It is usually not advisable to enter a thread late, unaware of what has gone on before, ignorant of explanations that may have been offered, and sufficiently cover the ground, enough at least to need no further detailing and without knowing the positions that various contributors have taken. This is an unusually tempting thread, even if one detects suspect themes behind its choice and introduction.
I would like to comment on Sparten80 most recent comments, among other reasons for the irresistible coda to his main arguments, which runs as follows:
By the way, this is an interesting topic, I hope no one is offended by it, as it has considerable academic merit and people need to discuss it and be more aware of this cultural hijack and sabotage (one of many) inflicted by the British on the local peoples of South Asia.
Since I disagree with a number of things that he has stated, but as he appears to have a sufficient degree of tolerance and broadmindedness to withstand a frontal attack on some of them, without losing his temper, firing nuclear missiles at his interlocutor or declaring jihad, this may be an interesting exercise. What's to lose?
Thats not true, infact, hindu scriptures refer to the regions of Pakistan particularly the Panjab regions (including both Pakistani and Sikh Panjab) to be off limit to devout practising hindus.
I am not sure what the original reference was, that provoked this remark.
We can examine its validity depending on whether or not to accept the cited sources, Hindu epics (not scriptures), as authentic historical sources. These are not usually considered authoritative historical sources, although based on hints found within, there have been inspired guesses made about obscure parts of Indian history which have as often as not proven to be true. In sum, we can read it for suggestions of answers to questions whose answers are not to be found in recorded secular texts with a reasonably long written trail. We cannot assume that they are authentic; there is too much mixture of myth within.
It might be argued that Herodotus, the 'father of history', also had myths within his 'Istoria', single-legged men, men who slept in the shade of their own ears, legends of how gold was collected in the fabled east, and the like. However, Herodotus never spoke about his actual protagonists having been engaged with mythical beings, or having encountered mythical things or objects, unlike the epics, which are full of such incidents.
It is unwise and not historiographically correct to take Hindu epic sources as authentic. We shall deal with these at arms' length, therefore, and hope that this is clear to readers.
This particular reference was made in the Puranas, stating that the best practices were no longer to be found in the Punjab and its surroundings. The reference was made at a time when the language and culture of the incoming Aryans had gone deep into the Gangetic plain and was still moving east.
We can make sense of it only by postulating that the Indian branch of the Indo-Iranian speaking wanderers on the Central Asian steppes came to the Punjab earlier than to the Gangetic plains, that they were moving in an easterly, perhaps even a south-easterly direction. As the borders of this culture spread, its older habitations were increasingly considered inauspicious, its inhabitants came to be seen as outside the pale.
It is not right on your part to ignore the identical description of, specifically, the Uttara Madra and the Parama Kamboja. The Parama Kamboja may have been considered cousins from the steppes, a typical Iranian speaking dweller of the steppes, nearly certainly part of the great Scythian mass.
Ironically, it is in the Panjab and the dessert regions south that the presence of hinduism both historically and even now was minimal.
This is proven by the fact that there are rarely any ancient hindu temples located in Pakistan bar a few exceptions, while in contrast, the number of ancient Zorastrian, Buddhist, Shamanist/Animist, Islamic and more recently, Christian sites are quite extensive.
From a historical point of view and even currently if one reads ancient hindu scriptures like the Puranas, Upanishads, Gita etc... The lands of Pakistan were off limits to devout hindus.
bearing this in mind, i dont understand how, many hindustani's today claim that in ancient times, hinduism spread far beyond and was a major religion outside of its current boundaries. Archeological, historical and even many indian scriptures themselves dispel such claims.
With the greatest respect to you personally, these views are extreme and completely untenable. Explaining why is a long procedure. Please bear with me. Another prior apology that needs to be rendered is that this exercise that follows is being done entirely from memory, so allowance may please be made for an elderly man to falter occasionally. It is hoped that there will not be a single major failure.
Instead of going at your arguments sentence and clause at a time, and fighting it out in the trenches, let us take a look at what we can postulate at a broad level.
The evidence today is largely linguistic. We have first the Indo-European language to handle. This seems to have branched out into Indo-European and Indo-Iranian variations during the wandering of the people speaking it on the steppes.
We know that there were five divisions (leaving aside the mysterious Boghaz Keui inscriptions for the moment) of the Indo-European variant: Greek, Latin, Celtic, Gothic or German and Tukharian. We know where each landed up, although it is a matter of speculation how the Tukharian landed up in the Tarim Basin in Xinjiang.
The Indo-Iranians themselves seem to have split somewhere on the steppes around the Syr-Daria/Amu-Daria river complexes, and the split in their languages was sharpened and deepened in this physical split.
As a result, and this gives us our first data point, some passages in the Zoroastrian Zend Avesta cannot be parsed without a reasonable knowledge of RgVedic Sanskrit; some passages in early hymns of the Rg Veda are comprehensible only given knowledge of Avestan. Again, linguistic analysis yields a figure of 1,700 to 1,100 BC for the Rg Veda, similar dates for the Avesta, leaving our fanatic Hindus and Zoroastrians and their dates in the 3rd and 4th millennium aside for the moment.
The second data point is the geographical references within the Vedas, which map on to features in the geography from the Syr Daria/Amu Daria river complexes, some on the mountains, and some on the foothills coming down from the high mountains;
The third data point is the tribes list from the Mahabharata, and the locations of the tribes, including, intriguingly, references to individual tribes and their peculiarities. A case in point is the Parama Kamboja tribe; horsemen, tall, fair, ferocious in battle, loyal to a fault, available as mercenaries to the feuding kings, source of wonderfully warm blankets, speakers of a language hauntingly familiar to the tribesmen in the Punjab, the Kauravas, but subtly different, and cautioned against by the high priests.
Our best guess is that these Parama Kambojas were dwellers in the Ferghana Valley, part of the Scythian congeries, speakers of an Eastern Iranian dialect. After being pushed around in the time of troubles when the Yueh-chi, the Moon-borne, were expelled by the Hiung-nu, and in turn pushed out the Scythians from their Ferghana homeland, one branch landing up in Scythian-stan, or Sakasthan north of the Makran coast, known in contemporary times as Seistan; another branch lives on to this day in the Punjab as the Kamboh.
At this point, it is necessary to address your misgivings regarding the lack of an associated material culture. In brief, the position is this. The early Indo-Aryan speakers had no identifiable material culture. In their earlier, steppe-land avatar as the Scythians, there is a speculative link to the BMAC culture; at that stage, if we are to go by our best-established links, this was a horse-riding, gold-ornament wearing pastoral people, who travelled the steppes like mastermariners and were the people who taunted Darius by staying just over the horizon from his expedition to hunt them down. The material culture that is associated with them appears in the form of tumuli and graves.
There was no corresponding material culture for the tribesmen who crossed the mountains and colonised the country beyond the foothills in the Punjab. They were in transition, and it is difficult to detect their traces until we come to Painted Grey Ware. There is, in fact, in South Asia, a long gap in material culture between the Mohenjo Daro remains, and the cult figures of the Buddha. Two major reasons define this phenomenon.
First, this was a society in transition from pastoral life on the steppes to initially just such a pastoral life on the pasture lands of the Indus river flats and then the Ganges river flats, followed, as their influence spread among autochthonous and peoples in the hinterland. As it happens, there has been no identification of any material culture with them. Taking the Ganges plain, for example, there is no trace of material culture to mark the passage of these people other than Painted Grey Ware in the period 1100 BC to 600 BC, that is, from after the time that the Vedas were thought to have been composed to the approximate time of the Buddha.
Mention has been made of the failure to find temples and other public buildings. This mention could only have been made in complete ignorance of the culture and civilisation and the religious practices that were characteristic of the period before the Buddha. Those early Vedic Hindus, for lack of better terminology, had no temples for the same reason that the Scythians had no temples; they were not idol worshippers. Idol worship became a feature of religious life only during the counter-reformation initiated by the gradual decay of Buddhism and the desire of the Hindu priestly class to preach their religion once again, that is, during the period 400 AD onwards. How idols came into the religious life of South Asia is not certain, although the Indus Valley Civilisation certainly had no lack of suggestive iconography. For the Buddhists, the first depictions of the Buddha were prompted by the converted among the Greeks who set up the Bactrian kingdoms. It may be recalled that this was during the period of the supremacy of the Buddhist religion, and the earlier forms of Hinduism were dormant, a minority in society and unable, perhaps even unwilling, to seek prominence.
From 600 BC to 400 AD, Buddhism slowly prevailed, with increasing momentum, against the earliest, Vedic Hinduism, which had no idols, hence no temples, and left neither the evidence of temples nor of tumuli, thanks to the adoption of cremation with the availability of wood in plenty, from the surrounding forests and arborage of both the Indus plain and the Gangetic. While the Indus plain was no longer the haunt of rhinoceros and elephant, the desiccation of some of the river systems having accelerated during the aftermath of the Harappan civilisation, it was still green and plentifully supplied with trees. It is Buddhism, therefore, that left the first traces of archaeological remains for posterity to examine.
At this point, I will seek a break to go about my normal work. If, Sparten80, you find this useful and interesting, I should like to continue the commentary with your following observations. Please feel free to indicate frankly if this is too heavy for a defence site. When you decide, please be aware that what follows is likely to be rather more comprehensive and fundamental an examination than has been done up to this point.
I think it may be possible that the indian founding fathers Nehru, Gandhi etc.. were acutely aware of the lack of identity that the people of hindustan had or maybe they just got lucky and inherited the continuing legacy of what Colonial Britain left in their ''creation'' of the country india.
For all intent and purpose, india is an artificial country in a modern context. It never existed historically, nor does it have any base. Many biased indians will point to Ashoka's empire, but it was not referred to india either, not on any maps, not by Ashoka himself. No ancient map exists ever showing a place called ''india'' in this form, infact alternate names are used to describe the various parts of South Asia.
As can be seen all throughout history is that the people inhabiting the gangetic plains and the subcontinent peninsula down to between the eastern and western knats have been very astute imitators of foreign cultures.
The people have always had an inheritent complex of identity, and were quick to adopt foreign cultural practises and traits, over time, gradually claiming those norms for themselves erroneously. This trait is applied over and over again all throughout history and may explain the inherent complex that many people have in South Asia in general, and as can be seen in this forum in general, the large numbers of indians who are Pakistan-fixated or fixated on other foreign things not indigenous to them.
Look at ancient hinduism (Note: the term hindu isnt even indigenous and was never used by the ancient practisers of ''hinduism'', it was introduced by foreigners after the 16th century - this is another discussion in itself)
The religion was introduced and shares many similarities to the pagan Iranic (Aryan Tribes) the settled in Pakistan and Afghanistan. In fact, Aryan legend holds that they settled the trans-indus and later Panjab region/eastern Afghanistan from where there religion spread in various directions leaving an impression. what is interesting is that many scholars, notably Iranian ones but also others, note that while hinduism shows many similarities and most likely is derived from the ancient Iranic faiths, the people now practising it are definately not Iranic in the genetic sense. In essence, the inhabitants of hindustan have adopted a foreign religion and given it a local flavour(=hinduism) claiming it as their own.
Many foreign traditions, introduced by Central Asian turks, Afghans, Arabs in the form of music, dance, art, culture, mannerism have left their imprint on them. But ironically, up until even 1526 when Babur defeated the Delhi Sultanate (Battle of Panipat), he noted that the people of Hindustan lacked basic social skills and rules of engagement. For a central asian turk to speak of such findings, doesnt point to any ''civilization'' at all. Ironically, go to wikipedia and you'll find indians editing it to read, that Babur was ''an indian ruler''. A better read would be Baburnama which gives considerable insight into the mindset of the native aboriginal people and his impression of them.
For the Hindustani, the best thing imaginable, was the arrival of the British, who not only put an end to the longstanding rule of the Mughals (A central asian empire) but also of several other empires (Hyderabad's Asif jahs), Nawabs of Bengal, Afghan etc... but built up the continent with a series of massive infrastructure projects, communication and railworks, schools and training, empowered them. They applied the name india, previously used for a region straddling the 2 banks of the Indus river in Sindh in ancient Greek and Persian maps, and applied to the entire continent stretching from burma to eastern Afghanistan.
In 1947, left them with a country. In turn giving the people of Hindustan a foreign name, new found identity and new found culture, language(Hindi over indigenous languages; note: interestingly, Panini, the ancient sankrit master was from Ghandara, Pakistan)) a sense of history and civlization, tying them back incorrectly to the ancient times. Winston Churchill summed it up just right when he said that "India is a geographical term. It is no more a united nation than the Equator". Despite this, people living all the way in Bengal, Andra Pradesh, UP and Tamil Nadu, somehow feel ''connected'' with people from the indus river of Pakistan?? sounds absurd but not when you have generations of absorbing foreign cultures and claiming them as your own. It is said, that those without any history or culture are quick to point them out on other people and find remote links to themselves so as to improve their stature and origins... Sounds familiar (I'll just leave that one as that)
Wether ''indians'' themselves actively picked the name india or were meagre bystanders in the colonial game of cultural hijack and manipulation, distorting the history and facts about the region, one will never know for sure, but what can be said is, judging by the number of people who continue to discount this and are vehemently in opposition to it, the british did a good job at it!
By the way, this is an interesting topic, I hope no one is offended by it, as it has considerable academic merit and people need to discuss it and be more aware of this cultural hijack and sabotage (one of many) inflicted by the British on the local peoples of South Asia
Whoa, the cities of Lahore and Kasur are said to have been founded by the sons of King Ram of Ayodhya, and the cities of Takshashila (Taxila) and Pushkalavati (Charsadda) are said to have been founded by the sons of his brother Bharat.
Gandhara is frequently mentioned in the Mahabharata, and there are many archeological relics related to deity Shiva that have been found in Afghanistan.