MastanKhan
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Hi,
Enjoy this 10 minutes of history lesson.
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I am not sure why it is so difficult to understand the simple fact that ancient India was not a single political unit, rather a geographical entity
Sir, this had been an extensively researched and debated topic. India has never been an ill defined term as you have stated. To the Persians, from whom Greeks and later all the western world the derived the idea of India it was the unknown region beyond Indus upto whose banks it's remotest Satrapi existed was known as India. Unlike a Nation State which must have a defined territorial integrity and a well established political system, a geographical or cultural entity does not necessarily need to have a starting point and an ending point."India" is a very ill-defined term. Where does it start and where does it end (historically, before British empire)? Who decides?
Who is an Indian - is it only a citizenship or there is more to it (since you guys insist it's ancient term)? If an inhabitant of territories held by India refuses to identify as one, is he still Indian?
India spans the boundaries of three distinct Primary Language families. It cannot be an ethno-linguistic nation. Neither a race based identity, like "white Europe".
It is simply a subcontinent-sized geographic area united by a colonial empire and handed over to new elites when they left. Any other attempt to define India will always require excessive explaining and more scholarly acrobatics than defining natural states like Germany or China.
Pakistan differs from India in that we agree we are five major ethnic groups united as a single federation. We are under no illusion that Pakistan is some ancient concept.
Sir, this had been an extensively researched and debated topic. India has never been an ill defined term as you have stated. To the Persians, from whom Greeks and later all the western world the derived the idea of India it was the unknown region beyond Indus upto whose banks it's remotest Satrapi existed was known as India.
Germany before then was just a conglomeration of princely states, so calling it a natural state is a bit irony, isn't it?
British of course defined it's modern boundaries but please note, when they left there were more than 700 hundred disgruntled princely states. So the British united modern India is a bit farcical idea in my opinion.
More work is needed to completely dismantle this colonial legacy.
Earlier India was called Hindustan by foreign powers
And sorry to say, any effort to look down upon this particular expression is never going to work. Indian subcontinent will always be Indian subcontinent and Indian Ocean will always remain as it is called today.
Seems like Non-Islamic history is not taught in Pakistan. prior to Mughlas there were many kingdoms (bigger than Mughal Sultanate) ruling over the country.First it was called sindhu. remember that Sindhu was not the name of whole of India but just a Part of current Sindh and Baluchistan and Gujrat areas. Then came Mughals, The one who called hindustan "Hindustan" were the Mughals. and the history of Mughuls is as far as 1500 only. Now, You should remember that it was the Mughuls, who first conquered major Portion of "what is now part of India", Before that this land had only small states of Raja Maharajas. Mughul's made it a Country. Then British continued this and conquered more areas and added them to Mughul territory and called it British-India.
India, or Hindustan [as a country] didn't existed before 11th Century. But it doesn't matter. as It exist NOW. so let's move on.
No, in Pakistani text books they teach a little about IVC and then jump directly to the Central Asian invasions (in which they then try to pass off Central Asians as 'us'/'Pakistanis').Seems like Non-Islamic history is not taught in Pakistan. prior to Mughlas there were many kingdoms (bigger than Mughal Sultanate) ruling over the country.
Central Asians (Aryans) gave you your language, religion and everything that comes with itNo, in Pakistani text books they teach a little about IVC and then jump directly to the Central Asian invasions (in which they then try to pass off in the Central Asians as 'us'/'Pakistanis').