You mean this.
'Wet fantasies if Islamic glory'...how does that sound?
Actually I was referring to RR's post nr 54 and 55, the report by a Harvard Professor...he's a neutral source.
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You mean this.
'Wet fantasies if Islamic glory'...how does that sound?
Actually I was referring to RR's post nr 54 and 55, the report by a Harvard Professor...he's a neutral source.
Bring it on...I'm eager to know what you found.
Well, here are a few updates:
*Aryan Invasion theory is no longer accepted, and the Indegenous Aryan Theory is widely believed to be propaganda. Rather the accepted theory is an Aryan Migration and syncretism over several centuries.
*The Sanskrit language appears to have several layers of "loanwords" from Urals, Central Asia (BMAC) and Balochistan, and later from Preexisting languages in the Northern India as per linguistic evidence.
*The core of the Rigveda is considered to be composed in the "Greater Punjab
region or the area P.Punjab + I.Punjab + Haryana + Himachal Pradesh. However, the stories and rituals are borrowed from elsewhere. There seems to be a clear distinction between the "geographical center" and the "cultural center".
*There is a an apparent shifting of location as the earlier parts of the Rigveda are composed in the western part of this region and the later parts in the east.
*The Balochistan region seems to be where the horse, which is very important in rigvedic culture, first arrived in South Asia. The Horse is not an indegenous animal to South asia.
*Both Early Iranian religion and Vedism are highly influenced by the Proto-Indo-Iranian culture whose exact location is still highly speculative.
To Summarize: The language, rituals, gods, godesses and legends of the rigveda are a progressive mix of legends and beliefs all the way from central asia to northern India. The actual composition of the rigveda and standardization of its verses happens in the "greater punjab" region.
P.S. There is lots more coming.....I"ll give my sources later...but all this is the opinion of Dr. Witzell (Harvard), Dr. Steve Farmer and other western archaeologists.
Cheers.
Suggestions for the identity of the early Rigvedic Sarasvati River include the Helmand River in Afghanistan, separated from the watershed of the Indus by the Sanglakh Range. The Helmand historically besides Avestan Haetumant bore the name Haraxvaiti, which is the Avestan form corresponding to Sanskrit Sarasvati. The Old Persian form is Hara[h]uvati, in Achaemenid times the name of the Arghandab River, the chief tributary of the Helmand. This name was in turn Hellenized to Arachosia. The 1st century CE geographer Isidore of Charax referred to Arachosia, the land where the Arghandab (Sarasvati) and Helmand (Setumanta) flow, as White India.
The Avesta extols the Helmand in similar terms to those used in the Rigveda with respect to the Sarasvati: "the bountiful, glorious Haetumant swelling its white waves rolling down its copious flood" (Yasht 10.67). Kocchar (1999) argues that the Helmand is identical to the early Rigvedic Sarasvati of suktas 2.41, 7.36 etc., and that the Nadistuti sukta (10.75) was composed centuries later, after an eastward migration of the bearers of the Rigvedic culture to the western Gangetic plain some 600 km to the east. The Sarasvati by this time had become a mythical "disappeared" river, and the name was transferred to the Ghaggar which disappeared in the desert, which under the influence of the early hymns was made into an invisible river joining the Ganga and Yamuna.
There are strong linguistic and cultural similarities between the Rigveda and the early Iranian Avesta, deriving from the Proto-Indo-Iranian times, often associated with the early Andronovo culture of ca. 2000 BC....
The Andronovo culture is actually a collection of similar local Bronze Age cultures that flourished ca. 2300–1000BCE in western Siberia and the west Asiatic steppe.
'Wet fantasies if Islamic glory'...how does that sound?
All of that does seem to fit in with with the theory that the Vedic civilization was in NorthWest/West Pakistan?
Since there are both linguistic and cultural and geographical ties to the Andronovo, it would be logical to conclude that the civilization existed in close proximity to them, which bolsters the argument that RR is making for their location.
I am confused about the purported migration to the Gangetic plains - why would that occur, if the Indus was in close proximity to the "Sarasvati of later years" that petered out? Would it not be logical to assume that the civilization simply moved a little West, to the fertile Indus plains, rather than several hundred KM east?
Perhaps the "migration" was one of beliefs, and culture, not of people?
I am confused about the purported migration to the Gangetic plains - why would that occur, if the Indus was in close proximity to the "Sarasvati of later years" that petered out?
Would it not be logical to assume that the civilization simply moved a little West, to the fertile Indus plains, rather than several hundred KM east?
Perhaps the "migration" was one of beliefs, and culture, not of people?
Am too am confused about this part actually. The Core of the rigveda verses seems to have been composed in "greater punjab" progressively from west to east.
Also, I am digressing, but the Indus Valley people seem to be Dravidians after all. They were apparently pushed back over several centuries, and also, some of them assimilated with the Aryans.
e.g.:
Words like "Indra" "Gandharva" etc which are very dear to the Rig Veda see their roots in the BMAC, which is south of the Urals.
Dravidian languages - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaIn addition to Elamite, unsuccessful attempts have also been made to link the family with the Japonic languages, Basque, Korean, Sumerian, the Australian Aboriginal languages and the unknown language of the Indus Valley civilisation. The theory that the Dravidian languages display similarities with the Uralic language group, suggesting a prolonged period of contact in the past,[4] is popular amongst Dravidian linguists and has been supported by a number of scholars, including Robert Caldwell,[5] Thomas Burrow,[6] Kamil Zvelebil,[7] and Mikhail Andronov[8] This theory has, however, been rejected by specialists in Uralic languages,[9] and has in recent times also been criticised by other Dravidian linguists like Bhadriraju Krishnamurti.[10]
Its not that simple. Infact, its insanely complicated.
Apparently the Aryans did roam all around North India, both assimilating with the locals, and the same time pushing some of them them south.
Here is a nice quote from Dr. Witzell:
In sum. We have clear linguistic, religious/ritual data, some
archeological ones (horses, Gandhara Grave Culture), and incipient
genetic ones. They all point to a limited immigration into the
subcontinent. An immigration, however, that had great direct and
indirect impact on the rest of North India and later on in all of
S.Asia -- by osmosis/acculturation and acceptance of an ``elite kit``
(Ehret) by the various local elites.
Am too am confused about this part actually. The Core of the rigveda verses seems to have been composed in "greater punjab" progressively from west to east.
However, the culture, stories, legends, and some critical loanwords indicate influences all the way from the Urals to pre-existing languages in Gangetic plains.
Also, I am digressing, but the Indus Valley people seem to be Dravidians after all. They were apparently pushed back over several centuries, and also, some of them assimilated with the Aryans:
"It also is clear that the remnant agricultural people of the Indus
moved upstream (apparently for want of sufficient water in some areas
and as to exploit monsoon rains not found in the Indus area), to
Haryana/Delhi and eastwards to Saurastra and Gujarat. Indeed, we find
non-Aryan (prefixing, Para-Munda) river/place names concentrated in the
Haryana (Kuruksetra) area Witzel 1999), and Dravidian ones in Gujarat
(Southworth 2005), while most of the NW and then the western Gangetic
valley has been overlaid by IA names." (Dr. Witzell again)
Its not that simple. Infact, its insanely complicated.
Apparently the Aryans did roam all around North India, both assimilating with the locals, and the same time pushing some of them them south.
Here is a nice quote from Dr. Witzell:
In sum. We have clear linguistic, religious/ritual data, some
archeological ones (horses, Gandhara Grave Culture), and incipient
genetic ones. They all point to a limited immigration into the
subcontinent. An immigration, however, that had great direct and
indirect impact on the rest of North India and later on in all of
S.Asia -- by osmosis/acculturation and acceptance of an ``elite kit``
(Ehret) by the various local elites.
What do you mean by "composed in Greater Punjab"? If the Rig Veda bears strong linguistic ties to North Western Western Pakistan/Iran/Afghanistan, and the earlier parts of it indicate geographical features in Aghanistan (Helmand), then wouldn't the "composition" be in that region too?
There is a very strong argument against this, that the Dravidians were a neolithic culture (used stone etc) and it seems illogical that the IVC would devolve into a more primitive civilization, as they moved south, there would be some semblance of their culture in the south as well.
What did you come across that indicates a strong connection? The script itself has not been completely deciphered yet, and if there was a strong linkage, the connections would be obvious I would imagine.
Actually, "limited immigration" would point to a diffusion of culture and beliefs rather than people. Similar to the Arabs into Pakistan - there wasn't a huge influx of Arab immigrants, but they left a permanent imprint on the areas they were in. So it could have been a similar situation.
There's no archaeological evidence, or even textual evidence that the Rig Veda was composed anywhere in the Punjab.
Pre-exisiting languages in the Gangetic plains? There are NO COMMON critical loanwords between the pre-Indo European languages of the Gangetic plains, and the Urals. The only common loan words are because the language has a common origin, the Indo-European language. Again this is a spread of language rather than people. I don't know what cultures, stories and legends you're talking about.
I don't disagree with this. There was an indirect spread of culture, not Vedic people into North India. Again where's the reference?
Also, there is a huge borrowing of sanskrit terms into classical tamil etc. although they are structurally different from Indo-Iranian languages.There is a very strong argument against this, that the Dravidians were a neolithic culture (used stone etc) and it seems illogical that the IVC would devolve into a more primitive civilization, as they moved south, there would be some semblance of their culture in the south as well.
Its far more complicated than that. Apparently the Dravidian languages developed later as an indigenous innovation.
Well thats the opinion of Witzell and Farmer from the year 2007. Apparently they know something you don't.
Not the Urals!!! How could gangetic languages spread to the Urals??
The Indo European language, upon reaching the gangetic plains with Aryan migrants, borrowed some loanwords from the gangetic people's languages.
I"ll prove my sources when I have enough data to write a nice long post explaining the current views (2007) of western researchers.
Don't worry I'll get my references. Solid ones, not from websites but from books.
Dude, you saying that "The Core of the rigveda verses seems to have been composed in "greater punjab" progressively from west to east." does not mean that Wiztel agrees with it. I can assure you, there has been no shift in thinking that Gandhara is the homeland of the Rig Vedic people.
The UCL papers quotes the Rig Vedic burial rites having sites in common with Gandharan ones from the last couple of years. I await your links and evidence of this amazing find.
Right, now I can agree with you here. What's your point? You did not say this before? "However, the culture, stories, legends, and some critical loanwords indicate influences all the way from the Urals to pre-existing languages in Gangetic plains."..in other words, you were quoting "out of India" theory while trying to act like you hadnt heard about it before
You do that. I can assure you that Witzel has not changed his mind on the site of he Rig Vedic homeland, even if you do quote statements of yourself, implying the Rig Vedic homeland has shifted all of a sudden. Proof should come before the statement.