I am really glad that you asked me this question, for two reasons - three, in fact.
First, just a few minutes before, I read a painful and humiliating mail from an apparently Chinese contributor complaining about the bad manners of Indian contributors. It was very painful to read, and upset me considerably. So, having this to answer will have, I sincerely hope, a calming effect on me and my lacerated nerves.
Second, the question has great intrinsic interest. It is so rich with content.
Third, you were apparently on holiday and enjoying a drink when you wrote one of your recent posts. If the situation continues, we must be very happy that this forum distracts you from the charms of your holiday and from the charms of the vine and of the demi-god Bacchus ;-)
Joe Shearer said:
India, the political entity was a British creation. India, the name by which south Asia has been known since approximately 300 BC or a little before by Europeans, was a Greek creation.
The history of India did not exist. The history of south Asia certainly did. Even independent empires that saw themselves as distinct from others were clearly cognizant of the cultural integrity of south Asia.
I want to talk more about this bolded part, According to my limited knowledge the oldest name for India of which i mean the prehistoric one was Bharata khanda , assumed to be named after the emperor bharata or chakravartin bharata who united the Bharata khanda from Balochistan to kanyakumari etc etc. The word Indiski or whatever seems to be some corrupt form of hindu or sindhu or some other word.
If the above explanation is to be accepted then is the South Asian history not Bharat's ?? The division of countries was recent but for ages haven't we by which i mean Bharata's descendents should be the one claiming this history. OR do u think that the Aryan invasion was true and i being from Andhra a south Indian am different from Northern Indians and was defeated and occupied by them Aryans which as far as i know is the corrupt form of Arya meaning respected one even today in telugu. Kindly explain ur view.
There are several parts to your question, itself a deep and involved one.
First, the easiest: the name by which we are known. A Chinese contributor has written with perfect accuracy and insight that our empires were not known as Chinese Empires or Indian Empires. Those were the terms used by others of us. For us, we thought of ourselves as the Ming or as the Maurya empire.
Very nicely put. Perfect, in fact. India itself is a name applied to south Asia by Europeans. It has as much value as Columbus thinking that the people he was interacting with were Indians from south Asia, when he went ashore in the west Indies (was it Hispaniola? I forget). India has misled all of us and caused a serious rumpus on another thread, when an otherwise very learned person named roadrunner kept painting himself into a corner with the use of the word India. If he had rephrased his argument without the use of the word India, he would prevailed logically and historically and with complete conviction.
So our first conclusion, which may be put away and not allowed to interfere with our further deliberations, is that India is merely the term for south Asia used by Europeans following the Greeks, and it indicated a political entity only twice, in the form of the British Empire and in the form of the successor state of democratic, republican India that is Bharat.
Which gives us an apt entry into consideration of what we called ourselves. There is no contradiction in fact between the story of the Aryans coming into India, and the universality of the term Bharata Varsha. You are an heir of the legacy of Bharata Varsha, just as much as a resident of Swat in northern Pakistan is, or my fellow-countrymen of Bangladesh are.
The people who came into the passes of the north-west were a mixed people, united only in their speaking that Indo-Aryan tongue which today we know as Rg Vedic Sanskrit. They found that there were others before them, the Rg Veda being full of their victories over the walled cities of these autocthones, whom they called Dasa and Dasyu, Pani and various other names. But they themselves passed on only the language that they spoke, Sanskrit, and left no trace of themselves genetically. The reason was that they were too few in number. The original inhabitants of the land were probably Dravidians speaking (strictly, Dravidian-Kol speaking), but genetically, even they were submerged in a sea of inhabitants whose genetic make-up had not changed since the Palaeolithic age. Neither the Aryan speakers nor their predecessors the Dravidian speakers made much impression on the masses who inhabited Bharata Varsha.
On the subject of subjugation of the country, as far as I can make out, this was a phenomenon confined to the Indus Plain, the Gangetic Plain and the Narmada Plain. The other cultural coparceners, the Brahmaputra Plain, the Godavari Plain and the Kaveri Plain, were not affected by this process of conquest. So there was not much question of the conquest of the Telugu people by the Indo-Aryan speaking tribes; it is in the highest degree unlikely that they got that far. It was later, under the Mauryas and the Guptas (to some extent) that the lands of the Telugus, counting the Kannadigas with them, were affected by northern conquest, and after that, honours were even.
This is my answer in brief. Please let me know if any point remains requiring further clarification, and I will be happy to oblige.