Joe Shearer
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Joe Shearer said:A plain examination of the envoy's quotes is the first part that you need to take up, in case you need clarification.
The second part is to look up maps of India which belong to those times, to the times of Scylax the navigator, of Strabo the geographer, of the unknown author of the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, and of all ancient maps of India. Those were not maps which look as the South Asian peninsula looks today, but maps which distorted the position and the shape of the sub-continent, and which reflected the partial and imperfect knowledge of the Europeans of those times about India.
Unfortunately, as is only to be expected with amateurs unfamiliar with their subject, every piece of evidence available in ancient times is interpreted in the light of modern knowledge, which leads to the misunderstandings and errors in the statements made.
Try again.
roadrunner said:Bits of modern day India may have been discovered by the Ancient Greeks during the time of Megasthenes. I would not say that that quote clearly demonstrates this. But even if it was referring to the whole of modern day India, I've taken this into account when I say that Ancient India from 2,000 to 5,000 years ago referred exclusively to Pakistan.
There is a logical error here, as well as a factual error.
First, the factual part, or parts.
The knowledge of the Indus Valley revealed by, say, Herodotus, is surely not even comparable with that of Megasthenes. As for the others, they based their accounts on the accounts in turn of those who actually accompanied Alexander; they are effectively reporting based on others' reports. Please note that neither Pliny nor Strabo was a contemporary; Megasthenes, on the other hand, was in the Maurya court prior to 288 BC, and was quite possibly - being the trusted ambassador of the Alexandrian successor Seleukos, and the house-guest of the governor of Arachosia (I think; I am not sure of the province) - from the ranks of the middle-ranking generals or civilian officers or savants accompanying the expedition unless he had come out from Greece or Macedonia very late, after 323 BC.
So we have the near-contemporary account of Megasthenes, with considerable information about the court and about life and the environs of the court. Please recall his story of the 'dogs', which is clearly an account of Rhesus monkeys, distorted by the narration to him by narrators unfamiliar with Greek. We are all familiar with the habits of these monkey hordes, which come to the ground, accept with disdain all that interests them, reject with every appearance of contempt that which does not, and troop in and troop out of villages and towns. Megasthenes in a few words describes them perfectly, down to their physiognomy. What do we have in contrast from the other school, with their supposed intimate information about the Indus Valley?
We have Pliny, Strabo, and the lost accounts of Scyllax and Nearchus. I ask only that we read these several accounts side by side - obviously those still extant!!! - and draw our own conclusions.
The logical error is based on the foundation of this thread, that the name India has been hijacked by a people and a civilisation, a culture, that had no right to it.
To this, a thinking response must necessarily be that this is a chronological fallacy. We are already aware that the Greeks can have known of India, whether the Indus Valley or the hinterland, only from the Persians, and that these contacts started with the interaction between the Greeks of Asia Minor and the Achaemenid Empire. This interaction is as late as the 6th century BC, and came to a point from 499 BC onwards, the onset of the Persian War, for recording which we call Herodotus the father of history.
This then leads us to some surprise when the statement is made that Ancient India from 2,000 to 5,000 years ago referred exclusively to Pakistan. But India as a term did not come into existence until the Greeks dropped their aitches. So how can India before 499 BC, at the most 550 BC, during the period 3000 BC to 550 BC, have referred to Pakistan, when the name India didn't exist?
Arguments that the precedessor name for India was known earlier do not convince, as this whole thread is based on the supposed misuse of the name India, rather than a misuse of the alternative names the Sapta Sindhu (please, not the SaptHa Sindhu) or even the Iranian version, the Hapta Hindu. If, therefore, India itself as a term was not in use before 550 BC, charitably speaking, how could it have referred to proto-Pakistan from 3000 BC onwards?
roadrunner said:By about 2,000 years ago the land region of modern day India was being discovered slightly more. The land region of modern day Pakistan was well known to the outside world, and reported extensively by the Greeks.
Some citations would be helpful. I have presented, in the previous passage, the far greater detail and depth of account submitted by Megasthenes, through one illustrative passage; is there any corresponding to this on the Indus Valley, other than the accounts of the battles of Alexander, accounts of the Rock of Aornos, and the stray account of the life of the hapless who resisted the aggression of the Macedonians?
roadrunner said:Do you agree that during the time of Herodotus, the Ancient Greeks did not know about the land of modern day India?
Indeed I do. I was planning to qualify this, but the qualificatory remarks are not important.
Yes, I agree.
You do realise that in terms of your argument, this means that the term 'Ancient India' can be applied to Pakistan from 499 BC to 288 BC? I make that the sum figure of 211 years in total.