DarkPrince
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middle eastern invaders
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First, the genetics issue.
The biggest question about the AIT came with the finding that Indians were a homogeneous mass, very slightly distinguishable one from the other, certainly not conforming to the assumptions that seemed to accompany the AIT: a genetically distinct master-race visible through their features and physiognomical characteristics from the subject race that they conquered, during their triumphant sweep down from the mountain passes.
To be honest, this outcome was more of a self-goal than a ripping off of a mask from the villainous features of the British and European conspirators to keep the ancient, universe-centric role of India a secret from its own people and from the people of the world that revisionists seem to take as almost scriptural truths. The time that the Indo-Aryan language took to percolate to the east may have been as long as 700 years. If the Rg Veda was finally in place complete sometime around 1500 BC, and if the dates of the Buddha are around 600 BC, assuming that it took a couple of centuries at least for the new political orders to settle in, the gap that emerges is around seven centuries.
Just as an aside, a similar religious and cultural interpolation occurred in the 11th century, and took 600 years, till the reign of Aurangzeb, scion of the latest wave of conquerors, akin, ironically, to the first Turks who came in with the Ghurid. In this period, they managed to lay down the foundations of a similar society, but never managed to overcome the existing religion and culture, which existed side by side. Looking at what this wave 'achieved', if achieved is the right word, gives us a lot of insight into what might have happened in similar circumstances in a similar span of centuries two and a half millennia earlier.
Clearly, the new entrants did not come in a tidal wave of humanity. They did come in as family units, and women and children were definitely present, but they were not an overwhelming mass. What the geneticists remind us is that the leading wave must have marched fast and hard, but through very small distances initially, throughout the seven centuries that we are considering. Did they carry the entire people with them? If we are to believe accounts of cattle raids and assaults on walled or protected settlements, the chances are that they did not. That was not what raiders did in any culture in any location. It does not take much reasoning to conclude that during this long period of seven centuries, each succeeding impulse of conquest or absorption involved a further dilution of the original people, until the vast masses became an indistinguishable pool of almost-identical character.
Seven centuries was enough to drive all distinctive genetic characteristics into the background mass, and it was enough to achieve the same two and a half millennia later too. It is equally significant that the Muslims who claim to have been the Man on Horseback in this era are also indistinguishable from those they conquered and held in bondage for almost the same period of time. Which is why it is surprising that we did not draw the right inferences earlier; but not surprising considering that people tended to go by superficial characteristics, fairness of skin, for instance, height, nasal character, features in general, beards and their characteristics and the like.
Of course the geneticists were right; the total absence of any inference of biased thinking may have been due partly to their transparent objectivity, and second, due to the obvious understanding of observers that they had overlooked an evident fact.
New turning point of Indian subcontinent will be when Bangladesh dives under the sea in 2050
The Sarasvati dilemma bothers the proponents of the AIT the most.
..."the geneticists who blew the biggest hole in the AIT
The Saraswati in the Rg veda is quite clearly a river in northern India, not the Afghanistan river.
This matches the Rigvedic description of the Sarasvati flowing to the samudra, which at that time meant 'confluence', 'lake', 'heavenly lake, ocean'; the current meaning of 'terrestrial ocean' was not even felt in the Pali Canon.
Age | Name | Locations | Notes |
12th to 9th century BCE | Black and Red Ware | Northern India, up to the Indus Valley, not to its west | Perhaps contemporaneous with Late Harappan pottery. May have given rise to Painted Gray Ware |
1200 BC to 600 BC | Painted Gray Ware | Hastinapura, Mathura, Ahichhatra, Kampilya, Kurukshetra | Perhaps contemporaneous with Late Harappan pottery. Succeeded by Northern Black Polished Ware. Found in the channel of the Saraswati, hence occurring after the demise of that river system. |
700 BC to 200 BC | Northern Black Polished Ware | Western Bengal | Coincided with the Mauryas, may have been coincident with the larger state-level organisation in India. |
My questions are almost never based on the genetic argument since I'm not really sure how much change is required to show up clearly in a population the size of India. This issue helps only in rebutting the most primitive ideas of the AIT. However having got that wrong, it makes the AIT vulnerable because of a proven chink in that armour. The essence of my argument is with the dating of the Rg veda. This is simply because if the dating of the Rg veda changes, then the AIT would be more holes than substance because they would then have to prove the existence of other branches to the same period to sustain. The presence of the Kassites and the Mitanni which is a part of recorded history starts to make this neatly dated theory more than a bit vulnerable. However the key to that vulnerability is the Sarasvati, for so long dismissed as a figment of imagination, then as a name for some other river(the Indus) & at times the Helmand(Haraxvaiti). If we agree that the Sarasvati was a large river flowing in the Ghaggar-Hakra system & it dried out due to geological changes, the problem for the AIT dating becomes acute. The Mahabharata, a much later work still speaks of the Sarasvati existing, though clearly dying & drying out in the desert. Once the date for the Mahabharata starts being pushed backward because we are now approaching recorded history where the river must find mention for the dating to sustain, the dates for all compositions before the Mahabharata also needs pushing back. Since painted grey ware sites are dated to 1000 BCE on the bed of the river, it must have dried out completely well before that. The date given for the drying of the river is at the very least 1800 BCE. If the river was flowing when the Rg veda was composed, the dating for the movement of people would be pushed way far back, something the AIT cannot sustain. That starts getting it very close to the supposed dates of the IVC, resulting in more & more confusion. This, simply is the reason I believe that many supporters of the AIT are not willing to look at the Rg veda & the Sarasvati with appropriate seriousness.
The second part is something that i have touched on before & that is the almost complete cultural absorption of the "invading" culture leaving behind almost no traces of the previous culture. It could happen but very unlikely. Using the analogy of the Muslim invasion, even after an longer period of time, there has not been a complete removal of previous history from memory. Why that should happen with a supposedly less violent time is difficult to imagine. Why it should also happen non-Aryan lands of south India is even more difficult to explain.
My questions are almost never based on the genetic argument since I'm not really sure how much change is required to show up clearly in a population the size of India. This issue helps only in rebutting the most primitive ideas of the AIT. However having got that wrong, it makes the AIT vulnerable because of a proven chink in that armour.
The Mahabharata, a much later work still speaks of the Sarasvati existing, though clearly dying & drying out in the desert.
So many nice kind words. Must have been one hell of a breakfast.......
middle eastern invaders
The problem seems to be that people who don't want to believe in Aryan invasion are trying to change what the theory says to what they want it to say, so they can "disprove it".
I can't believe i am having to explain this, as I thought this was just self evident.
But language and culture are independent of genetics. You can speak English and not be genetically from England. You can be Buddhist and not be genetically Chinese.
The Aryan invasion solves a lot of questions about our history.
How come languages from Celtic to Persian to Hindi and Bengali are more similar than other languages, such as Arabic or Chinese?
Now, if this makes you insecure about your history and the people you hate, then that is your problem.
The theory itself is sound.
But language and culture are independent of genetics. You can speak English and not be genetically from England. You can be Buddhist and not be genetically Chinese.
The Aryan invasion solves a lot of questions about our history.
How come languages from Celtic to Persian to Hindi and Bengali are more similar than other languages, such as Arabic or Chinese?
Agree with your logic, although the last sentence is a bit harsh.
People seem to confuse cultural invasion with physical invasion, as if the two must always be related.
That's what I am trying to say, though with too many words, if your messages are anything to go by.
If the theory you were taught has lots of holes, you should look for better answers.The Aryan invasion solves a lot of questions about our history.
How come languages from Celtic to Persian to Hindi and Bengali are more similar than other languages, such as Arabic or Chinese?
Good, keep that in mind.Now, if this makes you insecure about your history and the people you hate, then that is your problem.
If your answer has lots of holes, you should look for a better answer.
Good, keep that in mind.