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If Pakistan shuns the term ‘Ancient India’ in its history books, is it entirely to blame?

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If Pakistan shuns the term ‘Ancient India’ in its history books, is it entirely to blame?
A few months ago, I visited a newly-opened museum in Lahore that, along with sections on Partition and the contemporary history of Pakistan, also included an exhibit on its ancient and pre-colonial history.

It was titled “Ancient Pakistan” and included references to the Indus Valley civilization, the Mauryan Empire, the Kushan dynasty and even the Khalsa Empire of Ranjit Singh.

While there were certain conscious inclusions and exclusions in the exhibit, possibly to align with the current nationalist discourse in the country, the title of the section stood out as a little odd.

It felt like a modern category had been imposed on the ancient, a trend increasingly on the rise across South Asia. The generally used term “Ancient India” perhaps would have not evoked a similar reaction.

The overarching nationalistic tilt of the museum might explain why its curators were reluctant to use the term “Ancient India” for its exhibits.

In such a nationalistic framework, there is only one India — the Republic of India. In this narrative, the nuance of the term “Ancient India” — which, in addition to including parts of contemporary India, also includes areas of Pakistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh — is lost.


In this simplistic framework, contemporary India becomes the modern-day incarnation of the ancient civilization that is India.

However, this phenomenon is not unique to Pakistan and its nationalist discourse. The Republic of India, which emerged after the Partition of British India, embraced its ancient Indian heritage, becoming the visible successor of Ancient India.

What helped its cause was the continuity in the names — India. While on one hand, the contemporary Indian state drew historical continuity from its ancient past, on the other hand, its exclusive use of the name “India” also helped spread the perception globally that it was the only rightful inheritor of the legacy of Ancient India.

India vs Hindustan
A couple of weeks ago Shoaib Daniyal wrote an incisive piece on Scroll.in in which he pointed out that for a brief moment in the history of South Asia, Muhammad Ali Jinnah objected to the use of the name “India” by the new country, arguing that it should be referred to as Hindustan.

Nothing came of that conflict, but there are contesting theories as to why Jinnah raised the issue in the first place. Perhaps he saw both India and Pakistan as the successors of historical British India.

As opposed to being a universal name for the entire Indian subcontinent, the name “India” was picked by the British after the formation of their Empire. It has Greek roots. The Greeks referred to the land across the Indus as India.

Once the name took root, the history of the land began to be referred to as Indian history. In all academic discourse, the pre-Partition history of Pakistan and Bangladesh continue to be referred to as “Indian history”.


Maybe Jinnah anticipated that the Republic of India’s use of the name “India” might gradually exclude Pakistan from this collective Indian heritage.

What also did not help was the subsequent attitude of the Pakistani state toward its Indian heritage. Slowly, as relations between the two neighbors began deteriorating, in Pakistan, the term “India” stopped being associated with a larger peninsular identity but was solely identified with the modern state.

Pakistan began distancing itself from its own history, allowing its antagonistic relationship with India to shape its attitude and perception of its Indian heritage.

Pakistan’s history came to be defined in opposition to India’s history. A celebration of Muslim rulers ensued — divorced from the political realities that dictated their actions — while all other history and heritage of the Indian subcontinent began to be ignored.

Where’s Pakistan in the big picture?
A fairly complicated situation exists today. In global academia, the term “Indian history” encapsulates the history of the entire region.

But in the popular imagination, Ancient India ends up being reduced to relating to the past of Independent India. For example, the demand that the British return the Kohinoor diamond to modern-day India shows how historical India and contemporary India are seen as an extension of each other, with Pakistan and Bangladesh completely sidelined.

On the other hand, within Pakistan, there has increasingly been some acknowledgment of this past. The bone of contention, however, has been how to refer to it and package it.



While calling Pakistan part of the broader Ancient India is bound to have political repercussions, referring to it as “Ancient Pakistan” also has the potential to mislead.

However, even if Pakistan today decides to change its attitude towards its Indian heritage and chooses to accommodate it in its identity, it would find it difficult to shape the global narrative that it is indeed one of the successors of Ancient India, along with Bangladesh and India.

The situation is unlikely to change in the foreseeable future and it seems the term “Ancient India” will continue to be associated with contemporary India exclusively.
 
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The situation is unlikely to change in the foreseeable future and it seems the term “Ancient India” will continue to be associated with contemporary India exclusively.

There is a reason the world uses the phrase "Indian subcontinent", which is proof that nobody refers to the subcontinent by the name of "India" anymore. Similarly it makes no sense to refer to the ancient history of the subcontinent as "Indian" history.

Indus valley people did not call themselves "Indian". Neither did Mauryan, Kushans, Mughals so there is nothing factually incorrect about the name "Ancient Pakistan". The first part refers to the era. The second part refers to the geographic location. Ancient Indian subcontinent is probably more correct.
The fact that the Greeks named the Indus region, which is almost exclusively inside Pakistan, as India will be a historical footnote, nothing more.

Besides India and Pakistan, the name has been misused plenty of times before. We have regions like East Indies, West Indies, Indonesia. Historically there were placed in China called India too. Today we have ethnic groups like American Indians and states like Indiana using the name.

Pakistan is the home of the river that named all of these places and people.
 
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The name "India" is testimony to the superpower of it's time - the British Empire. The use of 'India' in common understanding spread thanks to the English being the language of the British Empire. In addition as the British Empire waned another Anglo-Saxon power, the Americans too over and English language has become the dominant global language allowing for the 'India' to spread far and wide or being translitered into other languages.

It all began with arrival of British. By 1850 they had conquered a large chunk of geography which might be described as South Asia but which British branded as 'India'. Over the following decades they wrote books on history and geography of their colony. Inevitably they always used 'India' as the name for the region. So for instance the English writer E. J. Chinnock translated Anabasis of Alexander the Great in 1880s he his translation uses the reality of his time. When Alexander marches over the Khyber Pass he terms that as "conquest of India" which of course was correct in 1880 because Khyber was the border of British India. As everything in English got translated into 'India' during the British soon the term gained world wide currency.

The reality is the 5,000 years ago the term 'India' did not even exist. No term that we use today existed then. Therefore to use Ancient Pakistan or Ancient India or even ancient Bangladesh when talking about five millenias ago carry exactly the same traction. Pakistani books and Pakistan's need to get past the British Raj and own up their own history as opposed to being defined by the Victorian English writers from the Raj period. In that sense we still suffer from colonized mind and follow the narrative laid by the British.

Time to free ourselves from mental slavery. Time to reify the term 'Ancient Pakistan'. Or are we going to keep using the narrative laid down by the colonial masters?
 
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There is no such thing as Ancient India.

And there is no such thing as Hindu ruled Pakistani lands ever.
 
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The name "India" is testimony to the superpower of it's time - the British Empire. The use of 'India' in common understanding spread thanks to the English being the language of the British Empire. In addition as the British Empire waned another Anglo-Saxon power, the Americans too over and English language has become the dominant global language allowing for the 'India' to spread far and wide or being translitered into other languages.

It all began with arrival of British. By 1850 they had conquered a large chunk of geography which might be described as South Asia but which British branded as 'India'. Over the following decades they wrote books on history and geography of their colony. Inevitably they always used 'India' as the name for the region. So for instance the English writer E. J. Chinnock translated Anabasis of Alexander the Great in 1880s he his translation uses the reality of his time. When Alexander marches over the Khyber Pass he terms that as "conquest of India" which of course was correct in 1880 because Khyber was the border of British India. As everything in English got translated into 'India' during the British soon the term gained world wide currency.

The reality is the 5,000 years ago the term 'India' did not even exist. No term that we use today existed then. Therefore to use Ancient Pakistan or Ancient India or even ancient Bangladesh when talking about five millenias ago carry exactly the same traction. Pakistani books and Pakistan's need to get past the British Raj and own up their own history as opposed to being defined by the Victorian English writers from the Raj period. In that sense we still suffer from colonized mind and follow the narrative laid by the British.

Time to free ourselves from mental slavery. Time to reify the term 'Ancient Pakistan'. Or are we going to keep using the narrative laid down by the colonial masters?

“India is no more a single country than the equator" - Winston Churchill

A similar masterpiece of a name that originated in Latin but then further developed by the British is "Orient". A meaningless name that only a delusional and confused state would willingly name itself The Republic of Orient

I would argue though that the oldest continuously used name in the subcontinent is Sindh.

You can see from this picture that there is nothing unusual about the meaning of names changing over time. These things happen. Whatever definition you might have, India is by no means a special case that we absolutely need to maintain:

Note the regions called Africa, Asia, Orient

1920px-Roman_Empire_with_dioceses_in_300_AD.png
 
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