Ah, two for the price of one! And I thought that these bargains had stopped in Aladdin's time. Silly me.
Joe Shearer said:
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.
roadrunner said:
You obviously do not know the importance of Herodotus versus Megasthenes in the Ancient Greek hierarchy. Herodotus was more important.
Well, if studying a paper on the Persian War and the Peloponnesian War, and getting the highest marks in my year in that paper counts, I do know a wee bit, just a little bit, mind you, about Greek history.
Before we go further, may I remind you that I am able to guide you and others interested through each and every battle and skirmish of the Persian War, and of the Peloponnesian War, to an extent and depth of detail which you will not find in contemporary Internet sources. My personal favourite is the Battle of Plataia, which is less referred to than other, more famous but less interesting from the military point of view, others such as Marathon, Thermopilai and Salamis (all from the Persian War). It would be correct to come to me for help on obscure parts of the Anabasis, or on the same author's treatise on Horsemanship. I am therefore fascinated to learn from you how Herodotus and Megasthenes must be comparatively viewed, and how to interpret their records!
Your remark could only have been made by someone completely confused by trying to follow the train of his own logic through its tortured paths. Permit me to refresh your memory.
Herodotus (since I am writing for an amateur column, it is more convenient to use the conventional Roman spelling, which will be recognised more readily; the correct transcription of his name is, however, Herodotos) wrote about the Persian War. He probably died in the last quarter of the 5th century BC, sometime between 425 BC and 400 BC, probably closer to the beginning than to the end of this quarter-century. He was described by the Roman orator Cicero as the "Father of History". He was described by his successor, Thucydides (Thoukydides) as a story-teller.
I hope you in turn are aware that of the two, Thucydides is by far the better historian; I hope, in fact, that you have read either or both of them, in which case such suggestions on my part would not be necessary.
The question here is not of whom among Herodotus and Megasthenes was considered the more important figure in the Ancient Greek hierarchy. Leaving aside the fact that there was actually no hierarchy, you are of course writing what you did with the full knowledge that one of them wrote, sitting in Greece, in the first half of the fifth century BC, sometime between 450 and 425 BC, and the other wrote after his ambassadorship to the places in question which was before 288 BC but not too far before.
I put it to you that the question is not of a mythical, manufactured hierarchy invented for the purposes of this argument by you, but of whether a remote look at a geography by an historian is of more weight than the accounts, the diplomatic report, to nod in the direction of Wikileaks, as it were, of an ambassador physically present in his reported location.
Joe Shearer said:
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?
roadrunner said:
So what? Megasthenes was in "India". Yes, he was the Ambassador at Taxilla (which is in Pakistan).
I am afraid that I have to correct you on this: he was actually at the capital, Pataliputra, which he spells quite recognisably as Patlibothra, not at the provincial seat, Taxila, which was in revolt more than once.
roadrunner said:
It doesn't make any difference, as I'm already acknowledging that some (a small part), of modern day India was discovered at the time of Megasthenes (about 2,000 years ago).
An excellent point. It has the weight, and the context, and the importance of a point.
You do realise that his account was of the capital on the Ganges in the ancient seat of the Mauryas, and the Nandas before them, Magadha? This is the equivalent of Ecbatana, the capital of Media, rather than the capitals of Persia.
You do also realise from my emphasised passage above that to get there, he had to travel from Arachosia, the Makran coast, probably from Kandahar, Alexandria in Arachosia, across the coastal peninsula, across the Indus, across Sindh, and then a very difficult passage probably marked by Ujjain (a Maurya stronghold) and up to the Ganges, probably meeting it around Allahabad, and then down river to Pataliputra, or up the river and to the Yamuna and then down to the Ganges, which was then easily navigable, down to Pataliputra?
Which brings us to the question of how much he saw of 'modern-day India' rather than 'Ancient India', both your rather charming essays at historical re-discovery.
You state that 'a small part' of modern-day India was known to Megasthenes. Is it your case that this middle aged Greek gentleman was a purdah-nashin?
roadrunner said:
And my point again, most of "Indian history" occurred between 2,000 to 5,000 years before, when India was Pakistan only.
Your points are truly shining brilliant spots of brightness. Unfortunately for us, you omitted joining them.
What in your opinion happened in India - modern-day India, to go along with your usage - between 2,000 years ago and today? I have listed a few, a very few items for your consideration earlier. Is it your case that none of them occurred, or is it your case that even if they occurred, they don't count, as they didn't happen in the Indus Valley?
On a purely off-topic matter: are you familiar with Mr. Washington Irving's story about the Catskill Mountains, in his book the Sketchbook of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.? The thought occurs that this story may have inspired your ventures into history.