well as the words and sentences of the Rigveda,
and the considerable astronomical information which its authors
supposedly embedded in it.10
The assumption of such encoded scientific knowledge would make it
understandable why there was such insistence on the preservation
of every letter of the text in precisely the sequence the original
author had set down. One can take certain liberties with a story,
or even a poem, changing words, transposing lines, adding explanatory
matter, shortening it, if necessary, and still communicate the intentions
and ideas of the author. However, one has to remember and reproduce
a scientific formula in precisely the same way it has been set down
by the scientist or it would not make sense at all. While the scientific
community can arbitrarily adopt certain letter equivalents for physical
units or processes, once it has agreed on their use, one must obey
the conventions for the sake of meaningful communication.
Even a non-specialist reader of ancient Indian literature will
notice the effort to link macrocosm and microcosm, astronomical
and physiological processes, to find correspondences between the
various realms of beings and to order the universe by establishing
broad classifications. Vedic sacrifices-the central act of Vedic
culture- were to be offered on precisely built geometrically constructed
altars and to be performed at astronomically exactly established
times. It sounds plausible to expect a correlation between the numbers
of bricks prescribed for a particular altar and the distances between
stars observed whose movement determined the time of the offerings
to be made. Subhash Kak has advanced a great deal of fascinating
detail in that connection in his essays on the 'Astronomy of the
Vedic Altar'. He believes that while the Vedic Indians possessed
extensive astronomical knowledge, which they encoded in the text
of the Rigveda, the code was lost in later times and the Vedic tradition
was interrupted.11
India, the cradle of (world-) civilisation?
Based on the early dating of the Rigveda (c. 4000 BCE)
and on the strength of the argument that Vedic astronomy and geometry
predates that of the other known Ancient civilisations, some scholars,
like N.S. Rajaram, George Feuerstein, Subhash Kak and David Frawley,
have made the daring suggestion that India was the 'cradle of civilisation'.
They link the recently discovered early European civilisation (which
predates Ancient Sumeria and Ancient Egypt by over a millennium)
to waves of populations moving out or driven out from north-west
India. Later migrations, caused either by climatic changes or by
military events, would have brought the Hittites to Western Asia,
the Iranians to Afghanistan and Iran and many others to other parts
of Eurasia. Such a scenario would require a complete rewriting of
Ancient World History-especially if we add the claims, apparently
substantiated by some material evidence, that Vedic Indians had
established trade links with Central America and Eastern Africa
before 2500 BCE. It is no wonder that the 'New Chronology' arouses
not only scholarly controversy but emotional excitement as well.
Much more hard evidence will be required to fully establish it,
and many claims may have to be withdrawn. But there is no doubt
that the 'old chronology' has been discredited and that much surprise
is in store for the students not only of Ancient India, but also
of the Ancient World as a whole.
Sorting out the questions:
The 'Revision of Ancient Indian History' responds to several
separate, but interlocking questions that are often confused.
- The (emotionally) most important question is that of the original
home of Vedic civilisation, identified with the question: where
was the (Rig-)Veda composed? India's indigenous
answer to that question had always been 'India', more precisely
'the Punjab'. The European, 'colonial missionary' assumption,
was 'outside India'.
- The next question, not often explicitly asked, is: where did
the pre-Vedic people, the 'Aryans' come from? This is a problem
for archeo-anthropologists rather than for historians. The racial
history of India shows influences from many quarters.
- A related, but separate question concerns the 'cradle of civilisation',
to which several ancient cultures have laid claim: Sumeria, Egypt,
India (possibly also China could be mentioned, which considered
itself for a long time the only truly civilised country). Depending
on what answer we receive, the major expansion of population/civilisation
would be from west to east, or from east to west. The famous lux
ex oriente has often been applied to the spread of culture
in the ancient world. India was as far as the 'Orient' would go.
- It is rather strange that the defenders of the 'Aryan invasion
theory', who have neither archaeological nor literary documents
to prove their assumption, demand detailed proof for the non-invasion
and refuse to admit the evidence available. Similarly, they feel
entitled to declare 'mythical' whatever the sources (Rigveda,
Puranas) say that does not agree with their preconceived notions
of Vedic India.
Some conclusions:
If I were to judge the strength of the arguments for revising
Ancient Indian History in the direction of 'India as Cradle of Civilisation'
I would rate Seidenberg's findings concerning the Shulvasutra geometry
(applied in the Indus civilisation; Babylonian and Egyptian geometry
derivative to it) highest. Next would be the archeo-astronomical
determination of astronomical data in Vedic and post-Vedic texts.
Third is the satellite photography based dating of the drying out
of the Saraswati and the archeo-geographical finding of a centuries
long drought in the belt reaching from Anatolia through Mesopotamia
and Northern India. Geological research has uncovered major tectonic
changes in the Punjab and the foothills of the Himalayas. At one
point a section rose about sixty metres within the past 2 000 years.
'Vasishta's Head', a bronze head found near Delhi, was dated through
radio-carbon testing to around 3700 BCE- the time when, according
to Hicks and Anderson, the Battle of the Ten Kings took place (Vasishta,
mentioned in the Rigveda, was the advisor to King Sudas).
A further factor speaking for the 'Vedic' character of the Indus
civilisation is the occurrence of (Vedic) altars in many sites.
Fairly important is also the absence of a memory of a migration
from outside India in all of ancient Indian literature: the Veda,
the Brahmanas, the Epics and the Puranas. Granting that the Vedic
Samhitas were ritual manuals rather than historic records, further
progress in revising Ancient Indian History could be expected from
a study of Itihasa-Purana, rather than from an analysis of
the Rigveda (by way of parallel, what kind of reconstruction
of Ancient Israel's History could be done on the basis of a study
of the Psalms, leaving out Genesis and Kings? Or what reconstruction
of European History could be based on a study of the earliest Rituale
Romanum?)
An afterword:
Hinduism today is not just a development of Vedic religion and
culture but a synthesis of many diverse elements. There is no doubt
a Vedic basis. It is evident in the caste-structure of Hindu society,
in the rituals which almost every Hindu still undergoes (especially
initiation, marriage and last rites), in traditional notions of
ritual purity and pollution, and in the respect which the Veda still
commands. There is a large area of Hindu worship and religious practice
for which the Veda provides little or no basis: temple-building,
image worship, pilgrimages, vows and prayers to gods and goddesses
not mentioned in the Veda, beliefs like transmigration, world-pictures
containing numerous heavens and hells and much more which appear
to have been taken over from non-Vedic indigenous cultures. There
have been historic developments that led to the developments of
numerous schools of thought, sects and communities differing from
each other in scriptures, interpretations, customs, beliefs.
Apart from its Vedic origins Hinduism was never one in either administration,
doctrine or practice. It does not possess a commonly accepted authority,
does not have a single centre and does not have a common history.
Unlike the histories of other religions, which rely on one founder
and one scripture, the history of Hinduism is a bundle of parallel
histories of traditions that were loosely defined from the very
beginning, that went through a number of fissions and fusions, and
that do not feel any need to seek their identity in conforming to
a specific historic realisation. While incredibly conservative in
some of its expressions, Hinduism is very open to change and development
under the influence of charismatic personalities. From early times
great latitude was given to Hindus to interpret their traditional
scriptures in a great many different ways. The ease with which Hindus
have always identified persons that impressed them with manifestations
of God has led to many parallel traditions within Hinduism, making
it impossible to chronicle a development of Hinduism along one line.
The presentation of a history of Hinduism will be a record of several
mainstream Hindu traditions that developed along individual lines;
only very rarely do these lines meet in conflict or merge to generate
new branches of the still vigorously growing banyan tree to which
Hinduism has been often compared.
|
Print
this page |