Oh boy... another thread where insecure Pakistanis show their identity crisis by trying to show how different they are from Indians while bashing India in every post. Lots of garbage posted here, hopefully I can address it all. Buckle up, this is going to be a long one.
Lol Chandragupta Maurya was not a Punjabi, he was a Bihari. Maurya is a caste of peacock tamers native throughout Northern India. For a nation that supposedly has such an ancient history, you sure love to shamelessly steal Indian history. Ashoka never revolted against "Brahmanism" he simply adopted Buddhism because he became disillusioned after the brutal war with Kalinga. And although Mauryan rule over Pakistan was relatively short, the Mauryans arguably had a greater impact on Pakistan than any other civilization at the time. It was the Mauryans who introduced Buddhism, a religion created in Bihar, to modern-day Pakistan. It was also the Mauryans under Ashoka who created a major urbanized civilization in modern Pakistan for the first time since the IVC. The only city in Pakistan that comes anywhere near as close as the cities of the Gangetic Plains is Peshawar, and that only became a major urban center during the rule of Ashoka. Of course, we all know how hard it is for Indus Nationalists to admit that most of their "great civilization" was actually imported from the Ganga
@Indus Pakistan I respect your vast historical knowledge and agree with you on many points, but posts like that do nothing to advance your cause. You claimed that everything good from South Asia comes from Indus Pakistan. I disagree. If anything it is the other way around. Let's look at it objectively. What are South Asia's contributions?
Buddhism- Buddhism was created in Bodh Gaya Bihar, and the first Buddhist sermon was delivered in Varanasi. Buddhism was spread to Southeast Asia through the scholars at 'Nalanda University, where it is still the dominant religion today. In fact, Buddhism was only introduced to Pakistan because it was conquered by Ashoka. a Bihari. obviously the Ganga wins here.
Mathematics- The decimal system, as well as the numerical and place value system we use today, were invented by Aryabhata, a mathematician born in Pataliputra. And although there is still some debate on the origin of the zero, it was Brahmagupta who first discovered its rules, including the basic rule that subtracting a number from itself results in zero. Brahmagupta was born in India and worked under the Gupta Empire. Brahmagupta was also the first to describe the quadratic equation among other things. All these accomplishments go to the Ganges region.
Medicine- The first surgeries were performed in Varanasi by Sushruta. The first Rhinoplasty operations were also perfomed in modern India, and India was the first place where anesthesia was used during surgeries.
Art, Culture, architecture- modern India is the only place in South Asia that is home to ancient works of indigenous architecture. Can you name any place in Pakistan as old and famous as the Ajanta caves, the Konark Sun Temple, or the ancient Chola temples?
literature- Two of the world's longest and most complex works of epic literature, the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, were written in India. India is also home to the Brahmi script, which is the mother of most modern scripts in Southern and Southeast Asian countries today. Pakistan meanwhile is home to the Kharosthi script, which is extinct. It is pretty obvious which one is superior. India is also home to Tamil, which is the oldest language still spoken today.
And aside from the IVC sites in India, ancient sites have also been unearthed in places such as Tamil Nadu, Chhattisgarh, and Bengal, some of which are potentially as old and as large as the most famous IVC sites.
Oh, and chess and yoga were also invented in modern-day India.
You are aware that historically, no Empire native to the Indus ruled the Ganges or the Deccan? Rather it was the other way around. For most of history, the Indus could barely rule itself considering its relatively harsh landscape did not allow for easy consolidation of power and the creation of a strong, centralized state like what happened in the Gangetic Plains. As a result, the Indus region was historically ruled by small kingdoms and city states that were easily ruled by foreign powers such as the Scythians, Gandharans, Huns, Mauryans, etc. That is why Alexander was eventually able to defeat King Porus, but he was forced to turn back after mere rumors of the strength and power of the Gangetic based Nanda Empire.
Your map only shows that the Ancestral North Indian population invaded Pakistan first before they invaded India. Which means they subjugated you guys first before they subjugated us. Don't see how that is something to e proud of. According to the Aryan Invasion theory, the ancestor of the population that would become the Ancestral North Indians originated somewhere between Ukraine and the Caucuses, and your map seems to show that. I am also curious to know what is so good about Central Asians and Iranians. If your civilization was so advanced, why are you proud of having foreign ancestry? There are plenty of ethnic groups in modern India that have that ancestry, but they do not obsess over it as much as you. Instead, they are proud of their own culture and achievements. This includes the brahmins that you supposedly admire. Oh well, to each their own. Although, if you think that Central Asian ancestry makes you racially distinct from most Indians, I am afraid you are off. The difference in the ratio of "aboriginal to Aryan" as you put it between most Indians and Pakistanis is not large enough to create a striking gap in phenotypes.
Anyway, I personally do not see much of a difference in terms of civilization between the aboriginal hunter gathers of Central and Southeastern India and the nomadic goat f**king desert tribes of KP and Punjab. But that could just be my own bias showing.
@Nilgiri @Joe Shearer @VCheng @Jackdaws
Best regards sir.