The Rigveda and
the Aryan Theory: A Rational Perspective
THE FULL
OUT-OF-INDIA CASE IN SHORT
REVISED AND
ENLARGED 20/7/2020
Shrikant
Gangadhar Talageri
[This was originally a paper presented
at the ICHR conference in New Delhi in 2018―yet unpublished. The world is now
in a totally unprecedented state of flux, where almost nothing seems to matter
anymore. No-one knows what will happen tomorrow. So I am uploading the article
on my blogspot. The full piece is a bit long, so it may be described as a book rather
than an article.
Here I have slightly modified and
corrected the article, and significantly expanded it, with two major
appendix sections containing important new evidence from my two other
articles, "The Elephant and the Proto-Indo-European Homeland"
and "India's Unique Place in the World of Numbers and Numerals",
to present in one place THE FULL CASE FOR THE OUT-OF-INDIA THEORY].
[A small addition to section V. has been
added on 29/3/2020].
[Edited on 3/4/2020 to correct the lists
of geographical references]
REVISED AND ENLARGED ON 20/7/2020 with the addition
of two new Appendices 3 and 4, both placed after the Bibliography.
Appendix 3 is just a
copy-paste of Appendix 2 of my article "The Aryan Story vs. True Aryan
History" which should also have been added to this present article to
complete the case. I inadvertently failed to add it earlier, so I am doing it
now.
Appendix 4 is a short
summary of my exposé of the fake Genetic arguments (as summarized by Tony
Joseph in his book "Early Indians") in my fourth book "Early
Indians―Tony Joseph's Latest Assault", 2019. Genetics is completely
irrelevant to the AIT-OIT debate, but this was also necessary to complete
the case.]
The Rigveda is the oldest extant
recorded text in India, and in fact in the entire Indo-European world. Its
importance in etching out the earliest history of Indian Civilization as well
as Indo-European history is uncontestable. And this fact is recognized across
the entire academic world of Indian Historiography.
However, there are strong differences of
opinion as to what exactly the Rigveda has to tell us about this ancient-most
history, and what exactly the position of the Rigveda and the "Vedic
Aryans" (the composers of the Rigveda) is in this history.
There are two major perspectives on this
matter:
1. The Aryan-Invaders perspective,
which treats the Vedic Aryans as an invader race in India. The period of
history represented in the Vedic texts is represented as a decisive break in the continuity in Indian
history, where an earlier culture (the "Harappan" or "Indus
Valley" culture) was almost completely supplanted by a new culture
(primarily language and religion) brought in by groups of invaders/immigrants called
"Aryans" coming from outside India around 1500 BCE.
2. The Indigenous-Aryans perspective,
which treats the Vedic Aryans as indigenous people, whose culture contains the
oldest, and indigenous, seeds and roots of the whole of Indian Civilization
(and, in extreme cases, even of World Civilization).
The Aryan-Invaders perspective is based
on the discovery made by European scholars in the colonial period that the
major languages of northern India are related to the languages of Iran, Central
Asia and Europe. Linguistic studies in the last few centuries established that
these languages together belong to a "language family", which has
been given the name "Indo-European" (formerly called
"Aryan", since the composers of the two oldest Indo-European language
texts, the Indian Rigveda and the Iranian Avesta, called
themselves ārya/airya).
The languages of northern India (Kashmiri,
Punjabi, Sindhi, Hindi, Bengali, Assamese, Oriya, Gujarati, Marathi, etc., as
well as Nepali and Sinhalese) belong to the Indo-Aryan branch of Indo-European
languages, of which Vedic Sanskrit is the oldest recorded language.
The other languages of India belong to
five distinct other language families: Dravidian (Tamil, Malayalam,
Telugu, Kannada, etc.), Austric (Santali, Mundari, Nicobarese, Khasi,
etc.), Sino-Tibetan (Ladakhi, Lepcha, Meitei, Garo, Naga languages,
etc), Burushaski and Andamanese.
These Indo-European languages are
divided into twelve branches: Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Baltic,
Slavic, Albanian, Greek, Anatolian, Armenian,
Tocharian, Iranian and Indo-Aryan. Two of these, Anatolian
(mainly the Hittite language) and Tocharian, are extinct, and
known only through archaeological and textual references and records. The
linguistic evidence shows that the speakers of the ancestral, or proto-, forms
of these twelve branches lived together in one geographical space before they
started separating from each other around 3000 BCE or so.
Linguists and philologists attempting to
arrive at the geographical location of this ancestral area, the Original
Homeland of the Indo-European languages, concluded in an almost general
consensus that this original area was in South Russia:
a) From this arose the conclusion that
the Indo-Aryan languages, or the oldest known (and presumed to be ancestral)
Vedic Sanskrit language, must have come into India from outside.
b) The date of this hypothetical arrival
of the Indo-Aryan languages into India was calculated at 1500 BCE and
the composition of the Rigveda (the oldest text of the vast and entirely
pre-Buddhist Vedic literature) at 1200-1000 BCE, by calibrating the date
of their presumed exit from South Russia (around 3000 BCE) with the date
of their securely known and recorded indigenous presence all over northern
India (600 BCE or the period of the Buddha).
c) The Harappan sites were discovered in
the early twentieth century. Their archaeological dating was as early as 3500
BCE (with roots going further back) and there was a slow archaeological
demise of this culture after 1800 BCE. The writings found on artifacts
found in these sites have not been deciphered, but were interpreted to mean
that this was a different and linguistically unidentified "pre-Aryan"
culture which was supplanted after 1500 BCE by the culture of the
"invading Aryans".
d) All this led to the AIT (Aryan Invasion
Theory) perspective of interpreting the Rigveda as the oldest record of the
early days of the Aryan invaders in their first outpost in northwestern India
before they spread out all over northern India. The Iranian Avesta represented
an almost parallel culture to that of the Rigveda. This led to the further
theory that two of the twelve branches of Indo-European languages, Indo-Aryan
and Iranian, migrated together from South Russia around 3000 BCE or so,
and settled down together for a considerable period in Central Asia (where they
developed the culture common to the Rigveda and the Avesta) before they
separated from each other. The Indo-Aryans subsequently entered into the
SaptaSindhava area (Greater Punjab, or present-day northern Pakistan) where they
composed their first text, the Rigveda.
This approach suffers from many very
grave flaws. To point out the most obvious ones:
1. There is no archaeological or
textual/inscriptional record of the Proto-Indo-European or the Rigvedic language or culture anywhere
outside India: neither in South Russia, nor in Central Asia, nor in any of the
areas on the routes leading from South Russia to Central Asia or Central Asia
to the SaptaSindhava area.
2. The Rigveda does not contain even the
faintest hint of any extra-territorial memories: there is no reference to areas
outside the Indian sphere, let alone any reference to such areas as being
ancestral areas from where they migrated into India. On the contrary, the hymns
of the Rigveda show that the composers considered themselves native to the Vedic
area, to which they show great sentimental attachment.
3. The Rigveda is supposed to be the
earliest text composed by Indo-European language speaking people newly arrived
into an originally non-Indo-European language area, the site of a great ancient
Civilization, the Harappan Civilization. But it does not refer to a single
individual or entity, friend or foe, who can be identified linguistically as
Dravidian, Austric or Burushaski, or anything linguistically non-Indo-European.
Let alone refer to conflicts with such individuals or entities, let alone hint
that such individuals or entities are natives of the area while the composers
of the hymns themselves are not.
4. Even at that point of time, the local
rivers and local animals mentioned in the Rigveda have Indo-European
(Indo-Aryan) names, and definitely not Dravidian/Austric/Burushaski/etc. names,
an unparalleled circumstance in any alleged invasion/migration scenario anywhere
in the world.
5. The invasion/migration scenario and
the alleged subsequent post-Rigvedic "Aryan" expansion
into and colonisation of the rest of northern India is totally unsupported by
the post-Rigvedic texts and traditional Sanskrit historical traditions, or by
the traditions of any non-Indo-European language speaking community in India.
6. The whole process of squeezing the
Indo-Aryan history in India (as derivable from the textual and archaeological
evidence) from the pre-Rigvedic stage to the date of the Buddha into a period
of a thousand years or so has a very sharp aura of utter unreality and
incompatibility with the facts.
In spite of all this, the AIT is still
taught in India, and in the rest of the world, as an established historical
narrative. Apart from the more obvious factors (international academic
pressure, the power of the established leftist academia in India with their
virulent anti-Hindu bias, and the compulsions of political vested interests,
all "buttressed by the weight of two centuries of scholarship"
ERDOSY 1995:x), one reason for this is that the anti-AIT narrative in India
also suffers from two fundamental flaws:
1. It firmly ignores or rejects the fact
that the Vedic Indo-Aryan language belongs to just one of many distinct
branches of a distinct language family (Indo-European: distinct from
other Indian languages belonging to other language families like Dravidian and
Austric), or else it tries to derive all the Indo-European languages of the
world (and even the Dravidian and other non-Indo-European languages within
India) from the Vedic language.
2. It equally firmly ignores the fact
that the geographical data in the Rigveda shows that the "Vedic Aryans"
occupied a space restricted to only a portion of northern India (from western
Uttar Pradesh and Haryana in the east to the border areas of Afghanistan in the
west), and that this shows there were other (than "Vedic Aryan")
people living in the rest of northern India during the Rigvedic period. And
that the expanding geographical horizon of post-Rigvedic texts shows some
kind of historical phenomenon.
In fact, the opponents of the AIT are
united with the proponents of the AIT in treating the Vedic language and
culture as some form of "ancestral" culture to the rest of Indian or Hindu
Civilization: treating, for example, the present-day "Aryan"
languages of northern India, as well as religious and other elements in
Hinduism not found in the Rigveda or in the other Samhitas, as "later"
developments from the Vedic language, religion and culture. Such an approach
actually leaves no scope for any other logical interpretation of the facts
other than the AIT scenario itself.
Hence, in order to arrive at the most
rational and accurate perspective on India's most ancient history, it is
necessary to understand:
I. The Exact Identity of the "Vedic
Aryans".
II. The Actual Date of the Rigveda.
III. The Geographical Evidence of the Data
in the text.
IV. The History of the Emigration of the
other Indo-European branches.
V. The Nature of the Spread of the Vedic
Religion in India.
My two newer articles, "India's
Unique Place in the World of Numbers and Numerals", and "The
Elephant and the Proto-Indo-European Homeland" contain extremely
important and conclusive new evidence for the Out-of-India Theory. I will
attach two appendices giving summaries of this evidence.
VI. Appendix 1: The Evidence of the
Indo-European Numbers.
VII. Appendix 2: The Evidence of Animal
and Plant Names.
And finally, the two new appendices
added below on 20/7/2020, both placed after the Bibliography.
VIII. Appendix 3: The Fraudulent Arena
of Academic Debate.
IX. Appendix 4: The Fake "Genetic Evidence".
I. The Exact
Identity of the "Vedic Aryans"
The Vedic Aryans, as per the AIT,
entered northwestern India from further northwest into a totally
non-Indo-European land. They linguistically and culturally supplanted the
original inhabitants of this area (the "Harappans"). They then
composed the hymns of the Rigveda in this area (variously referred to as
"SaptaSindhava" or "The Land of the Seven Rivers", or "the
Greater Punjab", i.e. mainly present-day Northern Pakistan), and later
spread deeper into the rest of India and soon colonized and established their
language, religion and culture over the whole of northern India. Their (Vedic
Sanskrit) language developed into the modern Indo-Aryan languages and their
Vedic religion into modern Hinduism.
The opponents of the AIT reject the earlier
parts of the above theory, and treat the Vedic Aryans as indigenous people
identical with the Harappans.
But they also treat the Vedic
language, religion and culture as ancestral to the modern Indo-Aryan languages
and to modern Hinduism.
They do this by ignoring or denying the
evidence of the geographical data in the Rigveda. Since the geography of the
Rigveda is restricted to westernmost U.P. and Haryana and areas further west
and northwest, in effect their approach also, even when it does not
expressly say so, treats the Vedic Aryans as people who later spread deeper
into India from the northwest (although from within India) and soon colonized
and established their language, religion and culture over the whole of an
originally non-Indo-European northern India. But is this what the textual
evidence actually shows?
The Puranas start their traditional
history with the mythical ancestral king,
Manu Vaivasvata, ruling over the whole of India, and dividing the land between
his ten sons. However the detailed narrative in the Puranas is restricted
primarily to the Indian area to the north of the Vindhyas, and they concentrate
only on the history of the descendants of two sons: Ikṣvāku and Iḷa.
The tribes descended from Ikṣvāku are said to belong to the Solar Race, and the
tribes descended from Iḷa are said to belong to the Lunar Race. The history of
the descendants of the other eight sons of Manu is either totally missing, or
they are perfunctorily mentioned in confused myths in between narratives
involving the Aikṣvākus and the Aiḷas. As per both the AIT and the
Indigenous Aryans perspectives, all these numerous eponymous tribes are
sections among, or descendants of, the Vedic Aryans.
However,
an examination of the geographical data in the Puranas gives us a clear
picture: the tribes described as descended from Ikṣvāku lived in eastern
Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
The
descendants of Iḷa were divided into five main conglomerates of
tribes (mythically treated in the later narratives as descended from the
five sons of Yayāti, a descendant of Iḷa):
a)
the Pūru tribes in the area of Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh,
b)
the Anu tribes to their North in the areas of Kashmir and the areas
to its immediate west,
c)
the Druhyu tribes to the West in the areas of the Greater Punjab,
d)
the Yadu tribes to the Southwest in the areas of Gujarat, Rajasthan
and western Madhya Pradesh,
e)
and the Turvasu tribes to the Southeast (in unidentified and unspecified
areas to the east of the Yadu tribes).
The
Puranas fail to give details of the history and even the precise geography of
the other eight sons of Manu, as well as of the Turvasu tribes
(who are generally mentioned in tandem with the more important Yadu
tribes). The main concentration of Puranic (and the Epic and other later
traditional) narrative is on the history of the northern tribes, the Pūru
and the Ikṣvāku, and the Yadu tribes to their southwest. The
early history of the Druhyu tribes is given, but later they disappear
from the horizon (for reasons that we will see presently) and the history of
the Anu tribes occupies a comparatively secondary space in the Puranas
(again for obvious reasons, as we will see).
Does
the Rigvedic data confirm this scenario of "Vedic Aryans" being
ancestral to all these various Puranic groups, or of all these various Puranic
groups being component sections among the "Vedic Aryans"? The first
scenario is ruled out, because the Rigveda does already refer to these various
Puranic tribal groups as distinct groups. The second situation is also ruled
out, because the Rigvedic data shows that the "Vedic Aryans"
constitute only one among these various tribal groups: the Pūru.
It must be noted, to begin with, that the Pūru, as per the Puranic
descriptions, originally occupied exactly the same geographical space which is the
core area of the Oldest Books of the Rigveda (Books 6,3 and 7): the area of
Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh.
The
Rigvedic data shows that the Pūru were the "Vedic Aryans", and
the composers of the Rigveda were their particular sub-tribe the Bharata
Pūru, who were the inhabitants of the core Rigvedic area of the Oldest
Books (6,3,7): Haryana and adjacent areas. Their neighboring tribes and people
in all directions were the other non-Vedic (i.e. non-Pūru), but
"Aryan" or Indo-European language speaking, tribes.
The
Pūru expansions described in the Puranas explain all the known
historical phenomena associated with the "Aryans":
a)
the expansion of Pūru kingdoms eastwards (Panchala, Kashi, Magadha)
explains the phenomenon which Western scholars interpreted as an "Aryan
expansion into India from west to east": the area of the Rigveda
extending eastwards to Haryana and westernmost U.P., the area of the Yajurveda
extending further eastwards to cover the whole of U.P., and the area of the
Atharvaveda extending even further eastwards up to Bengal,
b)
and the Pūru expansion westwards described in the Puranas and the
Rigveda was the catalyst for the migration of Indo-European language speakers
from among the Anu and Druhyu tribes (whose dialects later
developed into the other eleven branches of Indo-European languages) from
India.
The
Evidence:
The
Rigveda frequently refers to the "panchajana" or the "Five
Tribes", i.e. the five Aiḷa tribes: Druhyu, Anu, Pūru,
Yadu, Turvasu, who are named together in I.108.8. Five
of the specific references are in the form of enumerations (as we would say:
"Punjab, Sindh, Gujarat, Maratha, Dravid, Utkal, Banga…") or in the
sense of directional references ("Kashmir to Kanyakumari.."): I.47.7;
108.8; VI.46.8; VIII.4.1; 10.5.
However, note how the other (than these six) specific references to
the six tribes make the identities very clear:
1.
The word Ikṣvāku occurs only once (in X.60.4) as an
epithet of the Sun.
2.
The Yadu and Turvasu (Turvaṣa in the Rigveda) are
mentioned many times (i.e. in 19 hymns). But almost every time (i.e. in as many
as 15 hymns) they are mentioned together (as one groups together
outsiders or distant peoples from one direction or general area: as an insular
Maharashtrian in Mumbai, for example, would use phrases like
"U.P.-Biharwale", "Gujarati-Marwadi",
"Punjabi-Sindhi", or "Chini-Japani", or else
"Madrasi" or "Kanadi" to encompass all South Indians,
etc.). What is more, they are named mostly in references to two specific
historical incidents which specifically describe them as living "far
away" and having to cross several rivers to reach the Vedic area; and
they sometimes figure as allies and sometimes as enemies.
3.
The Druhyu are only mentioned thrice in a single hymn (VII.18),
and there they are enemies of the composers of the hymn. The Anu
are mentioned in 4 hymns: in the two more specific of them (VI.62; VII.18,
both in the Old Books), they also are enemies of the composers of
the hymns. In the other two more general references (V.31; VIII.74
both in the New Books), the word Anu is used as a synonym for the Bhṛgu
priests who originated the fire-sacrifice (Bhṛgu also figure as
enemies in VII.18).
4.
In contrast with all this, the Pūru are found referred to throughout the
Rigveda in the first-person sense. They are the "We" of the Rigveda:
in IV.38.1 and VI.20.10, the Pūru are
directly identified with the first person plural pronoun. All the Vedic Gods
are identified as the Gods of the Pūru: Agni is described as being like
a cooling “fountain” to the Pūru (X.4.1), as a “priest”
who drives away the sins of the Pūru (I.129.5), the Hero
who is worshipped by the Pūru (I.59.6), the protector of
the sacrifices of the Pūru (V.17.1), and the destroyer of
enemy castles for the Pūru (VII.5.3). Mitra and Varuṇa are
described as affording special aid in battle and war to the Pūru, in the
form of powerful allies and steeds (IV.38.1,3; 39.2).
Indra is described as the God to whom the Pūru sacrifice in order to
gain new favours (VI.20.10) and for whom the Pūru shed
Soma (VIII.64.10). Indra gives freedom to the Pūru by
slaying their enemies (IV.21.10), helps the Pūru in battle
(VII.19.3), and breaks down enemy castles for the Pūru (I.63.7;
130.7; 131.4). He even addresses the Pūru, and asks them
to sacrifice to him alone, promising in return his friendship, protection and
generosity (X.48.5), in a manner reminiscent of the Biblical
God’s “covenant” with the "People of the Book", the Jews. In VIII.10.5,
the Aśvins are asked to leave the other four tribes (the Druhyu, Anu,
Yadu and Turvasu, all of whom are specifically named) and come to
"us".
Further:
a)
The area of the Sarasvatī river was the heartland of the Vedic Aryans. It was
so important that it is the only river to have three whole hymns (apart from
references in 52 other verses) in its praise: VI.61; VII.95 and
96. Sarasvatī is also one of the three Great Goddesses praised in the āprī
sūktas (family hymns) of all the ten families of composers of the Ṛigveda. As
per the testimony of the Rigveda, the Sarasvatī was a purely Pūru river,
running through Pūru territory, with Pūru dwelling on both sides
of the river: “the Pūru dwell, Beauteous One, on thy two grassy banks” (VII.96.2).
b)
The identity of the Pūru with the Vedic Aryans is so unmistakable, that
the line between “Pūru” and “man” is almost non-existent in the Rigveda:
Griffith, for example, sees fit to directly translate the word Pūru as
“man” in at least five verses: I.129.5; 131.4; IV.21.10;
V.171.1 and X.4.1. In one verse (VIII.64.10),
the Rigveda itself identifies the Pūru with “mankind”: “Pūrave
[…] mānave jane”. The Rigveda actually coins a word pūru-ṣa/puru-ṣa
(descendant of Pūru), on the analogy of the word manu-ṣa
(descendant of Manu), for “man”. In his footnote to I.59.2,
Griffith notes: "Pūru's sons: men in general, Pūru being regarded as
their progenitor", and again, in his footnote to X.48.5,
Griffith notes: "Ye Pūru: 'O men'―Wilson", and likewise in his
footnotes to VII.5.3 and X.4.1.
c)
The identity of the Pūru with the Vedic Aryans is impossible to miss:
Prof. Michael Witzel points out that it is “the Pūru, to whom (and to ...
the Bharata) the Ṛigveda really belongs” (WITZEL 1995b:313), and affirms
that the Rigveda was “composed primarily by the Pūrus and Bharatas”
(WITZEL 1995b:328), and notes that the Bharatas were “a subtribe”
(WITZEL 1995b:339) of the Pūru. Southworth even identifies the Vedic
Aryans linguistically and archaeologically with the Pūru.
d)
The only two unfriendly references to the Pūru, in this case
clearly to sections of non-Bharata Pūru who entered into conflict
with the Bharata clan or sub-tribe who are the Vedic Aryans proper of
the Rigveda (especially during the period of the Family Books, after which the
Rigveda becomes a general Pūru text), are in VII.8.4 which talks
about “Bharata’s Agni” conquering the (other) Pūru, and VII.18.3
which talks about conquering “in sacrifice” the scornful Pūru (who
failed to come to the aid of the Bharatas in the Battle of the Ten Kings.
According to many scholars, the other Pūru were actually allies
of the Bharatas in the war and the verse refers to a dispute over
sharing of the "spoils"!). The Bharatas are undoubtedly the
unqualified heroes of the hymns in the Family Books 2-7 (all but one of
the references to the Bharatas appear only in the Family Books: I.96.3;
II.7.1,5; 36.2; III.23.2; 33.11,12;
53.12,24; IV.25.4; V.11.1; 54.14;
VI.16.19,45; VII.8.4; 33.6): in many of
these verses even the Gods are referred to as Bharatas: Agni in I.96.3,
II.7.1,5; IV.25.4 and VI.16.19, and
the Maruts in II.36.2. In other verses, Agni is described as belonging
to the Bharatas: III.23.2; V.11.1; VI.16.45
and VII.8.4. There is not a single reference in the whole of the
Rigveda even faintly hostile to them.
e)
Significantly:
i)
The deity (Bhāratī) of the Bharata subtribe of the Pūru is
one of the three Great Goddesses (like Sarasvatī) praised in the family
hymns of all the ten families of composers in the Rigveda: the third Great
Goddess is the ancestral Iḷā.
ii)
While nine of those ten families of composers are priestly families, the tenth
is a family exclusively consisting of composers from the royal dynasty of the Bharata
subtribe of the Pūru, whose āprī sūkta is X.70.
f)
But most significant of all is the use of the word ārya in the Rigveda.
The word ārya (which everyone acknowledges to be the word by which the
Vedic people referred to themselves) is used in the Rigveda in the sense of "belonging
to our community/tribe". It is used only in reference to Bharata
kings like Sudās and Divodāsa, never in reference to non-Pūru kings.
Non-Pūru patrons (mainly in the dānastuti hymns of the Atri
and Kaṇva rishis) are never called ārya. Even when non-Pūru
kings like Mandhātā, Purukutsa and Trasadasyu are praised to the skies
(Trasadasyu is even called a "demi-god" or "ardha-deva" in IV.42.8-9),
it is only because of the help rendered by them to the Pūru
(this help is referred to in I.63.7; IV.38.1, VI.20.10;
VII.19.3), and they themselves are never called ārya.
And the Rigveda even clearly indicates that ārya is a synonym for Pūru,
in I.59.2 (vis-a-vis I.59.6 in the same hymn) and VII.5.6
(vis-a-vis VII.5.3 in the same hymn).
The
word ārya is found in 34 hymns, of which 28 are composed by composers
belonging either to the Bharata family or the two priestly families
directly affiliated to them, the Angiras and Vasiṣṭha, and 2 more
by the Viśvamitra rishis, who were also affiliated to the Bharata
king Sudās before being supplanted by the eponymous Vasiṣṭha. One more
within the Family Books is by the Gṛtsamada (note that the Gṛtsamada
are descended from an Angiras rishi).
Only
3 hymns are by rishis not affiliated to the Bharatas, and the
references to ārya in those three hymns are interesting as they demonstrate
the neutrality of the composers vis-à-vis the Bharata Pūru: One hymn (IX.63)
is by a composer from the most neutral and apolitical family of rishis in the
Rigveda, the Kaśyapa, and the word ārya is used twice in the hymn
in the only case in the whole of the Rigveda where the word has a
purely abstract meaning ("pure") rather than any personal or tribal
meaning. The other two hymns are by the Kaṇva, who (alongwith the Atri)
are politically active rishis not affiliated solely to the Vedic Aryans (Bharatas
and Pūru) but closely associated with other tribes as well. Consequently,
in one reference (VIII.51.9), the Kaṇva composer expresses
(his) neutrality between ārya and dāsa (i.e. between the Pūru
and Other Tribes); but in the other (VIII.103.2), even the
unaffiliated Kaṇva composer of this hymn uses the word ārya only
in reference to the Bharata king Divodāsa.
Most
interesting of all:
i)
9 (IV.30, VI.22,33,60, VII.83, X.38,69,83,102)
of the above 34 hymns refer to ārya as enemies (8 of them jointly to ārya
and dāsa enemies)! All the nine hymns are by Bharata composers or
the two families of rishis closely affiliated to them, the Angiras and Vasiṣṭha.
ii)
Further, 7 more hymns (I.100,111, IV.4, VI.19,25,44, X.69)
refer to jāmi (kinsmen) and ajāmi (non-kinsmen) enemies, all 7
being composed by the Bharata and Angiras.
iii)
And one more (X.133), by a Bharata composer, refers to sanābhi
(kinsmen) and niṣṭya (non-kinsmen) enemies. In addition, one more (VI.75),
by an Angiras, likewise refers to sva araṇa (hostile kinsmen) and
niṣṭya (non-kinsmen) enemies.
This
has no logical explanation in AIT interpretation except to say that the Aryans "must
also have fought amongst themselves". But the pattern of references makes
the actual explanation clear: it is Bharata (Pūru) as the Vedic ārya
fighting against (non-Bharata) Pūru as the enemy ārya.
Finally, the Rigveda itself makes this clear when it tells us in the Viśvamitra
hymn III.53 (which records the aśvamedha performed by Sudās on
the eastern banks of the Sarasvatī, after which he is described as expanding
his kingdom in all directions) that it is the Bharata who, when they set
out to do battle, do not differentiate between those who are close to them
(i.e. kinsmen) and those who are distant from them (non-kinsmen).
Note: There are only 19 hymns in the Rigveda (out of a total of
1028 hymns) composed by composers from the Bharata family. But 3 out
of 34 hymns in the Rigveda which use the word ārya, 2 out of 9
hymns in the Rigveda which refer to "both ārya and dāsa
enemies", 1 out of 7 hymns in the Rigveda which refer to "jāmi
and ajāmi enemies", and the only hymn which refers to "sanābhi
and niṣṭya enemies", are by Bharata composers.
The
evidence is very clear: The Pūru ̶ and only the Pūru
̶ and particularly the Bharata Pūru from among them, are the "Vedic
Aryans", composers of the Rigveda and speakers of the Vedic dialect (the
"Indo-Aryan" of the linguists). And the other tribes named in the
Puranas are logically not "Vedic Aryans", but they are
speakers of non-Vedic
Indo-European languages. The other tribes find mention in the Pūru
Rigveda only in the same way as the non-Jewish tribes of Palestine, and the
Egyptians, Hittites, Babylonians and Persians, are mentioned in the Jewish
Tanakh (Old Testament).
II. The Actual
Date of the Rigveda
The compulsions of the linguistic data
compel the linguists to postulate that the "Vedic Aryans" entered
India as intruders (whether invaders or immigrants) only around or after 1500
BCE, and composed the Rigveda between 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE. The
linguistic data shows that speakers of all the twelve branches of Indo-European
languages were together in the Original PIE (Proto-Indo-European)
Homeland (wherever it be located) till around 3000 BCE, and only
started separating from each other and migrating from that Homeland after or
around that point. As per the AIT, this Homeland was in South Russia. At
the same time, the securely dated archaeological and textual evidence from
around the period of the Buddha (600 BCE or so) shows that the
Indo-Aryan languages were definitely well established and spoken by local
people all over northern India at that time. Achieving a balance between these
two dates compels the date of intrusion to be fixed at 1500 BCE: the
fact that the Iron Age commenced in northern India by 1200 BCE (although the
latest evidence now takes this date back by several centuries), and that
the Rigveda is clearly a pre-Iron-Age text, also prevents the postulation of a
later date.
The oldest datable and decipherable
material or inscriptional evidence for the definite established presence of
Indo-Aryan (Indo-European) languages in northern India is represented by the
inscriptions of Ashoka (269-232 BCE). This gives the proponents of the AIT
the freedom to postulate this speculative as-late-as-possible date for the
invasion post-1500 BCE. A significantly earlier date would
automatically disprove the South Russian Homeland theory (since it would be
difficult to callibrate such an early date for the totally locally-oriented
Rigveda with the postulated departure from South Russia around 3000 BCE) and would
prove that India itself is the Original Homeland.
Till the beginning of the twentieth
century, the only contemporary external (non-Indian) source for any data to be
compared with that of the Rigveda was the Iranian Avesta. But
this text also shared the Rigveda's characteristic of having been orally
transmitted during the earlier part of its existence, and was hence not datable
on the basis of material inscriptions. But in the early twentieth century, it
was discovered on the basis of
datable records in West Asia that the Mitanni rulers of Syria-Iraq
from around 1500 BCE were of
"Indo-Aryan" origin. Their established presence in West Asia more
than 200 years even earlier before that completely skewed the established
consensus about the date of the Rigveda. However, this was sought to be
adjusted within the AIT by postulating that the Mitanni Indo-Aryans separated
from the main (i.e. Vedic) Indo-Aryans as well as the Iranians in Central Asia well
before 1500 BCE in a pre-Rigvedic period. They migrated westwards
into West Asia; while the proto-Vedic Indo-Aryans, later, migrated into
northwestern India, and the proto-Iranians into Afghanistan, where they, later
and separately, composed the Rigveda and the Avesta respectively.
The dated Mitanni records of the mid-second
millennium BCE, therefore provide the first and the only datable material inscriptional
evidence for the computation of "Indo-Iranian" chronology. But
what does this computation show? Does it show that the recorded Mitanni
Indo-Aryan data is of the pre-Rigvedic Indo-Aryan stage, as the AIT
proponents insist it does?
The Rigveda consists of 10 Books or Maṇḍalas,
numbered 1 to 10, containing different numbers of hymns and verses: the total
number of hymns is 1028, and the number of verses is 10552. The Books belong to
different periods, but the Indologists studying the internal chronology of the
Books are unanimous in classifying 6 Books, the Family Books 2-7, as being older
than the 4 non-Family Books 1, 8-10. Again, among the Family Books, it is
agreed that Book 5 is closer to the non-Family Books than to the other five
Family Books. Thus we get two categories of Books: the 5 Early/Old Books
2,3,4,6,7, and the 5 Late/New Books 1,5,8,9,10. The Early/Old Books include
Old hymns and verses, as well as Redacted hymns and verses (i.e. hymns which
were added, edited or modified during a later period, at the time of inclusion
of the New Books, as per the Indologists). The number of Hymns and
verses in the three categories is as follows:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 280 Hymns, 2351 verses.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 62 Hymns, 890 verses.
3. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 686 Hymns, 7311 verses.
A. THE MITANNI DATA:
If the classification of the Mitanni
culture as representing a pre-Rigvedic stage of "Indo-Aryan" culture
is correct, then the elements common to the Rigveda and the Mitanni (and
also the Avesta) should be found in the greatest numbers in the Old Books of
the Rigveda (which would be closest in time to the connection with the
proto-Mitanni Indo-Aryans), should become less frequent in the New Books (with
the passage of time and increase of distance from the proto-Mitanni Indo-Aryans
and the Iranians) and least frequent in the post-Rigvedic texts. However, we
find exactly the opposite case, i.e. a huge mass of common elements is completely
missing in the Old Hymns in the Old Books, found a few times in the
Redacted Hymns in the Old Books (which were edited in the period of the New
Books), but found in abundance in the New Books and in post-Rigvedic texts and
later literature:
The
common Vedic-Mitanni elements consist of names having the following prefixes
and suffixes: -aśva, -ratha, -sena, -bandhu,
-uta, vasu-, ṛta-, priya-, and (as per the analysis
of the Indologist P.E.Dumont), also bṛhad-, sapta-, abhi-,
uru-, citra-, -kṣatra, yama/yami-. There is
also the word maṇi, "bead/ornament".
A1.
Composer Names:
The
following is the distribution of names with these prefixes and suffixes among
the composers of hymns in the Rigveda:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns.
3. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 108 Hymns.
V. 3-6, 24-26, 46, 47,
52-61, 81-82 (21 hymns).
I. 12-23, 100 (13 hymns).
VIII. 1-5, 23-26, 32-38,
46, 68-69, 87, 89-90, 98-99 (24 hymns).
IX. 2, 27-29, 32, 41-43, 97
(9 hymns).
X. 14-29, 37, 46-47, 54-60,
65-66, 75, 102-103, 118, 120, 122, 132,
134, 135, 144, 154, 174, 179 (41
hymns).
Not a single hymn in the Old Books is composed by
a composer with names with these prefixes and
suffixes.
A2.
References Within the Hymns:
The
following is the distribution of names with these prefixes and suffixes, and
the word maṇi, in references within
the hymns of the Rigveda:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns, 0 verses.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 2 Hymns, 2 verses.
3. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 78 Hymns, 128 verses.
VII.33.9 (1 hymn, 1 verse and name).
IV.30.18 (1 hymn, 1 verse and name).
V.19.3; 27.4,5,6; 33.9; 36.6; 44.10;
52.1; 61.5,10; 79.2; 81.5 (9 hymns, 12 verses and names).
I.33.8; 35.6; 36.10,11,17,18; 38.5;
45.3,4; 83.5; 100.16,17; 112.10,15,20; 116.2,6,16;
117.17,18; 122.7,13,14; 139.9; 163.2; 164.46
(14 hymns, 26 verses and names).
VIII.1.30,30,32; 2.37,40; 3.16; 4.20;
5.25; 6.45; 8.18,20; 9.10; 21.17,18; 23.16,23,24;
24.14,22,23,28,29; 26.9,11; 32.30; 33.4; 34.16;
35.19,20,21; 36.7; 37.7; 38.8; 46.21,33; 49.9;
51.1,1; 68.15,16; 69.8,18; 86.17 87.3
(24 hymns, 42 verses and 44 names).
IX.43.3; 65.7 (2 hymns, 2 verses and names).
X.10.7,9,13,14; 12.6; 13.4; 14.1,5,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15;
15.8; 16.9; 17.1; 18.13; 21.5; 33.7; 47.6;
49.6; 51.3; 52.3; 58.1; 59.8; 60.7,10;
61.26; 64.3; 73.11; 80.3; 92.11; 97.16;
98.5,6,8; 123.6; 132.7,7; 135.17; 154.4,5;
165.4 (29 hymns, 46 verses and 47 names).
The
only references in the Old Books are in two Redacted Hymns.
The
above evidence is not partial or ambiguous. It is clear and sweeping:
the elements of the culture common to the Rigveda and the Mitanni are not
pre-Rigvedic (formed during some hypothetical period in Central Asia
before the "arrival" of the Indo-Aryans "into" India). They
are Late Rigvedic, i.e. they belong to the period of composition of the New
Books.
B.
THE AVESTAN DATA:
But
this common culture is not just a Vedic-Mitanni culture: it is a Vedic-Mitanni-Iranian
culture. So let us examine the provenance of the common Vedic-Avestan names and
name types in the Rigveda, to see whether the Iranian evidence also
shows this to be a late Vedic culture developed in the period of the New
Books of the Rigveda. The Avestan data available is much more massive
than the Mitanni data available, and includes other important data including
hosts of other common words, as well as metres, etc.:
The
common Vedic-Avestan names and name types include not only names with the
prefixes and suffixes found in the Mitanni records already considered earlier
except -uta (i.e. -aśva, -ratha, -sena, -bandhu,
vasu-, ṛta-, priya-, and, as per the analysis of the
Indologist P.E.Dumont, bṛhad-, sapta-, abhi-, uru-,
citra-,-kṣatra and yama/yami-) and the word maṇi,
but also names with the prefixes and suffixes aśva-, ratha-, ṛṇa-,
-citra, pras-, ṛṣṭi-, -ayana, dvi-, aṣṭa-,
-anti, ūrdhva-, ṛjū-, -gu, saṁ-, svar-,
-manas, śavas-, -stuta, śūra-, sthūra-, vidad-,
nṛ-, pṛṣad-, prati-, -śardha, pṛthu-, jarat-,
maya-, hari-, -śruta, śyāva-, -toṣa, -tanu,
-rocis, -vanta/-manta, -kratu, etc., and the
following names: Ghora, Āptya, Atharva, Uśīnara, Avasyu,
Budha, Ṛkṣa, Gandharva, Gaya, Sumāyā, Kṛpa,
Kṛṣṇa, Māyava, Śāsa, Traitana, Urukṣaya, Nābhānediṣṭha,
Vṛṣṇi, Vaivasvat, Virāṭ, etc., as well as a few words
common to the Rigveda and Avesta which are found only as words in the Rigveda
but as words as well as in names in the Avesta or vice versa (such as prāṇa,
kumbha, śepa, etc., and the names of certain animals). Also,
there are numerous other words, listed by earlier Indologists (like Hopkins)
and present-day Indologists (like Lubotsky and Witzel), which are peculiar to
only the Indo-Aryan and Iranian branches and are not found in the other IE
languages. These include the following prominent words: āśā, gandha/gandhi,
kadrū, sūcī, tiṣya, phāla, saptaṛṣi, mūjavat,
stukā, ambhas, samā, strī, tokman, evathā,
udara, kṣīra, sthūṇa, chāga, kapota, vṛkka,
śanaih, pṛdāku, bhaṅga, parṣa, pavasta,
dvīpa. Also the words gāthā and bīja.
B1.
Composer Names:
The
following is the distribution of names with these prefixes and suffixes among
the composers of hymns in the Rigveda:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns, 0 verses.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 1 Hymn, 3 verses (last
3 of the 18 verses in the hymn).
3. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 308 Hymns, 3389 verses.
III.36.16,17,18 (1 hymn, 3
verses).
V.1, 3-6, 9, 10, 20,
24-26, 31, 33-36, 44, 46-49, 52-62, 67, 68,
73-75, 81, 82 (39 hymns, 362 verses).
I.12-30, 36-43, 44-50,
99, 100, 105, 116-139 (61 hymns, 710 verses).
VIII.1-5, 10, 14, 15, 23-38,
43-51, 53, 55-58, 62, 68, 69, 75, 80,
85-87, 89, 90, 92, 97-99 (52 hymns, 878 verses).
IX.2, 3, 5-24, 27-29, 32-36, 41-43,
53-60, 63, 64, 68, 72, 80-82, 91, 92,
94, 95, 97, 99-103, 111, 113, 114 (61 hymns,
547 verses).
X.1-10, 13-29, 37, 42-47, 54-66,
72, 75-78, 90, 96-98, 101-104, 106, 109,
111-115, 118, 120, 122, 128, 130, 132,
134, 135, 137, 139, 144, 147, 148, 151, 152,
154, 157, 163, 166, 168, 170, 172,
174, s175, 179, 186, 188, 191 (95 hymns, 892
verses).
The
only hymn in the Old Books whose composer has a name with any of
these prefixes or suffixes is III.36 (in fact, only the last 3
verses out of 18 in this hymn), a Redacted Hymn, classified in the Aitareya
Brahmana VI.18 as a late addition into the Old Book 3.
B2.
References Within the Hymns:
The
following is the distribution of names with these prefixes and suffixes, and
the other common Vedic-Avestan or "Indo-Iranian" words, within
the hymns of the Rigveda:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns, 0 verses.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 14 Hymns, 20 verses.
3. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 225 Hymns, 434 verses.
VI.15.17; 16.13,14; 47.24
(3 hymns, 4 verses and names).
III.38.6; 53.21 (2 hymns, 2
verses and names).
VII.33.9,12,13; 55.8,8; 59.12; 104.24
(4 hymns, 6 verses, 7 names).
IV.30.8,18; 37.7; 57.7,8 (3 hymns, 5
verses and names).
II.32.8; 41.5,12 (2 hymns, 3 verses and names).
V.10.3,6; 18.2; 19.3,3; 27.1,4,5,6;
30.9,12,14; 31.10; 33.9,10; 34.8; 35.4; 36.3,6;
41.5,9; 44.5,10,10,10,11,11,12,12; 45.11;
52.1; 53.13; 54.13; 61.5,6,9,10,18,19; 62.6,7,8;
64.7; 74.4; 75.8; 79.2; 81.5 (23 hymns, 42
verses, 47 names).
I.7.1; 10.2; 18.1; 22.14; 23.22;
24.12,13; 25.15; 30.3,4; 33.8,14,15; 35.6; 36.10,10,10,11,17,17,18;
38.5; 39.3; 42.9; 43.4,6; 44.6; 45.3,3,3,4;
51.1,3,13; 52.1; 59.1; 61.7; 66.1; 80.16;
83.5,5; 88.1,5; 91.6; 100.16,17; 104.3;
112.7,9,10,10,11,12,15,15,15,19,20,23,23; 114.5;
116.1,2,6,6,12,16,16,20,21,23; 117.7,8,8,17,17,18,18,20,22,24;
119.9; 121.11; 122.4,5,7,7,13,14; 125.3; 126.3;
138.2; 139.9; 140.1; 158.5; 162.3,7,10,10,15;
163.2,2; 164.7,16,46; 167.2,5,6; 169.3; 187.10;
188.5; 190.1; 191.16 (50 hymns, 95 verses, 113 names).
VIII.1.11,30,30,32; 2.1,9,37,38,40,40,41;
3.9,10,12,12,12,16; 4.1,2,2,19,20; 5.25,25,37,37,37,38,39;
6.6,39,45,46,46,48;
7.23; 8.18,20; 9.7,10,15; 12.16; 17.8,12,14;
19.24,37; 20.4; 21.17,18; 23.2,16,23,24,24,28;
24.7,14,18,22,23,28,28,29; 25.2,22; 26.2,9,11; 27.19;
32.1,2,30; 33.4,17; 34.3,16; 35.19,20,21; 36.7;
37.7; 38.8; 45.5,11,26,30; 46.21.21,21,22,24,24,31,33;
47.13,14,15,16,17; 49.9; 50.5; 51.1,1,1,1,1,2,2;
52.1,2,2,2,2; 54.1,2,2,8; 55.3; 56.2,4;
59.3; 62.10; 66.8; 68.10,15,15,16,16,17;
69.8,18; 70.15; 71.2,14; 74.4,4,13,13,13;
75.6; 77.2,5,10,10; 80.8; 85.3,4; 87.3;
91.3,5: 92.2,25; 93.1; 97.12; 98.9 103.8
(55 hymns, 128 verses, 157 names).
IX.8.5; 11.2,4; 43.3;
58.3; 61.13; 65.7; 67.32; 83.4; 85.12;
86.36,47; 96.18; 97.7,17,38; 98.12; 99.4; 107.11;
112.4; 113.3,8; 114.2 (18 hymns, 23 verses, 23 names).
X.8.8; 9.8; 10.4,7,9,13,14;
11.2; 12.6; 13.4; 14.1,1,5,5,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15;
15.8; 16.9; 17.1,1,2,5; 18.13,13; 20.10;
21.5,5; 23.6,7; 24.4; 27.7,10,17; 28.4;
31.11; 33.7; 34.1,11; 39.7; 47.3,6; 48.2;
49.5,6; 51.3; 52.3; 55.8; 58.1,1; 59.6,8,10;
60.5,7,10,10,10; 61.13,17,18,21,26; 62.8; 63.17;
64.2,3,8,16,17; 65.12,12; 67.7; 72.3,4; 73.11;
80.3; 82.2; 85.5,6,37,37,40,41; 86.4,6,23,23;
87.12,16; 89.7; 90.5,13; 91.14; 92.10,11; 93.14,15,15;
94.13; 95.3,15; 96.5,6,8; 97.16; 98.1,3,5,6,7,8;
99.6,11; 101.3; 103.3; 105.2; 106.5,6; 109.4;
115.8,9; 120.6,9; 123.4,6,7; 124.4; 129.1; 130.5;
132.7,7; 135.1,7; 136.6; 139.4,6; 146.6;
148.5; 150.3; 154.4,5; 159.3; 164.2; 165.1,2,3,4,4,5;
166.1; 177.2; 189.2 (79 hymns, 146 verses, 160 names).
The
only references in the Old Books are in fourteen Redacted Hymns.
B3. Dimetric Meters:
In addition, the
following is the distribution in the Rigveda of the newer dimetric meters, i.e.
meters having 8 syllables per line [other than the old gāyatrī (8+8+8)
and anuṣṭubh (8+8 +8+8), which are found throughout the Rigveda], i.e. the pankti (8+8+8+8+8), mahāpankti
(8+8 +8+8 +8+8) and dimeter śakvarī (8+8+8+8+8+8+8), common to the
Avesta and the Rigveda:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0
Hymns, 0 verses.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 1 Hymn, 1 verse.
3. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 50 Hymns, 255 verses.
VI. 75.17 (1 verse).
V. 6.1-10; 7.10; 9.5,7; 10.4,7; 16.5;
17.5; 18.5; 20.4; 21.4; 22.4; 23.4; 35.8;
39.5; 50.5; 52.6,16-17; 64.7; 65.6; 75.1-9;
79.1-10 (49 verses).
I. 29.1-7; 80.1-16; 81.1-9; 82.1-5;
84.10-12; 105.1-7,9-18; 191.10-12 (60 verses).
VIII. 19.37; 31.15-18; 35.22,24; 36.1-7;
37.2-7; 39.1-10; 40.1-11; 41.1-10; 46.21,24,32;
47.1-18; 56.5; 62.1-6,10-12; 69.11,16; 91.1-2
(86 verses).
IX. 112.1-4; 113.1-11; 114.1-4 (19
verses).
X. 59.8,9; 60.8,9; 86.1-23; 133.3-6;
134.1-7; 145.6; 164.5; ; 166.5 (41 verses).
The
only verse in the five Old Books is in a notoriously late Redacted
Hymn.
In sum: the common data, representing
the cultural elements common to the Rigveda, the Avesta, and the securely dated
Mitanni documents and records, is not found at all in the 280 Old
Hymns and 2351 Old verses in the five Old Books. It is found sparingly in the
62 Redacted Hymns and 890 Redacted verses in these Old Books (which were
redacted or edited during the period of composition of the New Books), and
found in great abundance in the 686 New Hymns and 7311 New verses in the five
New Books as well as in all subsequent Vedic and Sanskrit literature.
To summarize the data only in the Old
Hymns and the New Hymns respectively, leaving aside as a distraction the
Redacted Hymns (Old hymns edited during the New period), we get an absolutely
uni-directional picture:
TOTAL HYMNS AND VERSES:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 280 Hymns, 2351 verses.
2. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 686 Hymns, 7311 verses.
COMMON RIGVEDIC-AVESTAN-MITANNI NAME
TYPES IN COMPOSER NAMES:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns, 0 verses.
2. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 309 Hymns, 3389 verses.
COMMON RIGVEDIC-AVESTAN-MITANNI NAME
TYPES AND WORDS WITHIN THE HYMNS:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns, 0 verses.
2. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 225 Hymns, 434 verses.
COMMON RIGVEDIC-AVESTAN NEW DIMETRIC
METERS:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0
Hymns, 0 verses.
2. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 50 Hymns, 255 verses.
The Avestan-Mitanni data, and its
complete identity with the new data in the New Books of the Rigveda, thus
presents us with solid scientifically dated evidence for dating the Rigveda:
1. The Mitanni kingdom flourished in
Syria-Iraq for about 200 years from around 1500 BCE or so. But the recorded
evidence shows that they were in West Asia more than 200 years prior to the
establishment of their kingdom. Further, the presence of another Mitanni-like
people, the Kassites, in Iraq (Babylon) is also attested from around 1750 BCE:
the Kassites had a king named Abirattaš, one of the late name-types (with the
suffix -ratha) found in the Mitanni names.
2. The presence of the Mitanni and
Kassites in Syria-Iraq in the 18th century BCE, and the presence in their
culture of cultural elements in common with the New Books of the Rigveda,
however harks back to a far earlier period: The Mitanni and
Kassites were already speakers of totally non-Indo-European languages. Witzel classifies these Indo-Aryan elements in the Mitanni
data as the "remnants" of Indo-Aryan in the Hurrite/Hurrian
language of the Mitanni (WITZEL 2005:361); and J.P.Mallory calls them "little
more than the residue of a dead language in Hurrian", and tells us
that "the symbiosis that produced the Mitanni may have taken place
centuries earlier" (MALLORY 1989:42). By any conservative estimate,
these cultural elements must date back long before 1800 BCE in West Asia
itself.
3.
The Old Books of the Rigveda, earlier, and the New Books of the Rigveda,
later, form two parts of one single cultural continuum.
Therefore, the new cultural elements in the New Books, which are not
found in the Old Books, represent new cultural developments within
the culture of the Old Books, and within the same geographical area.
The Old Books (6,3,7,4,2) preceded the development of the common
Rigvedic-Mitanni-Avestan culture, and the New Books (5,1,8,9,10) represents
the period of this development: both within the same broad geographical
horizon. The geographical horizon of the Rigveda is therefore the geographical horizon
of the area where this new culture originally developed: i.e. this common
culture developed in the area stretching from westernmost Uttar Pradesh and
Haryana in the east to Afghanistan in the west. And this is the area from which
the proto-Mitanni Indo-Aryans and the proto-Iranian ancestors of the Avestan
composers migrated to their historical areas, taking this common culture with
them.
4.
The Mitanni people in West Asia (Syria-Iraq) already in the 18th century BCE
represented the "remnants" and "residue" of
this common culture inherited from their Indo-Aryan ancestors. Those ancestors
must by any logic have already arrived in West Asia by 2000 BCE at the latest. They
must therefore have migrated from the Rigvedic area (stretching from
westernmost Uttar Pradesh and Haryana in the east to Afghanistan in the west)
many centuries before their presence in West Asia. By any logic, this can only
be a date somewhere in the second half of the third millennium BCE at the
latest.
5.
The culture that the proto-Mitanni Indo-Aryans took with them was clearly
already a fully developed and flourishing culture in this home area of the
Rigveda at the time they migrated from the area taking this culture with them.
Therefore the beginnings of this new culture of the New Books of
the Rigveda must go back at the very least to 2500 BCE and even further
back into the first half of the third millennium BCE.
6.
The period of composition of the Old Books (which are themselves divided into
two periods: an Earlier Old Period of the Oldest Books 6,3,7 in that order, and
a Later Old Period, or Middle Period, of Books 4,2), in which this new culture
of the New Books is completely absent, will therefore go much
further back in time before 2500 BCE at the very latest: to 3000
BCE or earlier.
This
dating is further confirmed by the references in the Rigveda to certain
technological innovations which took place in the second half of the third
millennium BCE, which are likewise completely absent in the Old
Books:
Spoked
wheels were invented (supposedly around
Central Asia) in the second half of the third millennium BCE. Likewise,
the “Bactrian camel was domesticated in Central Asia in the late 3rd
mill. BCE” (Witzel). The following is the distribution of references to camels
and to spokes in the Rigveda, all exclusively in the New Books and
completely missing in the Old Books:
V.13.6; 58.5.
I.32.15; 141.9; 138.2; 164.11,12,13,48.
VIII.5.37; 6.48; 20.14; 46.22,31; 77.3.
X.78.4.
7.
The fact that the Old Books of the Rigveda were composed in the area stretching
from westernmost Uttar Pradesh and Haryana in the east to Afghanistan in the
west in a period anterior to 3000 BCE (at minimal estimates) gives
us two very significant equations:
a)
This is the area as well as the period of the "Indus Valley"/"Harappan"/"Sindhu-Sarasvatī"
Civilization. Therefore clearly the Rigvedic culture is identifiable with the
"Indus Valley"/"Harappan"/"Sindhu-Sarasvatī"
culture.
b)
As per the linguistic evidence, the speakers of all the 12
branches of Indo-European languages were together in the PIE Homeland, the "Original
Homeland of the Indo-European languages", till around 3000 BCE. Therefore that
PIE Homeland in 3000 BCE is clearly in northern India.
The Date of the Other Vedic Texts: Another important point which must be clarified here is the
relative position of the other Vedic texts (the other Samhitās, the Brāhmaṇas,
the Āraṇyakas, the Upaniṣads and the Sūtras) vis-à-vis the
Rigveda in terms of their period of composition. If the Rigveda was
completed by 1500 BCE or so, does this mean that the other texts follow each
other in a chronological line after 1500 BCE?
The
fact is: there is nothing to indicate that the periods of the different texts
are mutually exclusive. While the points of completion of the different
texts are indeed in line with their hitherto accepted chronological order,
there is no reason to believe that the entire bodies (so to say) of the
different texts were necessarily composed in mutually exclusive periods.
The composition of the bulk of the oldest texts or the oldest parts of the
texts in most of these categories must already have started at different points
of time within the later Rigvedic period, along with the composition of the
hymns in the New Books of the Rigveda: it is only that the Rigveda, for
ritual reasons, was preserved with much greater precision and exactitude than
the other texts, and therefore the New Books preserved older linguistic forms
than the other Vedic texts which may have been constantly redacted and
linguistically updated. The exact chronological details must await detailed
investigation, including an examination of genuine astronomical details or data
which may be available in these texts.
III. The
Geographical Evidence of the Data in the text.
Can the above data somehow be fitted
into any scenario where the Indo-Aryans can still be brought into India from
outside around 3000 BCE, so that they occupied this geographical space in
northern India from west to east? An examination of the geographical data in
the Rigveda in fact shows exactly the opposite.
The geographical horizon of the Rigveda
can broadly be divided into three
regions:
1. The Eastern Region: the Sarasvatī and
areas to its east: mainly present-day Haryana and westernmost Uttar Pradesh.
2. The Central Region: the Saptasindhu or
Punjab between the Indus and the Sarasvatī, mainly
the northern half of present-day Pakistan and contiguous parts of Indian
Punjab.
3. The Western Region: the
Indus and areas to its west: mainly Afghanistan and contiguous areas of
northwestern most Pakistan.
The
geographical data pertaining to the
Eastern region is as follows:
River names:
Sarasvatī, Dṛṣadvatī/Hariyūpīyā/Yavyāvatī, Āpayā, Aśmanvatī, Amśumatī,
Yamunā, Gangā, Jahnāvī.
Place names:
Kīkaṭa, Iḷaspada/Iḷāyāspada (indirectly Vara-ā-pṛthivyāh,
Nābhā-pṛthivyāh).
Animal names:
ibha/vāraṇa/hastin/sṛṇi (elephant), mahiṣa (buffalo), gaura
(Indian bison), mayūra (peacock), pṛṣatī (chital, spotted deer).
Lake
names: Mānuṣa.
The
geographical data pertaining to the
Central region is as follows:
River names:
Śutudrī , Vipāś, Paruṣṇī, Asiknī, Vitastā, Marudvṛdhā.
Place names:
Saptasindhavah (indirectly sapta+sindhu).
The
geographical data pertaining to the
Western region is as follows:
River names:
Tṛṣṭāmā, Susartū, Anitabhā, Rasā, Śvetyā, Kubhā, Krumu, Gomatī, Sarayu,
Mehatnū, Śvetyāvarī, Suvāstu, Gaurī, Sindhu (as the Indus river), Suṣomā,
Ārjīkīyā.
Place names:
Gandhāri.
Mountain names: Suṣoma, Ārjīka, Mūjavat.
Animal names:
uṣṭra (Bactrian camel), mathra (Afghan horses), chāga
(mountain goat), meṣa (mountain sheep), vṛṣṇi (ram), urā
(lamb), varāha/varāhu (boar).
Lake names: Śaryaṇāvat(ī).
The Old Books of the Rigveda, as we saw, go back beyond
3000 BCE. If the Indo-Aryans entered India from the northwest and then expanded
eastwards into northern India, the geographical data in the Rigveda should show
a prior acquaintance with the northwest. However, the data actually shows
exactly the opposite. It shows that the Vedic Aryans in the period of the Old
Books were not familiar with the northwest, and only expanded westwards in that
direction from the interior of India by the time of composition of the New
Books of the Rigveda:
A. THE EASTERN NON-RIVERINE DATA VERSUS THE WESTERN
NON-RIVERINE DATA:
Eastern: The following is the distribution of the eastern
geographical data (excluding the rivers) in the Books of the Rigveda:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 22
Hymns, 23 verses, 24 names.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 4 Hymns, 6 verses, 7
names.
3. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 69 Hymns, 81 verses, 85 names.
VI. 1.2; 4.5; 8.4; 17.11; 20.8 (5 hymns, 5
verses and names).
III. 5.9; 23.4,4,4;
45.1; 46.2 (4 hymns, 4 verses, 6 names).
VII. 40.3; 44.5; 69.6; 98.1 (4 hymns, 4 verses and names).
IV. 4.1; 16.14; 18.11; 21.8 (4 hymns, 4 verses and names).
II. 3.7; 10.1; 22.1; 34.3,4; 36.2 (5 hymns, 6 verses and names).
III. 26.4,6; 29.4,4; 53.11,14 (3 hymns, 5 verses, 6 names).
IV. 58.2 (1 hymn, 1 verse and name).
V. 29.7,8;
42.15; 55.6; 57.3; 58.6; 60.2; 78.2 (7 hymns, 8 verses and names).
I. 16.5;
37.2; 39.6; 64.7,7,8; 84.17;
85.4,5; 87.4; 89.7; 95.9; 121.2; 128.1,1,7,7;
140.2; 141.3; 143.4; 162.21; 186.8; 191.14 (17 hymns,
20 verses, 23 names).
VIII. 1.25; 4.3; 7.28; 12.8; 33.8; 35.7,8,9; 45.24; 69.15; 77.10; 87.1,4 (10 hymns, 13
verses and names).
IX. 33.1; 57.3; 69.3; 72.7; 73.2; 79.4; 82.3; 86.8,40; 87.7; 92.6; 95.4; 96.6,18,19; 97.41,57; 113.3 (14 hymns, 18 verses and names).
X. 1.6,6;
5.2; 8.1; 28.10; 40.4; 45.3; 49.4;
51.6; 54.4; 60.3; 65.8; 66.10; 70.1; 91.1,4; 100.2; 106.2; 123.4; 128.8; 140.6; 189.2; 191.1 (21 hymns,
22 verses, 23 references).
It will be seen that:
1. The eastern references are found
distributed evenly throughout every part of the Rigveda, from the earliest
books and hymns to the latest ones.
2. It is not only the pattern of
references which shows the familiarity of the Vedic Aryans with the eastern
region throughout the period of the Rigveda, the references themselves make it
clear. The references to the
eastern animals are not casual ones: it is clear that the animals and their
environment form an intimate part of the idiomatic lore and traditional imagery
of the Rigveda: the spotted deer, for example, are the official steeds of the
chariots of the Maruts. The name of the buffalo (like that of the bull) is used
as an epithet, applied to various Gods, signifying great strength and
power. The Gods approaching the place of sacrifice to drink the libations
are likened to thirsty bisons converging on a watering place in the
forest. The outspread tails or manes of Indra's horses are likened to the
outspread plumes of the peacock's tail. The elephant is clearly a very familiar animal fully integral to the
traditional culture and environment of the Vedic people: IV.16.14
compares Indra's might to that of a mighty elephant, and at least three verses
(I.64.7; 140.2; VIII.33.8) refer to a wild
elephant crashing its way through the forests and bushes: in the third
reference the elephant is "rushing on this way and that way, mad with
heat" (GRIFFITH). X.40.4 refers to hunters following two
wild elephants, I.84.17 refers to household elephants as part of
the possessions of a wealthy householder, IV.4.1 refers to royal
elephants as part of the entourage of a mighty king, and IX.57.3
refers to a ceremonial elephant being decked up by the people. VI.20.8
refers to battle elephants, or at least to elephants in the course of the
description of a battle.
Western: On the other hand, the following is the distribution of the western
geographical data (excluding the rivers) in the Books of the Rigveda:
1. Old Hymns in Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0
Hymns, 0 verses.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns, 0 verses.
3. New Hymns in Books 1,5,8,9,10: 44 Hymns, 52 verses, 53 names.
I. 10.2;
29.5; 34.9; 43.6; 51.1; 52.1; 61.7; 84.14; 88.5; 114.5; 116.2,16; 117.17,18; 121.11; I26.7; 138.2; 162.3,21 (16
hymns, 19 verses and names).
VIII. 2.40; 5.37; 6.39,48; 7.29,29; 34.3; 46.22,23,31; 56.3; 64.11; 66.8; 77.10; 85.7;
97.12 (12 hymns, 15 verses, 16
names).
IX. 8.5; 65.22,23; 86.47; 97.7; 107.11; 113.1,2 (6 hymns, 8 verses and names).
X. 27.17;
28.4; 34.1; 35.2; 67.7; 86.4; 91.14; 95.3; 99.6; 106.5 (10 hymns,
10 verses and names).
In sharp contrast to the eastern
references, it will be seen that the western references are completely
absent in the Old Books. In fact, they are completely absent even
in the New Book 5, which (being a Family Book) is older than the other
four non-Family New Books 1,8,9,10.
They are found only in the New non-Family Books.
[Interestingly, a word associated with Gandhāri
is gandharva: the gandharva in the Rigveda is the guardian (or,
in the plural, the guardians) of the Soma in the western mountains. This word
is also completely absent in the Old Hymns in the Old Books,
found only once in a Redacted Hymn, and is otherwise found only in the New
non-Family Books:
III. 38.6 (1 hymn, 1 verse and name).
I. 22.14; 163.2 (2 hymns,
2 verses and names).
VIII. 1.11; 77.5 (2 hymns, 2 verses
and names).
IX. 83.4; 85.12; 86.36; 113.3 (4 hymns, 4 verses and names).
X. 10.4;
11.2; 80.6; 85.40,41; 123.4,7; 136.6; 139.4,5,6; ; 177.2 (8 hymns, 11 verses and names)].
Thus there is clearly a distinct
difference in the geographical horizon of the Old Books versus the New Books.
The geography of the Old Books is totally eastern, while that of the New
Books spans the entire area from east to west.
The non-riverine geographical
references indicate the cultural milieu familiar to the composers of the hymns.
The eastern cultural milieu is clearly a part of the cultural ethos of the
composers of the Rigveda in every period of the Rigveda, from the earliest
Books and hymns to the latest ones. The western cultural milieu is
however completely absent from the cultural ethos of the
composers of the Old Hymns in all the five Old Books and even in the New Book
5, and becomes a part of the Rigveda only during the period of composition of
the four New non-Family Books.
B. THE RIVER NAMES IN THE RIGVEDA AND
THE VEDIC EXPANSION FROM EAST TO WEST:
The river references indicate the area
of activity of the composers of the hymns. The following is the distribution of
the names of the eastern rivers in the Books of the Rigveda:
1. Old Books 2,3,4,6,7: 24 Hymns, 45
verses, 47 names.
2. New Books 1,5,8,9,10: 30 Hymns, 37 verses, 39 names.
VI. 27.5,6; 45.31; 49.7; 50.12; 52.6; 61.1,2,3,4,5,6,7,10,11,13,14 (6 hymns, 17
verses and names).
III. 4.8; 23.4,4,4,; 54.13; 58.6 (4 hymns, 4 verses, 6 names).
VII. 2.8; 9.5; 18.19; 35.11; 36.6; 39.5; 40.3; 95.1,2,4,5,6; 96.1,3,4,5,6 (9 hymns, 17 verses and
names).
II. 1.11; 3.8; 30.8; 32.8; 41.16,17,18 (5
hymns, 7 verses and names).
V. 5.8;
42.12; 43.11; 46.2; 52.17 (5 hymns, 5 verses and names).
I. 3.10,11,12; 13.9;
89.3; 116.19; 142.9; 164.49,52; 188.8 (7 hymns, 10 verses and names).
VIII. 21.17,18; 38.10; 54.4; 96.13 (4 hymns, 5 verses and names).
IX. 5.8; 67.32; 81.4 (3 hymns, 3 verses and names).
X. 17.7,8,9;
30.12; 53.8; 64.9; 65.1,13; 66.5; 75.5,5,5; 110.8; 131.5; 141.5; 184.2 (11 hymns, 14 verses, 16 names).
Again, we find the eastern river
references, like the eastern non-riverine references, distributed evenly
throughout every part of the Rigveda, from the earliest books and hymns to the
latest ones: the only exception here is Book 4, for historical reasons,
as we will see shortly.
But note the distribution of the names
of the western rivers in the Books of the Rigveda:
1. Old Books 2,3,4,6,7: 4 Hymns, 5
verses.
2. New Books 1,5,8,9,10: 57 Hymns, 72 verses.
IV. 30.12,18; 43.6; 54.6; 55.3 (4 hymns, 5 verses and names).
V. 41.15;
53.9,9,9,9,9,9 (2 hymns, 2
verses, 7 names).
I. 44.12;
83.1; 112.12; 122.6; 126.1; 164.4; 186.5 (7 hymns, 7
verses).
VIII. 7.29; 12.3; 19.37; 20.24,25; 24.30; 25.14; 26.18; 64.11; 72.7,13 (9 hymns, 11 verses).
IX. 41.6; 65.23; 97.58 (3 hymns, 3 verses).
X. 64.9;
65.13; 66.11; 75.1,3-9; 108.1,2; 121.4 (6 hymns, 14 verses).
It will be seen that the western river references
are completely absent in four (6,3,7,2) of the five Old Books: as
in the case of the eastern river references, this time also the only
exception is Book 4. Book 4 therefore clearly occupies a peculiar position: its
cultural milieu is eastern like the other Family Books, but its area of
activity is western. This is explained by the historical westward thrust
of the "Vedic Aryans" (the Pūru) from east to west as described in
the Rigveda, as we will see now:
The Old Books of the Rigveda have a
completely eastern geography: the western non-riverine geographical
names are completely absent in the Old Hymns in all five of the
Old Books (6,3,7,4,2), and the western river names are completely absent
in all the hymns (Old as well as Redacted) in four of the five Old Books
(6,3,7,2).
The oldest of the five New Books, Book 5
(a Family Book like the five Old Books), shows a middle position: western
non-riverine geographical names are completely absent in it, but western
river names are found in it.
The other four New Books, the four non-Family
Books (1,8,9,10), have both eastern and western non-riverine as well as river
names in equal measure.
All this clearly shows a historical
expansion of the "Vedic Aryans" (the Pūru) from the east in the Old
Books to the west by the time of the New Books, and this expansion took place during
the course of composition of the Rigvedic hymns. Therefore, this expansion
has to be found recorded in the Rigveda.
This movement or expansion from the east
to the west obviously took place across the central region (the area between
the Sarasvatī and the Sindhu rivers), and has to have taken place
during the course of composition of the Old Books. Therefore it should become
clear from an analysis of the geographical data in the Rigveda pertaining to
this Central region in the Old Books. There are no mountain or lake names from
this area in the Rigveda, and there are no animals peculiar to this area other
than those found to its east or its west. The river names and place names of
the Central region are found in the Rigveda as follows (in this case, the specific
names are given below in order to understand the geographical movement of
expansion):
1. In Old Books 2,3,4,6,7: 7
Hymns, 9 verses.
2. In New Books 1,5,8,9,10: 12 Hymns, 12 verses.
III. 33.1 Vipāś, 1 Śutudrī (1 hymn, 1 verse, 2 names).
VII. 5.3 Asiknī; 18.8 Paruṣṇī,
9 Paruṣṇī (2 hymns, 3 verses and names).
IV. 22.2 Paruṣṇī; 28.1 sapta+sindhu;
30.11 Vipāś (3 hymns, 3 verses and
names).
II. 12.3 sapta+sindhu,12 sapta+sindhu (1 hymn, 2 verses and names).
V.
52.9 Paruṣṇī (1 hymn, 1 verse and name).
I. 32.12
sapta+sindhu; 35.8 sapta+sindhu (2
hymns, 2 verses and names).
VIII. 20.25 Asiknī; 24.27
Saptasindhavah; 54.4 sapta+sindhu; 69.12 sapta+sindhu; 74.15 Paruṣṇī (5 hymns, 5 verses).
IX. 66.6 sapta+sindhu (1 hymn, 1 verse).
X. 43.3
sapta+sindhu; 67.12 sapta+sindhu; 75.5 Śutudrī, 5 Paruṣṇī, 5 Asiknī, 5
Marudvṛdhā, 5 Vitastā (3 hymns, 3 verses, 7 names).
The historical sequence of the
five Old Books is clear:
1. Book 6 is the Oldest Book, pertaining
mainly to the time of the early Bharata king Divodāsa: "In book
6 of the Bharadvāja, the Bharatas and their king Divodāsa play a central role"
(WITZEL 1995b:332-33). Divodāsa is mentioned a number of times: VI.16.5,19;
26.5; 31.4; 43.1; 47.22,23; 61.1. In fact,
the book goes many generations back into the period of the earliest Rigvedic
and pre-Rigvedic history: it mentions Divodāsa's father Sṛñjaya: VI.27.7; 47.25; also in
one hymn, VI.61.1, by the insulting epithet Vadhryaśva,
meaning "impotent". It mentions Divodāsa's grandfather Devavāta:
VI.27.7; and contains the only reference in the Rigveda to the
eponymous ancestral Bharata himself: VI.16.4. It also
mentions Pratardana, son of Divodāsa: VI.26.8
2. Books 3 and 7 are the second and
third oldest Books of the Rigveda in that order, and pertain to the time of
Divodāsa's descendant Sudās:
"Book 3 [….] represents the time of king Sudās"
(WITZEL 1995b: 317), and, as the number of references show, Book 7 even more
so. In that order, because it is accepted by all scholars, including
the Indologists, that Viśvāmitra of Book 3 was the priest of Sudās for a short
and earlier period, and was later replaced by Vasiṣṭha of Book 7. Sudās is
mentioned many times in these Books: III.53.9,11; VII.18.5,9,15,17,22,23,25;
19.3,6; 20.2; 25.3; 32.10; 33.3; 53.3;
60.8,9; 64.3; 83.1,4,6,7,8. His father Pijavana is
mentioned in VII.18.22,23,25.
3. Book 4 pertains to the period of
Sudās' descendants Sahadeva and (his son) Somaka, who are
mentioned in IV.15.7,8,9,10 and IV.15.9
respectively.
These four books form one distinct historical
era: they are the only Books which refer to Divodāsa's grandfather Devavāta:
VI.27.7; III.23.2; VII.18.22; IV.15.4.
Other early Bharata kings are also mentioned in these Books: in one hymn, III.23,
Devaśravas, either a contemporary of Sudās or another name for Sudās
himself, is described as offering oblations to a sacred fire established by his
ancestor Devavāta. Sudās and the Bharatas are also referred to as Pratṛda
(descendants of Pratardana) in VII.33.14, and as Tṛtsu in VII.18.7,13,15,19;
33.4,5,6; 83.4,6,8. [Incidentally, Bharatas as such
represent the earliest era of the Rigveda as a whole: the word Bharata
is found only in the Family Books (2-7) and one reference is found in I.96.3.
This hymn is in the Kutsa upa-Maṇḍala of Book 1 (consisting of hymns I.94-115)
which seems aligned with Book 4, since it also mentions Sahadeva in I.100.17].
4. Book 2 is the last of the Old Books. It
is definitely later than Books 6,3 and 7, and it is definitely an Old
Book by any criterion, and therefore much older than the five New Books
5,1,8,9,10: as we saw earlier on in respect of the common
Rigvedic-Mitanni-Avestan data and the geographical data, Book 2 falls in line
with the other Old Books on every count. Its position with regard to Book 4 is
ambiguous: it is either contemporaneous with Book 4 or perhaps belongs to an even later era,
since it shares many words, names and features with Book 4 which are missing
in the three Oldest Books. The only noteworthy point about Book 2 is that it
does not refer to any other river apart from the Sarasvatī.
The step-by-step geographical
direction of movement or expansion is clearly seen in the westward movement
of the river names in the Old Books, as well as explicitly recorded in the
historical narrative:
1. Book 6 is the Oldest Book of the
Rigveda, and its antecedents and prehistory go far back into the past beyond
the period of Divodāsa and his son Pratardana to the period of
their ancestors. But its geography is totally eastern: it not only does
not mention any geographical data (riverine or non-riverine) from the western
region, but it does not even mention any geographical data (riverine or
non-riverine) from the central region either. It refers to the Sarasvatī
(VI.49.7; 50.12; 52.6; 61.1,2,3,4,5,6,7,10,11,13,14)
as well as to other rivers to the east of the Sarasvatī: the Gaṅgā (VI.45.31)
and the Hariyūpīyā/Yavyāvatī (VI.27.5,6).
[Hariyūpīyā and Yavyāvatī are alternate
names of the Dṛṣadvatī and refer to "a tirath in Kurukṣetra"
(THOMAS 1883): the Dṛṣadvatī is known as Raupyā in the Mahabharata,
clearly a development of the Rigvedic Hariyūpīyā; and the Yavyāvatī, which is
often sought, without any basis, to be identified with the Zhob river in
Afghanistan, is found mentioned only once anywhere else in the whole of Vedic
or Sanskrit literature, in the Panchavimsha Brahmana, about which Witzel
admits: "the river Yavyāvatī is mentioned once in the RV; it has been identified with the Zhob
in E. Afghanistan. At PB 25.7.2, however, nothing points to such a W.
localisation. The persons connected with it are
known to have stayed in the Vibhinduka country, a part of the Kuru-Pañcāla land" (WITZEL 1987:193), i.e. in Haryana to the east of the Sarasvatī].
The activities of the
ancestors of Divodāsa are all located in this eastern region even in
other Books: VI.27 describes a battle fought on the banks of the Hariyūpīyā/Yavyāvatī
by Sṛñjaya son of Devavāta; VI.61 describes this formerly
"impotent" (Vadhryaśva) father of Divodāsa worshipping
on the banks of the Sarasvatī and being granted the birth of Divodāsa;
III.23 describes Devaśravas, a contemporary of Sudās, or
another name for Sudās himself, worshipping the eternal fire established
on the banks of the Dṛṣadvatī and Āpayā (and lake Mānuṣa)
by Devavāta.
When we place the river-data on a graph,
the movement from east to west from this Original Vedic area becomes clear:
2. Book 3 of the Viśvāmitras,
in the time of Sudās, a descendant of Divodāsa, refers for the first
time to the first two rivers of the central region, the Punjab, from the
east: the Śutudrī (present day Sutlej) and the Vipāś (present
day Beas). This Book still does not mention any other geographical name to the
west of the Sarasvatī other than these two names. And these names are mentioned
in hymn III.33 in the context of a historical crossing of these two
rivers by Sudās and his army of Bharata warriors. This crossing was undertaken,
as per III.33.5, to access the Soma lands to the west from which
the Vedic Aryans imported Soma (somewhat like the mediaeval Europeans trying to
find a sea-route to India to access its spices).
The earlier activities of Sudās under the priesthood of
Viśvāmitra, described in this book, are also confined to the east: in III.29,
the Viśvāmitras kindle a sacred fire at Iḷāyāspada, at Nābhā Pṛthivyāh,
in the Haryana area to the east of the Sarasvatī; and in III.53, they
perform a sacrifice at the same place (Vara-ā-Pṛthivyāh):
"Come
forward, Kuśikas, and be attentive; let loose Sudās' horse to win him riches.
East, west, and north, let the King slay the foeman, then at earth's choicest
place perform his worship" (III.53.11 as per
Griffith's translation), after which Sudās commences his expansionist
activities in all directions. These forays further east include Kīkaṭa (III.53.14):
this is often assumed by traditional scholars to refer to as distant an area as
Magadha in Bihar, but, even without going so far, even Witzel accepts it to be
a place to the south-east of Haryana: "in eastern Rajasthan or
western Madhya Pradesh" (WITZEL 1995b:333 fn).
3. Book 7 of the Vasiṣṭhas, who replaced the Viśvāmitras as the
priests of Sudās halfway through his conquests, refers for the first time to
the third and fourth rivers of the Punjab from the east, immediately after the
Śutudrī and the Vipāś: the Paruṣṇī (present day Ravi) and the Asiknī
(present day Chenab). This Book also still does not mention any other
geographical name to the west of the Sarasvatī other than these two names. The
context is the great battle, the dāśarājña or Battle of the Ten Kings,
fought by Sudās on the banks of the Paruṣṇī with an alliance of ten
sub-tribes of the Anu and some remnants of the Druhyu tribes.
This battle clearly represents the next steps in the
east-to-west expansion: after all the descriptions of the activities of his
far ancestors in the east (detailed above), and the commencement of his
conquest with a ritual sacrifice again in the east, and after crossing the two easternmost
rivers of the Punjab as described in Book 3, Sudās now fights this battle on
the banks of the Paruṣṇī (VII.18), and his enemies are described
as the people of the Asiknī (VII.5.3), clearly indicating
that Sudās is approaching from the east and they are fighting from the west
from the side of the Asiknī river. The enemies are specifically
described as abandoning their possessions after their defeat, and scattering
abroad (VII.5.3) in the westward direction (VII.6.3).
4. Book 4, of the period of Sudās' descendant Sahadeva and
his son Somaka, takes the expansion deep into the west: the two central
rivers it mentions are the Vipāś (IV.30.11) and Paruṣṇī
(IV.22.2), clearly harking back to the early ancestral days of
the beginnings of the expansion westwards. One of these two hymns describes the
culmination of this expansion in the battle on the banks of the western river Sarayu
(IV.30.18), the Harirud (Herat) river to the west
of the Sindhu (IV.30.12). This book does not mention any
eastern river, not even the Sarasvatī, which is prominent in every other Book
of the Rigveda, but it mentions western rivers in other hymns as well: the Rasā
(IV.43.6) and the Sindhu (IV.54.6; 55.3).
The completely western river names in Book 4 contrast sharply with
the fact that the near-contemporary book 2 mentions only one river, the eastern
Sarasvatī: II.1.11; 3.8; 30.8; 32.8; 41.16,17,18.
This may indicates two areas of composition in the later Old period: hymns from
the expanding Pūru in the western areas in Book 4, and hymns from the home area
east of the Sarasvatī in Book 2.
Many AIT-oriented scholars try to exploit the western orientation
of the river names in Book 4 to suggest that Book 4 must be the oldest Book of
the Rigveda with the "invading Aryans" still in the west―and some
even try to suggest the same about Book 2 by insisting that the Sarasvatī of
this Book must be the Avestan Haroyu of Afghanistan. This ignores both the
voluminous details about the activities of the early Bharatas in Books 6, 3 and
7 (detailed above) in the east, of whom the Bharatas in Books 4 and 2 are
descendants, as well as the historical narrative in these Books about the
Bharata expansion from east to west. It also ignores the fact that the
non-riverine references in both Books 4 and 2 are completely eastern and
emphatically non-western: Nābhā Pṛthivyāh (II.3.7); Iḷaspada
(II.10.1); ibha/hastin, elephant (IV.4.1;
16.14); mahiṣa, buffalo (II.18.11); gaura,
Indian bison (IV.21.8; 58.2); pṛṣatī, chital (II.34.3,4;
36.2). There is, however, one new western factor appearing in Book 4: a
reference to Afghan sheep: avi (IV.2.5), otherwise found
only in the New Books 5,1 and 10.
The fully eastern base of the three Oldest Books (6,3,7) is also
clear from the fact that even the references to seven rivers in the form sapta+sindhu
are totally missing in these three Books. These start only in the
two later Old Books of the Rigveda: IV.28.1 and II.12.3,12,
and are found in all the New non-Family Books: I.32.12; 35.8;
VIII.54.4; 69.12; IX.66.6; X.43.3;
67.12, while the specific word saptasindhavah as the name of an
area (the central region or the Punjab) appears only in Book 8 in VIII.24.27.
5.
Book 5, the last of the Family Books and the first of the New Books, represents
a middle position between the Old Family Books and the New non-Family Books in
many ways. Its arrangement of the hymns is as per the scheme of arrangement in
the Old Family Books; but its scheme of ascription of hymns is as per the
system in the New Books: each hymn is ascribed to the actual composer of the
hymn rather than to the eponymous ancestral rishi as in the Old Books. The
common Rigvedic-Mitanni-Avestan culture, as we saw, is already fully developed
in the period of Book 5, but the base area of the Book is still rooted in
the east:
a)
while it does refer to western rivers in two hymns (to the Rasā in V.41.15,
and to 6 rivers, Sarayu, Kubhā, Krumu, Anitabhā, Rasā,
Sindhu, in one hymn and verse V.53.9), most of the western
river names are in one hymn V.53 by Śyāvāśva, who also mentions
the central river Paruṣṇī and the eastern river Yamunā in another
hymn, in V.52.9 and 17 respectively. As Witzel points out, all these river names only indicate that the particular poet is widely
traveled, and not necessarily that the Vedic people actually occupied the areas
of the rivers named: “all these geographical
notes belonging to diverse hymns are attributed to one and the same poet,
Śyāvāśva, which is indicative of the poet’s travels” (WITZEL
1995b:317).
Likewise the reference to Rasā in
V.41.15 is by Atri, who elsewhere refers to the eastern Sarasvatī
in V.42.12; 43.11. The Sarasvatī is also referred
to by two other composers in V.5.8 and 46.2
respectively.
b) while it refers to western rivers,
Book 5 does not mention any western non-riverine names, except the Afghan
sheep, avi (V.61.5, again by Atri), already
mentioned in Book 4, but it does mention eastern non-riverine names: Śyāvāśva mentions
the pṛṣatī, chital, in V.55.6; 57.3; 58.6; 60.2,
and Atri also mentions it in V.42.15. Another composer
refers to the mahiṣa, buffalo in V.29.7,8.
6. The non-Family Books 1
and 8 represent the next chronological phase in the Rigveda (although some of
the hymns in Book 1 are sometimes earlier than the hymns in Book 8 and some are
much later), and Book 9, the Book of Soma Pavamāna, follows them: as Proferes,
a student of Witzel, points out, “the
pavamāna collection consists primarily of late authors, those from Books 1, 5, 8 and in a limited number of
cases, 10” (PROFERES 1999:69).
Book 10 comes much later; so much so
that, in spite of the marked difference within the language and culture of the
first nine Books of the Rigveda, the language of Book 10 stands apart: as Ghosh
puts it (before giving a long list of words and grammatical features to prove
the point), "On the whole [...] the language of the first nine Maṇḍalas must be
regarded as homogeneous, inspite of traces of previous dialectal differences […]
With the tenth Maṇḍala it is a different story. The language here has
definitely changed […] The language of the tenth Maṇḍala represents a
distinctly later stage of the Rigvedic language" (GHOSH 1951/2010:240-243).
This makes it all the more
significant that non-Family Books 1,8,9, and even the Family Book 5, fall into
one distinct group with Book 10 (including in terms of the
common Rigvedic-Mitanni-Avestan vocabulary, as New Books, versus the five Old
Books 6,3,7,4,2), and it emphasizes the long chronological period covered by
the New Books, as well as the chronological isolation of the Old Books from
this long later period.
The geographical horizon of the four
non-Family Books expands over the entire area of the Rigveda as a whole: Books
4 and 5 gave us a glimpse of the west, but these four non-Family Books show a
new and comprehensive familiarity with the west which is completely unknown to
the five Old Books (and even to Book 5):
a) For the first time, these
Books introduce a place name from the northwest, Gandhāri, southern
Afghanistan, in I.126.7; a lake from the northwest, Śaryaṇāvat,
in I.84.14; VIII.6.39; 7.29; 64.11; IX.65.22;
113.1; X.35.2; and the mountains of the northwest, Ārjīka,
Suṣoma, Mūjavat in VIII.7.29,29; IX.65.23;
113.2; X.134.1, as well as a reference to the snow-capped
peaks of the northwest, himavanta, in X.121.4.
b) There is a flood of new names
of animals of the northwest in these four Books: meṣa sheep, chāga
mountain goat, urā ewe, uṣṭra camel, mathra Afghan horse, varāha/varāhu
boar in I.43.6,6; 51.1; 52.1; 61.7; 88.5;
114.5; 116.16; 117.17,18; 121.11; 138.2; 162.3;
VIII.2.40; 5.37; 6.48; 34.3; 46.22,23,31;
66.8; 77.10; 97.12; IX.8.5; 86.47; 97.7;
107.11; X.27.17; 28.4; 67.7; 86.4; 91.14;
95.3; 99.6; 106.5. Most of these names are found in
Iranian as well, in the Avesta: maēša (sheep), ura (lamb), uštra (camel) and varāza
(boar).
c)
Apart from the western rivers already mentioned in Books 4 and 5, Sindhu,
Sarayu, Rasā, Kubhā, Krumu, these Books mention many other western rivers for the
first time, namely Tṛṣṭāmā, Susartū, Śvetyā, Gomatī, Mehatnū,
Śvetyāvarī, Suvāstu, Gaurī, Suṣomā, Ārjīkīyā:
I.44.12; 83.1; 112.12; 122.6; 126.1; 164.4; 186.5; VIII.7.29; 12.3; 19.37; 20.24,25; 24.30; 25.14; 26.18; 64.11; 72.7,13; IX.41.6; 65.23; 97.58; X.64.9; 65.13; 66.11; 75.1,3,4,5,6,7,8,9; 108.1,2;
121.4.
d) The New Books, and particularly
Book 8, represent the closest parallels with the Mitanni and the Avesta: here
we now find names of patron kings
which have been identified by western Indologists (including Witzel) as actual proto-Iranian
names (Vṛcayā, Kuruṅga, Caidya, Tirindira, Parśu,
Varosuṣāman, Anarśani, Kanīta): I.51.13; VIII.4.19;
5.37,38,39; 6.46; 23.28; 24.28; 25.2; 26.2;
32.2; 46.21,24; X.86.
Here,
we also find Rigvedic names (Mitrātithi, Devātithi, Subandhu,
Indrota, Priyamedha) in common with Mitanni names (Mittaratti,
Dewatti, Subandu, Indarota, Biriamasda) in I.45.3,4; 139.9; VIII.
3.16; 4.20; 5.25; 6.45; 8.18; 32.30; 69.8,18;
X.33.7; 73.11; and as composers of V.24; VIII.2,4,68,69; IX.28;
X.57,58,59,60,75.
e) The New Books, and particularly the
extensive Book 8, clearly represent the period and area of the mature Harappan culture
(although Book 10 is post-Harappan for the most part), and, in keeping with the
archaeological evidence of Harappan trade with Babylon, we find two
Babylonian words associated with trade
and commerce in Book 8: in VIII.78.2, we find the word manā
(a measure of weight) and in VIII.66.10,
we find the word bekanāṭa (money-lender).
In
this Harappan period, certain eastern rivers (primarily the rivers of the core
Haryana area, Dṛṣadvatī, Āpayā, Hariyūpīyā, Yavyāvatī)
prominent in the Oldest era, are now on the periphery of the Rigvedic horizon,
and do not find any mention in the New Books: this may also be indicative of
the slow drying up of the eastern tributaries of the Sarasvatī by this time.
These four historical rivers do not find mention even in the nadī sūkta X.75,
although the Gaṅgā still remains prominent and important and is the
first river to be mentioned in this Hymn to the Rivers as the easternmost river
within the Rigvedic horizon. As the Sarasvatī had three whole hymns
dedicated to it in the Oldest Books (VI.61, VII.95,96), the Sindhu,
Indus, has now become the most important river, to whom the nadī sūkta
is primarily dedicated, and it is also now lauded along with some other deities
in the last verse of a number of hymns in Book 1 (I.94,95,96,98,100,101,102,103,105,106,107,108,109,110,111,112,113,114,115),
apart from other stray verses in the New Books.
The
journey from the Oldest Book (Book 6 with its pre-Rigvedic background) to the
very late Book 10 is clearly a long one in time (as we saw, Book 6 goes back
far beyond 3000 BCE) as well as in space (the Vedic Aryans expanding from an
original Homeland in Haryana in the east into southern Afghanistan).
As
we noted at the very outset, certain points about the Vedic data, ignored or
downplayed by the Indologists, made the AIT perspective highly suspect even
assuming a date of composition post-1500 BCE and a west to east expansion
within the text: namely:
a)
the total absence of extra-territorial memories (or memories of any invasion
from outside India) in the text,
b)
the total absence of any entity or name identifiable linguistically as
Dravidian or Austric (or of any other known non-Indo-European language) in the
text, and
c)
the fact that the rivers and animals of the area have purely Indo-Aryan (i.e.
Indo-European) names in the text.
Now,
we see that the date of the Oldest Books goes back beyond 3000 BCE, that
there is solid and unchallengeable evidence of an expansion from an originally
eastern Homeland into western areas which were earlier unknown, and further, and
that even in this Oldest period the Vedic composers clearly have a strong
emotional attachment to the eastern region: in VI.61.14, the
composer begs the river Sarasvatī: "let us not go from thee to
distant countries"; in VI.45.31, the long bushes on the
banks of the Gaṅgā are used in a simile (showing their long acquaintance
and easy familiarity with the topography and flora of the Gaṅgā area);
and in III.58.6, the banks of the Jahnāvī (i.e. presently Jāhnavī,
the name of the Gangā close to its source) are referred to as the
"Ancient Homeland" of the Gods. All this, before or around 3000 BCE,
makes the AIT perspective totally impossible and untenable.
IV. The History
of the Emigration of the other Indo-European branches.
As
the linguistic data shows, the Indo-Aryans were one of many dialectal
groups of Indo-European language speakers in the Original Homeland. There were
other dialectal groups (present knowledge knows eleven other dialects which
have developed into known branches of Indo-European languages) who lived around
them in 3000 BCE.
Likewise,
the "Vedic Aryans" are one of many territorial tribal groups
mentioned in the Puranic traditional history, the Pūru. And in the
Family Books, they are one particular branch or sub-tribe of the Pūru
known as the Bharata Pūru, who originally lived in the areas of westernmost
U.P and Haryana as indigenous inhabitants in and before 3000 BCE. There
were other territorial tribal groups who lived around them. The logical
inference is that the area of the Pūru in 3000 BCE was part of the
Original Homeland, and the other territorial tribal groups around them included
the other dialectal groups which later became the other eleven branches of
Indo-European languages.
If
northern India was the Original Indo-European Homeland, another logical
inference is that those of the other groups around them who migrated out of
India are more likely to have been to the west of the Pūru, since
all the other historical branches of Indo-European languages are found far to
the west outside India. The two most likely candidates are the Anu and
the Druhyu. The evidence can be examined as follows:
A.
The Geography of the Two Tribal Groups.
B.
The Linguistic Classification of the Migrating Branches.
C.
The Recorded Migrations.
D.
The Textual and Linguistic Evidence.
A.
The Geography of the Two Tribal Groups:
As
per the Puranic descriptions:
a)
the Anu tribes originally inhabited the areas to the North of the Pūru
in the areas of Kashmir and the areas to its immediate west, and
b)
the Druhyu tribes originally inhabited the areas to the West of the Pūru
in the areas of the Greater Punjab (present-day northern Pakistan).
Certain
early (and clearly pre-Rigvedic) events recorded in the Puranic traditions led
to a realignment in the areas of these two tribes: the Druhyu
tribes started conquering eastwards and southwards, and their conquests brought
them into conflict with all the other tribes and peoples. This led to a
concerted effort by the other tribes to drive them out, and the result was that
they were driven out not only from the east but also from their homeland in the
northern half of present-day Pakistan. This area was occupied by a major branch
of the Anu tribes who moved southwards and westwards: “One branch, headed by Uśīnara established
several kingdoms on the eastern border of the Punjab […] his famous son Śivi originated the Śivis
[footnote: called Śivas in Rigveda
VII.18.7] in Śivapura, and extending
his conquests westwards […] occupying
the whole of the Punjab except the northwestern corner” (PARGITER
1962:264): the Druhyu tribes were pushed far to the west, into
Afghanistan: “the next Druhyu king
Gandhāra retired to the northwest and gave his name to the Gandhāra country”
(PARGITER 1962:262).
Thus:
a) the Anu
now became inhabitants of the areas to both the North (Kashmir and areas to its
west) as well as the West (northern Pakistan) of the Pūru, and
b) the Druhyu
were pushed out further west and northwest (i.e. into the northwestern corner
of the Punjab, and into Afghanistan), only some remnants remaining in the
original area.
B. The Linguistic Classification of the
Migrating Branches:
As per the linguistic analysis of the isoglosses
(linguistic features) shared by the various Indo-European branches, the twelve
branches (i.e. their ancestral Dialect forms) are classified into three main
and distinct groups in respect of the chronology and sequence of their
migration from the Homeland (wherever that Homeland be located):
1. The Early Branches: Anatolian (Hittite)
and Tocharian in that order.
2. The European Branches: Italic, Celtic,
Germanic, Baltic and Slavic in that order.
3. The Last Branches (given here by their
historical locations from west to east, since their particular sequence of
migration from the Homeland is not clear): Albanian, Greek, Armenian,
Iranian and Indo-Aryan.
The significant points of the linguistic analysis
are:
1. After the early emigration of Anatolian,
all the remaining branches (Tocharian, the European Branches, and
the Late Branches) developed some fundamental isoglosses in common which
are absent only in Anatolian:
a) Feminines in *ā, *ī, *ū. (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:35).
b) Instrumental plural masculine *-ōis
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345).
c) Independent (deictic) demonstrative
pronouns *so, *sa, tho (pl.th) (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345).
2. The Early Branches and the Last
Branches do not share any major isogloss (other than the above ones shared
by Tocharian with all the non-Anatolian branches), indicating
that there was no major linguistic interaction among them after the migration
of both the Early Branches from the Homeland.
3. The European Branches and the Last
Branches share many isoglosses, showing close interaction between the two
groups in the Homeland after the migration of the two Early Branches:
a) Middles in *-oi/*-moi (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345):
Germanic-Baltic-Slavic, Albanian-Greek-Armenian-Iranian-IndoAryan.
b) The comparison of adjectives in *-thero
and *-is-tho (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Germanic,
Greek-Iranian-IndoAryan.
c) The instrumental singular masculine
*-ō (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Germanic-Baltic, Iranian-IndoAryan.
d) Satem assibilation: palatals >
assibilated stops (> sibilants) (HOCK 1999a:14-15): Baltic-Slavic,
Armenian-Iranian-IndoAryan.
e) The “Ruki” rule (HOCK 1999a:14-15):
Baltic-Slavic, Armenian-Iranian-IndoAryan.
f) The merger of the original PIE velars
and labio-velars (HOCK 1999a:15): Baltic-Slavic, Armenian-Iranian-IndoAryan.
g) The Locative *-s-u/*-s-i (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:345): Baltic-Slavic, Greek-Iranian-IndoAryan.
h) The relative pronoun *yos
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Slavic, Greek-Armenian-Iranian-IndoAryan.
i) The genitive-locative dual *-os
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Slavic, Iranian-IndoAryan.
j) A first person singular pronoun:
nominative, genitive and accusative (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Slavic,
Iranian-IndoAryan.
4. The European Branches share important
isoglosses with the Early Branches:
a) The relative pronoun *khois
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Anatolian-Tocharian, Italic.
b) The genitive singular *-ī
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Tocharian, Italic-Celtic.
c) Subjunctives in *-ā, *-ē (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:345): Tocharian, Italic-Celtic.
d) Middle passives in *-r (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:345): Anatolian-Tocharian, Italic-Celtic.
e) The Middle present participle in
*-mo- (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Anatolian, Baltic-Slavic.
f) Modal forms in *-l- (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:345): Anatolian-Tocharian, Slavic.
5. Some of the Last Branches share
certain isoglosses with the European Branches missing in IndoAryan:
a) The original Proto-Indo-European *tt
changed to ss: Baltic-Slavic,
Greek-Albanian-Iranian. [It changed to tst in Anatolian, and to st in
Italic-Celtic-Germanic, and remained tt only in IndoAryan].
b) A loss of aspiration
in voiced aspirated stops (LUBOTSKY 2001:302): Germanic-Baltic-Slavic, Iranian.
6. All the Last Branches
developed several sweeping isoglosses in common after the departure of the Early
Branches and the European Branches:
a) A “complete restructuring of the entire inherited verbal system”
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:340-341,345), with the formation of athematic and thematic
aorists, augmented forms and reduplicated presents: Albanian, Greek, Armenian,
Iranian, IndoAryan.
b) Oblique cases in *-bhi-
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:345): Albanian, Greek, Armenian, Iranian, IndoAryan.
c) The prohibitive negation *mē (MEILLET
1908/1967:39): Albanian, Greek, Armenian, Iranian, IndoAryan.
7. Some of the Last Branches
developed certain isoglosses in common missing in IndoAryan:
a) Change of *s > h from initial *s
before a vowel, from intervocalic *s, and from some occurrences of *s before
and after sonants, while *s remained before and after a stop (MEILLET
1908/1967:113): Greek-Armenian-Iranian.
C.
The Recorded Migrations:
The emigrations of the Druhyu and
Anu tribes are actually a matter of recorded history:
1. The Druhyu, as per the original
Puranic locations of the five Aila tribes, were originally inhabitants
of the Greater Punjab area (the SaptaSindhava, or present day northern
Pakistan) to the west of the Pūru.
Later, after the Anu displaced
them from this area, the Druhyu in a pre-Rigvedic era were pushed farther to
the west, into Afghanistan or "the
Gandhāra country" (PARGITER 1962:262).
Even later, they started migrating to
the north into Central Asia and beyond:
"Indian tradition distinctly asserts that there
was an Aila outflow of the Druhyus through the northwest into the countries
beyond, where they founded various kingdoms" (PARGITER 1962:298).
"Five Purāṇas add that Pracetas’ descendants
spread out into the mleccha countries
to the north beyond India and founded kingdoms there" (BHARGAVA 1956/1971:99).
"After a time, being overpopulated, the Druhyus
crossed the borders of India and founded many principalities in the Mleccha
territories in the north, and probably carried the Aryan culture beyond the
frontiers of India" (MAJUMDAR 1951/1996:283).
2.The Anu, as per the original
Puranic locations, were originally inhabitants of the North: of Kashmir and the
areas to its west.
Then, still in the pre-Rigvedic era,
"One branch, headed by Uśīnara
established several kingdoms on the eastern border of the Punjab", and later, by the time of the Oldest
Books of the Rigveda (6,3,7) they had extended their "conquests westwards […] occupying the whole of the Punjab except
the northwestern corner” (PARGITER 1962:264).
In the period of the Oldest Books, the
expansionist activities of the Bharata Pūru king Sudās and his
descendants led to the westward migration of major sections of the Anu:
the dāśarājña war led to the possessions (territory) of the Anu
being taken over by the Bharatas. As we have already seen, they are specifically described (VII.18.13) as
abandoning their possessions after their defeat, and scattering abroad (VII.5.3)
in the westward direction (VII.6.3).
Clearly there were two major
migrations: the migration of the Druhyu towards the North (into Central
Asia, and later further westwards), and the migration of the Anu
towards the West (into Afghanistan, and later further westwards).
This explains the two main groups of Indo-European
branches: The European
Branches form one cohesive group along with the Early Branches and
constitute a northern belt of Indo-European languages, while the Last
Branches constitute a southern belt. Therefore:
a) the Druhyu are to be identified at least
with the European Branches (the nomenclature possibly covering the Early
Branches as well), and
b) the Anu are to be identified with the Last
Branches (except the Pūru Indo-Aryan).
D.
The Textual and Linguistic Evidence:
As per the popular theory, the Original Homeland
was in South Russia: the Anatolian branch first migrated to the south,
then the Tocharian branch migrated to the east, later the European
Branches migrated towards the west. Much later, the Albanian
and Greek branches migrated to the southwest, the Armenian
branch to the south, and the Iranian and Indo-Aryan
branches to the east.
The Indian Homeland theory shows first the Anatolian
and Tocharian branches migrating in that sequence to the north
from Afghanistan into the western and eastern parts respectively of Central
Asia, much later followed into Central Asia by the Italic, Celtic,
Germanic, Baltic and Slavic branches in that sequence. The
first two branches remained in Central Asia for a long time (the Tocharian
branch till the end of its existence), and the Anatolian branch later
migrated westwards through Kazakhstan and then south into Anatolia (Turkey)
around the Caspian Sea. The European Branches expanded northwestwards,
finally moving into Europe.
The Albanian, Greek, Armenian
and Iranian branches migrated westwards from Afghanistan, with the
tail-enders of the Iranian group continuing in Afghanistan (later also
spreading northwards into Central Asia), and Indo-Aryan continuing in
the Original Homeland to the east of Afghanistan.
The Indian Homeland theory, being
recorded in the ancient texts, already eclipses the Russian Homeland theory
which is pure
speculative hypothesis.
But even the bare evidence of the Isoglosses alone
makes it clear that the South Russian Homeland theory is untenable while the
Indian Homeland theory fits in perfectly with the data:
1. Migrations almost always take place in one
general direction, as in the Indian homeland theory: the South Russian homeland
theory has all the different branches migrating in every possible direction.
2. It is logical that the Homeland should be
located in the historical area of one of the five Last Branches, with
one branch continuing to remain in the area after the migration of the other
four, as in the Indian homeland theory. The South Russian Homeland theory has
every single one of the Last Branches migrating from the Homeland, with
one European Branch (Slavic) finally returning back into the area
in historical times.
3. The Anatolian branch was the first to
migrate from the Homeland, and all the other branches evolved together as a
group separately from Anatolian, and later
also from Tocharian. However, we find a large number of important
isoglosses formed jointly between the Early and European
Branches, and between the European and Late Branches, but none between the Early and Late
Branches.
In the South Russian Homeland theory, Anatolian
migrated to the south, Tocharian to the east and then the European
Branches to the west. Later, Albanian and Greek
migrated to the southwest, Armenian to the south, and Iranian
and Indo-Aryan to the east. Given the wide range of directions in which
all these branches dispersed, there is no explanation at all for the
isoglosses:
a) The Early Branches (going south
and east respectively) formed important isoglosses with the European
Branches (going west),
b) the European Branches (going west)
formed important isoglosses with the Late Branches (going southwest,
south and east respectively),
c) but the Early Branches (going south
and east respectively) did not form any isoglosses with the Late Branches (going southwest,
south and east respectively).
However, in the Indian Homeland theory, these facts
have a natural explanation: the Early Branches first migrated to the north
of Afghanistan and settled in Central Asia. The Late Branches never went
north of Afghanistan in the formative period, and therefore did not form any isoglosses with the Early
Branches to the north. The European Branches, on the other
hand, remained in Afghanistan for a considerable period, when different
isoglosses were formed with various Late Branches. Later they migrated northwards
into Central Asia (still later moving towards Europe through the northwest
of Central Asia), when different isoglosses were formed with the Early
Branches.
4. In the Russian Homeland theory, Indo-Aryan and
Iranian are supposed to have migrated together eastwards from South Russia as
one group (Indo-Iranian), completely distinct from
the other branches. Nevertheless, Iranian shares certain isoglosses in
common with other Late Branches, or jointly with certain European
Branches and Late Branches, which are missing in Indo-Aryan.
This has no explanation in the South
Russian Homeland theory, but in the Indian Homeland theory, these are explained
as isoglosses formed by Iranian with the other branches in the west in Afghanistan,
and these are missing in Indo-Aryan because it remained in the east.
Similar to these isoglosses is the
presence in Iranian (mainly Avestan and Ossetic) of a small category of
words, which we may call "northwestern" or "Afghan" words
pertaining to a mountainous land with ice and snow, found also in the European
Branches but not found in Indo-Aryan:
Av.
aēxa "frost, ice" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic and
Germanic.
Oss.
tajyn "thaw, melt" (verb) with cognates in Slavic, Germanic,
Celtic and Italic (and also Greek and Armenian).
Av.
udra "otter" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic and Germanic.
Av.
bawra-/bawri- "beaver" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic,
Germanic, Celtic and Italic.
Oss.
wyzyn "hedgehog" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic and Germanic
(and also Greek and Armenian).
Oss.
læsæg "salmon" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic and Germanic
(and also Armenian).
Av.
θβərəsa- "boar" with cognates in Celtic.
Av.
pərəsa- "piglet" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic, Germanic,
Celtic and Italic.
Pehl.
wabz- "wasp" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic, Germanic, Celtic
and Italic.
Av.
staora- "steer" with cognates in Germanic.
Apart from all these basic
considerations, there is significant textual and linguistic evidence for the
migration of each of the three groups from the Indian Homeland:
THE EARLY BRANCHES:
1. Logistically, the two Early
Branches migrating northwards from Afghanistan into Central Asia takes them
almost directly into their historically attested areas: Tocharian
remained in eastern Central Asia till the end, and Anatolian reached its
earliest recorded historical area (Turkey) by a natural expansion westwards
towards, and then around the shores of, the Caspian Sea.
On the other hand, at least the presence
of Tocharian in Central Asia is an anomaly in the South Russian Homeland
theory: as Childe had accepted long ago, “the
simplest explanation of the presence of a Centum language in Central Asia would
be to regard it as the last survivor of an original Asiatic Aryan stock. To
identify a wandering of Aryans across Turkestan from Europe in a relatively
late historical period is frankly difficult” (CHILDE 1926:95-96).
2. The
two Early Branches Anatolian and Tocharian are referred to
in the Puranas as the two great tribes or peoples living to the north of the
Himalayas, whom they call the Uttara-Madra and the Uttara-Kuru.
The Uttara-Kuru are easily identified by their geographical location with
the Tocharians: this is supported by the simiḷarity of the name Uttara-Kuru
with the name Tocharian (Twghry in an Uighur text, and Tou-ch’u-lo
or Tu-huo-lo in ancient Chinese Buddhist texts). Clearly Uttara-Kuru
is a Sanskritization of the native appellation of the Tocharians, preserving,
as closely as possible, what Henning calls "the consonantal skeleton
(dental + velar + r) and the old u-sonant [which] appears in
every specimen of the name" (HENNING 1978:225). Since the eastern of
the two great tribes to the north were called the Uttara-Kuru, the
western must have been called the Uttara-Madra on the analogy of the
actual Kuru and the Madra tribes of the south being to the east
and the west respectively; and the term Uttara-Madra must therefore
refer to the Anatolians (proto-Hittites).
3.
The presence, in Hittite mythology, of Indra, as the God/Goddess Inara
who helps the rain-God to kill the Great Serpent, is significant. Indra
is completely unknown to all the other Indo-European mythologies and traditions
(except of course, the Avesta, where he has been demonized): Anatolian
can only have acquired this God and nature-myth from an earlier sojourn close
to the Vedic area.
[The
name is so uniquely Indo-Aryan that Lubotsky and Witzel (see WITZEL
2006:95) feel emboldened to classify Indra as a word borrowed by
"Indo-Iranian" from a hypothetical BMAC language in
Northern-Afghanistan/Central-Asia! Incidentally, the Larousse
Encyclopaedia of Mythology actually describes Inar/Inara as “Inar, a God who had come from India with
the Indo-European Hittites” (LAROUSSE 1959:85)].
4.
Finally, incredible as it may seem, we actually have some kind of racial
evidence (though nothing to do with any "Aryan race") indicating
that the proto-Hittites immigrated into West Asia from the east
(Central Asia) rather than from the West: it was only in the beginning of the
twentieth century that their language was discovered and studied in detail and
they were conclusively identified linguistically as Indo-Europeans. Shortly
after this, a paper in the Journal of the American Oriental Society makes the
following incidental observations: "While the reading of the
inscriptions by Hrozny and other scholars has almost conclusively shown that
they spoke an Indo-European language, their physical type is clearly Mongoloid,
as is shown by their representations both on their own sculptures and on
Egyptian monuments. They had high cheek-bones and retreating foreheads."
(CARNOY 1919:117).
THE
EUROPEAN BRANCHES:
1.
The three northern tribal groups as per Indian tradition were the Pūru, Anu
and Druhyu. All three shared a common, or interrelated, culture in
western North India, with religious systems exhibiting the same two central
religious features: hymnology and fire-rituals. The priests of the Pūru (the
Indo-Aryan speakers) were the Aṅgiras, of the Anu (mainly
the Iranian branch) were the Bhṛgu, and of the amorphous group of
tribes further west were the Druhyu (which is why the group was itself
referred to as Druhyu). [For details, see TALAGERI 2000:254-260,
2008:247-250, and for greater details about the complicated Aṅgiras-Bhṛgu
history and relations, see TALAGERI 2000:164-180].
That
there were three main groups of rival priests, and that the third group (besides
the Aṅgiras and the Bhṛgu) were the Druhyu, is made clear in the Rigveda and the Avesta: Rigveda
VII.18.6 refers to the priests of the Anu-Druhyu
coalition against Sudās as "the Bhṛgu and
the Druhyu".
Likewise, in the
Avesta in Vendidad 19, it is an Angra
and a Druj who try to
tempt Zaraθuštra away from the path of Ahura Mazda. [the priests of the
Iranians were the Āθrauuans (Atharvans or Bhṛgus), including Zaraθuštra himself].
After
examining the similarities and common religious features among the ancient
Indo-European branches, Winn
concludes that the “Celts, Romans, and
Indo-Iranians shared a religious heritage dating to an early Indo-European
period” (WINN 1995:103).
The
only European group which preserves the original PIE priestly class is the Celtic
group, whose religion exhibits the same two central religious features found in
the Vedic and Avestan religions, i.e. hymnology and fire-worship. It also preserves the original name Drui
(gen. Druid), i.e. Druhyu. As in the Vedic and Iranian religions:
a) the main curriculum of the “Celtic Druids [….] involved years of instruction and the memorization of innumerable
verses, as the sacred tradition was an oral one” (WINN 1995:54) and
b) fire-rituals formed the centre of the
religion. The fire rituals were originated by
the Bhṛgu priests, and the Rigveda (even in the Oldest Books, where the Bhṛgu
are regarded as enemies: see TALAGERI 2000:172-174) gives them due credit for
the same. Similarly, The
Bhṛgu (of the Anu
tribe) are indirectly remembered in Celtic traditions as the earliest rishis
or teachers: two of the three Great Goddesses of the Celts were named Anu and Brigit, and while all the
Goddesses in general were associated with fertility cults, “Brigit, however, had additional functions
as a tutelary deity of learning, culture and skills” (LAROUSSE 1959:239).
Most significantly, Brigit is primarily associated with the
maintenance of eternal fires, like the eternal fires of the Iranian priests
(and the eternal fire referred to in the Rigveda III.23), and this was
the central feature of her main temple at Kildare in Ireland, where eternal
flames were maintained by priestesses.
While Celtic is the only branch
which preserves the original PIE priestly system with the name Drui (Druhyu,
as well as the names Anu
and Brigit), it is clear
that this priestly class really prevailed in all the European Branches:
a) The word Druhyu and its cognates (Druh, Drugh,
drogha, droha) in the Rigveda, as well as the word Druj in the Avesta, refer to
demons or enemies. But cognate forms have the opposite meaning in the European
languages: while Drui is
the name for the priests of the Celtic people, the word means “friend”
in the Baltic and Slavonic languages (e.g. Lithuanian draugas and Russian drug), and something like “soldier” in the Germanic languages
(Gothic ga-drauhts, Old
Norse drōtt, Old English
dryht, Old German truht). “Friend” may have been a symbolic word for a militant
"priest": the Rigvedic reference to the two priestly classes of
Sudas’ enemies is as follows, Griffith’s translation: “The Bhṛgus and the Druhyus quickly listened: friend rescued friend mid
the two distant peoples”.
b) The Bhṛgu are also indirectly remembered in Germanic
tradition: the Norse god of poetry and wisdom is Bragi, and although he is not directly associated with fire
rituals, a suggested etymology of his name, often rejected simply because he is
not known to be associated with fire or fire rituals, is from the word braga, “to shine”: i.e. his name
is also derived from the same IE root as the name of the Bhṛgu, the originators of the
Vedic fire-rituals, and the related Phleguai,
the Greek fire-priests.
All this confirms the identity of the Druhyu
of Indian historical tradition with the speakers of the ancestral forms of the European
Branches.
2. A
very detailed and complex linguistic study by Johanna Nichols and a team of
linguists, appropriately entitled "The Epicentre of the Indo-European
Linguistic Spread", examines ancient loan-words from West Asia
(Semitic and Sumerian) found in Indo-European and also in other language
families like Caucasian (with three separate groups Kartvelian,
Abkhaz-Circassian and Nakh-Daghestanian), and the mode and form of transmission
of these loan-words into the Indo-European family as a whole as well as into
particular branches, and combines this with the evidence of the spread of
Uralic and its connections with Indo-European, and with several kinds
of other linguistic evidence : "Several kinds of evidence for the PIE
locus have been presented here. Ancient loanwords point to a locus along the
desert trajectory, not particularly close to Mesopotamia and probably far out
in the eastern hinterlands. The structure of the family tree, the accumulation
of genetic diversity at the western periphery of the range, the location of
Tocharian and its implications for early dialect geography, the early
attestation of Anatolian in Asia Minor, and the geography of the centum-satem
split all point in the same direction [….]: the long-standing westward
trajectories of languages point to an eastward locus, and the spread of IE
along all three trajectories points to a locus well to the east of the Caspian
Sea. The satem shift also spread from a locus to the south-east of the
Caspian, with satem languages showing up as later entrants along all
three trajectory terminals. (The satem shift is a post-PIE but very
early IE development). The locus of the IE spread was therefore somewhere in
the vicinity of ancient Bactria-Sogdiana." (NICHOLS 1997:137): i.e.
all this linguistic evidence locates the locus of the spread of the European
Branches in the very area outside the exit point from Afghanistan into
Central Asia indicated by the data in the Puranas regarding the emigration
of the Druhyu tribes.
3.
Independently of the diverse linguistic evidence analyzed by Nichols above
(which pertains to linguistic contacts of the European dialects with languages to
the west and southwest of Central Asia), there is other linguistic evidence
further east:
a)
A western academic scholar of Chinese origin, Tsung-tung Chang, shows, on the
basis of a study of the relationship between the vocabulary of Old Chinese (as
reconstructed by Bernard Karlgren, Grammata Serica, 1940, etc.) and the
etymological roots of Proto-Indo-European vocabulary (as reconstructed by
Julius Pokorny, Indogermanisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch, 1959) that
there was a very strong Indo-European influence on the formative vocabulary of
Old Chinese. His conclusions: "Among Indo-European dialects, Germanic
languages seem to have been mostly akin to Old Chinese" (CHANG
1988:32), and all this indicates that "Indo-Europeans had coexisted for
thousands of years in Central Asia [….] (before) they emigrated into
Europe" (CHANG 1988:33).
b)
The association of proto-Germanic, as well as proto-Celtic, with
ancient Central Asia is confirmed by Gamkrelidze and Ivanov as well, who deal
with this point at length in section 12.7 in their book, entitled "The
separation of the Ancient European dialects from Proto-Indo-European and the
migration of Indo-European tribes across Central Asia" (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:831-847), where they trace the movement of the European Dialects from
Central Asia to Europe on the basis of a trail of linguistic contacts between
the European Dialects and various other language families on the route: this
evidence includes (apart from borrowings from the European Dialects into Old
Chinese, already discussed above) borrowings from the Yeneseian and Altaic
languages into the European Dialects and vice versa. Significantly, Gamkrelidze
and Ivanov are proponents of a Homeland in Anatolia, but the linguistic
evidence compels them to postulate a hypothetical movement of the European
Branches eastwards into Central Asia before they moved out westwards
towards Europe.
4. There
is plenty of other linguistic evidence to show that there was a westward, and
not eastward, migration of Indo-European
languages. For example:
a)
Semitic words borrowed by ancient Indo-European (taurus, wine)
are found in all the nine branches to the west, but not in the three eastern
branches (Indo-Aryan, Iranian, Tocharian): further, the
words for "wine" are found in the western branches in three
reconstructed forms corresponding to their stage of migration westwards. Thus,
the Early Branch Hittite (Anatolian) has borrowed the form *wi(o)no,
the European Branches have borrowed the form *weino, and
the Last Branches Albanian, Greek and Armenian have
borrowed the form *woino.
b)
Indo-Aryan and Iranian words have been massively borrowed by the Uralic
languages of eastern Europe, but there are no reverse borrowings, showing that
the two eastern branches did not come from the west and never had contact with
the Uralic speakers, but small groups of Indo-Aryan and Iranian
speaking people must have migrated westwards with the European Branches and
settled down among the Uralic speakers, finally getting integrated into
their ranks.
[Incidentally,
the Finnish scholar Parpola is a strong proponent of the theory that the
Indo-Iranians, before "migrating" eastwards to their
historical habitats, were inhabitants of a far western region to the southeast
of the Uralic, or more properly the Finno-Ugric, people.
He regularly, including in the above article, cites the evidence of the huge
number of Indo-Iranian, Iranian or Indo-Aryan
loans in Finno-Ugric to this effect. He therefore treats this as
evidence that the Indo-Iranians came from the Uralic
areas.
This
is a classic example of upside-down half-witted logic: there are genuinely massive
numbers of very important ancient Indo-Iranian/Iranian/Indo-Aryan
words borrowed into Finno-Ugric: “The earliest layer of Indo-Iranian
borrowing consists of common Indo-Iranian, Proto-Indo-Aryan and Proto-Iranian
words relating to three cultural spheres: economic production, social relations
and religious beliefs. Economic terms comprise words for domestic animals
(sheep, ram, Bactrian camel, stallion, colt, piglet, calf), pastoral processes
and products (udder, skin, wool, cloth, spinner), farming (grain, awn, beer,
sickle), tools (awl, whip, horn, hammer or mace), metal (ore) and, probably,
ladder (or bridge). A large group of loanwords reflects social relations (man,
sister, orphan, name) and includes such important Indo-Iranian terms like dāsa ‘non-Aryan, alien, slave’ and asura ‘god, master, hero’. Finally a
considerable number of the borrowed words reflect religious beliefs and
practices: heaven, below (the nether world), god/happiness, vajra/‘Indra’s weapon’, dead/mortal,
kidney (organ of the body used in the Aryan burial ceremony). There are also
terms related to ecstatic drinks used by Indo-Iranian priests as well as
Finno-Ugric shamans: honey, hemp and fly-agaric” (KUZMINA 2001:290-291).
But decades of desperate efforts have failed to
locate a single Finno-Ugric word borrowed into the Indo-Iranian
languages of the east
Except
to extremely motivated scholars with a disdain for data and logic, this cannot
indicate that the Indo-Iranians of the east came from the west,
but only that certain Indo-Iranian groups (now lost to history,
like the Mitanni Indo-Aryans) must have migrated westwards
into the Finno-Ugric areas from the east in ancient times.
Immigrants always give new words into the local languages. Indian languages have large numbers of words
borrowed from Arabic/Persian (during the centuries of Islamic
rule in India), the Austric and Sino-Tibetan languages of
southeast Asia and northern Asia have large numbers of Sanskrit
borrowings, the Konkani dialects of Goa have large numbers of Portuguese
borrowings (many, like balde "bucket" and paõ
"bread", have spread to other Indian languages), English
(following the Norman invasion of England) has many French borrowings,
the Tamil dialect of Pondicherry has many French borrowings, many
languages in former British colonies have large numbers of English
borrowings.
In every case, the reverse also takes place: the immigrants
also borrow local words from the local languages.
But in none of the above cases do we find the immigrants
transferring these local words to their homeland (no Indian words
transferred back to Arabic and Persian, no Thai or Cambodian or Indonesian
words transferred back to Sanskrit, etc.―except where colonialists move back to
their home areas with words borrowed from the colonies, as in English, and
write literature popularizing those words).
So
the evidence in fact strongly disproves the idea that the Indo-Iranians
came from the west, and shows that the presence of Indo-Iranian
words in Finno-Ugric (matched by the absence of Finno-Ugric
words in Indo-Iranian) shows a situation of Indo-Iranian migrants
to, and not from, the Finno-Ugric
areas.
Strangely, as per Parpola's logic, the Finno-Ugric
languages borrowed all these words somewhere near South Russia from the ancestral
speakers of Indo-Aryan and Iranian: in short, as far away
as in South Russia and as long ago as in remote pre-Vedic times, the
putative "Indo-Iranians" already had words like ārya, dāsa,
*medhu- (but not *melith-), and even a name
for the Bactrian camel!]
c)
There were contacts in remote pre-PIE
times between proto-Indo-European and proto-Austronesian
(the ancestral form of the languages of Indonesia, Malaysia, and the islands of
the Pacific). Isidore Dyen (DYEN 1970) showed the
striking similarities between many words reconstructed
in the proto-Indo-European and proto-Austronesian languages,
including such basic words as the first four numerals, many of the personal
pronouns, and the words for “water” and “land”. And Dyen points out that “the number of comparisons could be
increased at least slightly, perhaps even substantially, without a severe loss
of quality” (DYEN 1970:439). And these contacts could only have been
in India:
S.K.Chatterjee,
the well known linguist separately
notes: “India
was the centre from which the Austric speech spread into the lands and islands
of the east and Pacific” (CHATTERJI 1951/1996:156),
and “the Austric speech […] in its original form (as the ultimate
source of both the Austro-Asiatic and Austronesian branches) […] could very well have been characterized
within India” (CHATTERJI
1951/1996:150).
5.
Of all the extant Indo-European groups, it is the European Dialects for whom we
have the clearest archaeological evidence regarding their movement into their
historical habitats (i.e. most of Europe). As Winn points out: "A
‘common European horizon’ developed after 3000 BC, at about the time of the Pit
Grave expansion (Kurgan Wave #3). Because of the particular style of ceramics
produced, it is usually known as the Corded Ware Horizon. [….] The
expansion of the Corded Ware cultural variants throughout central, eastern and
northern Europe has been construed as the most likely scenario for the origin
of PIE (Proto-Indo-European) language and culture. [….] the territory
inhabited by the Corded ware/Battle Axe culture, after its expansions,
geographically qualifies it to be the ancestor of the Western or European
language branches: Germanic, Baltic, Slavic, Celtic and Italic" (WINN
1995:343, 349-350).
The
origins of the Corded Ware culture has been traced further east: to the Kurgan
Culture of the South Russian Steppes, to the north of the Caucasus and south of
the Urals. And more recently, the earliest origins of many of the elements of
the Kurgan Culture have been traced to Central Asia.
This
archaeological evidence "does not [….] explain the presence of
Indo-Europeans in Asia, Greece and Anatolia" (WINN 1995:343), but it
explains the presence of the European branches, and their expansion
through Eastern Europe to the northern and western parts of Europe.
THE
LAST BRANCHES:
There
is voluminous evidence about the close contacts between the Iranian and Indo-Aryan
branches even after their separation from the other 10 branches of
Indo-European languages.
To
explain this, the linguists have postulated a hypothetical separation of a
joint "Indo-Iranian" branch from the other branches in the
postulated South Russian Homeland itself, and the development of a common
"Indo-Iranian" culture in a pre-Rigvedic era in Central
Asia (on the way from South Russia to the oldest recorded historical habitats
of these two branches).
However,
as we have seen, the common cultural data in the Rigveda and the Avesta
shows that this common culture developed in the period of the New Books
of the Rigveda in the area between Haryana and Afghanistan. The
voluminous evidence for this common "Indo-Iranian" history is
given in detail in my books (TALAGERI 2000:163-231; 2008:258-277, etc.). The Pūru-Anu
(Vedic-Iranian) rivalries or conflicts are preserved in the traditions of the
Puranas and the Avesta in the form of the Deva-Asura or Daeva-Ahura
conflicts and the Aṅgiras-Bhṛgu/Atharvan (Bṛhaspati-Śukrācārya)
or Aṅgra-Āθrauuan
rivalries.
Two
of the Indo-European expansionary or migratory movements had already taken place
in the pre-Rigvedic period itself:
a)
The separation of the Early Branches from this Homeland area, and their
movement into and settlement in Central Asia from Afghanistan, and
b)
the separation of the European Branches from this Homeland area, and
their movement into and settlement in Afghanistan.
In
the period of the Oldest Books of the Rigveda (6,3,7), the Last Branches
were still present within the Rigvedic horizon. It was the dāśarājña
battle and the expansionary activities of Sudās (Book 7) which led to the
movement of the Last Branches, the Anu, into Afghanistan,
triggering the northward movement of the Druhyu tribes (the European
Branches) from Afghanistan into Central Asia (and later westwards), and
later the expansion and movement of the other Last Branches westwards
from Afghanistan:
1.
It is generally recognized, on the basis of the late isoglosses developed in
the Albanian, Greek, Armenian, Iranian and Indo-Aryan
branches, that these were the five branches which remained within the Original
Homeland area after the separation of the other seven branches. This area is
hypothetically assumed by the proponents of the South Russian Homeland theory
to be in South Russia.
However,
the data in the Rigveda regarding the dāśarājña battle and the
expansionary activities of Sudās (Book 7), shows this area to be in the Punjab.
As we saw, Sudās, the Vedic (Indo-Aryan/Pūru) king enters the
Punjab area from the east and fights this historical battle against a coalition
of ten tribes (nine Anu tribes, and one tribe of the remnant Druhyu
in the area), and later these tribes start migrating westwards.
The
Anu tribes (or the epithets used for them) named in the battle hymns
are:
VII.18.5 Śimyu.
VII.18.6 Bhṛgu.
VII.18.7 Paktha, Bhalāna, Alina, Śiva, Viṣāṇin.
VII.83.1 Parśu/Parśava, Pṛthu/Pārthava, Dāsa.
(Another
Anu tribe in the Puranas and later tradition is the Madra).
A
few words on some of these names:
a)
Dāsa: This is a word which refers to any non-Pūru (i.e.
non-"Vedic Aryan"), but particularly to Iranians: it is found in 54 hymns (63 verses) and the overwhelming
majority of these references are hostile references. But there are three verses
which stand out from the rest: they contain references which are friendly
towards the Dāsa:
a. In VIII.5.31, the Aśvin-s are depicted as
accepting the offerings of the Dāsa.
b. In VIII.46.32, the patrons are referred to as
Dāsa.
c. In VIII.51.9, Indra is described as belonging to
both Ārya and Dāsa.
As all these three hymns are dānastutis (hymns in praise of
donors), it is clear that the friendly references have to do with the identity
of the patrons in these hymns. Two of these hymns (VIII.5,46) have
camel-gifting patrons (and it is very likely that the third hymn has one
too: this dānastuti does not mention the specific gifts received, and
merely calls upon Indra to shower wealth on the patron), and the only other
hymn with a camel-gifting patron is another dānastuti in the same book: VIII.6.48.
These four hymns (VIII.5,6,46,51) clearly belong to a
separate class from the other Rigvedic hymns:
a) 3 of them (VIII.5,6,46) refer to patrons who gift
camels,
b) 3 of them (VIII.5,46,51) speak well of the Dāsa, and
c) 3 of them (VIII.5,6,46), all being the hymns with
camel-donors, have patrons whose names have been identified as proto-Iranian
names: a range of western Indologists (including Hoffman, Wilson, Weber,
Witzel and Gamkrelidze) have identified Kaśu (VIII.5), Tirindira
Parśava (VIII.6), and Pṛthuśravas Kānīta (VIII.46) as
proto-Iranian names. Ruśama Pavīru, the patron of VIII.51, is not
specifically named as Iranian by the scholars. However, the
Ruśama-s are identified by M.L.Bhargava (BHARGAVA:1964) as a tribe of the
extreme northwest from the Soma lands of Suṣomā and Ārjīkīyā. This
clearly places them in the territory of the Iranians.
Now the word dāsa, though used for non-Pūru and
mostly in a hostile sense in the Rigveda (and meaning "slave" in
later Sanskrit), is clearly a word with an originally benevolent connotation.
It is derived from the root √daṁś- "to shine" (obviously with
a positive connotation), is found in the name of Divo-dāsa in a positive sense,
and is used to describe the patrons of the hymns in the above references.
Clearly, it was a tribal name among the Anu (the Iranians): note
that the word "daha" means "man" in the (Iranian) Khotanese
language. It was first used by the Bharata Pūru for the Anu in
general and later extended to all non-Pūru tribes and people.
b) Śimyu: This word is found only in the Rigveda, and only twice
in the Rigveda: once in VII.18.5 in reference to the enemies of
Sudās and later once more in I.100.18, in the hymn which
describes the Vārṣāgira battle (the "battle beyond the Sarayu") in
Central Afghanistan, in reference to the enemies of the descendants of Sudās.
c) Madra: The Madra are not referred to in the
Rigveda, in the descriptions of the battle between Sudās and the Anu tribes,
but they were one of the most prominent Anu tribes of the area even in
much later post-Rigvedic times.
d)
Viṣāṇin: This may seem the only weak link in
the identifications of the Anu (Iranian) tribes. However, it seems to complete
the picture if they are identified with the Piśācin or Piśāca
(the Nuristanis): note the interchangeability between "p" and
"v" in "Paṇi" and "vaṇi", and the change of
"Bhalāna" (Bolan) to "Baluch".
These tribal names are primarily found only in two hymns, VII.18
and VII.83, of the Rigveda, which refer to the Anu tribes who fought
against Sudās in the dāśarājña battle or "the Battle
of the Ten Kings". But see where these same tribal names are found in
later historical times (after their exodus westwards referred to in VII.5.3
and VII.6.3). Incredibly, they are found dotted over an
almost continuous geographical belt, the entire sweep of areas extending
westwards from the Punjab (the battleground of the dāśarājña
battle) right up to southern and eastern Europe:
Afghanistan: (Avestan) Proto-Iranian: Sairima (Śimyu), Dahi
(Dāsa).
NE
Afghanistan: Proto-Iranian: Nuristani/Piśācin
(Viṣāṇin).
Pakhtoonistan
(NW Pakistan), South Afghanistan:
Iranian: Pakhtoon/Pashtu (Paktha).
Baluchistan
(SW Pakistan), SE Iran: Iranian:
Bolan/Baluchi (Bhalāna).
NE
Iran: Iranian: Parthian/Parthava
(Pṛthu/Pārthava).
SW
Iran: Iranian: Parsua/Persian
(Parśu/Parśava).
NW
Iran: Iranian: Madai/Mede
(Madra).
Uzbekistan: Iranian: Khiva/Khwarezmian (Śiva).
W.
Turkmenistan: Iranian: Dahae (Dāsa).
Ukraine,
S, Russia: Iranian: Alan (Alina),
Sarmatian (Śimyu).
Turkey: Thraco-Phrygian/Armenian: Phryge/Phrygian (Bhṛgu).
Romania,
Bulgaria: Thraco-Phrygian/Armenian: Dacian
(Dāsa).
Greece: Greek: Hellene (Alina).
Albania: Albanian: Sirmio (Śimyu).
The
above named Iranian tribes include the ancestors of almost all other
prominent historical and modern Iranian groups, such as the Scythians
(Sakas), Ossetes and Kurds, and even the presently Slavic-language
speaking (but formerly Iranian-language speaking) Serbs, Croats
and others.
We
also see here an important historical phenomenon: the tribal group which
migrates furthest retains its linguistic identity, while those of that tribe
who remain behind or on the way get absorbed into the surrounding linguistic
group:
a)
The Śimyu who migrated furthest retained their Albanian identity
and language (Sirmio), while those among them who settled down on the
way got linguistically absorbed into the Iranians (Avestan Sairima,
later Sarmatians).
b)
The Alina who migrated furthest retained their Greek name and language
(Ellene/Hellene), while those among them who settled down on the
way got linguistically absorbed into the Iranians (Alan).
c)
The Bhṛgu who migrated furthest retained their Thraco-Phrygian/Armenian
name and language (Phryge/Phrygian), while those among them who
settled down on the way got linguistically absorbed into the Iranians
(their priestly class the Āθrauuan), and those who remained behind got linguistically absorbed
into the Indo-Aryans (as the priestly class of Bhṛgu). [The Armenians,
in the Caucasus area, lost the name, but retained their language much
influenced by Iranian].
d)
The Madra who migrated furthest retained their Iranian name and
dialect (Mada/Mede/Median), while those who remained
behind got linguistically absorbed into the Indo-Aryans (Madra)
while retaining their tribal identity as Anu.
Further:
a)
The name of the king of the ten-tribe alliance against Sudās is Kavi
Cāyamāna (VII.18.8) (a descendant of Abhyāvartin Cāyamāna of VI.27.5,8,
who is called a Pārthava in VI.27.8) and their old priest is Kavaṣa (VII.18.12).
Both these names are Iranian names found in the Avesta: Kauui, Kaoša.
Kavi Cāyamāna was undoubtedly the first king of the Kauuiiān
dynasty so prominent in the Avesta: in later times it was the Parthian kings
who claimed to be descendants of this dynasty.
b)
Earlier, the southward march of the Anu into the Punjab had commenced
with Uśīnara: "One branch, headed by Uśīnara established
several kingdoms on the eastern border of the Punjab", and later, by the time of the Oldest Books of the Rigveda (6,3,7)
his son Śivi Auśīnara had extended the Anu "conquests westwards […] occupying the whole of the Punjab except
the northwestern corner” (PARGITER 1962:264). Aošnara is an Iranian name found in the Avesta.
c) Even earlier, there were the original
Anu of the North (Kashmir and areas to its west) from whom this "one
branch" had migrated southwards into the Punjab. Significantly, this
northern area even today is the Home of the Nuristani languages which
exhibit many pre-Iranian features (the
proto-Iranian dental affricates ć (ts), ź (dz), ź (dz), etc.).
The
Anu identity of at least the Iranians continues till much later
times: in later historical times, the
name Anu is prominently
found at both the southern and northern ends of the area described in the
Avesta:
a) Greek texts (e.g. Stathmoi Parthikoi, 16, of
Isidore of Charax) refer to the area and the people immediately north of the
Hāmūn-ī Hilmand in southern Afghanistan as the anauon or anauoi,
and
b) Anau is the name of a prominent proto-Iranian or Iranian
archaeological site in Central Asia (Turkmenistan).
It
is clear that the speakers of the proto-forms of the four Last Branches
(Albanian, Greek, Armenian and Iranian), were in
the Punjab at the time of the dāśarājña battle or "the Battle of
the Ten Kings" in the period of the Oldest Books (6,3,7) which, as we saw,
go back in time to 3000 BCE at least, and only started migrated
westwards after that.
2. While there are no records for the prehistory of the Albanian
and Armenian branches before they entered their historical habitats, most linguists
postulate a close linguistic relationship between
the Greek, Albanian and Armenian branches. Some evidence for
the movement of the Greek language through West Asia may be found
recorded by Gamkrelidze, in a section entitled “The Greek migration to mainland Greece from the east. Greek-Kartvelian
lexical ties and the myth of the Argonauts” (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:799-804),
even though only as part of his theory that the Indo-European homeland lay in
Anatolia: “The numerous lexical resemblances between Greek and Kartvelian,
found precisely among the ‘pre-Greek’ words of non-Indo-European origin, are to
be interpreted as showing that a number of Kartvelian words were borrowed by
Greek… somewhere in the Near East during the Greek migrations from the
proto-homeland westward to historical Greek territory… some… prehistoric
borrowings from Greek into Kartvelian… show that the Greek-Kartvelian
borrowings went in both directions” (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:801-802).
There is of course, plenty of recorded
evidence for the Iranian movement from the east:
The earliest references to Iranians
in Iran do not occur till after the beginning of the first millennium BCE:
“We find no evidence of the future
‘Iranians’ previous to the ninth century BC. The first allusion to the Parsua
or Persians, then localized in the mountains of Kurdistan, and to the Madai or
Medes, already established on the plain, occurs in 837 BC in connection with
the expedition of the Assyrian king Shalmaneser III. About a hundred years
afterwards, the Medes invaded the plateau which we call Persia (or Iran)
driving back or assimilating populations of whom there is no written record”
(LAROUSSE 1959:321).
“By the mid-ninth century BC two major
groups of Iranians appear in cuneiform sources: the Medes and the Persians.
[….] What is reasonably clear from the cuneiform sources is that the Medes
and Persians (and no doubt other Iranian peoples not identified by name) were
moving into western Iran from the east” (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1974,
Vol.9, 832).
“‘Persians’
are first mentioned in the 9th century BC Assyrian annals: on one
campaign, in 835 BC, Shalmaneser (858-824) is said to have received tributes
from 27 kings of Paršuwaš; the Medes are mentioned under Tiglath-Pileser III
(744-727 BC) [….] There are no
literary sources for Iranians in Central Asia before the Old Persian
inscriptions (Darius’s Bisotun inscription, 521-519 BC, ed. Schmitt) these show
that by the mid-1st millennium BC tribes called Sakas by the
Persians and Scythians by the Greeks were spread throughout Central Asia, from
the westernmost edges (north and northwest of the Black Sea) to its easternmost
borders” (SKJÆRVØ 1995:156).
Therefore, it is clear that the location
of the Indo-European Homeland in northern India, and the migrations of the
different branches from this Homeland are a matter of actual recorded history.
THE LAST BRANCH IN THE HOMELAND:
The last and only branch (of the three
northern Aiḷa branches, or the twelve Indo-European branches) to
remain in the Homeland was Indo-Aryan: the language of the "Vedic
Aryans" or the Pūru. Before examining (in section V) the
position of this Vedic culture vis-à-vis the other eastern tribes, we should
first understand its position vis-à-vis the western tribes (the Anu and Druhyu)
who were the speakers of the proto-forms of the other eleven branches which
migrated out of India.
As per the Aryan-Invader
perspective, there are three phases in the Vedic "Indo-Aryan"
heritage:
a) The Indo-European heritage
shared with the other eleven branches in the PIE Homeland in South Russia.
b) The Indo-Iranian heritage
shared with the Iranian branch in Central Asia, after the separation of the
Indo-Aryan and Iranian branches from the other ten branches and migration
eastwards.
c) The Indo-Aryan heritage,
developed all by itself after separating from Iranian and entering India.
As per the Out-of-India or Indian
Homeland perspective based on the recorded history of the
Indo-European migrations, also, there
are these same three stages:
a) The Indo-European heritage
shared by all the twelve branches in their joint Homeland in northern-northwestern
India.
b) The Indo-Iranian heritage
shared by the Indo-Aryan and Iranian branches after the departure of the other
ten branches.
c) The Indo-Aryan heritage,
developed all by itself after the separation and emigration of the Iranians.
If the Aryan-Invader perspective
were right, the Vedic culture portrayed in the Rigveda would be a very diluted
form of the original PIE culture in the Homeland. As we saw, the Vedic
language is not the ancestor of the other branches, it is just one of twelve
branches of Indo-European languages. After the distance travelled all the way
from South Russia over long centuries, very few traces of the ancestral PIE
language and culture should have remained in the culture depicted in a text
(the Rigveda) composed in northern India in which there is not the
faintest trace of extra-territorial memories.
However, the picture presented by the Vedic
language and culture shows it to be so close to the PIE language and
culture that it seems to be literally hot out of the PIE oven: as Griffith puts it in the preface to the first edition of
his translation of the Rigveda: “The great interest of the Ṛgveda is,
in fact, historical rather than poetical. As in its original language we see
the roots and shoots of the languages of Greek and Latin, of Kelt, Teuton and
Slavonian, so the deities, the myths, and the religious beliefs and practices
of the Veda throw a flood of light upon the religions of all European countries
before the introduction of Christianity.”:
1.
The mythology of the Rigveda represents the most primitive form of
Indo-European mythology: as Macdonell puts it, for example, the Vedic gods “are
nearer to the physical phenomena which they represent, than the gods of any
other Indo-European mythology” (MACDONELL 1963:15). In fact, in the
majority of cases, the original nature myths, in which the mythological
entities and the mythological events are rooted, can be identified or traced only
through the form in which the myths are represented in the Rigveda.
All the other Indo-European mythologies, individually,
have numerous mythological elements in common with Vedic
mythology, but very few with each other; and even these few
(except those borrowed from each other by neighboring languages in ancient but
historical times, such as the Greek god Apollo, borrowed by the Romans) are
ones which are also found in Vedic mythology (see TALAGERI 1993:377-395).
The
following, for example, is an almost exhaustive list (I have not used phonetic
spellings for the non-Vedic names) of common Indo-European deities found in the
mythologies of more than one branch. Note that every single one of these
deities is found in the Rigveda:
Dyaus Pitar (Vedic), Zeus Pater (Greek), Jupiter
(Roman), Dei Patrous (Illyrian), Dievs (Baltic).
Uṣas (Vedic), Eos (Greek), Aurora (Roman), Aushrine
(Baltic).
Varuṇa (Vedic), Odinn/Wodan (Germanic), Ouranous
(Greek), Velinas (Baltic).
Asura (Vedic), Aesir (Germanic), Ahura (Avestan).
Marut (Vedic), Ares (Greek), Mars (Roman).
Parjanya (Vedic), Perkunas (Baltic), Perunu (Slavic), Fjorgyn
(Germanic).
Traitana (Vedic), Thraetaona (Avestan), Triton
(Greek).
Aryaman (Vedic), Airyaman (Avestan), Ariomanus/Eremon
(Celtic).
Saramā/Sārameya (Vedic), Hermes (Greek).
Pūṣan, Paṇi (Vedic), Pan (Greek), Vanir
(Germanic).
Rudra (Vedic), Ruglu (Slavic).
Danu (Vedic), Danu (Irish).
Indra (Vedic), Indra (Avestan), Inara (Hittite).
Śarvara (Vedic), Kerberos (Greek).
Śrī (Vedic), Ceres (Greek), Freyr/Freya
(Germanic).
Bhaga (Vedic), Baga (Avestan), Bog (Slavic).
Apām Napāt (Vedic), Apām Napāt (Avestan), Neptunus
(Roman), Nechtain (Celtic).
Ṛbhu (Vedic), Elbe (Germanic = English Elf).
Yama (Vedic), Yima (Avestan), Ymir (Germanic).
The
tally (out of 19): Vedic (19), Greek (9), Avestan
(7), Germanic (7), Roman (4), Baltic (4) Slavic (3), Celtic (2), Hittites (1),
Albanian (1). And in all the deities which are shared by the Avesta, it is
clear that the connection is to and through the Rigvedic deity: further,
the Avesta represents a highly evolved, highly anthropomorphized and
highly transformed state of religion and mythology, which shows very few
connections with the natural phenomena that they represent, except through
analogical comparison with the Rigveda.
Not
only are Vedic deities the only ones to have clear cognates in all
the other branches, but in many cases, it is almost impossible to
recognize the connections between related mythological entities and events in
two separate Indo-European mythologies without a comparison of the two with the
related Vedic versions. Thus, for example, the Teutonic (Germanic) Vanir
are connected with the Greek Hermes and Pan, but it is impossible
to connect the two except through the Vedic Saramā and Paṇi (see
TALAGERI 2000:477-495 for details). The Avestan mythology stands
aloof from all other Indo-European mythologies and is connected only to Vedic
mythology.
2. Linguistically, the Vedic language is
the only language which still retains the verbal roots of the most
common cognate words in the different Indo-European languages. This
point, first noted by Nicholas Kazanas, has been dealt with in more detail by
Koenraad Elst, who points out that the roots of many of the most basic and
commonest cognate words (for example, the words for father, son, daughter,
bear, wolf, etc.) are still active and productive roots in the Vedic/Sanskrit
language with many other words being created from the same verbal roots, while
only these isolated cognate words are present in the other branches with no clear
clues as to their etymologies.
Further, an examination of the Rigveda
shows all the three stages (the Indo-European stage, the Indo-Iranian
stage and the Indo-Aryan stage) are present within the history of the
text. All these three stages are geographically located within India,
and in fact the three Oldest Books of the Rigveda (6, 3, 7, in that order) are
geographically restricted to the areas in Haryana and further east (i.e. in the
region to the east of the Sarasvati), and it is only during the course of
composition of the Rigveda that the geography of the text expands
northwestwards. This can be illustrated with the history of just one word
"night":
a) The common Indo-European word throughout the
Rigveda is nakt-. It is common to almost all the other branches: Greek nox
(modern Greek nychta), Latin noctis (French nuit, Spanish noche),
Hittite nekuz, Tocharian nekciye, German nacht, Irish anocht,
Russian noc', Lithuanian naktis, Albanian natë, etc.
b) A less common Indo-Iranian word throughout
the Rigveda is kṣap. It is found in the Avesta (where the word related
to nakt- is completely missing except in a phrase upa-naxturusu,
"bordering on the night") as xšap: modern Persian shab
(as used in Urdu, and in the phrase shab-nam "night-moisture=
dew").
c) The common Indo-Aryan Sanskrit word, which
appears for the first time only a few times in the latest parts of the Rigveda,
is rātri, which completely replaces the earlier words in post-Rigvedic
Sanskrit and is the common or normal word in all modern Indo-Aryan languages as
well as in all other languages which have borrowed the word from Sanskrit, but
is totally missing in the IE languages outside India (which had already
departed before the birth of this word).
The words uda-, āpah and pānīya
for "water" is another such example.
The Rigvedic language shows the "roots and
shoots" of all the other Indo-European languages, and the "deities,
the myths, and the religious beliefs and practices of the Veda throw a flood of
light upon the religions of all European countries before the introduction of
Christianity", precisely because northern India was the Original
Homeland of all the twelve branches, and the Rigveda, though representing
the language and religion of only one branch (the Indo-Aryan branch,
or the Pūru),
a) continued to remain in the Original Homeland long
after all the other branches had undergone long migrations to their historical
habitats, and
b) had maintained a continuous tradition and records
of the original common language and mythology in the form of the traditional
history in the Puranas and the meticulously preserved hymns of the Rigveda.
V. The Nature of
the Spread of the Vedic Religion in India.
It is clear that northern India was the
Homeland of the Indo-European family of languages and that all the other
branches of Indo-European languages in the world migrated from India. There was
no "Aryan Invasion of India", and the area of the Harappan (Indus
Valley or Sindhu-Sarasvati) Civilization in its earliest phases was the area
from which the speakers of the proto-forms of the other eleven branches (Italic,
Celtic, Germanic, Baltic, Slavic, Albanian, Greek,
Anatolian, Armenian, Tocharian and Iranian)
migrated westwards.
Now, the question remains: if the Vedic
language, religion and culture were originally native to the area from
westernmost U.P. and Haryana, and expanded westwards in the Rigvedic period
itself up to Afghanistan, what exactly was the nature of the spread of this
culture eastwards into India? Did our Classical Indian/Hindu
Civilization originate from this Vedic culture, as the proponents of both, the
Aryan Invasion Theory as well as the Indigenous Aryan Theory, would like to
believe? Are the modern "Indo-Aryan" languages of North India
descended from the Vedic language of the Pūru (the
"Indo-Aryan" of Indological and linguistic studies)? Are the elements
of Indian religion found in post-Rigvedic texts (the Atharvaveda, the
Upanishads, the Puranas and Epics, and in latter-day popular Hinduism in all
parts of the country) "later developments" from this original Vedic
culture? It is necessary to have a proper perspective on this point to
understand the situation fully and correctly.
LANGUAGE:
The eleven branches of Indo-European
languages outside India are descended from the languages of the Anu and Druhyu
tribes to the west of the Pūru, while the Vedic language was the
language of the Pūru tribes. The entire Indo-European paradigm is based
on the comparative study of the eleven (presently) out-of-India branches and
the Vedic language (which is treated as the twelfth branch).
However, the modern Indo-Aryan languages
of North India are not descended from the Vedic language of the Pūru:
they are descended from other Indo-European languages which were
spoken by the tribes to the east and south of the Pūru: i.e. the Ikṣvāku,
Yadu, Turvasu, and others. This is proved by various linguistic
factors:
a) Prakrits
and Indo-Aryan dialects in eastern India retained the r/l distinction, which is
technically “pre-Indo-Iranian” since the “Indo-Iranians” of the
Rigveda-Avesta-Mitanni records had merged r/l into r.
b)
The Bangani language isolated in the hills of Uttarakhand has Kentum
language features: the branches of Indo-European languages are divided into Kentum
(classically Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Greek and Tocharian) and Satem
(classically Baltic, Slavic,
Iranian and Indo-Aryan).
c)
Archaic words are preserved in Sinhalese which are not found in Vedic/Sanskrit:
for example the word watura (English water, Hittite watar).
d)
Archaic features and words are also found in eastern and southern Prakrits,
which are missing in Sanskrit and Iranian: K.R. Norman, in his study of the
variations between the OIA (Old Indo-Aryan: Vedic and Classical Sanskrit) and
MIA (Middle Indo-Aryan: Prakrits), finds MIA dialects contain many forms “which are clearly of IA, or even IE,
origin, but have no attested Skt equivalent, e.g. suffixes not, or only rarely,
found in Skt, or those words which show a different grade of root from that
found in Skt, but can be shown not to be MIA innovations, because the formation
could only have evolved in a pre-MIA phonetic form, or because a direct
equivalent is found in an IE language other than Skt” (NORMAN 1995:282).
The Prakrits and consequently the modern
Indo-Aryan (or NIA or New Indo-Aryan) languages of northern India, and
in fact the rich Sanskrit lexicons, contain large numbers of words which have
been classified by the Prakrit grammarians as deśī (local) words
distinct from tatsama (directly borrowed Vedic or Sanskrit) words
and tadbhava (derived or evolved from Vedic or Sanskrit) words. Linguists
and Indologists have tried hard to prove these words to be borrowings from
Dravidian and Austric, but failed; and have ultimately had to brand them
hypothetically as "non-Aryan" words of unknown origin, probably
borrowed from some unknown, unrecorded, unidentifiable and completely extinct
"non-Aryan" languages which must have been spoken in northern
India before the "arrival" of the "Aryans". Most of these
words are the common words in the modern Indo-Aryan languages of
northern India. These "new" words include, for example, ghoṭaka
(horse), kukkura (dog), prastara (stone), pānīya (water),
etc. for the original Vedic/Sanskrit words aśva (horse), śvan
(dog), aśman (stone), uda-/āpah (water), etc.
However, these are not
"non-Aryan" words, but words from the Inner Indo-European
languages spoken to the east and south of the Vedic Pūru area: for some
of these words "a direct equivalent
is found in an IE language other than Skt" as Norman puts it above,
but most of them are not found in the other IE languages either. This is
because though they are IE words, they are often derived from different roots
found in the speech of the eastern or Inner Indo-Europeans (the Ikṣvāku,
Yadu, Turvasu, etc.) but not found in the speech of the Druhyu-Anu-Pūru
tribal cluster of the north and northwest whose twelve descendant branches have
been used in the comparative studies on the basis of which the "PIE"
language has been reconstructed. These words entered the Sanskrit language in
the post-Rigvedic stage, but words like rātri (night) are examples of
such eastern Indo-European words which started entering the Vedic language even
towards the end of the Rigvedic period itself. In fact, even the rare Dravidian
word started entering the Vedic language towards the end of the Rigvedic
period, e.g. kāṇá (one-eyed/cross-eyed) from Dravidian kaṇ (eye)
in X.155.1, and the root √pūj (VIII.17.12)
from Dravidian pū (flower), indicating interaction between the Vedic people
and the people of the South. In later times, there was a massive influx
of Inner Indo-European words, and even many Dravidian and Austric words, in the
pan-Indian Sanskrit lexicons: e.g. heramba (buffalo) from Dravidian yerumai
(buffalo).
The great linguist S.K Chatterji,
although he puts it in terms of the AIT in which he was an unquestioning
believer, puts it as follows:
"MIA and NIA languages
are not, strictly speaking, derived from the language of the Rigveda or from
Classical Sanskrit" (CHATTERJI 1926:36).
"[…] these Aryans of the eastern
tracts seem to be different from the Midland or Vedic Aryans in many respects―in
religious observances, in many practices, in dialect" (CHATTERJI 1926:40).
"[…] these Aryans were distinct
from those other Aryans of the West among whom the Vedic culture grew up,
distinct in dialect, in religion and in practices" (CHATTERJI
1926:45).
I had put the situation as follows in my first book:
"The earliest form of Indo-European speech (proto-proto-Indo-European)
was spoken in the interior of India, and in late prehistoric times, it spread
out as far north and west as Kashmir and Afghanistan" (TALAGERI
1993:229). It developed into different dialects or languages, of which the
outermost ones (i.e. the dialects of the Druhyu and Anu) "spread
out of India into Europe, West Asia and Chinese Turkestan […] The
modern Indo-Aryan languages are not descendants of the Rigvedic dialects [i.e.
the Pūru dialects], but of other dialects which were contemporaneous
with the Rigvedic dialects [i.e. the dialects of the Ikṣvāku, Yadu,
Turvasu, etc.], but which belonged to a different section of
Indo-European speech (the Inner Indo-European section) […] The Vedic
dialects remained the vehicles of the Vedic literature that followed the
Rigvcda; but soon the 'Classical Sanskrit' language was artificially created by
the ancient Indian grammarians (Panini was preceded by hundreds of other
linguists and grammarians, many of whom are named by him in his Ashtadhyayi) in
order to achieve a refined via-medium between the Vedic language and the Inner
Indo-European dialects (which had developed conjointly with the Dravidian languages
over the course of millenniums, and were therefore structurally different from
Vedic, and also had their own roots and words). Later the 'Prakrits' (which
were also not fully natural forms of speech, but which successively
approximated, to a greater and greater degree, the Inner dialects) came into
vogue. Finally the Inner dialects came into their own in the form of the 'New
Indo-Aryan' languages, as heavily Sanskritised as the Dravidian languages.
During the course of the millenniums, upto the present day, the various
'Indo-Aryan' […] dialects and languages influenced each other in
innumerable ways, too complicated to be analysed here" (TALAGERI
1993:230).
RELIGION AND CULTURE:
In India, as in the rest of the world, religion was
originally a tribal affair. Tribes in every corner of India, as of the
inhabited world of the time, were followers of different tribal religions. As
in other parts of the world, the rise of organized and urbanized civilization
led to the development of one particular kind of organized religion among the
different tribes and people spread out over a certain area. In India, this area
was the North and Northwest, covering particularly present day northern
Pakistan, Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Himachal Pradesh and the western parts of
U.P. This area covered many different tribes, notably the conglomerates of
tribes known to traditional Indian history as the Druhyu, Anu and
Pūru.
The religion which developed in this area concentrated
on worship of the elements (the sun, moon, clouds, rain, sky, earth, rivers,
etc.) and worshipped the Gods perceived in these elements through sacrifices
offered through the medium of fire, and through the medium of sounds couched in
the form of hymns. This religion is found in the Rigveda (the religious
book of the Pūru), the Zend Avesta (the religious book of the
main groups among the Anu who migrated westwards into Afghanistan), and
in the religious practices of the ancient European priests, mainly the Celtic
Druids (emigrants to Europe from among the Druhyu); and in fact the
revival by a section of Lithuanians of their ancient religion, which
they call darna, also consists of these same two elements: fire rituals
and the chanting of hymns. Evolved versions of the root Vedic nature-myths with
more developed mythologies are found in the other European religions (Greek,
Teutonic, Slavic, Lithuanian, etc.).
In India, after
the emigration of the Anu and Druhyu tribes, the religion of the Pūru,
because of its highly organized and systematically developed priesthood and
rituals, spread over the rest of the country along with Vedic culture. As
the religions of the different tribes all over the country converged into the
increasingly diluted Pūru religion, the original Pūru (Vedic)
rituals and myths increasingly came to occupy the position of a nominal upper
layer in a new multi-layered and multi-facetted religion which was rapidly
becoming the common Pan-Indian religion of the sub-continent. When this
pan-Indian religion and culture came to be known as Hindu is a matter of
irrelevant dispute. That it is known as Hindu is an indisputable
fact.
But there was a big difference in the spread of Hinduism
all over India and the spread of Abrahamic religions all over the world.
Unlike these Abrahamic religions, which demonised the Gods, beliefs
and rituals of the religions which they sought to uproot, destroy and supplant,
Hinduism accepted and internalised the Gods, beliefs and rituals of the
tribal religions which converged into it. The result is that today the most popular
Hindu deities in every single part of India are originally local tribal
Gods: whether Ayyappa of Kerala, Murugan of Tamilnadu, Balaji
of Andhra, Vitthala of Karnataka (Vithoba of Maharashtra), Khandoba
of Maharashtra, Jagannatha of Orissa, etc., etc., or the myriad forms of
the Mother Goddess, with thousands of names, in every nook and corner of
India. Further, every single local (originally tribal) God and Goddess is
revered by every Hindu in every corner of India, in the form of the kuladevata,
the grihadevata or the gramadevata. In time, of course, myths
were formed nominally associating many of these deities with one or the other
of the main Gods and Goddesses of Puranic Hinduism as their manifestations,
these Puranic Gods themselves being additions from different parts of India to
the Hindu pantheon (or originally Vedic Gods like Vishnu and Rudra with basic
characteristics adopted from the other local and tribal deities). But these
associations were not an imposition “from above”, they were the result of
popular local myth-making and part of the consolidation of the national
popularization of the local deities: the deities retained their local names,
forms, rituals and customs, and became all-India deities, objects of
pilgrimages from distant areas.
But it is not only in respect of “Gods” and
“Goddesses” that Hinduism freely and respectfully adopted from local
tribes and religions: even the most basic concepts of the Hindu religion
are originally elements adopted from the tribal and local religions from every
part of India. The original Pūru (Vedic) layer of religion which forms
the pan-Indian umbrella of Hinduism was originally more or less the religion
depicted in the Rigveda: the worship of Indra, Varuna, Mitra, Agni, Soma, the
Maruts and Ashvins, and other specifically Vedic deities (including Vishnu and
Rudra, who later become the most important Puranic Gods), and the main
religious rituals were the Agni rituals (homa, yajña, etc.) and
the Soma rituals. The Soma rituals are completely defunct today (in fact, even the
exact identity of Soma is debated and disputed), the Agni rituals are still
performed, but only during major ceremonies (birth, death, weddings, ritual
inaugurations of houses, etc.) and on other major occasions, and the major
Vedic Gods are minor figures of Puranic stories.
Practically every single basic feature of Hinduism
today was adopted from the religious beliefs and rituals of the other,
originally tribal, religious traditions of the people from every single corner
of India as they all converged into Hinduism. To begin with, Idol-worship
which is absolutely the central feature of Hinduism and which includes
(a) the worship of the lingam, “rude blocks of stone” with eyes painted on
them, or roughly or finely carved or cast images of stone, metal or some other
material, (b) treating the idols as living beings (bathing, dressing and
feeding them, putting them to sleep, etc.), (c) performing puja by
offering flowers, water and fruits, bananas and coconuts, clothes and ornaments
to the idols, (d) performing aarti by waving lights and incense before
the idols, (e) performing music and dance before the idols, (e) partaking of prasad
of food offered to the idols, (f) having impressive idol-temples with pillared
halls, elaborate carvings and sculptures, sacred tanks and bathing ghats,
temple festivals with palanquins and chariots, etc. (g) applying ash, sandal-paste,
turmeric, vermillion, etc. on the forehead as a mark of the idols, etc. This
entire system in all its variations was adopted from the various practices of
the people of eastern, central and southern India, along with the Gods and
idols themselves.
All the basic philosophical concepts of
mainstream Hinduism are likewise adopted from the tribal and local
populations of different parts of India: the concept of rebirth and
transmigration of souls, the concept of auspicious moments based on
the panchanga and the tithis, the worship of particular trees
and plants, animals, birds and reptiles, the worship of particular
forests, groves, mountains and rivers, the worship of ancestors in
elaborate ceremonies, etc., etc.
The spread of this Vedic religion
(ultimately Vedic only in name) from an original Pūru centre in
Haryana to all over India can in no way be treated as an invasion, any more
than the spread in later times (after 600 BCE) of Buddhism and Jainism
from an original Ikṣvāku centre in Bihar to all over India (and in the
case of Buddhism, all over Asia at one time).
And all these features in Hinduism are
not "new" or "later" developments from (or in) an original Rigvedic
kind of religion, as is generally assumed. For example, it is believed that the
philosophical culture of the Upanishads is a "later"
development from the Vedic religion: the karma kāṇḍa of
the Rigveda developing into the upāsana kāṇḍa of the Upanishads,
etc. But in actuality this culture of philosophical speculation and religious
organization was clearly a feature of the Ikṣvāku culture of the east
(just as the Vedic type religion of hymns and fire rituals was a feature
of the Pūru-Anu-Druhyu culture of the North and Northwest,
the Harappan area): here we find the development of the Upanishad
philosophies (many of the speculative philosophical discussions in the
Upanishads take place in the eastern court of the Ikṣvāku king Janaka),
of the Buddhist, Jain, Vratya and Charvaka religions
and philosophes, of the concept of Vegetarianism as a virtue, etc.
Further east of the Ikṣvāku culture was the home of Tantric
customs and religious practices. To the South, as already pointed out, was the
home of the elaborate systems of Idol-worship and Temple Culture
which are the central feature of Hinduism all over India today.
All these (and many, many more) different
aspects of the Pan-Indian Hindu Religion and Culture, and of Classical
Indian/Hindu Civilization, may appear to be "new entrants" into
an "original Rigvedic culture" if looked at from the point of view of
their chronology of appearance in the Sanskrit texts as Indian civilization
consolidated itself. But that would be like treating the areas of America and
Australia as "new areas" looked at from the point of view of their chronology
of appearance in European references. All these religious systems are probably
as old as the Vedic/Harappan culture itself: it is not mere myth which
makes the Jains talk about long lineages of Tirthankaras preceding Mahavir, or
the Buddhists refer to the many previous incarnations of the Buddha.
The Pan-Indian Hindu Religion
and Culture, and Classical Indian/Hindu Civilization, are indeed
prime examples of the popular slogan "Unity in Diversity". It is time
Indian historians learnt to accept this holistic and rational perspective of
looking at Indian history, rather than treating Indian history as a
"development" from the Vedic/Harappan culture, or alternately as a
conflict between the Vedic and other cultures which are components of the
Indian/Hindu ethos.
Footnote: Incidentally,
searching for "Harappan-type" cities in the East and South is also a
little presumptuous: the culture of the other people in the other parts of
India, e.g. the culture of the Ikṣvāku of eastern U.P. and Bihar, or the
cultures of areas further South, would naturally be different from the Pūru-Anu-Druhyu
or Harappan culture of the North and Northwest, even if equally old, and
their archaeological sites and material artifacts would be different from the
Harappan ones.
Additional section, from another blog
article with some modification, added to V. The Nature of the Spread of the
Vedic Religion in India on 29/3/2020:
As we saw, the Vedic culture and religion, in the
Vedic days, before the Hindu religion welded the entire nation into one
all-encompassing bond, was distinct from the culture of the east and the south.
Were these different aspects of our Hindu religion and culture, then, totally
unknown to each other at that time, or even hostile to each other in some way
as Hindu-hating leftist ideologues like to insist? They cannot have been
totally unknown to each other at a time when even the cultures of West Asia
were in contact with the Vedic-Harappan culture: Harappan ships travelled not
only to the ports of the Gulf, but probably into the Mediterranean Sea as well
(see my blog article "The Elephant and the Proto-Indo-European Homeland").
Is there any evidence of Vedic-Dravidian contacts in
the Vedic period? As we will see now, there definitely were such contacts.
Are there any Dravidian words at all in the Rigveda?
Seeing the geographical location of the Harappan civilization and the known
geographical location of the Dravidian languages in the South, it would be
rather difficult to see how such interaction could take place in those remote
times. The presence of the Brahui language in Baluchistan was originally the
most prominent factor cited in claiming that the Harappan area was originally
inhabited by Dravidian speaking people, but now it has been accepted that the
Brahui language actually migrated to Baluchistan from the South comparatively
recently: as Witzel points out, “its
presence has now been explained by a late migration that took place within this
millennium (Elfenbeim 1987)” (WITZEL 2000a:§1). Likewise, Southworth, even
while urging a Dravidian presence in the Harappan areas, admits that: “Hock (1975:87-8), among others, has noted
that the current locations of Brahui, Kurux and Malto may be recent”
(SOUTHWORTH 1995:272, fn22).
But there are two words in the Rigveda which,
however unpalatable it may be to Sanskrit-centric opponents of the AIT, are
very definitely linguistically Dravidian words:
1. The verbal root pūj- "to revere,
worship, respect, honour (usually an idol, with flowers)", derived from
the Dravidian, e.g. Tamil pū-, "flower", representing a form
of worship totally unknown to the Vedic culture, and representing the religion
of the South.
2. The word kāṇa, "one-eyed" or
"cross-eyed", very clearly derived from the Dravidian, e.g. Tamil kaṇ,
"eye".
It is true that civilization and culture developed
differently in different parts of the country, and the Rigvedic culture of the
northwest in its initial stages (i.e. in the Old Books,
restricted to Haryana and its immediate environs) need not necessarily show
elements from other parts of India. But what about in the period of the Mature
Harappan = New Rigvedic civilization with its far-reaching trade
contacts and relations?
Twelve years ago, in my 2008 book "The
Rigveda and the Avesta―The Final Evidence", I noted the situation as
follows: "let us accept that there may be some adstrate words of Dravidian or Austric origin in 'Indo-Aryan' ―
perhaps we protested a bit too much in our earlier books, due to the
implications sought to be drawn from such alleged 'non-Indo-Aryan' words in
Classical or even Vedic Sanskrit. The word kāṇa
'one-eyed', in the RV, for example, is obviously derived from the Dravidian
word kaṇ 'eye'. Other, not
implausible suggestions include the words daṇḍa
and kuṭa". (p.292).
As a matter of fact, an examination of the actual
Rigvedic data shows us that the Rigvedic culture did include some Dravidian
elements. These elements were not residual elements of an original Dravidian
Harappan civilization invaded and taken over by invading "Aryans", as
often suggested, they are new elements imported from the Dravidian South.
This is proved by the fact that:
1. They are not found in the Old Books, and
the geographical names in the Old Books show that Dravidian speaking
people never lived in the Harappan area before or during that period.
2. They are found as incidental elements in
the New Books, in a period which shows massive oversea trade
contacts even with foreign places like Mesopotamia (two Babylonian words: bekanāṭa,
money-lender to traders, in VIII.66.10, and manā, a unit
of measure which is still used to this day, in VIII.78.2.), and
which is the period preceding the Avestan and Mitanni eras: the
common elements with the Avesta and the Mitanni are abundantly found in the same
texts and hymns which show these incidental Dravidian elements.
3. The Indian traditions and linguistics unambiguously and very clearly connect the
people associated with these elements―actually Rigvedic rishis of Dravidian
identity― with the South. And these people are not inimical to the
Rigvedic culture but a part of it.
There seem to be at least two distinct streams of
originally Dravidian speaking rishis:
1. As we saw, the Rigveda contains two important
words―very important and common in later Sanskrit as well as in modern
Indo-Aryan, but found only once each in the Rigveda―of undoubtedly Dravidian
origin. These are:
a) The verbal root pūj-.
b) The word kāṇa.
These two words are found (both in the New
Books) as follows:
a) pūj- in VIII.17.12,
attributed to Irimbiṭhi Kāṇva,
b) kāṇa in X.155.1, attributed
to Śirimbiṭha Bhāradvāja.
It cannot be a coincidence that both the words are
composed by two different rishis with such strikingly similar, unusual and non-Indo-Aryan
names. The rishi-ascriptions in book 10 are very often garbled. In my 2000 book
"The Rigveda―A historical Analysis", pp.25-26, I had written "Maṇḍala
X is a very late Maṇḍala and stands out from the other nine Maṇḍalas in many
respects. One of these is the general ambiguity in the ascriptions of the hymns
to their composers. In respect of 44 hymns, and 2 other verses, it is virtually
impossible to even identify the family of the composer". It is clear
that the composer of X.155 is the same as the composer of VIII.17,
i.e. Irimbiṭhi Kāṇva.
The name is clearly Dravidian: in fact, we still
have a place in Kerala named Irimbiḷiyam: it is not impossible that
this, or a nearby area, is the home-area of this Rigvedic composer―more than
4000 years old! Note that there are two
more words in the same hymn, VIII.17, which have also been identified as
Dravidian:
a) -khaṇḍ- in VIII.17.12,
b) kuṇḍa in VIII.17.13,
and, to crown it all, the word muni, found
only five times in the whole of the Rigveda (thrice in one hymn
in Book 10), and referring to holy men from the non-Vedic areas of the
East and South within India, is also found in the next verse: in VIII.17.14
. That we should have so many indications in three consecutive verses is
incredible but extremely significant.
Very clearly, this rishi Irimbiṭhi is a
person from the Dravidian South who, like members of different religious orders
in present-day India who are found in parts of India other than their area of
origin, migrated to the busy cosmopolitan Mature Harappan = New
Rigvedic civilization area from the South and subsequently became a
Rigvedic rishi.
2. But Indian tradition has one more, and a very
important, rishi who is unanimously and resoundingly associated, in the
traditions of both the North and the South, with the South: Agastya.
Puranic and Epic tradition tells us that Agastya migrated to the South
and settled down there. But here is what Wikipedia has to say:
"Agastya was a revered Vedic
sage of Hinduism.[2][3] In the Indian tradition, he is a noted recluse and an influential
scholar in diverse languages of the Indian
subcontinent. He and his wife Lopamudra are the celebrated authors of hymns 1.165 to 1.191 in the Sanskrit
text Rigveda and other Vedic literature.[3][4][5]
Agastya appears in numerous itihasas and puranas
including the major Ramayana and Mahabharata.[5][6] He is one of the seven or eight most revered rishis
in the Vedic texts,[7] and is revered as one of the Tamil Siddhar
in the Shaivism tradition, who invented an early grammar of the Tamil language, Agattiyam, playing a pioneering role in the development of Tampraparniyan medicine and spirituality at Saiva centres in
proto-era Sri Lanka and South India. He is also revered in the Puranic
literature of Shaktism and Vaishnavism.[8] He is one of the Indian sages found in ancient sculpture and reliefs
in Hindu temples of South Asia, and Southeast Asia such as in the early
medieval era Shaiva temples on Java Indonesia. He is
the principal figure and Guru in the ancient Javanese language text Agastyaparva, whose 11th century version
survives.[9][10]
Agastya is traditionally attributed to be the author
of many Sanskrit texts such as the Agastya
Gita found in Varaha Purana, Agastya Samhita found embedded in Skanda Purana, and the Dvaidha-Nirnaya Tantra text.[5] He is also referred to as Mana, Kalasaja, Kumbhaja, Kumbhayoni and
Maitravaruni after his mythical origins."
Even more to the point: "The etymological
origin of Agastya has several theories. One theory states that the root […]
is derived from a flowering tree called Agati gandiflora, which is
endemic to the Indian subcontinent and is called Akatti in Tamil. This
theory suggests that Agati evolved into Agastih, and favors
Dravidian origins of the Vedic sage".
He is a "non-Aryan Dravidian whose ideas
influenced the north […] In Southern sources and the North Indian Devi-Bhagavata
Purana, his ashram
is based in Tamil Nadu, variously placed in Tirunelveli, Pothiyal hills, or Thanjavur".
Therefore, despite later legends taking him from the
North to the South, historically he was clearly a Dravidian sage from the South
who, or rather whose descendants, migrated northwards and became an important
part of the Rigvedic priesthood, being recognized as a separate and independent
family of Rigvedic rishis:
a) Tradition shows him to be different from the other
Vedic rishis, more of a recluse and a forest-dweller, who prefers to stay away
from the glamour and lucre of urban settings and royal patronage.
b) He is totally absent from the major part of the
Rigveda, and his descendants have hymns only in the New Books (mainly in
book 1, where most of the Dravidian words are found) but tradition not only
outside the Rigveda but even within the Rigveda (VII.33.10)
consistently portrays him as an ancient Rishi contemporaneous to Vasiṣṭha, with
whom he is sought to be connected in this verse.
c) The only reference to him, outside
the New books 1 and 8 (I.117.11; 170.3; 179.6;
180.8; 184.5; VIII.5.26), is an incidental one in a
Redacted Hymn, probably redacted by a descendant, in VII.33.10.
And this hymn has a Dravidian word daṇḍa in the next verse VII.33.11.
3. The arrival of the Irimbiṭhas and Agastyas
into the Rigvedic area in the Mature Harappan period seems to have brought in a
small stream of Dravidian words, which stream became a small flood in later
post-Vedic Classical Sanskrit.
The following is a list of other words allegedly of
Dravidian origin, found in the Rigveda: vaila, kiyāmbu, vriś,
cal-, bila, lip-, kaṭuka, kuṇḍṛṇācī (?), piṇḍa,
mukha, kuṭa, kūṭa, khala, ulūkhala, kāṇuka,
sīra, naḍa/naḷa, kulpha, ukha, kuṇāru,
kulāya, lāṅgala. They are found only in the New Rigveda
and in the Redacted Hymns, except for the occurrence of mukha in IV.39.6,
kulāya in VII.50.1, and kulpha in VII.50.2.
But note that Arnold (whom Hock cites as an expert on these matters) has
classified both these hymns IV.39 and VII.50 also as Redacted
Hymns on metrical grounds: so we do not find a single one of these
Dravidian words in the Old Rigveda! The references (other than those already
mentioned above: VII.33.10; IV.39 and VII.50) are
found as follows:
Redacted Hymns:
VI. 15.10; 47.23;
75.15.
III. 30.8.
IV. 57.4.
New Rigveda:
I. 11.5; 28.1,6; 29.6; 32.11;
33.1,3,3; 46.4; 97.6,7; 144.5; 162.2,13,15,19;
164.8; 174.10; 191.1,3,4.
VIII. 1.33; 43.10;
77.4.
X. 16.13; 48.7;
81.3; 85.34; 90.11; 97.6; 102.4.
Remember, these Dravidian rishis and
words are found in the New Books before 2000 BCE,
and long before the first appearance of the Mitanni in Syria-Iraq and the
Indo-European Iranians (Persians, Parthians, Medians) in Iran, and nearly
two millenniums before the Tamil Sangam Era! So the
Vedic-Dravidian relationship is an old and friendly one.
VI. Appendix 1:
The Evidence of the Indo-European Numbers
An unexpected new type of conclusive
evidence for the OIT or Indian-Homeland Theory is the evidence of the
Indo-European numbers, which I have detailed in my article "India's
Unique Place in the World of Numbers and Numerals". The relevant
evidence is given here in short.
The number system in the Indo-European
languages is a decimal system based on 10. This is the case in
most languages of the world as a natural consequence of the fact that human
beings have 10 fingers to count. Due to a minor variant method of counting on
both fingers and toes, many languages of the world also have vigesimal
number systems based on 20. Due to the influence of the
non-Indo-European Basque language (originally spoken in south-western
Europe before the arrival of Indo-European languages in the area), the Celtic
languages like Irish and Welsh have developed a vegisimal system, and the
Italic French language shows some traces of this influence:
Euskara (Basque):
1-10: bat, biga, hirur, laur,
bortz, sei, zazpi, zortzi, bederatzi, hamar
11-19: hameka, hamabi, hamahirur,
hamalaur, hamabortz, hamasei, hamazazpi, hamazortzi,
hemeretzi
20, 40, 60, 80, 100: hogei, berrogei, hiruetanogei,
lauetanogei, ehun
Other numbers: vigesimal + ta + 1-19.
Thus:
21: hogei ta bat
(20+ta+1), 99: lauetanogei ta hemeretzi (80+ta+19).
Welsh (IndoEuropean-Celtic):
1-10: un, dau, tri, pedwar,
pump, chwech, saith, wyth, naw, deg
11-15 un-ar-ddeg, deuddeg, tri-ar-ddeg,
pedwar-ar-ddeg, pymtheg
16-19 un-ar-bymtheg, dau-ar-bymtheg, tri-ar-bymtheg,
pedwar-ar-bymtheg
20, 40, 60, 80, 100: hugain, deugain, triugain,
pedwarugain, cant
The numbers from 21-99 are regularly
formed by the numbers 1-19 + ar + vigesimal (here the
units come first. Note, in Old English also, the units came first, as in the
nursery rhyme "four-and-twenty blackbirds"). Thus:
21: un ar hugain (1+ar+20) and 99: pedwar-ar-bymtheg
ar pedwarugain (19+ar+80).
Irish (IndoEuropean-Celtic):
1-10: aon, dō, trī, keathair,
kūig, sē, seakht, okht, naoi, deikh
11-19: aon-dēag (1+10), etc.
20, 40, 60, 80, 100: fikhe, dā-fhikhid,
trī-fhikhid, kheithre-fhikhid, kēad
Other numbers: the numbers 1-19 + is +
vigesimal (here also the units come first). Thus:
21: aon is fikhe, 99: naoi-deag is
kheithre-fhikhid (19+is+80).
[But the language also alternatively retains the
original Indo-European tens
numbers:
10, 20, 30, etc: deikh, fikhe, trīokha,
daikhead, kaoga, seaska, seakhtō, okhtō, nōkha,
kēad].
French (IndoEuropean-Italic)
[but only partially]:
1-10: un, deux, trois, quatre,
cinq, six, sept, huit, neuf, dix
11-19: onze, douze, treize, quatorze,
quinze, seize, dix-sept, dix-huit, dix-neuf
20-100: vingt, trente, quarante,
cinquante, soixante, soixante-dix, quatre-vingts, quatre-vingt-dix,
cent
The numbers from 21-99 are generally formed
as follows, e.g. 20: vingt, 1: un, 21: vingt
et un
The et ("and") only comes before un,
otherwise 22 vingt-deux, etc.
But note the words for 70, 80
and 90 mean "60+10", "4x20" and "4x20+10"
respectively. So the numbers 71-79 are soixante et onze, soixante-douze,
(60+11, 60+12) etc., and the numbers 91-99 are quatre-vingt-onze,
quatre-vingt-douze, (4x20+11, 4x20+12) etc. (81-89 are the normal
quatre-vingt-un, quatre-vingt-deux, etc.).
However, all the other Indo-European
languages have the original decimal system, in three stages.
There are actually four stages of development of the decimal
system, but the first stage is not recorded in any Indo-European language
(somewhat like the unrecorded PIE language), however, it is found in
certain other non-Indo-European languages in India, and it is logical
that the earliest PIE must have had this system.
A. The First Decimal Stage:
In the first decimal stage, the language has numbers for 1-10 and a
number for 100. The other numbers in between are formed from these eleven
words (directly or by some other system). This system is primarily found in the
Sino-Tibetan languages (Chinese, Tibetan, Thai, etc.) and in some Austric
languages (Vietnamese, etc), including the Santali language in India,
and is also found in different individual languages all over the world:
Santali (Austric-KolMunda):
1-10: mit', bar, pɛ, pon,
mɔrɛ, turūi, ēāe, irәl, arɛ, gɛl
tens 20-90: bar-gɛl, etc. 100: mit-sae
Other numbers: tens+khān+unit.
Thus: 11: gɛl khān mit', 21: bar-gɛl khān mit', 99: arɛ-gɛl khān arɛ
[Alternately, the other numbers can be
formed without inserting the word khān]
[If English had used this system, the
following, in its simplest form, would have been the way the other numbers
would have been formed: 11=ten-one, 20=two-ten, 21=two-ten-one,
99=nine-ten-nine].
B. The Second Decimal Stage:
In the second decimal stage, the language has numbers for 1-10, for the
tens numbers 20-90, and for 100. The other numbers in between are
formed from these twenty words (directly or by some other system). This
system is primarily found in the Altaic languages (Turkish, Mongolian,
Manchu, Korean, Japanese), and is also found in different individual languages
all over the world.
Among Indo-European languages, this
system is found only in Sanskrit, although camouflaged to some extent by
the highly inflectional nature (i.e. the rules of sandhi) of the
language, and in actual spoken (as opposed to the artificial literary) Sinhalese
to the south and Tocharian B to the north:
Sanskrit:
1-9: eka, dvi, tri, catur,
pañca, ṣaṭ, sapta, aṣṭa, nava
tens 10-90: daśa, viṁśati, triṁśat,
catvāriṁśat, pañcāśat, ṣaṣṭi, saptati, aśīti,
navati, śatam
Other numbers: units-form+tens.
[The tens do not undergo any change in
combination, with the sole exception of the word for 16, where -daśa
becomes -ḍaśa in combination with ṣaḍ-. And, by the regular Sanskrit phonetic rules
of sandhi or word-combination, in the unit-form+tens
combinations for 80-, a-+-a becomes ā, and i-+-a
becomes ya, so 81: ekāśīti, 82: dvyaśīti, etc].
Units-forms:
1 eka: ekā- (11), eka-
(21,31,41,51,61,71,81,91).
2 dvi: dvā- (11,22,32), dvi-
(42,52,62,72,82,92).
3 tri: trayo- (13,23,33), tri-
(43,53,63,73,83,93).
4 catur: catur- (14,24,84,94), catus-
(34), catuś- (44) catuḥ- (54,64,74).
5 pañca: pañca- (15,25,35,45,55,65,75,85,95).
6 ṣaṭ: ṣo- (16), ṣaḍ- (26,86), ṣaṭ-
(36,46,56,66,76), ṣaṇ- (96).
7 sapta: sapta- (17,27,37,47,57,67,77,87,97).
8 aṣṭa: aṣṭā- (18,28,38,48,58,68,78,88,98).
9 nava: ūna- (19,29,39,49,59,69,79,89), nava-
(99).
Spoken Sinhalese:
1-9: eka, deka, tuna,
hatara, pasa, haya, hata, aṭa, navaya
tens 10-100: dahaya, vissa,
tisa, hatalisa, panasa, hɛṭa, hɛttɛɛva, asūva,
anūva, siyaya
tens-stems 10-100: daha-, visi-,
tis-, hatalis-, panas-, hɛṭa-, hɛttɛɛ-, asū-,
anū-, siya-
The
other numbers are regularly formed tens-stem + unit.
Thus:
11: daha-eka, 21: visi-eka, 99: anū-navaya
Tocharian B:
1-10: se, wi, trai,
śtwer, piś, ska, sukt, okt, ñu, śak
11-19: ten + unit. Thus
11: śak-se.
20: ikäm.
[Being an extinct language found only in
documents, nothing is known about the exact form of the other numbers]
[If English had used this system, the
following, in its simplest form, would have been the way the other numbers
would have been formed: 11=ten-one, 20=twenty, 21=twenty-one, 99=ninety-nine].
C. The Third Decimal Stage:
In the third decimal stage, due to influence from neighboring non-Indo-European
languages with vigesimal number systems (like Burushaski in the
northwest, and Austric languages like Turi and Saora in the
east), the numbers from 11-19 came to be formed in a different way from
subsequent sets (21-29, 31-39, 41-49, etc.). In this third decimal stage, the
language has numbers for 1-10, for the tens numbers 20-90, and
for 100. The numbers 11-19 are formed in one way, and the other numbers
in between (21-29, 31-39, 41-49, etc.) are formed in a different way (directly
or by some other system). This system is primarily found in two
language-families of the world: Indo-European and Dravidian,
although.it is also found in different individual languages all over the world.
The strange thing is that this system is
found universally in all the 8 branches of Indo-European languages outside
India other than Indo-Aryan and Tocharian and the Celtic
languages which, as we saw, have adopted a vigesimal system from Basque
(nothing is known about the exact numbers in Hittite); and in Indo-Aryan,
it is found in only one language: the one Indo-Aryan language
which migrated out of North India: literary Sinhalese.
Consider the following examples from
each of these 9 branches and from literary Sinhalese:
Persian (IndoEuropean-Iranian):
1-10: yak, dū, si, cahār,
pañj, shish, haft, hasht, nuh, dah
11-19: yāzdah, davāzdah, sīzdah,
chahārdah, pānzdah, shānzdah, hīvdah, hījdah,
nūzdah
tens 20-100: bīst, sī, chihil, pañjāh,
shast, haftād, hashtād, navad, sad
Other numbers: tens+u+unit. Thus 21: bīst
u yak, 99: navad u
nuh
Armenian (IndoEuropean-ThracoPhrygian):
1-10: mēk, erkou, erekh, chors,
hing, veçh, eòthә, outhә, inә, tas
11-19: tasnmēk, tasnerkou, tasnerekh,
tasnchors, tasnhing, tasnveçh, tasneòthә, tasnouthә,
tasninә
tens 20-100: khsan, eresoun, kharrasoun,
yisoun, vathsoun, eòthanasoun, outhsoun, innsoun,
hariur
Other numbers: tens+unit. Thus: 21: khsan mēk, 99: innsoun inә
Ancient Greek (IndoEuropean-Hellenic):
1-10: heîs/mía/hen (m/f/n), dúo,
treîs, téssares, pénte, héks, heptá, oktṓ,
ennéa, déka
11-19: héndeka, dṓdeka, treîs-kaì-déka,
téssares-kaì-déka, pentekaídeka, hekkaídeka,
heptakaídeka, oktokaídeka, enneakaídeka
tens 20-100: eíkosi, triákonta, tessarákonta,
pentḗkonta, heksḗkonta, hebdomḗkonta, ogdoḗkonta, enenḗkonta,
hekatón
Other numbers: tens+kaì+unit or unit+kaì+tens.
Either form can be used. Thus:
21: eíkosi kaì heîs or heîs kaì
eíkosi, 99: enenḗkonta kaì
ennéa, or ennéa kaì enenḗkonta
[Note: Greek vowels have a tonal accent, which is
marked. A special form for neuter 4: téssara]
Albanian (IndoEuropean-Illyrian):
1-10: një, dy, tre, katër,
pesë, gjashtë, shtatë, tetë, nënd, dhjëte
1-18: një-mbë-dhjëte, etc. 19: nëntë-mbë-dhjëte
tens 20-100: njëzet, tridhjet, dyzet,
pesë-dhjet, gjashtë-dhjet, shtatë-dhjet, tetë-dhjet,
nënd-dhjet, një-qind
Other numbers: tens+e+unit. Thus 21: njëzet
e një, 99: nënd-dhjet
e nënd
[Note: 20 and 40 seem to be formed on a principle of
1x20, 2x20].
Russian
(IndoEuropean-Slavic):
1-10: odin, dva, tri, cyetyrye,
pyat', shyest', syem', vosyem', dyevyat', dyesyat'
11-19: odin-nadçat', dvye-nadçat', tri-nadçat',
cyetyr-nadçat', pyat-nadçat', shyest-nadçat', syem-nadçat',
vosyem-nadçat', dyevyatnadçat'
tens 20-100: dvadçat', tridçat', sorok,
pyat'-dyesyat, shyest'-dyesyat, syem'-dyesyat, vosyem'-dyesyat,
dyevyanosto, sto
Other numbers: tens+unit: Thus 21: dvadçat' odin, 99: dyevyanosto dyevyat'
Lithuanian (IndoEuropean-Baltic):
1-10: vienas, du, trys, keturi,
penki, šeši, septyni, aštuoni, devyni, dešimtis
11-19: vienuolika, dvylika, trylika,keturiolika,
penkiolika, šešiolika, septyniolika, aštuoniolika, devyniolika
tens 20-100: dvidešimt, trisdešimt, keturiasdešimt,
penkiasdešimt, šešiasdešimt, septyniasdešimt, aštuoniasdešimt,
devyniasdešimt, šimtas
Other numbers: tens+unit. Thus 21: dvidešimt
vienas, 99: devyniasdešimt devyni
German (IndoEuropean-Germanic):
1-10: eins, zwei, drei, vier,
fünf, sechs, sieben, acht, neun, zehn
11-19: elf, zwölf, dreizehn, vierzehn,
fünfzehn, sechzehn, siebzehn, achtzehn, neunzehn
tens 20-100: zwanzig, dreissig, vierzig,
fünfzig, sechzig, siebzig, achtzig, neunzig,
hundert
Other numbers: unit+und+tens (as one word,
but eins becomes ein). Thus:
21: einundzwanzig, 99: neunundneunzig
Spanish (IndoEuropean-Italic):
1-10: uno/una, dos, tres,
cuatro, cinco, séis, siete, ocho, nueve,
diez
11-19: once, doce, trece, catorce,
quince, dieciséis, diecisiete, dieciocho, diecinueve
tens 20-100: veinte, treinta, cuarenta,
cincuenta, sesenta, setenta, ochenta, noventa,
ciento
Other numbers: 21-29: vienti-uno, etc.
Others: tens+y+unit. Thus:
31: treinta y uno, 99: noventa y nueve
Literary Sinhalese
(IndoEuropean-IndoAryan):
1-9: eka, deka, tuna, hatara,
pasa, haya, hata, aṭa, navaya, dahaya
1-9 unit stems: ek-, de-, tun-,
hatara-, pas-, ha-, hat-, aṭa-, nava-
11-19: ekoḷaha, doḷaha, teḷaha,
tudaha, pahaḷoha, soḷaha, hataḷoha, aṭaḷoha,
ekun-vissa
tens 10-100: dahaya, vissa, tisa,
hatalisa, panasa, hɛṭa, hɛttɛɛva, asūva, anūva,
siyaya
Other numbers: unit-stem+tens. Thus the
word-order for all the numbers is unit+tens.
[And, like Sanskrit and Latin (and the
other modern Indo-Aryan languages which retain this feature), the number
-9 is expressed by a minus-principle, where ekun- is used with the following
tens-form (except, as in Sanskrit and most other modern
Indo-Aryan languages, for 99)].
Thus: 21: ek-vissa, 89: ekun-anūva. Only 99 is nava-anūva.
To understand how this third stage
represents a transformation from the second stage, note the difference
between how Sanskrit forms the words for 11 and 12, and the way all
other Indo-European and Dravidian languages form the words for 11 and 12:
Sanskrit: 1= eka,
2= dvā, 10= daśa. 11= ekā-daśa,
12= dvā-daśa. (This is a straight combination, and just
like later formations: e.g. 21= eka-viṁśati, 22= dvā-viṁśati,
from 20= viṁśati).
All Other Indo-European and
Dravidian languages (of the third and fourth stages):
English: 1= one,
2= two, 10= ten. 11= eleven,
12= twelve.
Spanish: 1= uno,
2= dos, 10= diez. 11= once,
12= doce.
Persian: 1= yak,
2= dū, 10= dah. 11= yāzdah,
12= davāzdah.
Lit. Sinhalese: 1= eka,
2= deka, 10= dahaya. 11= ekoḷaha,
12= doḷaha.
Telugu: 1= okaṭi,
2= reṇḍu, 10= padi. 11= padakoṇḍu,
12= panneṇḍu.
Hindi: 1= ek,
2= do, 10= das. 11= gyārah,
12= bārah.
In all these languages, the words for 11
and 12 are fused together, sometimes to the extent that the original words for
1, 2 and 10 are not directly recognizable in the combinations. And in all
the other Indo-European languages (other than Sanskrit, Tocharian
B and Spoken Sinhalese of the second stage, and of
course the Indo-Aryan languages of North India of the fourth stage) and all
the Dravidian languages, the later formations (21-29, 31-39,
etc.) follow a regular pattern of formation, which is different
from the pattern of formation of 11-19.
D. The Fourth Decimal Stage:
In the fourth decimal stage, found only in the Indo-Aryan languages of North India (i.e. not even in
the Indo-Aryan language which migrated out of North India in very
ancient times: Sinhalese), the language has numbers for 1-10, for
the tens numbers 20-90, and for 100. The numbers 11-19 are formed
in one way, and the other numbers in between (21-29, 31-39, 41-49, etc.) are
formed in a different way, but not directly or by any regular system.
So, unique in the whole world, it becomes necessary to individually learn by heart
every single one of the numbers 1-100.
Examine the three following examples, Hindi,
Marathi and Gujarati. Compare the difference in the forms in the
three languages:
Hindi:
1-9: ek, do, tīn, cār, pāñc,
chah, sāt, āṭh, nau
11-19: gyārah, bārah, terah, caudah,
pandrah, solah, satārah, aṭhārah, unnīs
tens 10-100: das, bīs, tīs, cālīs,
pacās, sāṭh, sattar, assī, nabbe, sau
The other numbers are formed by unit-form+tens-form,
e.g. 21: ek+bīs = ikk-īs. The word ek here takes
the form ikk-, and the word bīs takes the form -īs.
The different changes taking place in the tens
forms as well as the units form in the numbers 21-99 must be
noted:
Tens forms:
20 bīs: -īs (21,22,23,25,27,28), -bīs
(24,26).
30 tīs: -tīs (29,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38).
40 cālīs: -tālīs (39,41,43,45,47,48), -yālīs
(42, 46), -vālīs (44).
50 pacās: -cās (49), -van
(51,52,54,57,58), -pan (53,55,56).
60 sāṭh: -saṭh (59,61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68).
70 sattar: -hattar (69,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78).
80 assī: -āsī (79,81,82,83,84,85,86,87,88,89).
90 nabbe: -nave (91,92,93,94,95,96,97,98,99).
Unit forms:
1 ek: ikk- (21), ikat- (31), ik-
(41,61,71), iky- (81), ikyā- (51,91).
2 do: bā- (22,52,62,92), bat- (32), ba-
(42,72), bay- (82).
3 tīn:
te- (23), ten- (33,43), tir- (53,63,83), ti- (73), tirā-
(93).
4 cār: cau- (24,54,74), ca- (44), caun-
(34,64), caur- (84), caurā- (94).
5 pāñc: pacc- (25), paĩ- (35,45,65), pac-
(55,75,85), pañcā- (95).
6 che: chab- (26), chat- (36), chi-
(46,76), chap- (56), chiyā- (66,96), chiy- (86).
7 sāt: sattā- (27,57,97), saĩ-
(37,47), saḍ- (67), sat- (77), satt- (87).
8 āṭh: aṭṭhā- (28,58,98), aḍ-
(38,48,68), aṭh- (78,88).
9 nau: un- (29,39,59,69,79), unan-
(49), nav- (89), ninyā- (99).
Marathi:
1-9: ek, don, tīn, cār, pāç,
sahā, sāt, āṭh, naū
11-19: akrā, bārā, terā, çaudā,
pandhrā, soḷā, satrā, aṭhrā, ekoṇīs
tens 10-100: dahā, vīs, tīs, cāḷīs,
pannās, sāṭh, sattar, aĩśī, navvad, śambhar
The other numbers are formed by unit-form+tens-form,
e.g. 21: ek+vīs = ek-vīs.
The different changes taking place in the tens
forms as well as the units form in the numbers 21-99 must be
noted:
Tens forms:
20 vīs: -vīs (21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28).
30 tīs: -tīs (29,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38).
40 cāḷīs: -cāḷīs (39,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48).
50 pannās: -pannās (49), -vanna
(51,52,55,57,58), -panna (53,54,56).
60 sāṭh: - sāṭh (59), -saṣṭa
(61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68).
70 sattar: -sattar (69), -hattar
(71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78).
80 aĩśī: -aĩśī (79,81,82,83,84,85,86,87,88).
90 navvad: -navvad (89), -ṇṇav
(91,92,93,94,95,96,97,98,99).
Unit forms:
1 ek: ek- (21,31,61), ekke- (41), ekkyā-
(81,91), ekkā- (51,71).
2 don: bā- (22,52,62,72), bat- (32), be-
(42), byā- (82,92).
3 tīn:
te- (23), teha- (33), tre- (43,53,63), tryā-
(73,83,93).
4 cār: co- (24), çau- (34,54,64), çavve-
(44), çauryā- (74,84,94).
5 pāç: pañc- (25), pas- (35), pañce-
(45), pañçā- (55), pā- (65), pañcyā (75,85,95) .
6 sahā: sav- (26), chat- (36), sehe-
(46), chap- (56), sahā- (66), śahā- (76,86,96).
7 sāt: sattā- (27,57), sada- (37), satte-
(47), sadu- (67), sattyā- (77,87,97).
8 āṭh: aṭṭhā- (28,58), aḍ- (38), aṭṭhe-
(48), aḍu- (68), aṭṭhyā- (78,88,98).
9 naū: ekoṇ- (29,39,49,59,69,79,89), navvyā-
(99).
Gujarati:
1-9: ek, be, traṇ, cār, pāñc,
cha, sāt, āṭh, nav
11-19: agyār, bār, ter, caud,
pandar, soḷ, sattar, aḍhār, ogṇis
tens 10-100: das, vīs, trīs, cālīs,
pacās, sāīṭh, sitter, ẽsī, nevũ, so
The other numbers are formed by unit-form+tens-form,
e.g. 21: ek+vīs = ek-vīs.
The different changes taking place in the tens
forms as well as the units form in the numbers 21-99 must be
noted:
Tens forms:
20 vīs: -īs (25), -vīs
(21,22,23,24,26,27,28).
30 trīs: -trīs (29,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38).
40 cālīs: -tālīs (41,42,43,45,46,47,48), -cālīs
(39), -ālīs (44).
50 pacās: -pacās (49), -van
(51,52,55,57,58), -pan (53,54,56).
60 sāīṭh: -sāṭh (59), saṭh
(61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68).
70 sitter:
sitter (69), -oter
(71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78).
80 ẽsī:
ẽsī (79), -āsī
(81,82,83,84,85,86,87,88,89).
90 nevũ:
-ṇu (91,92,93,94,95,97,98,99), -nnu (96).
Unit forms:
1 ek: ek- (21,41,61,71), eka- (31), ekā-
(51,91), eky- (81).
2 be: bā- (22,52,62,92), ba- (32), be-
(42), b- (72), by- (82).
3 traṇ:
te- (23,33), tre- (43,53,63), ty- (83), t- (73), trā-
(93).
4 cār: co- (24,34,54,64), cum-
(44,74), cory- (84), corā- (94).
5 pāñc: pacc- (25), pāã- (35,65), pis-
(45), pañc- (75,85), pañcā- (55,95).
6 cha: cha- (26,36.96), che- (46), chap-
(56), chā- (66), chay- (86), ch- (76).
7 sāt: sattā- (27,57,97), saḍa- (37), suḍ-
(47), saḍ- (67), sity- (77,87).
8 āṭh: aṭṭhā- (28,58,98), aḍ- (48,68),
aḍa- (38), iṭhy- (78,88).
9 nav: ogaṇ- (29,39,49,59), agṇo-
(69), ogṇā- (79), nevy- (89), navvā- (99).
The same irregularity or inflectional complexity can
be seen in the formation of the numbers between 21 and 99 in all
the Indo-Aryan languages of North India (right up to Kashmiri in the
extreme north, and going so far westwards as to influence the Pashto language
in the northwest which, although it belongs to the Iranian branch, has
also been influenced by the Indo-Aryan cerebral sounds), but is
found nowhere else outside the sphere of North India . Note that the
irregularity of the fusion of the forms in one Indo-Aryan language do not
correspond to those in another Indo-Aryan language. Thus, ek (1) has one
form (ek-) in Marathi in 21, 31 and 61, but Hindi has three different
forms ikk- (in 21), ikat- (in 31) and ik- (in 61), and
Gujarati has two forms ek- (in 21,61) and eka- (in 31). Or pāñc
(5) has one form (paĩ-) in Hindi
in 35, 45 and 65, and Gujarati has two forms pāã- (in 35,65) and pis-
(in 45), but Marathi pāç (5) has three different forms pas- (in
35), pañce- (in 45) and pā- (in 65).
We have shown the numbers 21-99 in these
three Indo-Aryan languages in classified table form, but obviously it is
simpler to learn each individual number by rote than with the help of these
classification tables.
This is in sharp contrast with all the
other languages in the world other than the Indo-Aryan languages of North India. In all
the other languages, it is necessary to learn by heart at the most the numbers
from 1-10, or from 1-19, and the tens forms (20,30,40,50,60,70,80,90).
All the numbers between 21 and 99 are formed from these numbers
by some sort of regular process which does not require
all these individual numbers to be learnt by heart. This is the case with all
other languages, including all the other non-Indo-European Indian languages
(Dravidian, Austric, Sino-Tibetan, Burushaski. The Andamanese languages, as
already pointed out, do not have numbers beyond 3 or 5) as well
as all the non-Indian Indo-European languages (spoken outside India),
including even the Indo-Aryan Sinhalese language (both spoken and
literary) spoken to the south of India.
Here we get a clear and irrefutable case
for the OIT or the Indian Homeland Theory of Indo-European languages:
1. The earliest form of the original PIE
language was probably in the First Decimal Stage. Unless it had already
evolved to the Second Decimal Stage. As the language is not recorded, we
have no definite evidence about how it formed the numbers after 10.
2. The two earliest migrant branches
from the Homeland were definitely in the Second Decimal Stage. We have
no recorded evidence about Anatolian (Hittite) for numbers above
10, but we have already seen the evidence of Tocharian B. We also have
the evidence of the oldest recorded Indo-Aryan language Sanskrit,
and of spoken Sinhalese. [As I have always pointed out, Sinhalese
is a very archaic Indo-European language, which retains archaisms like the word
watura for "water", lost already even in Sanskrit].
3. All the other 9 Indo-European
branches (Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Baltic, Slavic,
Albanian, Greek, Armenian, Iranian, although
Celtic in southwest Europe later adopted a vigesimal system under the
influence of Basque) as well as the only Indo-Aryan language
emigrating from North India, literary Sinhalese, were in the Third
Decimal Stage. Also, the Dravidian languages of South India are in
the Third Decimal Stage. This shows that all these languages evolved
together into the Third Decimal Stage in India― after
the emigration in the Second Decimal Stage of Hittite and Tocharian
and the standardization of Sanskrit.
4. The Indo-Aryan languages which
continued to evolve in North India after the emigration of the
other 11 branches, as well as its own Indo-Aryan Sinhalese language, are
in the Fourth Decimal Stage.
Special Note: the numeral
"One":
In this connection, let us take one more example, of
the Indo-European words for the very first numeral "one", and see
what it indicates. The majority of Indo-European languages have words for
"one" which are derived from two reconstructed proto-Indo-European
words: *oi-no and *oi-ko, which are prominent in
the non-Indo-Iranian and the Indo-Iranian branches respectively (these
are the two divisions suggested by linguists for identifying "early
Indo-European" words). Thus the word *oi-no is not represented
in the Indo-Iranian languages at all, and the word *oi-ko is not
represented in the non-Indo-Iranian languages at all (unless the
Armenian word mek is taken to represent it).
But there is one language which has alternate forms
comparable to both *oi-no and *oi-ko, and this is
the non-Indo-European language Burushaski spoken in northern (Pak-occupied)
Kashmir. Burushaski "one"= hin (or hǝn) and hik.
Note also that the Dravidian languages generally have forms comparable to *oi-no:
Tamil on-ru, Malayalam on-nu, Kannada on-du, Tulu on-ji.
But Telugu by contrast has oka-ṭi. Does all this, perhaps, indicate the
location of the *oi-no-*oi-ko area where the non-Indo-Iranian
branches split away from the Indo-Iranians?
There are some Indo-European words for "one"
which are not derived from either *oi-no or *oi-ko.
But almost all of these are connected with the Sanskrit words sama and eva,
both of which mean "same". Thus Tocharian A to the north of Kashmir
has sas (masculine) and säm (feminine): Tocharian B has a common se.
The Greek heis (masculine) is obviously cognate to the Tocharian sas.
Avestan to the west of India had aeva and Old Persian had aiwa;
and some modern Iranian languages and a few Dardic languages have eva-forms—
e.g. modern Dardic Bashgali, which has ev and Iranian Pashto which has yaw
(although most modern Iranian and Dardic languages, including modern Persian yak,
Baluchi yak, Tajik yak, Kurdish yek, and Kashmiri akh,
have the normal *oi-ko forms). Thus all the evidence seems to
point towards India.
But there are still two major
Indo-European words which remain: Greek mía (neuter) and the Armenian
word mi or mek. Compare the Austric (Kol-Munda) words for
"one": Santali mit, Mundari mií, Korku mīa,
Kharia moi, Savara mi, Juang min, Gadaba muirō.
Could the Greek and Armenian words be derivatives of the Austric words? The
Austric words are certainly the original, for a cognate word môt is
attested by the Austric Vietnamese language, and muǝy by
the Austric Khmer (Cambodian) language.
VII. Appendix 2:
The Evidence of Animal and Plant Names
In
the linguistic debate on the subject of the Proto-Indo-European Homeland, the
discussion of flora and fauna holds a special position. As Mallory and Adams
put it: "generally, those concerned with locating the Indo-European
homeland through its lexicon tend to employ the evidence of its reconstructed
fauna […] and flora" (MALLORY-ADAMS:2006:131).
We
will examine the different aspects of this evidence as follows:
A.
Temperate vs. Tropical Flora and Fauna
B.
Eastern vs. Western Flora and Fauna Within the Rigveda and Vedic texts
C.
PIE Flora and Fauna of the North-west and Beyond
D.
The Evidence of Soma
E.
The Evidence of Honey
F.
The Evidence of Wine and Aurochs
G.
The Evidence of the Horse
H.
The Evidence of the Cow
[It
must be noted that all this evidence is given in full detail in my article
"The Elephant and the Proto-Indo-European Homeland". Here we
only see a short basic summary of the evidence―as short as possible].
A.
Temperate vs. Tropical Flora and Fauna:
Temperate
Flora and Fauna:
It
is generally argued that the evidence of the animal and plant names shows a
homeland in the Steppe areas far outside India, since the different IE branches
have common names for animals and trees of the "temperate" regions
but not of tropical or semi-tropical areas like India.
Michael
Witzel, for example, tells us: “Generally, the PIE plants and animals are
those of the temperate climate” (WITZEL 2005:372), and that in the Rigveda
"words such as those for ‘wolf’
and ‘snow’ rather indicate linguistic memories of a colder climate" (WITZEL 2005:373).
Witzel
further argues that “we do not find any typical Old Indian words beyond
South Asia, neither in the closely related Old Iranian, nor in Eastern or
Western IE […] In an OIT scenario, one would expect ‘emigrant’ Indian
words such as those for lion, tiger, elephant, leopard, lotus, bamboo, or some
local Indian trees, even if some of them would have been preserved, not for the
original item, but for a similar one (e.g. English [red] squirrel > North
American [gray] squirrel)” (WITZEL 2005:364-365). He reiterates this
argument later: “the search for Indian plant names in the west, such as
lotus, bamboo, Indian trees (aśvattha, bilva, jambu,
etc.), comes up with nothing. Such names are simply not to be found, also not
in a new meaning” (WITZEL 2005:373).
This
is in total disregard of the fact that most languages generally only
preserve the names for animals and trees found in their territory and not for
those found in other territories. In short, no Indo-Aryan language has a
name for an animal or plant found in the Steppes of South Russia and not found
in India, and, to paraphrase Witzel above: "the search for Steppe plant
names in India also comes up with nothing. Such names are simply not to be
found, also not in a new meaning".
About the wolf and snow: the fact is
that the wolf is as much a native of the major part of India as of Steppe areas
with cold climates. When Rudyard Kipling wrote the Jungle Book, featuring a boy
called Mowgli raised in the jungle by wolves, he was talking about an Indian
boy raised in an Indian jungle by Indian wolves: although Kipling actually was
from Britain, the wolves in his story did not represent "linguistic
memories" of British wolves.
And "snow" is found in India
as much as in the western areas. As per the Encyclopaedia Britannica, India has
"the largest area, outside of the Polar regions, under permanent ice
and snow": the Himalayas. And snow is not a "linguistic
memory" of the past in the Rigveda: it is mentioned in the Rigveda only
once or twice in the New Books, after the Vedic Aryans expanded
westwards past the Punjab into Afghanistan and the northwestern Himalayas from
their Haryana homeland: The word hima, in 10 verses
in the Rigveda (I.34.1; 64.14; 116.8; 119.6; II.33.2;
V.54.15; VI.48.8; VIII.73.3; X.37.10;
68.10), means "winter" (and winter is also not a
"linguistic memory": it is a season occuring in every corner of
India, and eg. the derived Marathi word for
"winter" is hivāḷā.
Further, far from depicting "memories" of a cold climate, in 4 of the
references, the verses talk about the Indian winter offering relief from the
burning heat of the Indian summer. Notably the only reference in the
three Oldest Books, VI.48.8 above, is in a Redacted Hymn),
and it is only in a very late reference in X.121.4 (a
reference to the snow-covered mountains of the Himalayas or the northwest) that
it means "snow", and in another reference in a New
Book, in VIII.32.26, it could possibly refer to a weapon made of ice.
Note
the multiple fraud in Witzel's argument:
1.
Witzel argues that the absence of names of Indian flora and fauna in IE
languages outside India disproves an Indian Homeland (which, as we will see
presently, is not strictly factual since names for many typical Indian animals
like the elephant, tiger leopard, lion, ape, etc. are found
outside India). But he clearly knows why the logic behind his argument (even if
it is accepted as factual) is fake, since, shortly afterwards, he rejects the
counter-argument that the names of "most of the IE plants and animals
are not found in India" by arguing that this is because their names
"have simply not been used any longer and have died out"
(WITZEL 2005:374). So clearly, to paraphrase his own words, if "most of
the Indian plants and animals are not found in Iran or Europe” it is only
because their names “have simply not been used any longer and have died out"!
2.
To compound his fake argument with a lie, he further argues that "The hypothetical
emigrants from the subcontinent would have taken with them a host of 'Indian'
words ― as the gypsies (Roma, Sinti) indeed have done." (WITZEL
2005:364-365). But he does not give the gypsy (Roma, Sinti) words for typical
Indian flora and fauna (demanded by him for the languages of Europe and Iran)
"such as lotus, bamboo, Indian trees (aśvattha, bilva, jambu,
etc.)" or "such as those for lion, tiger, elephant, leopard,
lotus, bamboo, or some local Indian trees, even if some of them would have been
preserved, not for the original item, but for a similar one", since he
is aware that in actual fact these names are "simply not to be found,
also not in a new meaning" in these languages as well! Instead,
clearly fully conscious of the fact that he is lying, he tries to substantiate
his claim with ludicrous examples: "The Gypsies, after all, have kept a
large IA vocabulary alive, over the past 1000 years or so, during their
wanderings all over the Near East, North Africa and Europe (e.g. phral
'brother', pani 'water', karal 'he does')" (WITZEL
2005:366)! The gypsies migrated from deeper inside India just over a thousand
years ago, and their language, Romany, is an Indo-Aryan language. If
even Romany does not preserve these words, isn't it fraudulent to insist as an
argument that languages from the other 11 branches of IE languages, migrating
thousands of years ago from the outer northwestern parts of India, should have
preserved those words?
Therefore,
generally, it would not be possible to locate the Indo-European homeland
on the basis of an analysis of names of fauna and flora, since each group of
speakers of Indo-European languages would only preserve names for animals and
plants found in their actual historical habitats and not for those found in
some ancient long-forgotten homeland.
Indo-Aryan
has common IE names for animals and plants of the temperate areas (the wolf,
bear, lynx, fox/jackal, deer/elk, bull, cow, hare, squirrel, otter, beaver,
mouse, duck/swan, dog, cat, horse, bull/cow, goat, sheep, pig, etc.) because
all these animals are found in India, or, where they (and their names) are
not found within India, they are found in areas to the immediate north-west of
India within the Indian cultural sphere, which, in any OIT scenario, would form
a part of the secondary homeland which the other branches would have to inhabit
and pass through in their movement out from India.
Note
also the following: Dyens talks about "some clues regarding where the
Proto-Indo-European languages had been spoken: the Indo-European languages and
words for certain flora and fauna (bears and beech trees are well-known
examples). By plotting on a map the natural environment of these diagnostic
flora and fauna, philologists established that the Indo-European Homeland was a
fairly primitive place in the temperate zone" (DYENS 1988:4).
In
the particular example quoted above, for example, the reference to "bears
and beech trees" as being typical examples of the flora and fauna
which establish the Homeland in the "temperate zone" illustrates the
circularity and fraud behind the arguments:
1.
Beech trees are found only in Europe, and the so-called PIE word for the
beech tree is also found only in Europe! The cognate words for
"beech", from the reconstructed PIE form *bhaHk'o-,
are found only in the five European branches (Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Baltic,
Slavic), and even among them, the Baltic and Slavic forms seem to be borrowed
from Germanic (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:534). Greek and Albanian have different words
for "beech", and the forms which seem to be derived from *bhaHk'o-
mean "oak". The word is totally missing in all the Asiatic branches:
Anatolian, Tocharian, Armenian, Iranian and Indo-Aryan. And yet, a "beech
argument" is being discussed since over a century, claiming that a common
proto-form for "beech" proves a "temperate zone" European
Homeland!
2.
Bears are treated as indicators of a "temperate zone" Homeland in the
Steppes. In actual fact:
a)
There are eight species of bear in the world. Three of them are restricted to
places outside the historical IE areas: ursus americanus (the American black
bear, to North America), tremarctos ornatus (the spectacled bear, to
South America) and ailuropoda melanoleuca (the panda bear, to Tibet and
China―actually to the north of India). A fourth species, ursus maritimus
(the polar bear) is restricted to the arctic areas, but this does include
Scandinavia. One species, ursus arctos (the old world brown bear) is
found all over the historical IE world (including Europe, the Steppes of South
Russia, Anatolia, and India). The three other bears, ursus thibetanus
(the Himalayan black bear), helarctos malayanus (the Malayan sun bear),
and melursus ursinus (the sloth bear) are all found in parts of India:
the third, in fact, only in India (and Sri Lanka). So India has four
species of bears, and the "temperate zone" Steppe region has only one!
b)
Further, the common PIE root *h2ṛetk- from which the common
words for bear are derived (PIE *h2ṛtkos-, Vedic ṛkṣa-,
Avestan arəšə-, Greek arktos, Latin ursus, Old Irish art,
Armenian ar, Hittite hartagga) "is otherwise seen only
in Skt. rakṣas- 'destruction, damage, night demon'" (MALLORY-ADAMS
2006:138) but nowhere in the other eleven branches!
Tropical,
Semi-Tropical or Indian Flora and Fauna:
But
ironically, and unfortunately for all these polemicists, there are
certain animals in the reconstructed names of Proto-Indo-European fauna which
are found in India but not in the Steppes, and which point unmistakably to an
Indian rather than a South Russian Steppe (or even Anatolian) homeland: the
tiger, lion, leopard, ape and elephant. Discussions on the reconstructed
fauna and its implications usually ignore these names, or argue against them:
The
tiger: *wy(H)āghras, is found in
three branches: Indo-Aryan vyāghra-, Iranian (Persian) babr, and
Armenian vagr (borrowed into the non-Indo-European Caucasian Georgian
language as vigr).
The
lion: *sinĝhos, is found in two
branches: Indo-Aryan siṁha-, and Armenian inj (with a transfer of
name to the leopard).
The
leopard: *perd, is found in four
branches: Indo-Aryan pṛdāku, Greek pardos/pardalis,
Iranian Persian fars-, and Anatolian (Hittite) paršana.
The
monkey: *qhe/oph, is found
in four branches: with the initial *qhe in Indo-Aryan kapí- and
Greek kēpos, and without it in Germanic (e.g. Old Icelandic) api
and Slavic (e.g. Old Russian) opica.
And
most important of all:
The
elephant: *leHbho-nth- or *ḷHbho-nth-
is found directly in at least four branches: Indo-Aryan íbha-, Greek eléphas
(Mycenean Greek erepa), Italic (Latin) ebur, and Hittite laḫpa-
(all with alternate meaning, or a word transfer to, "ivory"). With a
transfer of meaning to "camel", it is found in two more branches:
Germanic (e.g. Gothic) ulbandus, and Slavic (e.g. Old Church Slavic) velibodŭ.
These
reconstructed PIE animal names go against the establishment theory that the
environment depicted by the reconstructed PIE fauna is that of the cold or
temperate areas of the north. Hence most AIT supporters (including the staunch
but racist-casteist Hindus) fraudulently ignore these names in their
discussions and wax eloquent on the reconstructed names of animals (and trees)
found in the temperate areas, but also found in India!
But
most important of all is the name of the elephant:
1.
The word is found distributed over the entire spectrum of Indo-European
languages: it is found (a) in both Asia and Europe, (b) in both the
south-easternmost branch (Indo-Aryan) as well as the north-westernmost one
(Germanic), (c) in all the oldest recorded Indo-European languages: in
"the earliest attested Indo-European languages, i.e. Hittite, Mycenaean
Greek and Indo-Aryan" (MALLORY-ADAMS 2006:99), as well as in the
oldest attested European branch languages in every part of Europe: the south
(Latin), north (Gothic), and east (Old
Church Slavic).
As
per Mallory and Adams, the criterion for determining a word to be definitely
Proto-Indo-European is "if there are cognates between Anatolian and any
[one] other Indo-European language", to which
they add: "This rule will not please everyone, but it will be applied
here" (MALLORY-ADAMS 2006:109-110): here there are cognates for the
elephant in Anatolian (Hittite) and five other branches!
2.
Unlike the other animals named above, the elephant is found in only one
of the historical Indo-European habitats: that of Indo-Aryan.
There are two distinct species of elephants: the Indian elephant (elaphas
maximus), found in India and in areas to its east (i.e. southeast Asia),
and the African elephant (loxodonta africana), found in sub-Saharan
Africa, in both cases far from the historical habitats of all the other
branches of IE languages other than Indo-Aryan.
The
above facts about the PIE elephant, in conjunction with the names of the four
other animals named above (and see later the evidence of other animal names),
constitute clinching evidence for the Indian homeland theory as opposed to the
Steppe (South Russian) homeland theory; but it is testimony to the motivated
nature of the discussion on the subject of the PIE homeland that the evidence
of the elephant in the Rigveda is just "the elephant in the living
room" for most scholars, who write as if they don't know it exists.
The
desperate attempts of the scholars to stonewall the evidence of the elephant,
and the untenability of those attempts, have been dealt with in full detail in
my article "The Elephant and the Proto-Indo-European Homeland",
and in the same article I have also detailed the extreme antiquity and
prevalence of the elephant culture in the hymns of the Rigveda.
The
elephant is found in the Rigveda, in both the Old and New Books, already with
three distinct names: íbha-, vāraṇá, and hastín. [Later on
there are many more: gaja, mātaṅga, kuñjara, dantī,
nāga, karī, etc. In the Rigveda itself, Griffith and Wilson
translate two more words as "elephant": apsah in VIII.45.56
and sṛṇí in X.106.6].
It
is clearly a very familiar animal fully integral to the traditional
culture and environment of the Vedic people: IV.16.14 compares
Indra's might to that of a mighty elephant, and at least three verses (I.64.7;
140.2; VIII.33.8) refer to a wild elephant crashing its
way through the forests and bushes: in the third reference the elephant is
"rushing on this way and that way, mad with heat" (GRIFFITH). X.40.4
refers to hunters following two wild elephants. I.84.17 refers to
household elephants as part of the possessions of a wealthy householder, IV.4.1
refers to royal elephants as part of the entourage of a mighty king, and IX.57.3
refers to a ceremonial elephant being decked up by the people. VI.20.8
refers to battle elephants, or, at least to elephants in the course of the
description of a battle.
The
importance of elephants and ivory in the Rigvedic culture and economy (see the
above article "The Elephant and the Proto-Indo-European Homeland"
for details) encompasses other Rigvedic words like tugra, bhujyu, ibhya,
vetasu, daśoṇi, ṛbhu, etc.
Most
significantly, the etymology of the common name for elephant/ivory
speaks volumes: the reconstructed PIE form is *lebh/*ḷbhonth-. This is the Sanskrit root √ṛabh-/√labh-.
In
an Indian homeland hypothesis, the elephant would be a very important animal
not just from around the period of the separation and migration of the
Indo-European dialects, but from long before that. The word would therefore not
be just an old Rigvedic word (as its distribution in the texts
shows it to be) but a very much pre-Rigvedic (and pre-PIE)
word. That this is so is proved by the fact that the word ibha- has no
known etymological derivation: Pāṇini does not give the etymological
derivation of the word, and its meaning is given in his Uṇādi-Sūtra-s
(which lists words not derived by him from verbal roots) as hastī
"elephant". Usually this would be taken (in an AIT scenario) as a
word borrowed by incoming "Aryan invaders" from some local language,
but in this case (apart from the fact that it has cognates in other IE
branches) the word is not found in any non-IE Indian language.
Therefore,
in this case, the only option is that ibha- is that rare type of Vedic
word: a word so old that it has already undergone a process of Prakritization
in the Rigveda. The logical pre-Prakritization form of ibha- would be *ṛbha-.
As the more regularly settled meaning of *ṛbha- was "tusk,
ivory" (as it is in Hittite laḫpa-, Latin ebur, Myc. Greek erepa,
and one of the two meanings of Greek elephas and Rigvedic ibha-,
the other meaning being "elephant" itself) the suffix in Greek elephantas
and the Germanic words (ulbandus-, etc., and the related Slavic words)
would be explained by the suffix -vanta: *ṛbha-vanta would
be "tusker".
In
the Rigveda, we have a related word: ṛbhu-, which refers to a race of
semi-divine artisans (identified etymologically and mythologically with the elf
of Germanic mythology and folklore). As per Macdonell, the word ṛbhu-
comes "from the root rabh, to grasp, thus means 'handy',
'dexterous'" (MACDONELL 1897:133). The root (due to r/l
alternation in the Vedic language) has two forms in the Rigveda, √rabh
and √labh, both meaning the same thing: √rabh:
"to take hold of, grasp, clasp, embrace" (MONIER-WILLIAMS
1899:867) and √labh: "to take, seize, catch"
(MONIER-WILLIAMS 1899:896). [A regular epithet of the ṛbhu-s is su-hastah
"deft-handed" (IV.33.8; 35.3,9; V.42.12;
VII.35.12; X.66.10)].
The
word ibha- ~ *ṛbha- is thus also derived from the root √rabh,√labh:
in this case, we have an advantage over Pāṇini as we also have the
modern comparative evidence of the word as found in other IE languages. This
not only explains the Vedic etymology of the word ibha-, it also
explains the PIE etymology: i.e. the l-element in the Greek and Hittite
versions (and the reconstructed PIE form *lebh-). [Note
that ibha, also derived from the meaning "handy, dexterous",
thus actually has the same sense as the later word hastin. This is
ironic since the very transparent descriptive etymology of hastin has
often been used as a rather pedestrian argument for it being a "new"
word coined by "invading Aryans" for a "new" animal
encountered by them in India].
The
ancient importance of ivory-trading in India explains the dual meaning of ibha-
in the Rigveda: ibha- "elephant/ivory" (*ṛbha- from √rabh,√labh),
ibhya "rich" (rabhya, labhya): the root √labh
is, in later times, regularly associated with profit, wealth and riches, and the
Goddess of wealth, Lakṣmī, is regularly depicted surrounded by elephants
(and even bears the names lābha-lakṣmī and gaja-lakṣmī).
The
word ṛbhu is likewise "said […] also of property or
wealth, RV.iv,37,5; viii,93,34" (MONIER-WILLIAMS 1899:226), and is
translated as "wealth" in the two verses (IV.37.5;
VIII.93.34) by, e.g., Wilson and Griffith.
In
short, the elephant alone by itself constitutes absolutely conclusive evidence
for the OIT or Indian Homeland Theory.
B.
Eastern vs. Western Flora and Fauna Within the Rigveda and Vedic texts:
A
look at some important Rigvedic fauna of the Old Books vis-a-vis the New Books
is very enlightening:
EASTERN
FAUNA:
First
of all, take the following eastern animals which are native to
the eastern interior areas of India but not native to the
north-west (i.e. Afghanistan and beyond): the elephant (ibha-, vāraṇa,
hastin), the Indian bison (gaura), the peacock (mayūra),
the buffalo (mahiṣa) and the spotted deer or chital (pṛṣatī/pṛṣadaśva).
References
to these eastern or Indian animals are found in every single
book and period of the Rigveda. :
1. Old Hymns in Old Books 2,3,4,6,7: 16
Hymns, 17 verses.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 2 Hymns, 3 verses.
3. New Hymns in New Books
1,5,8,9,10: 56 Hymns, 63 verses.
Old
Books:
VI.8.4; 17.11; 20.8.
III.45.1; 46.2.
VII.40.3; 44.5; 69.6; 98.1.
IV.4.1; 16.14; 18.11; 21.8.
II.22.1; 34.3,4; 36.2.
Redacted
Hymns:
III.26.4,6;
IV.58.2.
New
Books:
V.42.15; 55.6; 57.3; 58.6; 60.2;
78.2.
I.16.5; 37.2; 39.6; 64.7,8;
84.17; 85.4,5; 87.4; 89.7; 95.9; 121.2;
140.2; 141.3; 186.8; 191.14.
VIII.1.25; 4.3; 7.28; 12.8; 33.8;
35.7; 45.24; 69.15; 77.10; 87.1,4.
IX.33.1; 57.3; 69.3; 73.2; 82.3;
86.25,40; 87.7; 92.6; 95.4; 96.6,18,19; 97.41,57;
113.3.
X.5.2; 8.1; 28.10; 40.4; 45.3;
49.4; 51.6; 54.4; 60.3; 65.8; 106.2; 128.8;
140.6; 189.2.
WESTERN
FAUNA:
There
are the western animals found only to the north-west of India
(Kashmir and areas to its west, the NWFP and Afghanistan), at least in the
context of Rigvedic geography (for that matter, wild mountain goats are
found in the eastern Himalayas, and the Nilgiri Tahr is found as far south as
in the Nilgiri hills of Tamilnadu; and wild boars are also found in the south
and east): the mountain goat (chāga), the sheep (meṣa) and lamb (urā),
the Bactrian camel (uṣṭra), the Afghan horse (mathra), and the
wild boar (varāha). Most of the names of these north-western animals, unlike
the names of the eastern animals that we just saw above, are found in the
Avesta as well: maēša (sheep), ura (lamb), uštra (camel)
and varāza (boar).
The
western animals are found mentioned only in the New Books―and
are even missing in the oldest of these, the Family Book 5―and therefore
clearly represent animals of the north-west which were unfamiliar to the
Vedic Aryans until they moved out into the north-west from their original areas
in the east:
1. Old Hymns in Old Books 2,3,4,6,7: 0
Hymns, 0 verses.
2. Redacted Hymns in Books
2,3,4,6,7: 0 Hymns, 0 verses.
3. New Hymns in New Books
1,5,8,9,10: 33 Hymns, 35 verses.
New
Books:
I. 29.5; 43.6; 51.1; 52.1; 61.7;
88.5; 114.5; 116.16; 117.17,18; 121.11; 138.2;
162.3.
VIII. 2.40; 5.37; 6.48; 34.3; 46.22,23;
56.3; 66.8; 77.10; 85.7; 97.12.
IX. 8.5; 86.47; 97.7; 107.11.
X. 27.17; 28.4; 67.7; 86.4; 91.14;
99.6; 106.5.
As we go deeper into the matter, the western domesticated ass (gardabha, rāsabha) and the boar (sūkara)
are found as follows―only in the Redacted Hymns and New Books, but missing
in the Old Books [Note Avestan hūkara, Tocharian kercapo. The
Avestan name for the ass (xara) is found only later in the Sutras (khara)]:
Redacted
Hymns:
III. 53.5.23.
VII. 55.4.
New
Books:
I. 34.9; 116.2; 162.21;
VIII. 85.7.
While
sheep were not familiar to the Vedic Aryans in the east, they
were acquainted with wool which was imported from the west, alongwith soma
which was filtered through it. The acquaintance increased as they expanded
westwards. The following is the distribution of the regular PIE word ávi-,
with the meaning "sheep", in the Rigveda, the word ávi-, and
its derived words ávya-, ávyaya-, and avyáya-, all
signifying "woollen filters" (for filtering the Soma juice), and the
regular PIE word for "wool" (with cognates in most of the IE
branches), ūrṇa-/ūrṇā-.
The
words are missing in the Old Hymns in the three Oldest Books 6,3,7, and
found only in the Middle old Books 4,2, the Redacted Hymns, and the New Books:
Old
Hymns:
IV. 2.5; 22.2.
II. 36.1
Redacted
Hymns:
VI. 15.16.
New
Hymns:
V. 5.4; 52.9; 61.5.
I. 126.7; I.135.6.
VIII. 2.2; 56.3; 97.2.
IX. 6.1,5; 7.6; 12.4; 13.1,6; 16.6,8;
20.1; 28.1; 36.4; 37.3; 38.1; 45.5; 49.4;
50.2,3; 52.2; 61.17; 62.8; 63.10,19; 64.5,25;
66.9,11,28; 67.4,5,20; 68.7; 69.34,9; 70.7,8;
74.9; 75.4; 78.1; 82.1; 85.5; 86.3,8,11,13,25,31,34,48;
91.1,2; 92.4; 96.13; 97.3,4,12,16,19,31,40,56; 98.2,3;
99.5; 100.4; 101.16; 103.2,3; 106.10,11; 107.2,10,17,22,68;
108.5; 109.7,16; 110.10.
X. 18.10; 26.6; 75.8; 90.10.
OTHER INDIAN FAUNA:
Meanwhile,
it may be noted there are many other purely native Indo-Aryan (i.e. IE)
names for many purely, though not exclusively eastern, Indian animals in
the Rigveda:
siṁha (lion)
śiṁśumāra (Gangetic or river dolphin)
sālāvṛka (hyaena)
These
are found distributed all over the Rigveda:
I. 64.8; 95.5; 116.18; 174.3.
III. 2.11; 9.4; 26.5.
IV. 16.14.
V. 74.4; 83.3.
VII.18.7.
IX. 89.3; 97.28.
X. 28.4,10; 67.9; 73.3; 95.15.
There
are also some animal names which are not found within the hymns of the Rigveda,
but appear only in or as personal names of particular persons rather than in
references to the animals themselves (though they refer to the animals
themselves in the Yajurveda and Atharvaveda):
kaśyapa (tortoise)
kapi (monkey)
vyāghra (tiger)
pṛdāku (leopard).
Other
such Indian animals with purely Indo-Aryan names, which do not appear in
any reference in the Rigveda, are mentioned in the Yajurveda and Atharvaveda:
śārdūla (tiger)
khaḍga (rhinoceros)
ajagara (python)
nākra (crocodile)
kṛkalāsa (chameleon)
nakula (mongoose)
jahakā (hedgehog)
śalyaka (porcupine)
kūrma (tortoise)
jatū (bat), etc.
Note: it is not intended to provide here a list of all animals
named in the Rigveda: this would include the names for many of the animals
common to India as well as Europe: the wolf, bear, lynx, fox/jackal, deer/elk,
bull, cow, hare, squirrel, mouse, duck/swan, dog, cat, horse, mule, bull/cow,
snake, fishes, various birds and insects, etc., some of which can have multiple
names in the Rigveda and the other Samhitas (e.g "deer"/
"antelope": ruru, eṇi, ṛśya, hariṇa,
etc.). Generally, we will only discuss animal names relevant to the AIT/OIT
debate. But the following Indo-Aryan names of some birds, in the Rigveda
(where specified) or at least in the Yajurveda and Atharvaveda, may be noted:
cakravāka (brahminy duck. II.39.3)
ulūka (owl, VII.104.22; X.165.4)
anyavāpa (cuckoo)
kṛkavāku (cock)
kapota (pigeon, I.30.4; X.165.1-5)
kapiñjala/tittiri (partridge)
kalaviṅka (sparrow)
kaṅka/krauñca (crane)
cāṣa (wagtail, X.97.13)
śyena/suparṇa (eagle, multiple references)
gṛdhra (vulture, many references)
śuka (parrot), etc.
PLANTS AND TREES:
In spite of all the talk about "temperate"
plants and trees in the PIE vocabulary, the Rigveda does not contain the name of a
single reconstructed, or otherwise, western plant or tree. In fact, it refers to a great many eastern
plants and trees, native to India and extremely important to
this day in Indian religion or commerce, with purely Indo-Aryan names.
In
the Rigveda we have:
śiṁśapa (dalbergia sissoo, the sissoo or shisham or North
Indian rosewood tree)
khadira (acacia catechu, the heartwood tree)
śalmalī (salmalia malabaricum, the silk-cotton tree)
kiṁṣuka, parṇa (butea monosperma, the flame-of-the
forest)
śimbala
(again salmalia malabaricum,
the silk-cotton tree)
vibhīdaka (terminalia bellerica, the belleric myrobalan or behra)
araṭva (terminalia arjuna, the arjuna tree)
aśvattha, pippala (ficus religiosa, the sacred fig
tree, the peepal)
urvāruka (cucumis sativus, the cucumber)
vetasa (calamus rotang or rattan/cane, used in cane
furniture)
darbha, muñja, śarya, sairya, kuśara, vairiṇa
(Indian grasses).
These
above are found in the Rigveda as follows:
I. 135.8; 164.20; 191.3.
III. 53.92;22.
IV. 58.5.
VII. 50.3; 59.12; 86.6.
VIII.46.27.
X. 85.20; 97.5.
The
Yajurveda and Atharvaveda mention many more important Indian plants and trees
with purely Indo-Aryan names:
ikṣu (saccharum officinale, the sugarcane plant)
bilva (aegle marmelos, the bael fruit plant)
nyagrodha (ficus benghalensis, the banyan tree)
śamī (prosopis cineraria, the shami tree)
plakṣa (ficus infectora, the white fig tree)
pippalī (piper longum, long pepper, an important spice).
Not
to mention a very long list of Indian medicinal herbs mentioned in the
Atharvaveda, clearly representing an ancient heritage of a long period of local
medicinal traditions. In short, the flora and fauna of the eastern interior
of India form the heart of the Rigveda (and this is amplified by the data
in the subsequent Samhitas: the Yajurveda and Atharvaveda), while the flora and
fauna of the northwest make only a very late appearance on the Rigvedic
horizon.
Incidentally,
the Vedic Aryans, according to the Rigveda, used Indian timbers in the
manufacture of different parts of the chariot: śiṁśapa (dalbergia
sissoo, the sissoo or shisham or North Indian rosewood tree), khadira
(acacia catechu, the heartwood tree), śalmalī (salmalia
malabaricum, the silk-cotton tree) and kiṁṣuka (butea monosperma,
the flame-of-the forest). On the other hand, in the case of the "Egyptian
war chariot", Tarr points out that "the timbers in question
were not of Egyptian origin but ‘came from the north’. […] The timbers
used were holm-oak for the axle and the spokes, elm for the pole, ash for the
felloes, the chassis and the dashboard, hornbeam for the yoke and birch bark
for wrapping and for joining the spokes with the felloes and the hub […] The
wooden material of the Egyptian chariots came from the Caucasus" (TARR
1969:74).
C.
PIE Flora and Fauna of the North-west and Beyond:
Al
this brings into focus the utter disconnect between the data analyzed above and
the case which has been presented by western Indologists all these years (or
rather for the last more than a century): the refrain about the reconstructed
PIE flora and fauna depicting a "temperate zone" area, on the grounds
that the reconstructed list includes only "temperate zone" flora and
fauna and not tropical ones or peculiarly Indian ones, has been a recurring
argument in spite of the fact that even many prominent western Indologists and
scholars from the earliest days, who basically accepted the AIT, rejected it as
illogical and plain stupid (Weber 1857, Keith 1933, Dolgopolsky 1987, etc). As
they reasonably pointed out, any people travelling from one particular area to
a new and distant one would naturally (over the course of centuries) forget
about the flora and fauna of their original area if those were not present in
the new area. The point is that the reconstructed flora and fauna considered
by the Indologists are found in both India and Europe, so it cannot in
itself indicate that the movement was from India to Europe or from Europe to
India.
But
Witzel further argues that many of these "temperate zone" words, in
spite of not being typical of the Rigvedic area, are found in
post-Rigvedic Sanskrit, and some more (though missing in Sanskrit) are
found in Iranian. So he argues that such words "rather indicate
linguistic memories of a colder climate than an export of words, such as that
for the high altitude Kashmirian birch tree, to Iran, Central Asia and Europe”
(WITZEL 2005:373). His point is that many of the common PIE words represent
things which are not typical "for the Panjab or the Indian plains"
(i.e. the Vedic area), and they are found not just in European languages but
even in Iranian languages, so they cannot have been taken there by westward
migrating people from inside the Vedic area. According to him, it fits in with
the AIT in which the "incoming Indo-Iranians" retained
European or Steppe words till the borders of India and the Indo-Aryans
alone lost them after entering India.
But
the main trouble with Witzel is that he is, all the time, answering an OIT
theory which would make the Vedic/Sanskrit language, of "the Panjab or
the Indian plains", the ancestor of all the IE languages of the world. But that (linguistically extremely unsound) theory
is not our theory, and nor does it accord with the recorded data. The
recorded data shows that the Vedic Aryans, living in Haryana and further east,
spoke a Pūru dialect (Vedic) of that area; while the speakers of
the ancestral forms of the other IE branches spoke various Anu and Druhyu
languages and dialects which were spoken in areas further west and
northwest, and had words (many of them in common with each other) for
northwestern flora and fauna (and doubtless many other items of vocabulary) peculiar
to their areas but missing in Vedic.
The
proof for this, in fact, is that many of these words are missing in the Rigveda
or its earlier parts, and only entered the Vedic language (or subsequent
Sanskrit) as the Vedic Indo-Aryans expanded northwestwards. More western words
along the same trajectory, in areas in which the Indo-Aryans never expanded (or
expanded only superficially) may reasonably be found in many other IE branches
(including Iranian) but not found at all in either Vedic, later Sanskrit
or the still later Indian languages.
The
chronology of appearance or occurrence of the names of flora and fauna follows
a distinct pattern:
1.
Flora and fauna peculiar to the interior of India
(elephant, chital/spotted deer, Indian bison, buffalo, peacock, lion, brahminy
duck, arjuna tree, silk-cotton tree) are found right from the Old Books
(6,3,7,4,2). These flora and fauna would not be very likely to be found
among the Anu and Druhyu of the northwest to begin with, and
would certainly stand very little chance of being retained by the (Anu
and Druhyu) languages and dialects after centuries of migrations and
settlement in distant areas where these flora and fauna are totally unknown:
note that even the Indo-Aryan Gypsy/Sinti/Romany lost the words for
these flora and fauna within a thousand years.
2.
Peculiarly "common Indo-Iranian" words for northwestern flora
and fauna appear later only in the New Books (5,1,8,9,10), or even later:
Vedic meṣa (sheep), urā (lamb), uṣṭra (camel), varāha
(boar) and sūkara (pig), kaśyapa (turtle), khara (ass), jahāka
(hedgehog) = Avestan maēša, ura, uštra, varāza, hūkara,
kassiapa, xara, dužuka, etc. These words represent the
common northwestern vocabulary of the New Books (or later) and the Avesta (or
Iranian in general).
3.
The much flaunted "temperate zone" PIE words for flora and fauna of
the northwest only appear in the Rigveda in the New Books (5,1,8,9,10), or
even later:
a)
As we saw, "old" PIE words like ávi- and ūrṇa-/ ūrṇā-,
with cognates in most other IE branches, are missing in the three
Oldest Books and appear only in the New Books or, at best, first appear only in
Book 4 which represents the westernmost thrust of Indo-Aryan expansion during
the period of Sudās' descendants Sahadeva and Somaka and the battle "beyond
the Sarayu" (IV.30.18) in Afghanistan.
b)
Witzel refers to the wolf and ice as "linguistic memories of a colder
climate". As we already saw earlier, wolves are found over most of
India, so this is an extremely stupid statement. As for ice (and snow): ice and
snow appear in the Rigveda only in the New Books.
c)
The word bhūrja for "birch", which Witzel refers to, is
missing in the Rigveda, and appears for the first time in the Yajurveda.
Significantly, the name is well represented in the Dardic, Nuristani and
Iranian languages of the extreme north and northwest: "in the Dardic languages
of mountainous northwestern India we have Phalura brhuǰ,
Dameli brūš, Gawar-Bati bluz 'birch'
(Mayrhofer 1963:11.514-15); Waigali bruǰ 'birch' (Morgenstierne
1954:238), Khotanese Saka braṁja 'birch', bruṁjə
'birchbark', Wakhi (Pamir Iranian) furz, Sanglechi barež,
Shugni baruǰ 'birch', Os. bærz/bærzæ 'birch',
Pashto barǰ 'birchbark band', Tajik burz, burs 'juniper'
(with semantic transfer)" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:531-532). Again and
again, we have this evidence of northwestern words entering the Rigveda in its
later parts (or in later Sanskrit texts) as the Vedic Indo-Aryans expanded
northwestwards.
4.
The Avesta has a vocabulary starting from the period of the New Books of the
Rigveda (as we have seen in detail in my earlier blog article "The
Recorded History of the Indo-European Migrations―Part 2, The chronology and
geography of the Rigveda"). But the Avesta represents an even
later chronological stage than the New Books, since by the time of
composition of the Avesta the proto-Iranians have moved out into Afghanistan
and are in contact with more western areas and with more western IE words: i.e.
with Anu words developed in common with the other Anu groups (Greek,
Armenian, Albanian to the west) and even local words developed in
common with, or adopted from, the Druhyu groups (Slavic, Baltic,
Germanic, Celtic, Italic, to the north). The development
of common Iranian-Druhyu words (missing in Indo-Aryan) took place in the
snowy mountainous regions of Afghanistan and Central Asia, and some of the
words clearly reflect this situation:
Av.
bərəz- "hill, mountain" with cognates in Slavic, Germanic and
Celtic.
Av.
snaēzaiti "snows" (verb) with cognates in Germanic, Celtic and
Italic (and also Greek).
Av.
aēxa "frost, ice" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic and
Germanic.
Oss.
tajyn "thaw, melt" (verb) with cognates in Slavic, Germanic,
Celtic and Italic (and also Greek and Armenian).
Av.
udra "otter" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic and Germanic.
Av.
bawra-/bawri- "beaver" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic,
Germanic, Celtic and Italic.
Oss.
wyzyn "hedgehog" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic and Germanic
(and also Greek and Armenian).
Oss.
læsæg "salmon" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic and Germanic
(and also Armenian).
Av.
θβərəsa- "boar" with cognates in Celtic.
Av.
pərəsa- "piglet" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic, Germanic,
Celtic and Italic.
Pehl.
wabz- "wasp" with cognates in Slavic, Baltic, Germanic, Celtic
and Italic.
Av.
staora- "steer" with cognates in Germanic.
[Witzel
repeatedly cites the name of the non-Indian beaver (Old English bebr,
beofor, Latin fiber, Lithuanian bēbrus, Russian bobr,
bebr, and Avestan baβri) with the name of the Indian mongoose
(Sanskrit babhru) as evidence for the AIT (WITZEL 2005:374). But the
common non-Indian word, in the OIT scenario, developed in the region of
Afghanistan and Central Asia, among the European dialects and proto-Iranian.
And there is no case for any movement of the name into India: the word babhru
occurs in the Rigveda, and in Mitanni IA, but as a name for a
particular horse-colour. In the east, the colour word (in much later
Sanskrit) was separately used as a name for the mongoose, but this
cannot be as part of an Aryan movement into India in an AIT scenario, because
in that case, the Aryans would have remembered the Rigvedic word babhru
(which, seeing that it is also found in the Mitanni IA language, supposed, in
the AIT scenario, to have separated from Vedic in Central Asia itself before
the separation of the proto-Iranians, makes the meaning quite old and
consistent) rather than a long-forgotten non-Indian use of the word for a beaver-like
animal in a distant land before an immigration already forgotten even in the
Rigveda. And, as Gamkrelidze points out, after a short discussion: “It is
notable that the Indo-Iranian languages are split by this isogloss: Sanskrit
shows the more archaic situation, while Avestan displays the innovation”
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:448).]
That
the mountainous region of Afghanistan and Central Asia was a central part of
the PIE Homeland is indicated in detail by Gamkrelidze and Ivanov (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:525-531), who point out the primary position of the oak tree, oak forests,
high mountain oaks struck by lightning and the presence of a tempestuous "all-powerful
thunder-deity who bore the name of the mountain oak" (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:529) in the reconstructed environment of the PIE Homeland. They actually
place the Homeland much further west, in Anatolia to be exact, but they point
out that the landscape indicated by the data stretches over the area "including
the Transcaucasus, Iran and Afghanistan" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:529). The
oak tree is of great importance in this reconstructed environment: Gamkrelidze examines
the oak tree first among the common PIE trees, and points out that the
reconstructed common PIE form (*t'e/orw-, *t're/ou-) for
"tree/wood" (Skt. dru-/ druma-/ dāru-/ taru-)
has cognates in eight branches (Anatolian, Tocharian, Baltic,
Slavic, Germanic, Indo-Aryan, Iranian, Greek),
but in three historically diverse branches (Celtic, Albanian and Greek)
the name for "oak" is derived from this reconstructed form (Greek
has both the words, "tree" as well as "oak", derived from
the same proto-form). The Armenian and Italic branches preserve
the word for "wood" in the adjective "hard" as applied to
wood, thus the word originally meant "tree/wood" in all
the branches, but is specifically applied to the oak in three branches.
[Note:
the original word for "tree" (*t'e/orw-, *t're/ou-)
remained "tree/wood" in nine of the twelve IE branches. In three
other branches, the meaning became "oak", one of them being Celtic.
The same root gave birth to the word Dru-hyu, the Rigvedic/Puranic name
of the speakers of the five European branches―Slavic, Baltic, Germanic,
Celtic and Italic―in "the mountainous region
inhabited by these ancient Indo-European tribes" in Afghanistan and
Central Asia, as well as to the connected word dru-i/dru-id, the
name of the priestly classes of these tribes (still retained by the Celts
in Ireland)].
5.
But there is another reconstructed word (*pherkhou-)
meaning "oak/oak forest/forest/mountain forest" (but never
"wood"): the word means "oak" in Italic, Celtic and
Indo-Aryan (Skt. parkaṭī-, actually a name of the white fig tree, but
Punjabi pargāi refers to the holly oak, quercus ilex), and the
word has a transferred meaning to "fir/pine/tree/forest" in Germanic:
the Germanic, e.g. English, word for "forest" is itself derived from
this word. The reconstructed PIE word is derived from the root *pheru-
"cliff/mountain/rock" (found in Sanskrit and Hittite) from which we
also get the Sanskrit parvata- "mountain". The name of a
common PIE thunder-god is derived from the same two words (with a suffix,
as *pherkhou/n- and *pheru/n-):
Indo-Aryan (Vedic) Parjanya, Baltic Perkūnas, Slavic Perun,
Germanic Fjǫrgyn (mother of the thunder-god Thor). As Gamkrelidze points
out: "The connection between the Proto-Indo-European thunder-god *pher(kho)u-n-
and terms for 'mountain oak, 'oak forest on mountain-top', 'mountain', 'cliff',
*pher(kho)u-, can be explained if we assume the ancient
mythological pattern of lightning striking great oaks on mountain-tops. This
view must reflect some recurrent feature of the mountainous region inhabited by
the ancient Indo-European tribes" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:528).
So
does all this prove that the Rigveda contains "linguistic memories"
of "the mountainous region inhabited by the ancient Indo-European
tribes" in Afghanistan and Central Asia, or much further beyond? On
the contrary:
1.
The oak, by any name, is totally missing in the Rigveda and in fact in any
Vedic text. The word parkaṭī-, when it does appear in much later
Classical Sanskrit texts, means the Indian white fig tree, ficus infectora,
already mentioned in the Atharvaveda with the name plakṣa-. The name is
however found in Punjab in much later times as pargāī, one of the many
names of a species of oak tree, the holly oak (quercus ilex), a tree
native to the Mediterranean, and therefore clearly a name imported at a very
late date from the west.
2.
There are clearly two "thunder-gods" in the Rigveda: Indra and
Parjanya. The name Indra has its origin in the word indu-
"drop", and therefore he is a thunder-god associated with the actual
rain-drops, and (apart from the fact that he is basically restricted to the
Indo-Aryan branch) is clearly a god of the monsoon region of Haryana and its
interior areas. The name Parjanya (apart from the fact that it has
equivalents in three other European branches) has its origins, as we saw, in
the oak-forests of the north-western mountains.
Indologists
and AIT scholars, with their inverted logic, classify Parjanya as the
original PIE and therefore also Vedic thunder-god because he is found in
Slavic, Baltic and Germanic mythology as well, and Indra
as a "new" thunder-god who increasingly replaced the original PIE
thunder-god in India. The facts, however, indicate the opposite picture:
a)
Indra is the most important deity in the Rigveda, and has over 250 hymns
addressed to him or glorifying him (out of a total of 1028 hymns in the
Rigveda). Parjanya has only 3 hymns addressed to him or glorifying him.
Even more significantly, while Indra is present in every part of the text,
old and new, and is mentioned (by this name alone, not counting his
other numerous special epithets) 2415 times in 538 hymns, Parjanya
is mentioned only 36 times in the following 25 hymns:
Old
Books (6,3,7,4,2):
IV.57.8.
VI.49.6; 50.12; 52,6,16; 75.15.
VII.35.10; 101.5; 102.1,2; 103.1.
New
Books (5,1,8,9,10):
V.53.6; 63.4,6; 83.1-5,9.
I.38.9,14; 164.51.
VIII.6.1; 21.8; 102.5.
IX.2.9; 22.2; 82.3; 113.3.
X.65.9; 66.6,10; 98.1,8; 169.2.
It
will be seen that all the references except one (VII.35.10)
are in New Books or in Redacted Hymns (underlined), and include the notoriously
late hymns towards the end of Books 4,6 and 7 (there being no reference to Parjanya
at all in Books 2 and 3). The sole exception (VII.35.10) is
clearly just a case of a late added name in a long list of deities in a
Viśvedeva ("all-gods") hymn.
This
proves that Parjanya is a deity of the northwest who entered
the Rigveda in the period of the New Books, as the Vedic Indo-Aryans expanded
northwestwards into the mountainous areas from the monsoon area in Haryana and
east. As the deity is found only in Slavic, Baltic and Germanic,
it also confirms the presence of (at least the remnants of) the ancestral Slavic,
Baltic and Germanic dialects in Central Asia during the period of
the New Books of the Rigveda.
b)
Further, while Indra is otherwise found only in Indo-Aryan (and, by
opposition, as a demon in the rival Iranian tradition recorded in the Avesta),
he is also represented in Hittite mythology in the name of the goddess Inara
who helps the (unnamed) rain god to kill the Great Serpent who was interfering
with the rainfall. Hittite (Anatolian) was linguistically the first
IE branch to separate from the other branches in any hypothetical Homeland;
and the presence of Inara in Hittite mythology confirms either the
greater antiquity of Indra (to Parjanya), or the presence of the
proto-Hittites in Central Asia at the time of the north-westward expansion of
the Vedic Aryans, or both.
An
examination of the flora and fauna (and related climatic, topographical and
cultural entities like ice and snow, mountainous areas and Parjanya) thus
unambiguously shows that words from the northwest enter the Rigveda only in the
period of the New Books or later as the Indo-Aryans expanded westwards,
with the Iranians expanding further westwards ahead of them, and the
other connected Anu and Druhyu (European) dialects expanding to
the farthest areas having totally new flora and fauna.
D.
The Evidence of Soma:
The
Soma rituals were an important part of the Rigveda as well as of Iranian
religion. The Soma plant was probably a
species of ephedra found in the extreme northwestern parts of the
Himalayas extending westwards to Central Asia and beyond. Species
of ephedra found further eastwards (in the Himalayas) were not capable of
yielding the kind of juice described in the Rigveda. Hence, according to the
Indologists, the fact that the ritual use of Soma formed such an integral part
of the Rigvedic religion (and that this feature is shared with the Iranians)
proves that the Vedic Aryans entered India from the northwest, bringing the
Soma plant and cult with them.
However, the evidence in the Rigveda shows that:
1. The Soma plant and its rituals were an extraneous
cult originally introduced to the Vedic Aryans and their priests in the east in
very early times by the Bhṛgu, priests of the Anu Iranians from
the Soma-growing areas to their northwest.
2. The actual Soma-growing areas were distant and unknown
to the Vedic Aryans in the Old Books of the Rigveda, and became known to
them only later after they expanded westwards.
3. The expansion of the Vedic Aryans (and, by a chain of events, the
dispersal of the Indo-Europeans) into the west and northwest was a direct
consequence of their quest for Soma.
1. The special priests of the Vedic Aryans (i.e. of the Bharatas)
were the Aṅgiras, Vasiṣṭha and Viśvāmitra. These
priests, however, are not specially associated with the Soma plant and
ritual. The priests very specially associated with Soma are the Kaśyapa
and Bhṛgu., both of whom are associated directly with the Anu
tribes or their original area (Kashmir and the northwest)
The Kaśyapa are very
closely associated with Soma: over 70 % of the verses composed by them are
dedicated to Soma Pavamāna, and the āprī-sūkta of the Kaśyapa
family is the only āprī-sūkta dedicated to Soma (all the other nine
āprī-sūkta-s are dedicated to Agni). But while the Kaśyapas
are exclusive Soma priests, the fact is that they entered the Rigveda at a late
stage: they became exclusive Soma priests in the period following the
expansion of the Vedic Aryans into the Soma-growing areas.
As we have repeatedly seen, the Bhṛgu, except for one
branch consisting of Jamadagni and his descendants, are associated with
the proto-Iranians living to the north and northwest of the Vedic people.
The identification of the Bhṛgu with Soma is deeper, older and more
significant: it is clear that the use of the Soma plant originated among the Bhṛgu,
and it is they who introduced the plant and its rituals to the Vedic Aryans and
their priests:
a. The word Soma,
which occurs thousands of times in the hymns of the Rigveda, is found in the
name of only one composer ṛṣi: Somāhuti Bhārgava.
b. The word pavamāna,
which occurs more than a hundred times in the Soma Pavamāna Maṇḍala (Book 9),
is found only once outside Book 9: in VIII.101.14 attributed to Jamadagni
Bhārgava.
c. Both the Rigveda and
the Avesta are unanimous in identifying Bhṛgu priests as the earliest
preparers of Soma: as Macdonell puts it: "The RV and the Avesta even
agree in the names of ancient preparers of Soma; Vivasvat and Trita Aptya on
the one hand, and Vivanhvant, Athwya and Thrita on the other"
(MACDONELL 1897:114). According to the Avesta, the first preparer of Soma was Vīuuaŋvhaṇt (Vivasvat), the second was Āθβiia
(Aptya) and the third was Θrita (Trita). Vivasvat
in the Rigveda is the name of the father of two persons: Yama and Manu.
In the Avesta also, Vīuuaŋvhaṇt is the father of Yima. Both Vivasvat and Yama Vaivasvata
are identified in the Rigveda as Bhṛgu (see the references to the Bhṛgu
group of ṛṣis in TALAGERI 2000:31-32), and Manu Vaivasvata is identified
in the anukramaṇī-s of VIII.29 with Kaśyapa. Trita Āptya
is not clearly identified with any family in the Rigveda, but it is significant
that he is described by the Gṛtsamadas (Kevala Bhṛgu) in II.11-19
as belonging to "our party" (Griffith's translation).
d. Almost all the hymns to
Soma in Book 9 are composed by ṛṣis belonging to the Middle and Late
Periods of the Rigveda (though there are fictitious ascriptions to older
composers in the "saptaṛṣi" hymns); however the hymns attributed to
the Bhṛgu include twelve hymns which are ascribed (even if possibly
composed or redacted by their descendants) to remote ancestral Bhṛgus
of the pre-Rigvedic period, who are already ancient and mythical even in the
oldest Books: Vena Bhārgava (IX.85), Uśanā Kāvya (IX.87-89)
and Kavī Bhārgava (IX.47-49, 75-79). The oldest Soma hymns in the
Rigveda therefore appear to be composed exclusively by Bhṛgu.
e. The Rigveda clearly
indicates that it was the Bhṛgu who introduced Soma to the Vedic Aryans,
and to their Gods and priests. According to at least three references
(I.116.12; 117.22; 119.9), the location or abode of Soma was a secret; and
this secret was revealed to the Aśvins by Dadhyanc, an ancient Bhṛgu
ṛṣi, already mythical in the Rigveda, and older than even Kavi Bhārgava and
Uśanā Kāvya. Dadhyanc is the son of Atharvaṇa, and grandson of the
eponymous Bhṛgu.
f. Even
the symbolism inherent in the eagle who brought Soma to the Vedic Aryans
probably represents this role of the Bhṛgu: according to Macdonell, "the
term eagle is connected with Agni Vaidyuta or lightning (TB 3, 10, 51;
cp. 12.12)" (MACDONELL 1897:112) and likewise, "BERGAIGNE thinks there can hardly be a doubt that bhṛgu
was originally a name of fire, while KUHN and BARTH agree in the opinion that
the form of fire it represents is lightning" (MACDONELL 1897:140) (see
also Griffith's footnote to IV.7.4).
2. Soma is regarded as growing in distant areas: this area is so
distant that it is constantly identified with the heavens (IV.26.6;
27.3, 4; VIII.100.8; IX.63.27; 66.30;
77.2; 86.24, etc.):
a. The only specific
thing known about the place of origin of Soma is that it grows on mountains (I.93.6;
III.48.2; V.43.4; 85.2; IX.18.1;
62.4; 85.10; 95.4; 98.9, etc.). Nothing more
specific is mentioned in the Family Books (2-7).
b. The area of Soma is
clearly not part of the Vedic area (nor is there even the slightest hint
anywhere in the Rigveda that it ever was): it is constantly referred to
as being far away (IV.26.6; IX.68.6; X.11.4;
144.4). This area is also known as the "dwelling of Tvaṣṭṛ"
(IV.18.3); and this is what the scholars have to say about Tvaṣṭṛ:
"Tvaṣṭṛ is one of the obscurest members of the Vedic
pantheon. The obscurity of the concept is explained [….]
(by) HILLEBRANDT (who) thinks Tvaṣṭṛ was derived from a mythical
circle outside the range of the Vedic tribes" (MACDONELL 1897:117).
c. Soma is mythically
(and repeatedly) reported to be brought by an eagle to the Vedic people, and
even to their Gods, from its distant place of origin:
I.80.2; 93.6.
III.43.7.
IV.18.13; 26.4-7;
27.3, 4.
V.45.9.
VI.20.6.
VIII.82.9; 100.8.
IX.68.6; 77.2;
86.24; 87.6.
X.11.4; 99.8;
144.4, 5.
That this place of origin is alien to the Vedic people is clear
from the fact that this eagle is reported to have to hurry (IV.26.5)
to escape the guardians of Soma, who are described as attacking the eagle (IV.27.3)
to prevent it from taking the Soma away.
"Tvaṣṭṛ is especially the guardian of
Soma, which is called 'the mead of Tvaṣṭṛ' (I.117.22)" (MACDONELL
1897:116), and Indra is described as conquering Tvaṣṭṛ in order to
obtain the Soma.
In his footnote to 1.43.8, Griffith refers to "the people
of the hills who interfere with the gathering of the Soma plant which is to be
sought there".
d. The Family Books are
generally ignorant about the exact details of the Soma-growing areas. Whatever
specific information is there is in the non-family New Books (1,8,9,10):
The prime Soma-growing areas are identified in VIII.64.11 as the
areas near the Suṣomā and Arjīkīyā rivers (the Sohān and Hāro),
northeastern tributaries of the Indus, in the extreme north of the Punjab and
northwest of Kashmir, and near Śaryaṇāvān (a lake in the vicinity of
these two rivers). In VIII.7.29, the reference is to the Suṣoma
and Arjīka (in the masculine gender, signifying mountains; while the
rivers of these names are in the feminine gender), clearly the mountains which
gave rise to the two aforesaid rivers, and again Śaryaṇāvān, which also
appears in X.35.2 as a mountainous area, perhaps referring to the
mountains surrounding the lake of the same name.
In another place (X.34.1), the best Soma is said to
be growing on the Mūjavat mountains: the Mūjavat tribes are
identified (Atharvaveda V-XXII-5, 7, 8, 14) with the Gandhārī, i.e. in
adjacent parts of Afghanistan.
That Gandhārī (northern Afghanistan) in the Rigveda
is associated with Soma is clear from the specific role assigned in the Rigveda
to the Gandharva or gandharva (mythical beings associated in the
Rigveda with that region). In the words of Macdonell: "Gandharva
is, moreover, in the RV often associated (chiefly in the ninth book) with
Soma. He guards the place of Soma and protects the races of the gods
(9.83.4; cp. 1.22.14). Observing all the forms of Soma, he stands on the vault
of heaven (9.85.12). Together with Parjanya and the daughters of the sun, the
Gandharvas cherish Soma (9.113.3). Through Gandharva's mouth the gods drink
their drought (AV.7.73.3). The MS (3.8.10) states that the Gandharvas kept the
Soma for the gods [….] It is probably as a jealous
guardian of Soma that Gandharva in the RV appears as a hostile being, who is
pierced by Indra in the regions of air (8.66.5) or whom Indra is invoked to
overcome (8.1.11) [….] Soma is further said to have dwelt among the
Gandharvas [….]" (MACDONELL 1897:136-137).
All these names are found mentioned only in the non-family New
Books (1,8,9,10), with a single reference (to gandharva) in Book 3 in a
Redacted Hymn described in the Aitareya Brahmana (VI.18) as a late interpolated
hymn in Book 3:
III.38.6.
I.22.14; 84.14; 126.7; 163.2.
VIII.1.11; 6.39; 7.29; 64.11; 77.5.
IX.65.22,23; 83.4; 85.12; 113.1-3.
X.10.4; 11.2; 34.1; 35.2; 75.5;
85.40,41; 123.4,7; 136.6; 139.4-6; 177.2.
e. While Soma was well known to the Vedic Aryans as a product
of the distant north-western areas, imported through the Anu and other
people further northwest, its use became more widespread and ritually important
only in the period of the New Books, so much so that a whole separate
book (Book 9) was compiled to accommodate the hymns composed for it. However,
with the passage of time (i.e. in post-Vedic times), the importance of the Soma
ritual was slowly lost in Indian religion as the focus shifted eastwards and
new rituals and philosophies of more eastern people supplanted the Soma ritual.
However, the importance of the Soma plant and ritual continued in its original
territories and among its original adherents: the ephedra plant is known as haoma/homa
(or derived words) in the Iranian languages (Persian, Pashto, Baluchi, as well
as most of the Dardic and Nuristani languages of the extreme north/northwest)
and as soma-lata even in parts of the Indian Himalayas (including in
Nepal), and is used to this day in Zoroastrian ritual.
3. The expansion of the Vedic Aryans into the west and northwest
was a direct consequence of their quest for Soma:
The westward movement commenced with the crossing of the
Śutudrī and Vipāś by Viśvāmitra and the Bharatas under Sudās, described
in hymn III.33; and the fifth verse of the hymn clarifies both the
direction and purpose of this crossing.
Griffith translates III.33.5 (in which Viśvāmitra
addresses the rivers) as: "Linger a little at my friendly bidding;
rest, Holy Ones, a moment in your journey"; but he clarifies in his
footnote: "At my friendly bidding: according to the Scholiasts,
Yāska and Sāyaṇa, the meaning of me vācase somyāya is 'to my speech
importing the Soma'; that is, the object of my address is that I may cross over
and gather the Soma-plant".
This crossing, and the successful foray into the northwest,
appears to have whetted the appetite of Sudās and the Bharatas for conquest and
expansion: shortly afterwards, the Viśvāmitras perform a horse ceremony for
Sudās, described in III.53.11: "Come forward Kuśika-s,
and be attentive; let loose Sudās' horses to win him riches. East, west,
and north, let the king slay the foeman, then at earth's choicest place [vara
ā pṛthivyā = Kurukṣetra] perform his worship" (GRIFFITH).
While some expansion took place towards the east as well (Kīkaṭa
in III.53.14), the main thrust of the expansion is clearly
towards the west and northwest: the first major battle in this long drawn out
western war is the dāśarājña on the Paruṣṇī, and the final one in
Central Afghanistan beyond the Sarayu.
While Sudās was still the leader of the Bharatas in the
battle on the Paruṣṇī, the battle beyond the Sarayu appears to
have taken place under the leadership of his remote descendant Sahadeva
in the Middle Period of the Rigveda.
Sahadeva's
son (referred to by his priest Vāmadeva in IV.15.7-10), who also
appears to have been a participant in the above battle beyond the Sarayu, may
have been named Soma-ka in commemoration of earlier conquests of
the Soma-growing areas of Central Afghanistan by his father Sahadeva.
The evidence in the Rigveda thus clearly shows that the Soma plant
and rituals were initially brought to the Vedic Aryans from the
Soma-growing areas of the northwest by the Bhṛgu, priests of the Anus
(the proto-Iranians) from those areas, and the Vedic Aryans themselves became
acquainted with the actual Soma-growing areas only in the period of the New
Books after they expanded into those areas.
E.
The Evidence of Honey:
Honey occupies a very important place in the Rigveda, and the word
has cognates in every language, showing it was a central part of PIE culture
and religion in any assumed Homeland. According to many scholars, honey and
beekeeping developed in Egypt and the Mediterranean area and spread as far east
as Iran. Therefore, the important position of honey in the reconstructed PIE
culture shows that the PIEs lived somewhere near this beekeeping region, or
passed through this area in prehistoric times. Parpola, for example, tells us
(quoting another scholar Hadjú) that the honey bee "was unknown in
Asia until very recent times, with the exception of Asia Minor, Syria,
Persia, Afghanistan, Tibet and China [….] On the other hand, the bee is
found west of the Urals in eastern Europe" (PARPOLA 2005:112). He
further informs us: "Apis mellifera is native to the
region comprising Africa, Arabia and the Near East up to Iran, and Europe up to
the Urals in the east and to southern Sweden and Estonia in the north; its
spread further north was limited by arctic cold, while its spread to the
east was limited by mountains, deserts and other barriers. Another
important limiting factor was that the cool, temperate deciduous forests of
Europe extend only as far east as the Urals and do not grow in Siberia (see
later). The distribution of Apis mellifera was confined to this area
until c. AD 1600, when it started being transported to other regions"
(PARPOLA 2005:112).
Gamkrelidze, likewise, tells us: "there can be no doubt
that beekeeping and the word for 'bee' are Proto-Indo-European, in view of the
word for 'honey' in Indo-European, the developed beekeeping economy among the
Indo-Europeans, and the religious significance of the bee in all the ancient
Indo-European traditions" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:516-517), and traces this
to the Mediterranean area: "It is in the Mediterranean area that the
transition from primitive beekeeping to more evolved types first takes place.
Here we find the second stage, sylvestrian beekeeping, where bees are kept in
the forest, in specially carved hollows in trees or in hollow logs set up in
forest apiaries; we also find the third stage, domestic apiculture, where
domestic bees are kept in manufactured hives near the homeland"
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:522). Finally, he tells us about the word for
"honey": "The word entered East Asia together with honey and
beekeeping, brought in by Indo-European tribes who migrated eastwards"
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:524).
However, here are the actual facts and evidence:
1. The Wikipedia entry on "Honey Bee" tells us: "Honey
bees appear to have their centre of origin in South and Southeast Asia
(including the Phillipines), as all the extant species except Apis mellifera
are native to that region. Notably, living representatives of the earliest
lineages to diverge (Apis florea and Apis andreniformes) have
their center of origin there".
The scholars discussing the evidence tell us about the
geographical range of the western bee, Apis mellifera, about
"the transition from primitive beekeeping to more evolved types"
involving this species in Egypt and the Mediterranean area, and about the
importance of honey in the PIE branches, and conclude that the different
branches of PIEs took these "evolved types" of beekeeping from
the Mediterranean to their historical areas. However:
a. There is absolutely
no evidence that the honey central to early PIE culture, or Vedic culture, was
the honey from Apis mellifera. After telling us all about the
history of Mediterranean beekeeping, Parpola discreetly tells us: "Another
species of cavity-nesting honey bee, Apis cerana, is native to Asia east
and south of Pakistan, Afghanistan, China, Korea and Japan" (PARPOLA
2005:123). The largest honey bees are the Species of Apis dorsata found
in India and further east.
b. These eastern honey
bees have been a source of honey in India from ancient times, and honey
gathering is an ancient traditional occupation even in the remotest tribal and
hill areas in the interior of the country: ancient Mesolithic rock paintings
dated 8000-6000 BCE in Bhimbetka and Pachmarhi in Madhya Pradesh depict
honey gathering: "The collection of honey is depicted in three
paintings at Pachmarhi and one at Bhimbetka. A painting in the Jambudwip
shelter at Pachmarhi shows a man driving out bees and a woman approaching the
beehive with a pot. Both are standing on ladders. In a second Pachmarhi
painting at Imlikhoh shelter a woman is driving away the bees. In a third
painting at Sonbhadra shelter two men climbing a scaffold are surrounded by
bees. The painting at Bhimbetka shows a man touching a beehive with a
round-ended stick. The man holds a basket on his back and appears to be
suspended by a rope. There are three men below him, including one standing on
the shoulders of another man" (MATHPAL 1985:182). These rock
paintings represent the oldest representation of honey gathering in the whole
of Asia, and are only comparable to similar rock paintings of similar age
in Spain and Australia.
2. The linguistic evidence in fact disproves any connection
of the PIE honey culture (as distinct from the honey culture of certain
specific historical IE branches, as we will see) with the domestic apiculture
developed in Egypt and the Mediterranean area:
a. While there is a
common PIE word for "honey", there is no common PIE word for
"bee", "bee-hive", "beeswax" and
"beekeeping/apiculture", all of which would have been expected in a
culture which practiced evolved domestic apiculture.
This is also the case regarding the evidence from the Rigveda,
which is the oldest IE language record in existence: honey (madhu-,
sāragha-) is important right from the Oldest Books of the Rigveda, the
Old Books pre-date the New Books, and the culture of the New Books represents a
period centuries older than the period of the first appearance of the Mitanni
Indo-Aryans (as well as the Hittites) in West Asia in the first half of the
second millennium BCE. But the Rigveda has only a few references to bees
(called makṣ/makṣikā), and none whatsoever to bee-hives, beeswax
or anything which would indicate the existence of any evolved forms of
beekeeping/apiculture.
b. The actual linguistic
evidence of the PIE words for honey is even more devastating: the common
reconstructed PIE word for "honey" is *medhu-. It
is found with two distinct meanings: firstly "honey", and secondly
"mead/wine/any intoxicating drink" from the primitive practice of
making mead from honey. It is found with both the meanings in five
branches: Indo-Aryan, Iranian, Tocharian, Slavic
and Baltic. It is found with only the secondary meaning
"mead/wine/any intoxicating drink" in three branches: Greek,
Germanic and Celtic, where a new PIE formation *melith-
has replaced the primary word *medhu- as the word for
"honey". In the remaining four branches, Anatolian
(Hittite), Armenian, Albanian and Italic, the word *medhu-
is completely lost, but even here, *melith- only signifies
"honey", and there are new words for "mead/wine/any intoxicating
drink".
This evidence is startling: the branches having only the word *medhu-
include the Early branch Tocharian, the European branches Slavic and
Baltic, and the Last branches Indo-Aryan and Iranian.
The branches having only the word *melith- include the Early
branch Anatolian, the European branch Italic, and the Last
branches Armenian and Albanian. In short, this isogloss cuts
across all the different chronological groups of IE branches. So what is the
common factor?
The answer is very clear: it is an east-west division:
i) All the five more eastern branches from each of the three
groups (Early, European and Last), i.e. Tocharian, Slavic, Baltic,
Indo-Aryan and Iranian, have retained the original word *medhu-
and have not acquired the new word *melith-.
ii) All the other seven more western branches from the
three groups have acquired the new word *melith-: of
these, of the five of them closest to the Egyptian and Mediterranean world,
four (Anatolian, Armenian, Albanian and Italic)
have completely lost the original word *medhu-, and one (the
more archaic Greek) has retained the word *medhu- for
"mead/wine/any intoxicating drink" while replacing it with the new
word *melith- for "honey" due to the strong
influence of the beekeeping culture of the Egyptian-Mediterranean region.
iii) Likewise, the remaining two western branches (Germanic
and Celtic), at a little distance from the direct influence of Egypt and
the Mediterranean, have also retained the word *medhu- for
"mead/wine/any intoxicating drink" while replacing it with the new
word *melith- for "honey".
iv) At the same time, all the five European branches (Italic,
Celtic, Germanic, Baltic, Slavic) have borrowed the
word for "bee" (reconstructed *bhe(i)-) from the
Egyptian word bj.t. Three branches further south-east, Greek, Armenian
and Albanian, derive words for "bee" from the borrowed word *melith-,
honey. "The Hittite word for 'bee' is unknown; texts use the Sumerogram
NIM.LÀL." (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:516, fn.81), so the Hittite word could
have been something similar. So only the three eastern branches (Indo-Aryan,
Iranian and Tocharian) definitely do not derive their words for
"bee" directly from the Egyptian form or from the word *melith-.
[Note 1: Incidentally, as in the case of the Indo-Iranian
words in Finno-Ugric languages, the academic scholars apply a kind of brazen
anti-logic in their pronouncements. Gamkrelidze tells us that the PIE word *medhu-
is derived from the Semitic word *mVtķ "sweet": "In
contrast to the native Indo-European word for bee honey, *meli(th)-,
the Semitic loan *medhu- began to be used in Indo-European to mean
'sweet intoxicating beverage'" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:771). As we saw:
1. The word that he claims to be a "Semitic loan"
is found for both "honey" and "intoxicating beverage" in
the five branches (Indo-Aryan, Iranian, Tocharian, Baltic
and Slavic) whose early historical habitats were completely out of
the area of Semitic influence, while out of the five branches (Italic,
Albanian, Greek, Armenian and Hittite) totally
within the area of Semitic influence, this "Semitic loan"
is completely missing in four of them, and is found (for
"intoxicating beverage") in only one (Greek). Simultaneously, the
word he claims to be a "native Indo-European word" is totally
missing in the first group of five branches which were out of the area of
Semitic influence, but found only in the other seven branches which were
within the sphere of Semitic influence!
2. Further, in the history of bees, honey and mankind, the early primitive
stages of honey gathering had an equal place for honey and mead (the
intoxicating beverage prepared from honey). It was only with the evolution of domestic
apiculture on a major scale that honey became an important commercial
product and the manufacture of mead eventually became insignificant or even
non-existent. The word *medhu-, meaning both
"honey" and "mead", found in the five branches historically
spoken in areas far from the influence of the Semitic areas of domestic
apiculture, clearly represents the "native Indo-European word".
The word *melith-, meaning only "honey", found only
in that sense in the seven branches historically influenced by Semitic
apiculture, in four of which (spoken right in Semitic territory or in its
immediate border areas) any cognate word for "intoxicating beverage"
has been completely lost, clearly represents the "Semitic loan".
That "honey + mead" was the original position, and "only
honey" the new position induced by Semitic influence, is proved by the
fact that the westernmost Iranian language Ossetic, deep in the sphere of
influence of Semitic domestic apiculture, retained the word *medhu-
and did not acquire the word *melith-, but, nevertheless:
"The Ossetic reflex of *medhu-, Oss.myd, means only
'honey'" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:520,fn 84).]
[Note 2: The PIE word *medhu- was also
historically borrowed into ancient Chinese (from Tocharian) and into the
Finno-Ugric languages (from Indo-Aryan migrants)]
That the western branches alone reflect the influence of this
Egyptian-Mediterranean-West Asian beekeeping culture proves one very
fundamental principle in IE migrations: migrations of branches took
place from the east to the west, hence important words from the central areas
(the West-Asia-Anatolia-Caucasus region) and languages (Semitic, Caucasian) are
found in the western branches (which passed across the longitudes of these
central areas or settled down there), but are missing in the branches to the
east of the central areas (since these eastern branches, being in the east from
the beginning, never crossed these central areas during their formative stages).
We will now immediately see two more instances of the validity of
this principle:
F.
The Evidence of Wine and Aurochs:
Gamkrelidze and Ivanov, in their bid to claim proto-Semitic
influence on PIE in its early stages, list seventeen potential
"loanwords" from Semitic. Mallory and Adams (pointing out the limited
dialectal distribution of many of these words in the IE branches) reduce the
list to four: "The more significant Semitic-Indo-European comparisons
are Proto-Indo-European *medhu- 'honey': Proto-Semitic *mVtk-
'sweet'; Proto-Indo-European *tauros 'wild bull, aurochs': Proto-Semitic
*ṯawr 'bull, ox'; Proto-Indo-European *septṁ 'seven':
Proto-Semitic *sab'atum; and Proto-Indo-European *wóinom 'wine:
Proto-Semitic *wayn 'wine'" (MALLORY-ADAMS 2006:82-83).
Two of these comparisons clearly represent coincidental
similarities. We have already dealt with the comparison between "Proto-Indo-European
*medhu- 'honey': Proto-Semitic *mVtk- 'sweet'". The
second one, "Proto-Indo-European *septṁ 'seven': Proto-Semitic *sab'atum"
is equally untenable: that either of the two families should have borrowed the
word for "seven" from the other is incomprehensible. Especially when
those advocating this "comparison" would reject a much more credible
comparison of the very first four numerals in Proto-Indo-European (*sem,
*dwōu/*dwai, *tri and *qwetwor:
note Tocharian sas/se 'one', Romanian patru 'four', Welsh pedwar
'four') and Proto-Austronesian (*esa, *dewha, *telu and *pati/*epati:
note Malay sa/satu 'one', dua 'two', tiga 'three', epat
'four') as far-fetched or coincidental.
But the other two words certainly offer very fair instances of
Semitic words borrowed into Indo-European languages. But into Proto-Indo-European
in its formative stages in its Homeland? Let us see the facts of the case:
The Proto-Semitic word *ṯawr 'bull, ox' is
represented in all the major Semitic languages: Akkadian šȗru, Ugaritic ṯr,
Hebrew šȏr, Syriac tawrā, Arabic ṯawr, South Arabic ṯwr.
In Indo-European, it is found in Italic (Latin taurus),
Celtic (Gaulish tarvos, Irish tarb), Germanic (Old
Icelandic ƥjórr), Baltic (Lithuanian taũras), Slavic
(Old Slavic turǔ), Albanian (tarok) and Greek (taȗros).
The Hittite word for "bull" is not known since it is
represented by a Sumerian ideogram whose Hittite reading is not known
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:483), and Armenian has borrowed a Caucasian form (tsul)
for bull. In short, here we again have a distinct case of the Semitic
influence being found only in the western branches: this Semitic loan
for "bull" or "aurochs" is completely missing in the three
eastern branches Indo-Aryan, Iranian and Tocharian.
Again it illustrates the phenomenon of migration of IE branches from east to
west.
The evidence of the words for "wine" is even more
devastating for the AIT. The word is either a "Semitic loan"
word, or "an ancient Near Eastern migratory word" (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:559) found in both in the Semitic (*wayn-, Akkadian īnu,
Ugaritic yn, Hebrew yayin, Hamitic Egyptian wnš) and
South Caucasian (*ɣwino- "wine", Georgian ɣwino,
Mingrelian ɣwin-, Laz ɣ(w)in, Svan ɣwinel, and *wenaq-
"vineyard", Old Georgian venaq, Mingrelian-Laz binex-
Svan wenäq) languages. Gamkrelidze also refers to "the
considerable development of viticulture and wine-making in the Transcaucasus"
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:560 fn 64), even as he suggests that the PIEs could also have
originally developed this word in the West Asian-Transcaucasus region.
Whether an original Semitic or Caucasian word, or an original
development in PIE, the geography of the word is undoubtedly the West
Asian-Transcaucasus region. And again:
1. The word is completely missing in the three eastern branches
Indo-Aryan, Iranian and Tocharian, but is
found in all the other nine western branches.
2. Furthermore, the word for wine is found in the nine western
branches in three grades (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:557-558): *wi(o)no- with zero
grade vocalism, *weino- with e-grade vocalism, and *woino- with
o-grade vocalism, exactly corresponding to the three
chronological groups of IE branches:
a. The Early branch which
migrated to the west, Anatolian, has words derived from *wi(o)no-: Hittite
wiyana-, Luwian winiyant, Hieratic Luwian wiana-.
b. The five European
branches have words derived from *weino-: Italic (Latin uīnum),
Celtic (Old Irish fīn, Welsh gwin), Germanic (German wein,
English wine), Baltic (Lithuanian vynas, Latvian vĩns),
Slavic (Russian vino, Polish wino).
c. The three Last branches
which migrated to the west have words derived from *woino-: Greek
(Mycenaean Greek wo-no, Homeric Greek oȋnos), Albanian (vēnë),
Armenian (gini).
Different
forms of the word were adopted into the three different groups of IE branches
as they migrated westwards, while the branches which remained in the east
remained unaffected.
G.
The Evidence of the Horse:
And
now we come to that animal which most advocates of the Steppe Homeland (with no
justification whatsoever, as we will see) think is the clinching weapon in
their arsenal: the horse. There have been so many absurd allegations,
claims and theories from both sides on this issue that we must first note what
is actually factual in the matter. There are basically only three indisputable
facts:
1.
The horse is known to the PIEs, and cognate words are found for the horse in
almost every single branch: PIE *ekhwos, Anatolian (Hieratic
Luwian) á-sù-wa, Tocharian yuk/yakwe, Indo-Aryan (Vedic) áśva,
Iranian (Avestan) aspa-, Armenian ēš "donkey", Greek
(Mycenaean) iqo, (Homeric) híppos, Germanic (Old English) eoh,
(Gothic) aihwa, Celtic (Old Irish) ech, (Gaulish) epo-,
Italic (Latin) equus and Baltic (Lithuanian) ešva. Ironically, it
is missing only in the one branch actually spoken in the Steppes, Slavic,
and the Albanian word has also not survived in the records. But this
proves that the horse was very well known to the PIEs in their Homeland,
before 3000 BCE, when different branches started dispersing from that
Homeland.
2.
The horse was known to the Vedic people throughout the period of composition of
the text.
3.
The horse is not native to India, but is native to a large area spread
out over northern Eurasia from the Steppes of South Russia in the west to
Central Asia in the east.
The
first two facts are not generally disputed, but the third one is disputed by
opponents of the AIT, some of whom suggest that the horse referred to in the
Rigveda is not the northern horse of the Steppes, but an indigenous species:
notably the Siwalik horse equus siwalensis, a sturdy species of horse
indigenous to a large part of northern India in ancient times, but believed to
have become extinct around 8000 BCE or so. The fact that the Rigveda I.162.18
and the Shatapatha Brahmana 13.5 describe the horse being sacrificed as having
34 ribs (when the true horse has 36 ribs, but some varieties of the Siwalik
horse are supposed to have had 34 ribs) is taken as added evidence of the
presence of the Siwalik horse in India in Vedic times, the lack of fossil evidence
being explained as irrelevant since (as we will see) fossil evidence of the
true horse is also absent in India during later periods when, and in areas
where, it is known that they were abundantly present. Further, it is
possible that the word *ekhwos originally referred to any
equid species in general (including the onager or hemione, one of the
fastest mammals known, a wild ass abundantly present in ancient north India
and still native to arid regions in Kutch and Ladakh), as indeed the word
"equid" as used today does. Also, sometimes in the Rigveda, the word áśva
is sometimes used for mounted animals other than the horse which are used
as vehicles for riding: in IV.37.4, the phrase "fat áśva"
may be a reference to an elephant, and, in many verses, the phrase
"spotted áśva", as vehicles of the Maruts are accepted as
definitely referring to spotted deer: I.87.4; 89.7; 186.8;
II.34.4; III.26.6; V.42.15; VII.40.3
(although, of course, this could also be a poetical transfer of a word
originally meaning "horse" to the spotted deer). However, we will
leave aside all these interesting arguments (although the references to 34 ribs
certainly warrant an explanation) and only concentrate on the evidence as
pertaining to the true horse "of the Steppes" which was not native to
India.
From the three facts regarding horses noted above, the supporters
of the AIT draw the following conclusion: the horse was not present or known in
India before the arrival of the "Aryans", since no bones of the horse
have been found in the Harappan sites and there is no representation of the
horse in the Harappan seals. Hence the Harappan civilization must be
"non-Aryan", and it was the "Aryans" who brought the horse
into India from their Homeland in the Steppes of South Russia. Hock, for
example, puts it as follows: “While
disagreeing on minor details, those familiar with Indo-European linguistic
paleontology and with the archeological evidence in Eurasia agree that the use
of the domesticated horse spread out of the steppes of the Ukraine, and so did
the horse-drawn two-wheeled battle chariot, as well as the great significance
of the horse in early Indo-European culture and religion. Indo-Europeanists and
specialists in general Eurasian archeology are therefore convinced, too, that
these features spread into India along with the migration of Indo-Aryan
speakers.” (HOCK 1999a:12-13).
This conclusion represents one of the most fraudulent propositions
in the whole "Aryan" debate:
1. The horse was not present in India, but it was present in
Central Asia to the north of Afghanistan since the earliest times. As of date,
the evidence of the first fully domesticated horses in the world, more than a
thousand years earlier than formerly believed, comes from the Botai culture in Kazakhstan:
by 3500 BCE, the Botai culture was a fully horse breeding culture
where horses were bred, milked, and ridden (examination of the teeth and
jaw-bones found on the sites have confirmed that bridles and bits were being
used).
But, even closer to home, strong evidence has been found that
horses were domesticated, or at least tamed and kept amidst human settlements
at even earlier dates, in Uzbekistan to the north of Afghanistan: see LASOTA-MOSKALEWSKA 2009 (A Problem of the Earliest Horse
Domestication. Data from the Neolithic Camp Ayakagytma 'The Site', Uzbekistan,
Central Asia. pp. 14-21 in Archaeologia Baltica Volume 11, Klaipeda
University, Lithuania, 2009). The team of
archaeologists and archaeozoologists who scientifically examined the material
on the site, some 130 km. north of Bukhara city, point out that there are
"two clearly separated phases: an Early Neolithic, 14c dated to ca
8000-7400 cal. BP, and Middle Neolith one, 14c dated to ca 6000-5000 cal. BP"
(with a 1500 year gap caused by flooding at the site), and there is "a
rich collection of animal remains, connected directly with the Neolithic
settlements. Among the bone and tooth fragments, the horse remains played a
very important role. Already in the earliest horizons a share of the pieces
identified as belonging to the Equidae family reached 30.0-40.0 % (Table
1). In comparison with other Eurasian Neolithic sites, such numbers are rather
unique" (LASOTA-MOSKALEWSKA 2009:14-15). On the basis of
various factors: "the extremely high share of the Equidae
remains, sometimes exceeding 40% [….] the height in withers [….] the
width of the sole surfaces measured on the basis of the hoof prints [which]
indicate that the animal who left them was much larger than an average wild
individual, but fit well to the size of horses domesticated for a long time [….]
[and] the presence [along with the horse remains on the site] of the other
fully domesticated species of mammals: cattle, sheep/goat,pig and dog [….]
leads us to the more than probable conclusion that the horse was domesticated
since the very beginnings of the Central Asian lowlands Neolithic, which is
dated to a turn of the ninth and eighth millennium cal. BP. At the same time,
it would be the earliest date for horse domestication that we have today"
(LASOTA-MOSKALEWSKA 2009:19-20).
So,
the horse did not come with invading "Aryans" who left the Steppes of
South Russia around 3000 BCE. Horses, whether fully domesticated, or in
various stages of semi-domestication, were already abundantly present in human
settlements to the immediate north of Afghanistan as far back as 6000 BCE.
Further,
the Indian Homeland was not confined to the interiors of India. The
recorded evidence shows us that by pre-Rigvedic times, the Indo-European
groups, the Druhyu and Anu, had already spread out from the
interior of India into the areas of Central Asia to the north of Afghanistan.
The period of the Old Books of the Rigveda goes back beyond 3000 BCE,
and by that time, Central Asia was already home to the proto-Anatolians, the
proto-Tocharians and the vanguard of the proto-European Druhyu groups. The
horse-domesticating, or at least horse-rich, areas of Central Asia were already
part of the heartland of the Druhyu who formed the northern continuum of
the expanded Druhyu-Anu-Pūru Homeland in 3000
BCE. Therefore, the development or adoption of a common PIE name for
the horse, one of the most magnificent animals of the time (whether in the wild
or in domestication) was natural and inevitable.
2. The claim that horses were unknown since horse bones are
not found in the Harappan sites is also a blatant lie. Horse bones have
been found in Indus sites and further in the interior of India in periods prior
to the alleged "Aryan invasion of India" after 1500 BCE. As Bryant
points out: "The report claiming the earliest date for the domesticated
horse in India, ca. 4500 B.C.E., comes from a find from Bagor, Rajasthan, at
the base of the Aravalli Hills (Ghosh 1989a, 4). In Rana Ghundai, Baluchistan,
excavated by E. J. Ross, equine teeth were reported from a pre-Harappan level
(Guha and Chatterjee 1946, 315–316). Interestingly, equine bones have been
reported from Mahagara, near Allahabad, where six sample absolute carbon 14
tests have given dates ranging from 2265 B.C.E. to 1480 B.C.E. (Sharma et al.
1980, 220–221). Even more significantly, horse bones from the Neolithic site
Hallur in Karnataka (1500–1300 B.C.E.) have also been identified by the
archaeozoologist K. R. Alur (1971, 123). [.......] In the Indus Valley
and its environs, Sewell and Guha, as early as 1931, had reported the existence
of the true horse, Equus caballus Linn from Mohenjo-Daro itself, and
Bholanath (1963) reported the same from Harappa, Ropar, and Lothal. Even
Mortimer Wheeler identified a horse figurine and accepted that “it is likely
enough that camel, horse and ass were in fact all a familiar feature of
the Indus caravan” (92). Another early evidence of the horse in the Indus
Valley was reported by Mackay, in 1938, who identified a clay model of the
animal at Mohenjo-Daro. Piggott (1952, 126, 130) reports a horse figurine from
Periano Ghundai in the Indus Valley, dated somewhere between Early Dynastic and
Akkadian times. Bones from Harappa, previously thought to have belonged to the
domestic ass, have been reportedly critically re-examined and attributed to a
small horse (Sharma 1992–93, 31). Additional evidence of the horse in the form
of bones, teeth, or figurines has been reported in other Indus sites such as
Kalibangan (Sharma 1992–93, 31); Lothal (Rao 1979), Surkotada (Sharma 1974),
and Malvan (Sharma 1992–93, 32). Other later sites include the Swat Valley
(Stacul 1969); Gumla (Sankalia 1974, 330); Pirak (Jarrige 1985); Kuntasi
(Sharma 1995, 24); and Rangpur (Rao 1979, 219)." (BRYANT
2001:169-170). Also, horse bones (Dhawalikar), as well as a terracotta figurine
of a horse, have been found at Kayatha in the Chambal Valley in Madhya Pradesh
in all the chalcolithic levels, dated 2450-2000 BCE. Also, there is a very
distinctive horse figure in a "chess set" found at Lothal.
Further, one of the finds (the one in Surkotada in the Kutch region of
Gujarat) has been certified by the topmost horse specialist archaeologist of
the time: "the material involved had been excavated in Surkotada in
1974 by J. P Joshi, and A. K. Sharma subsequently reported the identification
of horse bones from all levels of this site (circa 2100–1700 B.C.E.). In
addition to bones from Equus asinus and Equus hemionus khur,
Sharma reported the existence of incisor and molar teeth, various phalanges,
and other bones from Equus caballus Linn (Sharma 1974, 76) [....] Twenty
years later, at the podium during the inauguration of the Indian Archaeological
Society's annual meeting, it was announced that Sandor Bökönyi, a Hungarian
archaeologist and one of the world's leading horse specialists, who happened to
be passing through Delhi after a conference, had verified that the bones were,
indeed, of the domesticated Equus caballus: “The occurrence of true
horse (Equus caballus L.) was evidenced by the enamel pattern of the
upper and lower cheek and teeth and by the size and form of incisors and
phalanges. Since no wild horses lived in India in post-pleistocene times, the
domestic nature of the Surkotada horses is undoubtful" (reproduced in
Gupta 1993b, 162; and Lal 1997, 285)" (BRYANT 2001:170-171).
The AIT scholars resort to any one of two tactics: complete
silence, or flat denial. Hock tries a middle path, and admits: "The
question whether the archeological evidence supports the view that domesticated
horses were a feature of the Harappan civilization is still being debated; see
the summary of arguments in CHENGAPPA, 1998", but continues on to: "Significantly,
however, to my knowledge no archeological evidence from Harappan India has been
presented that would indicate anything comparable to the cultural and
religious significance of the horse or the important role of the horse-drawn
two-wheeled chariot which can be observed in the traditions of the early
Indo-European peoples, including the Vedic āryas. On balance, then, the
‘equine’ evidence at this point is more compatible with migration into India
than with outward migration” (HOCK 1999a:12-13).
But, according to the AIT (and Hock himself), the horse and
the "horse-drawn two-wheeled battle chariot" came from the
Steppes of Ukraine and South Russia with the "Aryans", who settled
down for a long period in the BMAC area in Central Asia for a period of time
where they developed the common "Indo-Iranian" culture and borrowed local
"BMAC" words, and then moved into the Punjab after 1500 BCE
where they composed the Rigveda by 1200 BCE, and then moved further
eastwards into the Gangetic plains where they composed the Yajurveda, and then
later spread out all over northern India. Is any of this scenario
supported by "archeological evidence [....] that would indicate
anything comparable to the cultural and religious significance of the horse or
the important role of the horse-drawn two-wheeled chariot which can be observed
in the traditions of the early Indo-European peoples, including the Vedic āryas"?
Note:
a. No archaeologist has yet been able
to produce any archaeological trail of horse bones (or chariots) from the
Ukraine to the BMAC, from the BMAC to the Punjab, and from the Punjab to the
other eastern parts of northern India, in sequence with the accepted areas and
time-frames of the AIT.
b. Bryant notes: "Another observation that needs to
be pointed out is that a number of scholars are prepared to consider that the
Bactria Margiana Archaeological Complex (BMAC), which will be discussed in the
next chapter, is an Indo-Aryan culture. The horse has been evidenced in this
culture in the form of representations in grave goods. However, no horse
bones have been found despite the availability of a large number of animal
bones. This again underscores the point that lack of horse bones does not
equal the absence of horse. Nor, at least in the opinion of those who subscribe
to the Indo-Aryan identification of the BMAC, does this lack equal the absence
of Indo-Aryans. Therefore, anyone prepared to associate the BMAC culture with
the Indo-Aryans cannot then turn around and reject such an identification for
the Indus Valley on the grounds of lack of horse bones in the latter"
(BRYANT 2001:173-174). [The BMAC culture had horses, of course, and they were
"Aryans": not "Aryans" on their way to India, but Anu
and Druhyu who had earlier emigrated from India to the northwest].
c. Not a single specimen of the Vedic
chariot (which Hock tells us was brought all the way from the Ukrainian Steppes
by the "Aryans") has yet been discovered by any archaeologist
anywhere in India in their time-frames and areas. The earliest stone carvings
depicting the chariot are found from the Mauryan period, after 350 BCE.
d. In fact, the occurence of horse
bones in the Punjab and Haryana from 1500 BCE till at least 500 BCE
is almost nil. Any stray finds reported (for example a sole reported finding of
horse bones in Bhagwanpura/Bhagpur in northeastern Haryana around 1000 BCE)
certainly cannot "indicate anything comparable to the cultural and
religious significance of the horse or the important role of the horse-drawn
two-wheeled chariot which can be observed in the traditions of the early
Indo-European peoples, including the Vedic āryas", and does not
represent any notable change in the situation after 1200 BCE. Further,
note that the earliest horse bone findings accepted by the AIT naysayers are in
the southern (Kutch) and eastern (northeast Haryana) corners of northwest
India: any "Aryan horse bones" in the stretch from the BMAC area to
the Greater Punjab area seem to be invisible.
Note also what the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th
edition, Vol. 9, p.348, has to say in the course of a description of Indian
archaeology: “Curiously, however, it is precisely in those regions that used
iron, and were associated with the horse, that the Indo-Aryan languages
did not spread. Even today, these are the regions of the Dravidian language
group”.
Witzel, for example, even while claiming that "linguistic
and textual studies confirm the presence of an outside, Indo-Aryan speaking
element, whose language and spiritual culture has definitely been introduced,
along with the horse and the spoked wheel chariot, via the BMAC area into
northwestern South Asia", immediately admits that: "However,
much of present-day Archaeology denies that. [....] So far, clear
archaeological evidence has just not been found” (WITZEL 2000a:§15).
Therefore, unless one is willing to accept that no such
people as the "Vedic Aryans", and no such things as the Vedic chariot
and Vedic horse, ever existed, it must be accepted that the whole set of
arguments concerning (the alleged absence of) horse bones in the Harappan
civilization are fake, fraudulent and irrelevant. Insisting on the
"Aryan" presence in the BMAC and the Punjab areas in the concerned
periods in spite of the absence of horse bones, and denying their
presence in the Harappan areas and period on the grounds of (the alleged)
absence of horse bones amounts to extreme special pleading.
3. The Linguistic evidence clearly completely disproves any
idea that the horse was unknown to the non-Indo-European language speaking
people of India before "Aryans" brought it all the way from the
Ukrainian Steppes and introduced it to them. The evidence shows that the horse,
whether as a magnificent exotic wild beast from beyond the northwest or as an
already domesticated animal, was individually and separately known to the
"non-Aryans" of India: as I pointed out in my first book: “Sanskrit
has many words for the horse: aśva, arvant or arvvā, haya,
vājin, sapti, turanga, kilvī, pracelaka and ghoṭaka,
to name the most prominent among them. And yet, the Dravidian languages show no
trace of having borrowed any of these words; they have their own words kudirai,
parī and mā […] The Santali and Mundari languages,
however, have preserved the original Kol-Munda word sādom. Not only has
no linguist ever claimed that the Dravidian and Kol-Munda words for ‘horse’ are
borrowed from ‘Aryan’ words, but in fact some linguists have even sought to
establish that Sanskrit ghoṭaka, from which all modern Indo-Aryan words
are derived, is borrowed from the Kol-Munda languages!” (TALAGERI
1993:160).
The above point is “echoed” by none other than Michael
Witzel: “Dravidian and Indo-Aryan (IE) words for domesticated animals are
quite different from each other, for example, Drav. DEDR 500 Tam. ivuḷi,
Brah. (h)ullī, 1711 Tam. kutirai, etc. DEDR 3963 Tam. pari
‘runner’, 4870 Tam. mā ‘animal’ (horse, elephant), Tel. māvu
‘horse’, cf. Nahali māv ‘horse’ […]; they have no relation with
IA aśva ‘horse’ and various words for ‘runner’ (arvant, vājin,
etc.).” Further, he adds: “Obviously, use of horses is not linked to
speakers of an IA language” (WITZEL 2000a: §15). So, clearly, horses were
not introduced to the "non-Aryans" of India by "invading
Aryans".
In an article in an Indian newspaper, as part of a political
media campaign in 2002, Witzel, however, alleges that the words in the
"non-Aryan" languages of India are borrowed from different West
Asian, and even Chinese, sources. He naturally does not explain the mode by
which those words landed into these "non-Aryan" Indian languages and
became so central to them. But, in any case, it still means that the horse was
known to the non-Indo-European language speakers of India by means other than
through an introduction by "Aryans".
4. The literary evidence in the Rigveda clearly shows that
the horse was a well-known and respected animal right from the period of the
Old Books. Naturally, this exotic, rare and much-prized animal from the (then)
areas of the Anu and Druhyu in Central Asia could not possibly
have been unknown to the Vedic Aryans in 3000 BCE: but the
horse clearly became commoner and more important only with the invention of the
spoked wheels in the period of the New Books:
a. The word ara- for
"spoke" is found only in the New Books (5,1,8,9,10):
V.13.6; 58.5.
I.32.15; 141.9; 164.11,12,13,48.
VIII.20.14;
77.3.
X.78.4.
b. Likewise, names with aśva
and ratha appear only within the New Books:
V.27.4,5,6; 33.9; 36.6;
52.1; 61.5,10; 79.2.
I.36.18; 100.16,17; 112.10,15;
116.6,16; 117.17,18; 122.7,13.
VIII.1.30,32;
9.10; 23.16,23,24; 24.14,22,23,28,29; 26.9,11; 35.19,20,21;
36.7; 37.7; 38.8; 46.21,33; 68.15,16.
IX.65.7.
X.49.6; 60.5; 61.21.
c. And also in the names of composers
of only the following hymns:
V.47, 52-61, 81-82.
I.100.
VIII.14-15,
23-26, 35-38, 46.
IX.32.
X.102,134.
The Bhṛgu ṛṣi, Dadhyañc, who introduced the
secrets of the northwest to Indra, is supposed to have the head of a horse (I.116.12;
117.22; 119.9), and the Bhṛgu (IV.16.20) and
the Anu (V.31.4) are credited with inventing the chariot
for Indra. This may show the direction of movement of innovations concerning
the horse and the chariot (but obviously it does not show the movements of the
Vedic Aryans themselves).
The horse, though not native to India, was definitely
known to the PIEs in their homeland, but this fits in perfectly well with the
Indian Homeland scenario recorded in the Indian texts.
H. The Evidence of the Cow:
Finally, we come to that animal which is most central to the
Indo-European ethos: much more central than the horse: i.e. the cow.
In spite of all the rhetoric about "Aryans" and their horses, it is
the cow which is central to the identity of the "pastoral Aryans",
but, unlike the other flora and fauna discussed so far, the cow rarely seems to
form a central point of discussion in faunal debates on the location of the
Homeland (by advocates of the South Russian Steppes theory), for obvious
reasons, as we will see. The cow/bull/cattle is probably the only
animal (other than the dog, domesticated from prehistoric times) which has a
form of the reconstructed PIE name in every single branch: PIE *gwṓus,
Indo-Aryan Skt. gáuh, Iranian Av. gāuš, Armenian kov,
Greek boûs, Albanian ka,
Anatolian Hier.Luw. wawa-, Tocharian keu, Italic Latin bōs, Celtic Old Irish bō,
Germanic German kuh, Baltic Lithuanian guovs, Slavic OCS govedo.
Gamkrelidze, an advocate of the Anatolian
Homeland theory, points out that "the economic function of the cow as a
dairy animal can be reconstructed for a period of great antiquity"
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:485), and further that "The presence of cows and
bulls among domestic animals goes back to an ancient period well before the
domestication of the wild horse. Evidence of domesticated bulls and cows is
found by the beginning of the Neolithic" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:489). But
then follows some deliberate misdirection to fit in with his Anatolian
Homeland theory. Gamkrelidze tells us: "There are two major centers of
cattle domestication in Eurasia: a European zone where the ancestral wild cow
was the huge European bison (Bos Primigenius Boj.), and a western Asian
area where the ancestral wild cows were distinct species [....] the
western Asian area is considered the center of first domestication of wild
cattle" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:489-490). He repeatedly proceeds to
refer to these as "the two centers of domestication"
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:490). Then, he adds the clincher: "Indo-European
dialects preserve words from a common base *thauro-,―originally
'wild cow, wild bull' in Indo-European―a Near Eastern migratory term, which
shows that the speakers of these dialects were acquainted with the wild cows
found specifically in the Near East" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:491).
The above contains many glaring
misrepresentations, which will become clear when we see the actual facts, all
of which point unanimously to an Indian Homeland:
1. There are indeed "two centers of domestication"
of the cow (i.e. of domestic cattle), and they are not the subject of any
controversy. The wikipedia article on "Cattle" unambiguously tells
us: "Archeozoological and genetic data
indicate that cattle were first domesticated from wild aurochs (Bos
primigenius) approximately 10,500 years ago. There were two major areas of
domestication: one in the area that is now Turkey, giving rise to the taurine
line, and a second in the area that is now Pakistan, resulting in the
indicine line [….] European cattle are largely
descended from the taurine lineage". All
other academic sources regularly point out that "the Indus Valley
Civilization" was one of the two centers of domestication of cattle.
[So much for the glaring difference between the "urban Harappans" and
"pastoral Aryans"].
2. The Rigveda is an extremely cow-centered text. Not only is the
cow mentioned many more times than any other animal (including the horse), but
the word go-/gau- in the Rigveda is replete with many
naturalistic and mystic meanings (where it represents the rays of the sun, the
earth, the stars, and many other more mystic things not within the scope of
this article) showing it to be a central feature of the Rigvedic religion and
socio-economic environment. But even more linguistically important is that the
Sanskrit language contains every single common IE word associated with cows and
cattle, except, significantly, the "Near Eastern migratory term"
borrowed from Semitic referred to by Gamkrelidze (the implications
of the absence of which, in the three eastern branches, definitely shows
that "the speakers of these dialects were not acquainted with
the wild cows found specifically in the Near East" (GAMKRELIDZE
1995:491 paraphrased) as already discussed earlier).
Mallory tells us there are three different words for
"cow" in the IE languages, *gwṓus, *h1eĝh, and *wokéha-. The first,
as we saw, is found in all the twelve branches. As for the other words for cow,
bull, cattle, they are found in Indo-Aryan + different
other branches:
a. *h1eĝh
"cow": Skt. ahī-, Armenian ezn, Celtic (Old Irish) ag.
b. *wokéha-
"cow": Skt. vaśā-, Italic (Latin) vacca.
c. *phekhu-
"livestock": Skt. paśu-, Iranian (Avestan) pasu-,
Italic (Latin) pecū, Germanic (Old English) feoh, Baltic
(Lithuanian) pēkus.
d. *uk(w)sēn "ox": Skt. ukṣan-, Iranian
(Avestan) uxšan, Tocharian okso, Germanic (English) ox,
Celtic (Old Irish) oss.
e. *wṛs-en "bull":
Skt. vṛṣṇí-,
Iranian (Avestan) varəšna-.
f. *usr-
"cow/bull": Skt. usra/usrā, Germanic ūro (from ūrochso).
g. *domhoyos "young bull": Skt. damya-,
Celtic (Old Irish) dam, Albanian dem, Greek damálēs.
This last is particularly significant. Gamkrelidze points
out the following: "that speakers of Proto-Indo-European were among
those who domesticated wild cattle is also shown by the presence in
Indo-European of another term for 'bull', derived from the verb *t'emH- 'tame,
subdue: bridle: force': OIr dam 'bull', Ved. damya- 'young bull to be tamed',
Alb. dem 'young bull', (Mayrhofer 1963:II.35), Gr. damálēs,
'young bull to be tamed', damálē 'heifer'"
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:491). The weight of the
evidence, however, shows that this "taming" took place in the area of
the Vedic people in the Indus-Sarasvati area, and not in West Asia as
Gamkrelidze tries to suggest.
Further, the following two words also illustrate the
developed role of dairying in the PIE world: a) Skt. goṣṭhá- and
Celtiberian (an extinct Celtic language spoken in Spain) boustom,
"cattle-shed"; and b) a common PIE word for "udder": Skt. ūdhar-,
Greek oŭthar, Latin ūber, Germanic (English) udder. Again,
Indo-Aryan is the common factor.
3. The Vedic Indo-Aryan and Iranian
branches, with their earliest recorded history located in northwestern India,
have preserved the original verb "to milk": Ved. duh-/dugh-
and Iranian dox-. This verb is lost in all the other branches, but the
fact that this is the original verb is proved by the occurrence of the root in
a very basic family relationship name indicative of the centrality of the
dairying culture in the PIE world: "The dialect words for 'daughter'
are an important set that go back to this root: Skt. duhitár-
'daughter', Avest. dugədar, Arm. dustr, Gk. thugátēr [....]
Engl. daughter, OPruss. duckti, Russ. doč', Toch B. tkácer"
(GAMKRELIDZE 1995:486, fn.41). The word has long been believed to signify
"milkmaid", indicating that milking the cow was an important part of
the duties of the daughter of the house in a typical PIE household. The Vedic
Indo-Aryan branch also derives its basic word for "milk" from this
root: dugdhá-.
Iranian, however, uses two other words: Avestan xšvīd-
(modern Persian šīr) and Avestan paēman, (modern Persian pīnū,
"sour milk"). Both these words have their counterparts in Vedic: kṣīr-
and payas-, both also meaning "milk". The words have
counterparts in other branches as well (Albanian hirrë "whey",
Baltic Lithuanian svíestas "butter", píenas
"milk"). Another Vedic word ghṛta "cream, butter,
ghee" is found as gert "milk" in Celtic Irish. And Vedic dádhi
(gen. dadhnás) "yogurt/curds, sour milk" is found as dadan
"milk" in Baltic Old Prussian and djathë "cheese" in Albanian.
However, there is another very widespread word
for the verb "to milk", found in eight branches: PIE *melk'-,
Tocharian mālklune, Celtic Irish bligim, Italic (Latin) mulgeō,
Germanic (English) to milk, Baltic (Lithuanian) mélžti, Slavic
(Old Russian) mlĕsti, Greek amélgo,
Albanian mjel. Four of them also derive the noun "milk" from
this root: Tocharian malke/malkwer, Celtic Old Irish melg/mlicht/blicht,
Germanic (English) milk, Slavic (OCS) mlĕko,
(Russian) moloko. From this circumstance, Gamkrelidze treats this root
as the original word for "milk", and writes: "It is
noteworthy that Indo-Iranian replaces both the original verb 'milk', *melk'-,
and the original noun 'milk'. This may have had to do with specific details of
the evolution of dairying among the cattle-breeding Indo-Iranian tribes after
their separation from the other Indo-European tribes" (GAMKRELIDZE 1995:486). But the idea that this was the
original word is disproved by the fact that:
a) It is totally missing in the Indo-Aryan
(apart from the Iranian) branch which retains every major common word
associated with cattle-breeding and dairying, and which is situated in the heart
of one of the two primary centres of cattle-domestication in the world (as
Gamkrelidze puts it: "In Sanskrit and Old Iranian we already find a
highly developed terminology associated with the dairying function of cows"
GAMKRELIDZE 1995:485, fn.35), and it would be strange that they should
completely have forgotten the original word for "milking/milk" (if it
were *melk'-).
b) It is also totally missing in the
first-to-emigrate Anatolian (Hittite) branch.
c) The Indian root duh-, which is also
the root for the word for "daughter" (as the "milkmaid" in
the typical pastoral PIE family), proves to be older and more primitive and
deep-rooted.
So, clearly, PIE *melk'- is a new word
developed among the PIEs in their secondary Homeland in and around Central Asia
after they migrated out from the northwest.
There is also another word for "milk"
found in Greek gála- (gen. gálaktos), Italic (Latin) lac (gen. lactis),
both meaning "milk" (note: the word galaxy "the milky
way"), and Hittite galattar "a pleasant-tasting plant
juice" (note Greek gála- is also
"plant sap", as is Latin lac herbārum). This is another word
which may have developed separately in Central Asia. [Pure speculation:
could it be connected with Sanskrit go-rasa "milk" from go-
"cow" and rasa "plant sap/juice"?]
4.
Most significantly of all, we now have genetic evidence from cattle
conclusively proving the OIT: recent scientific genetic studies of cattle
have confirmed that the Indian humped zebu cattle, domesticated in the
Harappan area since thousands of years, suddenly started appearing in West Asia
as well as Central Asia around 2200 BCE, and by 2000 BCE there
was largescale mixing of the Indian zebu cattle, bos indicus, with the
genetically distinct western species of cattle, bos taurus, in West
Asia. Thus we have three very distinct animal species native to India―the elephant,
the peacock and the domesticated Indian zebu cattle―appearing
in West Asia exactly coinciding with the presence and activities of the Mitanni
in West Asia at the time, thus confirming that the Mitanni people were migrants
from India to West Asia around 2200 BCE:
The
most clinching evidence of all:
the species of cattle found in India till modern times have absolutely no
admixture with bos taurus of West Asia, which was also the cattle which
spread to the Steppe areas and Europe. India had only purely zebu cattle,
bos indicus, till modern times.
If we are to accept the AIT theory of "pastoral
Aryans" from the Steppes migrating into India after 2000 BCE, we
must accept the impossible proposition that the "pastoral Aryans"
migrated into India after a journey of over a thousand years from the Steppes,
without bringing a single bovine animal with them, and yet brought with them
the most complete pastoral vocabulary and culture among all the Indo-European
branches―or they slaughtered and ate up every single one of their bulls and
cows (including the bones) as soon as they entered India, leaving not a single
animal to mix with the local Harappan cattle which immediately became the
animal of the immigrants!
Genetics can show
the movements and migrations of groups of people or species of animals,
though it cannot tell us which languages they spoke (assuming here that the
cattle from different areas also speak different languages: they do emit
distinctly different sounds). The genetic evidence of the DNA of cattle species
shows that western cattle bos taurus never entered India in ancient
times. But Indian cattle bos indicus did move into Central Asia as well
as West Asia by the second half of the third millennium BCE, in the first
stages of the migration of Indo-Europeans from an Indian Homeland into their
other historical areas, until the emigrants reached areas where bos
taurus were abundant and progressively mixed with or replaced the bos
indicus taken by these emigrants.
In
any case, to sum up, a
comparison of the flora and fauna in Indo-Aryan with the flora
and fauna in PIE and the various Indo-European branches
points towards India as the original Homeland, and shows a changing landscape
of flora and fauna as the IE branches migrated north-westwards into Afghanistan
and Central Asia and then further westwards and north-westwards into their
historical areas. The elephant symbolizes the original Indian ethos of
the PIE environment.
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TALAGERI 1993: The Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism. Talageri S.G. Voice of India, New Delhi, 1993.
TALAGERI
2000:
The Rigveda: A Historical Analysis. Talageri S.G. Aditya Prakashan (New
Delhi), 2000.
TALAGERI
2008:
The Rigveda and the Avesta: The Final Evidence. Talageri S.G. Aditya
Prakashan (New Delhi), 2008.
TARR 1969: The History of the Carriage. Laszlo, Tarr. tr.
Elisabeth Hoch. Arco Publ. Inc., New York, 1969.
THOMAS
1883:
The Rivers of the Vedas, and How the
Aryans entered India. Thomas, Edward. The Journal of the American Oriental
Society, 1883 (p.357-386).
WIKIPEDIA: (as Referred).
WINN
1995: Heaven, Heroes and Happiness:
The Indo-European Roots of Western Ideology. Winn, Shan M.M. University
Press of America, Lanham-New York-London, 1995.
WITZEL
1987:
On the Localization of Vedic Texts
and Schools. Witzel, Michael. in “India and the Ancient World
–History Trade and Culture Before AD 650” ed. by Gilbert Pollet,
Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta, vol.
25, Departement Orientalistiek, Leuven.
WITZEL
1995b:
Rgvedic History: Poets, Chieftains
and Politics. Witzel, Michael. pp. 307-352 in “The Indo-Aryans of
Ancient South Asia”, ed. by George Erdosy. Walter de Gruyter. Berlin
WITZEL 2000a: The
Languages of Harappa. Witzel, Michael. Feb. 17, 2000.
WITZEL
2005: Indocentrism: autochthonous
visions of ancient India. Witzel, Michael. pp.341-404, in The
Indo-Aryan Controversy — Evidence and Inference in Indian history, ed.
Edwin F. Bryant and Laurie L. Patton, Routledge, London & New York, 2005.
VIII. Appendix
3: The Fraudulent Arena of Academic Debate
Added 20/7/2020
The defeat of the AIT on all three fronts, though
still successfully stonewalled by Western Academia (and the International,
including Indian, Academia that they control) to this day, has led to some
swift and radical damage control measures, represented by weird about-turns by
western scholars on crucial points like the identity of the Rigvedic Sarasvati
with the Ghaggar-Hakra river complex. But nothing weirder than the Stalin-era
like Confession and visibly reluctant Apology by a major western linguist, Johanna
Nichols, whose linguistic study on the locus of the Indo-European language
spread, which she locates in Bactria-Margiana in Central Asia east of the
Caspian, is mentioned above. Read the full quote of Nichols' conclusions in her
1997 paper, given in the body of this blog above. She has now posted the above
paper (and another one from 1998) on academia.edu, but she prefaces the paper
with the following "retraction":
"PARTIAL RETRACTION:
The theory of an east Caspian center of the IE spread
argued for here is untenable and with much regret I retract it. It's a
beautiful theory that accounts elegantly for a great deal of the dynamic and
linguistic geography of the IE spread, but it conflicts with essential
archaeological and etymological facts. The paper that convinced me to abandon
it is:
Darden, Bill J. 2001. On the question of the Anatolian
origin of Indo-Hittite, Robert Drews, ed., Greater Anatolia and the
Indo-Hittite Language Family, 184-228. Washington, DC: Institute for the
Study of Man.
The rest of both chapters still stands, but the east
Caspian locus is post-PIE. The PIE homeland was on the western steppe."
Incredible but true. The scholar who had presented
such detailed data and conclusions in 1997 and 1998 ("The locus of
the IE spread was therefore somewhere in the vicinity of ancient Bactria-Sogdiana."
NICHOLS 1997:137), is now (after her conclusions were profusely quoted by
opponents of the AIT) forced by academic and "peer" pressure to state
(without detailed explanation in the form of any data or logistics which would
negate the original thesis) that "the east Caspian locus is post-PIE.
The PIE homeland was on the western steppe", even as she still insists
that the "rest" of what she had written "still stands"!
She fails to point out the details of the "archaeological or etymological
facts" which now overturn the original "beautiful theory that
accounts elegantly for a great deal of the dynamic and linguistic geography of
the IE spread", or to point out which part of this theory "still
stands" as opposed to the part which does not, and why
she is now compelled to create this new division of her original thesis into
one part which "still stands" and another part which does not.
Can there be testimony more eloquent
than this to the defeat of the AIT, the stranglehold of Stalinistic or
Orwellian scholarship on Western Academia, and to the basic irrelevance of this
fake and fraudulent "academic" world?
IX. Appendix 4:
The Fake "Genetic Evidence"
Added 20/7/2020
In the last decade and more, the
complete defeat of the AIT and the irrefutable nature of the OIT case presented
by us has led to a radical reappraisal of the debate on the part of the
AIT-proponents: they now avoid debating the issue on the basis of data or
arguments based on the three academic disciplines which are actually
relevant to the subject: viz. Linguistics, Archaeology and Textual Analysis.
Now they seek to make the whole thing a question of "Genetic
Studies". So much so that large numbers of Indian opponents of the AIT
have been persuaded to swallow this line and have now start debating the
subject on the basis of "Genetics".
The fact is that Genetics has
absolutely no role to play in the "Aryan" debate, unless we
actually find "genetic" evidence which completely and convincingly
fits in with the evidence of the Linguistic, Archaeological and Textual data.
The "Aryan" question is purely a linguistic question, and not
at all a genetic one. Genetics can neither prove the AIT, nor prove the
OIT, nor disprove the AIT, nor disprove the OIT.
1. In the last few decades, more and
more genetic studies are being made, and reports being prepared, claiming
"genetic evidence" for, and occasionally against, the
AIT. A major one was the Reich Report of March 2018, "The Genomic
Formation of South and Central Asia".
2. This was followed by Tony Joseph's
book "Early Indians", Juggernaut Books, New Delhi, 2018, which
cites the above Reich Report as the final and unchallengeable word on the
subject, proving beyond dispute on the basis of incontrovertible evidence that
the "Aryans" entered India after 2000 BCE and
brought the Indo-European (Vedic) languages and culture and the Steppe
genes into India.
3. This was followed by my book "Genetics
and the Aryan Debate: 'Early Indians' Tony Joseph's Latest Assault",
Voice of India, New Delhi, 2019, which has completely demolished Joseph's
fraudulent case, and irrefutably proved that there was no "Aryan"
(Indo-European) migration into India, that the Vedic culture in India goes back
beyond 3000 BCE, and that India was the PIE Homeland.
Here I will briefly give only the main
salient points from my above book relevant to the fraudulant "genetic"
claims:
A. Can "genetic evidence" mark
out Indo-European speakers?
B. Does the Reich Report present an
honest case?
C. What does the genetic data show
vis-à-vis the AIT-OIT debate?
A. Can "genetic
evidence" mark out Indo-European speakers?:
I have gone in detail in this matter in
my above book. It is a matter on which there is no sense in trying to convince
the Genetics-enthusiasts even among those opposed to the AIT. So I will just
state the main points:
1. Genetics can tell us only the
different strands of ancestry in the DNA of an individual: it cannot tell us
from which particular one of those different strands that individual has
inherited his/her present language, religion, or cultural features. Buddhism
moved out from India to all over Asia, without injecting Indian genes and DNA
into the bodies of the people who adopted Buddhism. Likewise Christianity,
primarily from Palestine and secondarily from Europe, and Islam, from Arabia,
spread over entire continents without injecting the genes and DNA of the
original Christian or Muslim followers into the converts. Chess spread out from
India, and cricket from England, without injecting Indian or English genes and
DNA into the bodies of the people from different continents for whom these
became national games. The English language and the Spanish language are today
the only mother-tongues of millions of people of all "races" all over
the Americas, Australia and other parts of the world, and are major languages
for millions of others―and the overwhelming majority of the people speaking
these languages do not have English or Spanish genes and DNA in their genetic
make-up.
It must be remembered that the classic theory has been, in any case, that the transmission of the Indo-European languages into different areas was a process of cultural transmission from one area to different other areas by a complex process of elite dominance, acculturation and cultural diffusion through different chains of transmission. The people who ultimately took the different branch-dialects into their historical habitats were not necessarily genetically the same as the people who started out with those dialects from the original homeland.
It must be remembered that the classic theory has been, in any case, that the transmission of the Indo-European languages into different areas was a process of cultural transmission from one area to different other areas by a complex process of elite dominance, acculturation and cultural diffusion through different chains of transmission. The people who ultimately took the different branch-dialects into their historical habitats were not necessarily genetically the same as the people who started out with those dialects from the original homeland.
It is only Linguistics, Archaeology and
Recorded history (in texts, inscriptions and oral traditions) which can confirm
the original location of languages, religions and cultural features: the
Buddhist texts and all original religious texts and terminology are in Sanskrit
or Pali, the Bible is originally in Hebrew and Greek, and the Qoran is in Arabic,
the names for chess in all the countries of Asia are derived from the Sanskrit
name chaturanga (from Arabic shatranj to Mongolian Shatara
and Vietnamese chhoeu-trang) and the original cricket terminology
is English. Besides, the origins of all these religions and cultural features,
and also the English and Spanish languages, are a matter of recorded history.
Without all this, and relying only on genes and DNA, we would not have known
their geographical origins.
2. This whole business of ancestry hunting
on the basis of "genetic" analysis has fast become a kind of joke.
There are any number of youtube videos
which expose the ridiculousness of the whole thing. For example:
It is to be noted that all these
"ancestries" have little relationship to the languages spoken by the individuals
(let alone of entire nations decided on the basis of a few samples)
whose ancestries are supposed to be revealed by these DNA tests. Even if we
doggedly assume that the "ancestry" results are right, they are
irrelevant in discussions of the origins of the languages spoken by them. As I
wrote in my above book: "I am a Chitrapur Saraswat brahmin: hypothetically
it may turn out from a DNA analysis that my DNA components (and those of my
caste brethren) have 10% Maori ancestry, 10% Eskimo ancestry, 10% Hottentot
ancestry, 10% Arab ancestry, 40% Steppe ancestry, and only 20% 'ANI-ASI'
ancestry. So what? The question is of language: was my Konkani language
or its earliest 'Indo-Aryan' form brought into India by my Maori, Eskimo,
Hottentot, Steppe or Arab immigrant ancestors, or was it adopted from some
sections of the 'ANI-ASI' groups native to India? 'Genetic evidence' does not
answer this question".
3. The fashionable
"haplogroup" which most AIT proponents (notably Tony Joseph in his
above book, where he calls it the "genetic signature" of
Indo-European language speakers) allege to be "Aryan" is "R1a1".
Joseph tells us: "how do we know that R1a and its subgroups are linked
to Indo-European language speakers in India? There is an easy way to check:
look at the distribution of R1a among Indian population groups and see if they
are linked to the traditional custodians of the Sanskrit language, the upper
castes in general or the Brahmins in particular" (p.167).
It is indeed an easy way to check,
based on various genetic studies:
Firstly, is it a question of brahmins?
The highest percentage of R1a1 among brahmins is in the east:
Bengal 72%, Bihar 60%, eastern UP 48%. In most of the rest of the country, the
percentages vary among the 30s (e.g. Gujarat 32%, Jammu 37%, Maharashtra 40%,
Andhra 26%, Madhya Pradesh 35%, Punjab-Haryana 35%).
Compare the non-brahminical castes of
North India: Punjab-Haryana Khatri 67%, Punjab Haryana Ahir 63%, Punjab Haryana
Balmiki 33%, Haryana Meo 31%, Rajasthan Meena 38%, Rajasthan Meghwal 30%,
Gujarat Bhanushali 67%, Gujarat Lohana 60%, Gujarat Kathodi 40%, Gujarat Charan
36%, Gujarat Rabari 32%, Gujarat Dongri Bhil 26%.....
Then, is it a question of
"Aryan" vs. "Dravidian"? Compare some of the Dravidian-speaking
castes and particularly the tribes (some, like the Kota, representing among the
purest and most pristine Dravidian forms of speech): Medar 39%, Ezhava 24%,
Korava 24%, Andh 31%, Kare Vokkal 27%, Chenchu 26%, Kota 23%.
Further, the Manipuri people in the far
east, who speak the Sino-Tibetan Meitei language, have 50%.
The starkness of this will be better
understood if we examine the R1a1 (the "genetic signature" of
Indo-European language speakers) percentages in the other Indo-European branch language
speakers outside India, starting with the branch closest to Vedic, the Iranians:
Amazingly, the percentage of R1a1
haplogroup in Iran is almost negligible: it ranges from around 3-4% in the
western parts of Iran to less than 20% in the more central and eastern areas
and among "the traditional custodians of the Avestan text and language",
the endogamy-practicing Zoroastrians in Iran as well as the Parsis in India.
The Armenians have R1a1 ranging from 2%
to 9%.
The Greeks have from 11% to 17%.
The Albanians have 2% to 10%.
The Italic people of Spain, Portugal
have around 2%. In Italy to the east, it is 4% to 5%, going up to 11% in the
north-east in areas bordering eastern Europe. The Romanians, actually in
eastern Europe, have as high as 20%.
The Celtic people (Ireland, Scotland,
Cornwall and Wales) have 1% to 7%.
The Germanic people (including Hitler's
"pure Aryans") mostly have low percentages: in Germany from 8% to the
highest 31% (in areas like Rostock), in Holland around 4%. In England, it
ranges from 1% to 7% (except in Orkney, a Scottish island, where it is 27%, due
to it having long been in control of the Norse people of Norway, who also have
27%).
In fact, among the Germanic populations,
the Scandinavians (Norway, Sweden, but also the non-Indo-European
Finland) have the highest consistent percentage of R1a1.
It is only the Baltic and Slavic
speakers of eastern Europe who have this haplogroup in high percentages: from
38% to 60%, going sometimes to as high as 65% (still less than the Bengali
brahmins, which as we saw above, does not make it an "Aryan" or
"brahmin" or "Indo-European" haplogroup!)―and the Iranian
speakers of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Central Asia: The Pathans 45-50%, the
Baluchis 28%, Nooristanis 60%, Tajiks 31%!
The dismal percentages among the
Iranians proper, Greeks, Armenians and Albanians (as also Celts and most Italic
speakers) may also be compared with the percentages in certain
non-Indo-European Semitic groups of West Asia: 9% in Syria, as high as 43%
among the Shammar tribes in Kuwait, and as high as 52% among the Ashkenazi
Levites in Israel: Levites are a priestly class among Jews, "'the
traditional custodians of the Hebrew Old Testament text and language"! In
fact, even the Uralo-Altaic language speaking Uighurs of Central Asia and
Sinkiang have 22%.
Clearly, while haplogroups may show
genetic ancestral connections among different peoples of the world―and
regardless of whether this particular haplogroup spread out from India (as some
Genetics-enthusiast opponents of the AIT claim) or was brought in by
immigrants―they can tell us nothing about the history of languages.
B. Does the Reich Report present
an honest case?:
The Reich report claims to show that the
Steppe genes were brought in by immigrants from the Steppes, after 2000
BCE, who also brought in the Vedic Indo-European language, religion and
culture.
The point is: while the report cannot
under any circumstance show that such immigrants brought in the Vedic
Indo-European language, religion and culture, does the report at least show
that Steppe immigrants entered India around 2000 BCE and that it is
their Steppe genes which are found all over the length and breadth of the
Indian population today?
I will leave it to geneticists opposed
to the AIT to argue out the issue on genetic grounds, but there are three
basic aspects of the report which definitely show that this did not happen.
Whether this is only because the preparers of the report were careless, sloppy
and ambiguous in their presentation, or because the genetic data actually fails
to show any such thing, can be a matter of subsequent debate (between
genetic-minded supporters and opponents of Reich's case). Here we will only
note these three aspects which seem to indict the report as fake (or carelessly
presented?):
1. According to the Reich report as originally
presented in 2018, the present Indian population of every region,
caste and religious composition (including most of the isolated tribes)
primarily consists of three ancestral components:
a) The First Indians or Onge
who migrated to South Asia from Africa 65000 years before present.
b) The Zagros/Iranian Agriculturists
who migrated to South Asia from the Zagros mountain area of Iran, around
7000 BCE.
c) The Steppe Pastoralists who migrated
to South Asia from the Kazakh Steppes and beyond, after 2000 BCE.
The report as it was finally presented
in 2019 modified the second point above (to fit in with some newer genetic
analysis), suggesting now that the separation of the "Iranian
Agriculturists" in India from the "Iranian Agriculturists" in
the Zagros area of Iran may have taken place as early as 10000 BCE or
earlier, and is ambiguous about the exact region where this separation took
place (i.e. not necessarily in the Zagros area of Iran). This, as the
geneticists sagely tell us, now establishes that the Harappan
civilization at least (though they insist it was not "Aryan") was
fully indigenous in its origins, and agriculture was probably separately
developed in the Harappan areas and not brought in (as previously
suggested) by "Zagros/Iranian Agriculturists" after 7000
BCE.
But this point is not in dispute. The
dispute is about the alleged third immigration after 2000 BCE and
what it "brought" into India.
According to the Reich report, till
2000 BCE, the people of northwestern India (i.e. the Harappans) had
only two ancestral components: the third entered into India in
the post-Harappan period with the coming of the Steppe
immigrants. The report makes this claim on the following grounds: although no
ancient DNA from the Harappan area and period had been found and analyzed as
yet (the only specimen of Harappan DNA being from the "Rakhigarhi
individual" whose analysis was not yet completed), a genetic study of the ancient
DNA of 312 specimens from Central Asia and Iran-Turan showed the
following:
309 of the 312 specimens, distributed all
over Central Asia and Iran-Turan (during the Harappan period) had three
ancestral components (as per Tony Joseph): "early-Iranian-agriculturist-related
ancestry (about 60 per cent), Anatolian agriculturist-related-ancestry (about
21 per cent) and west-Siberian related ancestry (about 13 per cent)" (JOSEPH
2018:94).
The remaining 3 of the 312 specimens,
found in areas of Central Asia and Iran-Turan bordering the Harappan
area, had only two (as per Tony Joseph): 14-42% First Indian
ancestry and the rest 86-58% Zagros/Iranian
Agriculturist ancestry, but no Anatolian ancestry at all.
[A correction to the picture shown by
Joseph: the graphs in the report show that the 3 specimens also had three
ancestries: the First Indian ancestry, the Zagros/Iranian
Agriculturist ancestry, and the west-Siberian related ancestry.
Apart from this inadvertent error by
Joseph, the logic is quite correct: the two groups both have Zagros/Iranian
Agriculturist ancestry and the west-Siberian related ancestry, but
while the 309 specimens have the Anatolian agriculturist-related-ancestry
as the third ancestry, the 3 specimens have the First Indian ancestry as
the third ancestry].
Therefore, the geneticists (and Tony
Joseph) concluded that, although no actual DNA from the Harappan areas was
available, the above situation showed that the 3 specimens which stood out from
the others were outward migrants from the Harappan civilization (since the First
Indian ancestry is found in all Indians today, but is found nowhere outside
the borders of Central Asia), and their genetic composition proved the genetic
composition of the Harappans. Therefore, Joseph predicts that the Rakhigarhi
DNA, when revealed, would be the same as the DNA of the 3 above specimens
(referred to as the "Indus Peripheral" specimens): "Scientists
have managed to recover DNA from the Harappan site of Rakhigarhi in India, but
the study has not yet been published. Credible news reports about the
unpublished study, however, suggest they support the conclusion of a mixture
between Zagros agriculturists and the Harappans" (JOSEPH 2018:93,fn):
by Harappans here, he refers to the First Indians or Onge.
His logic was perfectly correct, and
(although for some reason most Genetics-enthusiasts among the opponents of the
AIT refused to accept this) I wrote in my book: "Although many of his
anti-AIT critics would object to this, he is probably right", since
the evidence clearly showed that while the 309 specimens (with Anatolian
ancestry) were locals of Central Asia with long connections to the outer world,
the other 3 specimens (with First Indian ancestry) had connections with
India to the south. The Rakhigarhi report, made public well after my book
was published, proved us right.
However, the main claim of the report is
that the Steppe ancestry entered India after 2000 BCE.
This is based on the separate DNA analysis of the only ancient post-Harappan
specimens found in India, 3 specimens in "the Swat valley of Pakistan
(1200-1 BCE)" (JOSEPH 2019:92), which have First Indians + Zagros
people + Steppe people ancestry (it is to be assumed that it still also has
the west-Siberian related ancestry, which for some reason Joseph seems
shy to mention). Thus the Steppe ancestry enters India for the first
time after the Harappan era.
However, the 309 specimens, mentioned
earlier, pertain to a long period, which includes the Harappan as well as
post-Harappan era, and the Steppe ancestry is apparently not found in
the BMAC area even in the post-Harappan era! So the Reich report tells us that
the BMAC area in Central Asia was "bypassed by members of these
[Steppe] groups who hardly mixed with BMAC people and instead mixed
with peoples further south" (REICH 2018:8)! At the same time, there
was migration into the BMAC from the south, so that the First Indians ancestry now entered the BMAC (but not
Iran-Turan).
Therefore, as per the report, we should
have the following four cases:
1. Central Asia (BMAC + Iran-Turan) in
the Harappan period: Zagros people + west-Siberian related +
Anatolian ancestry.
2. BMAC in the post-Harappan period:
Zagros people + west-Siberian related + Anatolian + First
Indians ancestry.
3. Harappa in the Harappan period
(Indus Peripheral in Central Asia): Zagros people + west-Siberian
related + First Indians ancestry.
4. Harappa in the post-Harappan
period (Swat Valley): Zagros people + west-Siberian related + First
Indians + Steppe ancestry.
The particular Steppe ancestry that came
into India after 2000 BCE, According to the Reich report, is "Steppe_MLBA"
(REICH 2018:14-15).
However, the picture that is shown on
the color-coded graph (REICH 2018:14-15) does not tally at all with this
description:
a) the post-Harappan color-chart
for both the BMAC as well as the Swat Valley shows
exactly the same colors: Blue + Orange + Green + Yellow. But there
should be a difference: the BMAC has Anatolian ancestry but no Steppe
ancestry, and the Swat Valley has Steppe ancestry but no Anatolian
ancestry, so the colors should be different.
b) Furthermore, according to the same
graph, the colors for the Steppe_MLBA are Blue + Teal + Orange + Red.
But the colors Teal and Red are completely missing in the DNA of
the Swat specimens which apparently includes this Steppe_MLBA ancestry.
So where is this Steppe ancestry
which "bypassed" the BMAC and entered into the Swat Valley? Why does
the color-coded chart not reflect these two claims made in the report?
2. In spite of this glaring defect, let
us assume the report is right in claiming that the 3 Swat DNA specimens in the
post-Harappan period contain Steppe ancestry for the first time within
India.
But, is the claim made by both Reich and
Tony Joseph, on the basis of this, at all honest or valid?
It will be seen that, as per the report,
the earliest and only ancient DNA specimens from within India,
which show this Steppe ancestry, are these 3 Swat specimens. And as per
Joseph, all these 3 specimens are dated "1200-1 BCE"
(JOSEPH 2019:92).
The Swat Valley is in the extreme
north of Pakistan, to the west of Kashmir. It represents the very northernmost
periphery of ancient India, well to the north of the central Punjab-Haryana
area of the Rigveda (although the Swat Valley does figure in the Rigveda).
And yet on the basis of these earliest
and only ancient DNA specimens from within India, in the very northernmost
peripheral area of India, as late as after 1200 BCE, Reich and
Joseph make the claim that these ancient specimens prove that
Indo-European speaking Steppe people entered India from the north in 2000
BCE! And, by 1200 BCE, they had completely occupied
the Rigvedic area as far east as western U.P. and Haryana, and had (after
having completely forgotten the fact of their external origins) composed the
entire text of the Rigveda, a text which does not mention a single entity with
a non-Indo-European name and already has Indo-European names for all the rivers
of the entire area!
Clearly, this is a fraudulent claim, and
the intentions of the Reich report are anything but objective scholarship.
3. What is the basis of the claim, based
on "Genetics", that Indo-Europeans from the Steppes brought the Steppe
DNA into India?
The basis is the fact that the Harappan
population (as per the evidence of both the Indus Peripheral as well as the
Rakhigarhi DNA) did not have Steppe DNA, while the present
population of India has this Steppe DNA, in its genetic
make-up. This (assuming that all the genetic
claims are true and correct) proves that the Steppe DNA entered DNA some
time between 2000 BCE and the present day.
However,
does this justify the claim by Reich and Joseph that this DNA entered the
Indian genetic make-up from immigrations between 2000 BCE and 1000
BCE? After all, the recorded history of India has been a continuous
saga of people from the outside world entering India in hordes through Central
Asia. All of them, till the Islamic invasions, merged with the Indian
population and adopted the Indian languages, religions and culture, so that
(after over 2000 years of internal immigrations within India, with groups of
people from every corner of India migrating to and settlng down in every other
corner) there has been a continuous admixture of populations and DNA. We have
the Shakas, Huns, Kushanas, Mongols, and even the Greeks and Persians and
others, pouring into India from the Buddhist period onwards. Would it be
surprising to find Steppe DNA in the present population?
The Reich
report makes its political agenda clear by trying to answer this objection in
its bid to promote the AIT and try to stymy the OIT. These
ideologically committed "scientists" categorically rule out the
possibility that any Steppe ancestry in present-day India could have
come from later historically attested invasions and immigrations.
Telling us that the Steppe_MLBA samples from eastern Eurasia
after 1500 BCE have ~25% of East Asian ancestry (the color purple
in their color-coded chart), which should necessarily have brought purple
ancestry into the DNA of modern Indians, the report claims that this "decreases
the probability that populations in the 1st millennium BCE and 1st millennium
CE―including Scythians, Kushans and Huns, sometimes suggested as sources for
the Steppe ancestry influences in India today―contributed to the majority of
South Asians, which have negligible East Asian ancestry in our analysis"
(REICH 2018:11-12).
That is: the Steppe people of the
first millennium BCE (as per these scientists) had an additional
Han Chinese ancestry (purple) while the Steppe people of the second
millennium BCE did not. Since the Steppe DNA in modern Indians
does not have this purple ancestry, it must have entered India in the second
millennium BCE and not in the first millennium BCE. So the
argument goes, although we are not provided with color-coded graphs of
modern Indians to allow us to check or confirm this.
This shysterish argument has two flaws:
a) This goes against their own claim, as
already pointed out above, that the Steppe_MLBA DNA was brought
in by Steppe immigrants of 2000 BCE, since this DNA should have
contained (in their color-coded graph) the colors Teal and Red
which are found in the Steppe_MLBA DNA but not found in the Swat
specimens (which they claim contain Steppe_MLBA DNA).
b) It is a historical fact that
hordes of people from Central Asia "including Scythians, Kushans and
Huns" entered India "in the 1st millennium BCE and 1st
millennium CE". If their DNA contained Han Chinese (purple)
ancestry, but the modern Indians with whom they intermixed in large numbers
(and this is recorded history, not speculation) do not have this purple
ancestry, this does not mean that all those historically recorded people never
actually came into India. It means that there is something wrong with the
"genetic" data, analysis and reasoning of these
"scientists".
4. There are other flaws and
agenda-driven points in the Reich report. We will deal with only one here: the
persistent mischievous references to ANI "Ancestral North
Indian" and ASI "Ancestral South Indian"
(which even becomes AASI "Ancient Ancestral South
Indian" in context). The use of these appellations is particularly
reprehensible because Joseph tells us (JOSEPH 2018:87-89), quoting Reich's own
words, that these two names were concocted by two Indian Hindu members of
Reich's team who did not like the AIT and wanted to suggest (in lieu of
the AIT) that there were two groups, both originally native
to India, to the North and South respectively, who produced by different
admixtures all the permutations and combinations of DNA found among the various
present castes, communities and tribes in India today. The two appellations
were reluctantly accepted by Reich only to placate the two parochial Hindu
scientists on his team. This was in 2009.
If so, why are these two spurious appellations
(allegedly concocted by anti-AIT Hindu members of Reich's team in 2009)
still used in the new report of 2018-2019 in an AIT context?
The use of these terms, in the context
of the scenario outlined in the Reich report is completely unwarranted:
Firstly, the only
ancient DNA without Steppe ancestry which has been found is in
the North: the Indus Peripheral DNA (in Central Asia) and
the Rakhigarhi DNA (in Haryana). On what grounds is it described as
"Ancestral South Indian"?
Secondly, every
group which migrated into India, including the First Indian or Onge
people from Africa, reportedly 65000 years ago, supposedly came by land from
the North. So there must have been, every time, a first stage
when an immigrating group with its particular new ancestry was found
only in North India and then later people carrying this ancestry
spread to the South. So there cannot possibly be, in Reich's scenario,
an "ASI" versus an "ANI" at any point of
time.
Clearly, the intention is to maintain a
distinction between two concocted groups:
a) Original Northern
"Aryans" (with Steppe ancestry) and
b) Original Southern
"Dravidians" (without Steppe ancestry)
in pursuit of the divisive AIT political
agenda.
Another agenda-driven appellation is
"Steppe Pastoralists" for the alleged Steppe immigrants
after 2000 BCE. In what sense were they "Pastoralists"?
The only cattle found in India from ancient times to the modern period are Bos
indicus or the humped zebu cattle native to India, first found
domesticated in the Harappan civilization. This is not our claim, it is a
unanimously accepted fact: see section H, The Evidence of the
Cow, of Appendix 2, The Evidence of Animal and
Plant Names, earlier on in this article. So the people who
supposedly came all the way from the Steppes and entered India from Central
Asia cannot have been "Pastoralists" since they did not bring
a single specimen of western cattle with them, and only became pastoralists
after becoming acquainted with the indigenous cattle they encountered in
India.
C. What does the genetic data show
vis-à-vis the AIT-OIT debate?:
The most important thing about the Reich
report, or its propagation by Tony Joseph, is that Joseph concedes a very
important and fundamental point. He tells us that the genetic data shows "a southward migration of
pastoralists from the Kazakh Steppe―first towards central Asian regions, that
is, present-day Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, after 2100 BCE; and
then towards south Asia throughout the second millennium BCE (2000 BCE to 1000
BCE)" (JOSEPH 2018:167). Further, since "the BMAC ancient DNA shows
Steppe presence only after 2100 BCE and is conspicuously absent before that,
it is clear that a Steppe migration to south Asia through this route could
not have happened earlier" (JOSEPH 2018:180).
In short, Joseph concedes that if it can
be shown that the Indo-European Vedic language was already being spoken in
India before 2000 BCE, it automatically means that any immigrants
from the Steppes (after 2000 BCE, there being no Steppe people
in India before 2000 BCE) could not have
brought the Indo-European languages into India.
As we have already seen earlier (in sections
II and III of this article, The Actual Date of the Rigveda and The
Geographical Evidence of the Data in the text, all of which we will
not repeat here) on the basis of the incontrovertible evidence of the Rigveda,
the Avesta and the Mitanni data, the oldest books of the Rigveda (6,3,7) go
back long before 2500 BCE, at which time the Vedic
Indo-Aryans were originally to the east of the Sarasvati river, in
Haryana, with no extra-Indian memories or personal acquaintance with areas to
the west of the Punjab, and their area was a purely Indo-Aryan area with
even the rivers having Indo-Aryan names!
So the so-called Steppe ancestry
has no connection with the Indo-European languages in India.
But what is Joseph's take on the date of
the Rigveda vis-à-vis the alleged immigration of people with Steppe
ancestry into India after 2000 BCE?
It becomes clear from Joseph's book that
it is the typical agenda-driven book where any and every claim or theory which
is pro-AIT or anti-OIT becomes "evidence" to him.It is like the case
presented to the Chandrashekhar government by the Babri Masjid Action Committee
vs. the case (prepared by Koenraad Elst) presented by the Vishwa Hindu
Parishad: the VHP case was complete and coherent and loaded with actual
evidence and logical arguments which did not contradict each other. The Babri
Masjid treated every written word against the Temple side as "scholarly evidence":
thus one piece of "scholarly evidence" claimed that there was no such
historical person as Rama, another claimed that Rama's Ayodhya was in
Afghanistan and not in UP, various others claimed various other cities in UP,
or various other sites in Ayodhya, as the actual birth-place of Rama, and so
on. All these contracictory claims were "evidence" to the Babri case!
Likewise, while Joseph (as we saw above)
claims that the "Aryans" had moved "first towards central
Asian regions, that is, present-day Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan,
after 2100 BCE; and then towards south Asia throughout the second millennium
BCE (2000 BCE to 1000 BCE)" (JOSEPH 2018:167), at another point in his
book he has no compunctions in presenting some other "scholarly evidence"
indicating the "Aryan" movement from the Steppes, which
"proves" that "around 2000 BCE, they finally broke through―or
went around―the Ural mountains and spread eastwards across the Steppe"
(JOSEPH 2018:179)!!
As
per this second version, the Indo-Aryans were still to the west of the Urals till
2000 BCE!
Please check this location on a map of
Siberia (or better still, the map in Joseph's own book, which shows the very
long route apparently taken by the Indo-Aryans eastwards from the Urals to somewhere
to the northwest of Mongolia and then southwards through the whole of Central
Asia, before they finally entered India), and see where India comes on that
map, to get the full impact of this as regards the possible date of their first
entry into the northwesternmost frontiers of India!
What is important is that Tony Joseph
also gives us his date for the Rigveda: "between 1400 BCE and 1000 BCE"
(JOSEPH 2018:177) on the authority of Michael Witzel.
If we identify the Indo-Aryans with the Steppe people
who had not yet
crossed into South Asia from present-day Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and
Tajikistan before 2000 BCE, and the date "between 1400 BCE
and 1000 BCE" for the Rigveda, we compulsorily get the following
impossible scenario:
1. The Indo-Aryans were still in
present-day Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan before 2000 BCE, and
had not yet crossed southwards.
2. After 2000 BCE, they started
moving southwards into the northwestern parts of South Asia. They moved swiftly
through the northwestern frontiers of Pakistan and the Punjab, and reached and
settled down in Haryana and westernmost U.P.
3. Here they settled down so thoroughly
that they:
a) completely forgot about all the western areas
that they had passed through;
b) became the sole inhabitants of this
area, and then totally lost all memories about the original non-Indo-European
people of that area, whom they had either completely displaced or exterminated;
c) renamed all the local places, lakes,
animals and rivers with Indo-Aryan names and did this so thoroughly that no
memories remained of the original names;
d) and then they composed the books,
hymns and verses of the Old Rigveda, presumably in the earlier
half of the composition period "between 1400 BCE and 1000
BCE" that Joseph assigns for the Rigveda.
4. Later, they again started moving back
across the Punjab and extended their horizon westwards up to southern and
eastern Afghanistan; there they became acquainted with the domestic camel and
with spoked wheels; and then they composed the books, hymns and verses of the New
Rigveda, in the later half of the period "between
1400 BCE and 1000 BCE".
5. After this, one section of these Indo-Aryans
started migrating westwards; they moved westwards through Afghanistan and Iran,
and arrived in West Asia (Iraq and Syria). There, in the course of time,
by 1700 BCE, they forgot all their past history and adopted the local
Hurrian language, only retaining some aspects of their Indo-Aryan heritage
(such as personal names, some words associated with horses and horse-training,
etc.). And some centuries later, they established the Mitanni
kingdom in 1500 BCE.
Note: among other
things, a culture (the culture of the New Rigveda)― which only developed
in the later part of the 1400-1000 BCE period of
composition of the Rigveda (as per Tony Joseph's date) after the
composition of the Old Rigveda in the earlier part of this period―was
taken by the pre-Mitanni ancestors into West Asia several centuries before
it even came into existence!
This is clearly impossible,
unless they migrated westwards after 1000 BCE through some kind
of "time warp" as seen in science-fiction films, and reached there
several centuries earlier long before 1700 BCE.
This whole scenario from 2000 BCE
to 1500 BCE is clearly absolutely impossible. To give it even
the barest modicum of serious consideration, we will require to accept a whole
series of impossible arguments:
a) That the scientific dating of
the Mitanni-related documents in Syria-Iraq is all wrong. That in fact the
whole of West Asian chronology is all wrong.
b) That the division of the Rigveda (by
two centuries of Rigvedic scholarship in keeping with the absolute evidence
of the data in the text) into an Old Rigveda and a New Rigveda is
all wrong. And in fact that maybe the Old Rigveda is actually the New
Rigveda and the New Rigveda is actually the Old Rigveda.
c) That the common data found in
the New Rigveda and the Mitanni-related documents of West Asia
(but not found in the Old Rigveda) is not real data. That maybe all this
common data was removed from the Old Rigveda and interpolated
into the New Rigveda by wily Hindus.
d) That the geographical data in the
Rigveda is not what it seems or is claimed to be: maybe, for example, the word Gaṅgā
actually refers to the Oxus, the word Kīkaṭa actually refers to Kazakhstan,
and the word mahiṣa actually refers to the Bactrian camel.
Unless we want to insist on these four
extremely special pleadings in order to reject the Rigvedic evidence, we must
accept the following:
any Steppe people who entered South Asia from present-day Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan and Tajikistan after 2000 BCE, and then spread out all over
India in the course of the next four thousand years, intermixing to different
degrees with all the existing inhabitants of the land and contributing their
genomes and DNA to the Indian gene pool―whatever else they may have brought
with them into India―did not bring the Indo-European languages and Vedic
culture. The fact that all their migrations and intermixing within India
did not create even a ripple in the archaeological record, or leave any kind of
memories among any section of the different groups concerned, shows that they
in fact got integrated into the local populace everywhere, accepting the local
languages and the general culture and traditions, like most other later ancient
people in the historical record (the Greeks, Persians, Scythians, Huns, etc.).
To sum up: the genetic
data definitely does not, and cannot, prove any
immigration of Indo-European-speaking "Aryans" into India after
2000 BCE. The joint testimony of the chronological and geographical data in
the Rigveda and the Mitanni-related documents (and also the Avesta), on the
other hand, proves that the Indo-European languages were already in India from
long before 3000 BCE. And the other historical evidence in the Rigveda,
coupled with the linguistic and archaeological evidence, as I have shown
conclusively in my books and blogs (summarized in this article), tells us, to
paraphrase Tony Joseph (JOSEPH 2018:165) that "we have to consider the genetic
case for the AIT as closed".
THIS ARTICLE CAN BE DOWNLOADED AS PDF ON ACADEMIA.EDU
THIS ARTICLE CAN BE DOWNLOADED AS PDF ON ACADEMIA.EDU
A classic piece. Needs to be translated in all Indian languages. I may try in Hindi🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
ReplyDeleteThank you for offering to do so: my work is always free to be translated, printed or published anywhere, as long as I am given the intellectual credit for it. I know it is a massive, tedious and painful task to translate such a huge piece with countless technical terms into any language, and whether you actually do it or not, thank you anyway for the offer.
Deletesir, Thanks a lot for accepting the offer. I am enclosing here with a sample translation. Please offer your comments on my e mail address, vishwamohan65@gmail.com
DeleteThe sample is given below:-
ऋग्वेद और आर्य सिद्धांत: एक युक्तिसंगत परिप्रेक्ष्य
[ यह श्री श्रीकान्त गंगाधर तलागेरी द्वारा भारतीय इतिहास अनुसंधान परिषद्, नयी दिल्ली के १९१८ के सम्मलेन में प्रस्तुत शोधपत्र का उन्ही के द्वारा परिमार्जित और संशोधित आलेख का हिंदी अनुवाद है जो अबतक अप्रकाशित है. यह अनुवाद माननीय तलागेरी जी की सहमति से प्रस्तुत किया जा रहा है.]
सच कहें तो भारत ही नहीं वरन समस्त भारोपीय (भारत-यूरोपीय) भूभाग का प्राचीनतम ग्रन्थ है - अपना 'ऋग्वेद'. भारोपीय और भारतीय सभ्यताओं के पुरातन इतिहास की सुराग पाने में इस ग्रन्थ की महत्ता का कोई सानी नहीं है. भारतीय इतिहास लेखन की सभी शैक्षणिक धाराओं में यह तथ्य सर्वमान्य है.
फिर भी, इस बात को लेकर तीव्र मतभेद उजागर हुए हैं कि इतिहास में ऋग्वेद और उसके रचयिता वैदिक आर्यों की सही स्थिति क्या है और ऋग्वेद हमें इतिहास के उन पन्नों को पढ़ने-समझने में किस सीमा तक सहायता करता है.
इस बात को ठीक-ठीक समझने के हमारे सामने दो नजरिये हैं:
१. 'आक्रान्ता-आर्यों' का परिप्रेक्ष्य
इसमें वैदिक आर्यों को एक आक्रामक प्रजाति समझा जाता है. वैदिक साहित्य का यह अंतराल भारतीय इतिहास के निरंतर प्रवाह में एक ऐसा विराम माना जाता है, जहाँ 'हड़प्पा' या 'सिन्धु-घाटी' नाम की एक पुरानी सभ्यता का अवसान होता है और उसकी जगह पर 'आर्य' नामक हमलावरों की एक प्रजाति भारत के बाहर से आकर १५०० ईसा पूर्व में भाषा और धर्म आधारित एक सर्वथा नवीन सभ्यता का बीजारोपण करती है.
२. स्थानीय 'भारतवंशी-आर्यों' का परिप्रेक्ष्य
इसमें वैदिक आर्यों को भारत की मिटटी में ही जन्मा भारतवंशी माना जाता है और इनकी संस्कृति को भारत ही नहीं, बल्कि समस्त वैश्विक-सभ्यता का स्थानिक बीज और मूल माना जाता है.
'आक्रान्ता-आर्य परिप्रेक्ष्य' औपनिवेशिक काल में यूरोपीय विद्वानों की उस छानबीन पर आधारित है कि उत्तरी भारत की प्रमुख भाषाओं का संबंध इरान, मध्य एशिया और यूरोप की भाषाओं से है. पिछली कुछ सदियों में हुए भाषाई अध्ययनों से ऐसा आभास मिलता है कि ये सारी भाषाएं आपस में मिलकर एक 'भाषा-परिवार' से अपना ताल्लुक रखती हैं. इस भाषा परिवार का नाम 'इंडो-यूरोपियन' (भारोपीय) दिया गया है. पूर्व में इसे 'आर्यन' कहा गया था क्योंकि इस परिवार की दो प्राचीनतम कृतियों, भारत के 'ऋग्वेद' और ईरान के 'अवेस्ता', की रचना करने वाले अपने को 'आर्य' कहा करते थे.
उत्तर भारत की भाषाएँ यथा, कश्मीरी, पंजाबी, सिन्धी, हिंदी, बंगाली, असमिया, उड़िया, गुजराती, मराठी आदि और साथ-साथ नेपाली तथा सिंहली भारोपीय भाषा परिवार की 'भारतीय-आर्य' शाखा से उद्भूत हैं और वैदिक संस्कृत इसकी सबसे पुरानी मानी हुई और दर्ज की गयी भाषा है.
भारत की बाकी भाषाएँ अन्य पांच चिन्हित भाषा परिवारों के सदस्य हैं जिनके नाम इस प्रकार हैं: द्रविड़ (तमिल, मलयालम, तेलगू, कन्नड़ आदि), ऑस्ट्रिक (संथाली, मुंडारी, निकोबारी, खासी आदि), चीनी-तिब्बती (लद्दाखी, लेपचा, मिती, गारो, नागा आदि), बुरुशास्की और अंडमणि.
ये भारोपीय भाषाएँ बारह शाखाओं में विभाजित हैं: इटालिक, सेल्टिक, जर्मन, बाल्टिक. स्लाविक, अल्बानी, ग्रीक, एनाटोलियन, अर्मेनियाई, टोकारियन, ईरानी और भारतीय-आर्य. इनमें से दो, अनाटोलियन (मुख्यतः हिटाईट भाषाएँ) और टोकारियन अब विलुप्त हो गयी हैं और इनकी जानकारी अब मात्र पुरातात्विक अवशेषों में संरक्षित शाब्दिक अभिलेखों और सन्दर्भों से ही मिलती है. भाषाई साक्ष्य यह प्रदर्शित करते हैं कि इन बारह भाषाओं के आद्य और पैतृक स्वरूपों को बोलने वाले लोग एक विशेष भौगोलिक क्षेत्र में एक साथ रहते थे जहाँ से ३००० ईसा पूर्व उन्होंने अलग होना शुरू किया...........
1918 को 2018 पढ़ें।
DeleteShrikant G Talageri: The Rigveda And The Aryan Theory: A Rational Perspective The Full Out-Of-India Case In Short Revised And Enlarged 20/7/2020 >>>>> Download Now
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Sir,
ReplyDeleteI happened to come across your work randomly while listening to a lecture on YouTube, and must admit, have been blown away by the clarity, depth and impartiality of your work on this subject. The evidence you present is very compelling, and best of all, very logical. Having been brought up on the conventional AIT paradigm, this work has been a must read for me, and I will recommend your work to others for sure.
I had 3 basic queries to further my understanding of this subject. Please excuse if these are questions you’ve already answered elsewhere.
1) the timing of the RV books as per this paper would place the IVC squarely in the same period as the RV, early Harappa corresponding to the old RV books, and mature Harappa with the newer books. What bothers me is why there are such limited references in the RV books to this massively evolved, urban civilisation which either they were a part of, or was right at their doorsteps. Infact, the second isn’t possible given Rakhigarhi, the timing in the paper would suggest IVC and the RV cultures should be one and the same, yet even the new RV books seem to not allude in any detail to the Harappan sites / ways of living. This is a question that has bothered me
2) the conventional dating of the Mahabharata at around 3100BCE would place it squarely in the same period as the old RV books per this paper. Given that the Mahabharata was essentially a Puru-Bharat fight centered in Haryana, the old RV books should have been replete with references to this clearly significant incident, yet there is only casual reference to Shantanu once in the RV unless I am mistaken. Any thoughts on this would also be greatly appreciated.
Many thanks and best compliments,
Shashwat
The Rigveda in the New Books has two words related to trade and commerce which are Babylonian words: mana and bekanata. But there is not a single reference to Babylon or Mesopotamia in any other way. The composers were composing for certain particular purposes and so they did not refer to things which were not part of their specific concerns: only things which came incidentally in the hymns provide us with clues. They refer to the Gods and rituals, and otherwise to the battles in which they participated or to the kings who gave them gifts. If you read the Dnyaneshwari, you will not necessarily get descriptions of the socio-political set-up and technological level of the Maharashtra of the time, since giving those details was not the purpose of the composer, Sant Dnyaneshwar.
DeleteBut note that even before the discovery of the Harappan sites, certain Indologists had pointed out that the hymns could only have been composed in a settled civilizational setting. Two examples:
“Pischel and Geldner have done well to point out that these poems are not the productions of ignorant peasants, but of a highly cultured professional class, encouraged by the gifts of kings and the applause of courts (Einleitung p.xxiv). Just the same may be said of the Homeric bards and of those of Arthur’s court […]” (ARNOLD 1904:217)
“[The Rigvedic collection] reflects not so much a wandering life in a desert as a life stable and fixed, a life of halls and cities, and shows sacrificial cases in such detail as to lead one to suppose that the hymnists were not on the tramp but were comfortable well-fed priests” (HOPKINS 1898:20).
Moreover, the Rigveda was composed among the Purus in the northern half of the Harappan civilization (which was a Puru-Anu area) while the southern part (Sind, Kutch, etc.) was Yadu territory and was the more commercially active area. The two Babylonian words and the frequent references to people in huge ships rescued at sea by the Ashwins are the only hints at this in the Rigveda. Also, the picture of Varuna living in a huge hall with a thousand pillars and doors is not exactly a concept that would be found among Steppe nomads.
About the Mahabharata, the "conventional dating" is a mistake. The Mahabharata took place around 1500 BCE. Too long and controversial to elaborate here. The tenth Mandala, in a very late hymn composed by his brother Devapi, refers to Shantanu.
Beautiful! Sir, you have created my interest in history through your deep scholastic researches imbued with scientific temperament unlike the traditional historians! Please accept my pranam and blessings!🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
DeleteDear Talageriji,
DeleteWith all due respect, I disagree with 1500 BCE as the date for the Mahabharata war for the following reasons:
i) As per the puranic king lists and reign-lengths given in five puranas (Bhrahmanda, Vayu, Vishnu, Matsya and Bhagwat Puranas), there are approximately 1600 years between Parikshit and Chandragupta Maurya. This gives us a lower bound of 2000-1900 BCE.
ii) The Saraswati river had certainly dried up completely by 1900 BCE. However, as per the Mahabharata descriptions, Saraswati was in a flux state and was carrying significant amount of water (on the northern part of its course). This also points towards a pre 1900 BCE period.
iii) Archaeologist Mackay, who had excavated the IVC sites, found a clay tablet dated 2200 BCE. According to Mackay, this tablet was descriptive of Mahabharata's Yamala Arjuna episode. This points towards a pre-2200 BCE date.
I'd request you to reexamine your claim for Mahabharata's century. This has the potential to factually push your dates for the Rig Veda back by around 1000-1500 years.
(i) Sir the same Puranas (especially Vayu) mention that there is a gap of 1015 years between Mahapadma Nanda (379 BCE) and coronation of Parikshit, grandson of Arjuna. This places Mahabharata to around 1400 BCE.
Delete(ii) if you check the archaeological data, we find considerable number of Late Harappan sites on the banks of upper portion of Saraswati so there's no harm in concluding that Mahabharata is post 190 BCE. Dwarka was also dated to 1570 BCE.
(iii) Mackey's opinion has to be proved, there's no evidence that the tablet depicts Mahabharata scene. It can also depict Srnjaya Divodas or Somaka Sahadev who lived in Pre Mahabharata phase.
Dear Talageriji,
ReplyDeleteI must confess at the onset that I am in absolute awe of the scholarly erudition and in-depth analysis that is a conspicuous signature of all your works. Whenever the storm of the politico-academic bias that has held the story of Indo-European origins hostage subsides, and an honest and factual analysis of this debate becomes more fashionable, your name will shine, almost alone, like a star.
I, however, have few doubts related to some technicalities herein. I'll be obliged if you could address them:
1) As far as I understand, there are two key stages of the homeland: i) When PIE was spoken in the homeland & ii) When PIE had split into the twelve branches, but they stayed together (in the Homeland) in an area of mutual interaction for some time. Therefore, sir, when you say "The cognate words for "beech", from the reconstructed PIE form *bhaHk'o-,...", are you referring to the first or the second stage? If this refers to the first stage, doesn't this mean that PIE speakers in the homeland were aware of the beech tree, and hence that tree must have been a common feature of the homeland?
ii) The Vedic language and mythology represent a stage closer than all other IE languages and myths to PIE. Could this simply be a result of Rig Veda's archaic nature? That is, while Rig Veda provides us with exact knowledge of the Indo-Aryan language and myths, there is no corresponding text of the European branches available to us. The European languages and myths have probably been accurately preserved only from the 1st millennium BCE, long after their separation from the homeland, and have been thus diluted significantly. Can this be a counter from the AIT brigade?
TIA and Regards!
1. "reconstructed PIE" simply means a word reconstructed from all the available forms. If the different words from which a PIE form has been reconstructed, are for a plant or animal found only in a restricted region (in this case Europe) and only in the branches found in that restricted region, it cannot represent Stage 1 or 2, but a subsequent stage when some branches migrated together in a particular direction and formed a word in common.
Delete2. The Hittite language is also recorded from the sixteenth century BCE, an earlier date than the Indologists are willing to concede for Vedic. But its totally changed vocabulary and mythology, the multiple non-Indo-European entities in their environment, and many other factors shows what remains of the original language and culture when immmigrants enter a civilized area at a distance from their own earlier habitat.
The Rigveda shows no external memories at all, and their environment (not only names of people mentioned in the text, but also of rivers, animals, etc.) is purely "Aryan", so they are obviously long inhabitants of the area. If they travelled all the way, through a series of halts, from South Russia to India, getting mixed with different populations, over more than a thousand years, and then mingled in the local population (the Harappans, the most populous civilization of the times) completely transforming them in language, religion, culture, and technology, etc. without creating a ripple in the archaeological records and leaving no memories of this transformation, could all this have happened in the twinkling of an eye? After all this, how could the text composed by them later have retained such a pristine "archaic" form like the culture of their far ancestors in the Steppes? Obviously this whole picture is impossible, and the only explanation, as I have repeatedly pointed out, is that the Rigvedic culture was hot out of the Indo-European oven, both in time and space. Read the chapter "The Archaeological Evidence" in my book "The Rigveda and the Avesta - The Final Evidence".
Sir, if a word represents a stage subsequent to stage 2, why is it even called a "PIE" word? It cannot be proto Indo-European, not in any sense of the term!
DeleteSince this paper was presented at an ICHR conference (and given that a textbooks revision is on the cards), can we expect OIT to find a place for itself in the revised textbooks?
TIA and Regards!
That question should be asked to the linguists. In this particular case, it was an attempt, now outdated and largely abandoned, to locate the Homeland near Europe.
DeleteI do not expect the OIT to figure in textbooks, because I have no expectations from politicians, who control everything and are only concerned with money and power. Has any party government for example even considered doing the most important thing required by Hindus: autonomy for its religious and educational institutions on par with those of Muslims and Christians? On the contrary, the erstwhile BJP govt. of Rajasthan and the present BJP government of Uttarakhand were/are competing with the Communist government of Kerala and the Evangelist government of Andhra in looting Hindu temple properties in their respective states!
Moreover, the number of "Hindus" who oppose scientific studies of history and insist that it is blasphemous to find historical clues in an "apaurusheya" Rigveda and brand scientific studies as "western-inspired", or who want fantastically ancient dates for the Ramayana, Mahabharata and Vedas, in many thousands of years, or who want to show that the Vedic language is itself the ancestral PIE (which it is not) or that that there is no such thing as "Indo-European" languages at all, etc. are too many, too popular and much more politically powerful than those who want scientific solutions. It is probably theories of that kind which will find a place in revised textbooks, if at all any revision takes place on this matter.
I have no hopes of anything in my lifetime. Maybe in a hundred years?
Dear Mr. Talageri,
ReplyDeleteWhile this article was indeed an interesting read, I would like to point out certain key facets that go against your Indian Homeland:
a) The reconstructed PIE is itself the biggest argument against an Indian Homeland. You might try and belittle it using words such as 'hypothetical', but the fact is, PIE -> Indo-Iranian -> Iranian and Indo-Aryan is arguably the biggest nail in OIT's coffin. Indo-Iranian gave rise to Indo-Aryan, and thus Avesta being contemporaneous with the 'late' Rig Veda hardly makes much sense. We know that Rig Veda was composed in orally and written down only much later, and so while it's integrity as a 'taperecord' is pretty much intact in the originality of the verses, the same can't be said about the ordering of the 10 verses in the 10 books. Just as redacted verses occur in "old books", it is not impossible to imagine that the same could have been the case with the "new books." Rig Veda was not compiled in neat layers as you seem to be suggesting. Against this, the linguistic analysis of Indo-Iranian giving rise to Indo-Aryan and linguistic evidence (independent of this debatable 'neat order of 10 mandalas') that Zarathushtra's Avesta being older than the Rig Veda supports AMT.
b) The archaeological evidence for the Yamnaya -> Andronova -> BMAC -> Cemetry H strongly supports Indo-European migration from the steppes into South Asia.
c) The Rig veda was not composed immediately after the Aryans entered India. The intervening period was at least 200 years long. By this time, Aryans had completely forgotten about their pre-India past, and the natives too had completely forgotten about their pre-Aryan past. Also, given that the Ghaggar Hakra's drying up around 2200-2000 BCE caused a sudden collapse of the IVC, it is not impossible to imagine that natives had dispersed to the interiors of India and thus the incoming Aryans did not have to encounter 'the teeming millions of Harappa'. Hence, Rig Veda doesn't refer to many non-Aryans. Despite this, as Michael Witzel (whom you profusely quote) has shown in his paper titled "Non-Aryan natives in the Rig Veda" that identification of some of this natives is not that difficult. All this fits perfectly for AMT.
d) That many rivers in the Rig Veda have Sanskrit names is also an incomplete representation of the true picture. Alternative non-IE etymologies do exist for major rivers such as Sindhu, Shutudri, Ganga and Anitabha. Given that the Ghaggar-Hakra collapsed around the same time as Aryans were entering West Punjab, it is pretty likely that the Haryana region was largely abandoned by the natives by around 1800 BCE (when the Aryans entered this region). Thus, purely Sanskrit names for Saraswati and its tributaries is not at all surprising and fits perfectly well with AMT.
e) If IE languages migrated from India, why doesn't any genetic study detect the First Indian component (which is uniquely Indian) anywhere outside India? At least some traces of the same should be found in Europe. But no! Against this, the steppe component is found in Central Asia and India both. Granted genetics can't answer specifics of a linguistic debate, this is nevertheless a strong corroborative evidence in favour of the Steppe homeland theory and against OIT.
The fact that you repeatedly use the outdated AIT instead of the much more serious AMT smells rather fishy. However, given that you are serious bout such debates, I hope you'll answer the points raised by me.
It is clear that you have not read anything written by me.
DeleteThe question of answering your outdated and half-baked arguments does not arise at all, because I do not answer "points" raised by trolls.
How am I a troll? Did I call you names? Did I brand you a "Hindutva Nationalist"? I raised certain specific points. Your refusal to address the same by unnecessarily branding me a "troll" is not going to help your cause, sir. The unbiased readers will only observe that specific objections raised by someone with an opposing viewpoint were altogether ignored and they will make up their minds accordingly.
DeleteOn the other hand, I am still open to changing my opinion if specific objections raised by me can be answered by your theory. Please sir, I request, kindly address specific points raised in my comment.
Trolls don't have to call names. The very obtuseness and persistence of their heckling shows them up as trolls.
DeleteYou ignore the literally hundreds of points in the article and come up with silly statements like "(in 200 years) Aryans had completely forgotten about their pre-India past, and the natives too had completely forgotten about their pre-Aryan past"! Is this your idea of a serious point? The rest of what you have to say is just repeating foolish things I have answered umpteen times in my books and articles and are completely outdated.
And your outdated claim: "The archaeological evidence for the Yamnaya -> Andronova -> BMAC -> Cemetry H strongly supports Indo-European migration from the steppes into South Asia." Perhaps you did not read Reich's report which says the Steppe people "bypassed" the BMAC?
Instead of raising silly heckling arguments, why don't you explain the evidence of the Mitanni and Iranian names and words being found only in the New Rigveda and post-Vedic texts? Or produce a list of words found in the Mitanni and Avestan texts and in the Old Rigveda but not in the New Rigveda and post-Vedic texts: But I suppose the significance of that evidence just escaped your brilliant attention? Or the evidence of the common name for elephant? Or the fact that the only cows in India since ancient times are Indian ones? Or that the
geography of the Rigveda shows a one-sided east-to-west movement? Or explain the list of Iranian tribes in the Battle of the Ten Kings? Or explain the Indo-European numbers?
Just objecting or refusing to accept facts and data does not constitute an "argument".
The fact is that if you really try to disprove every piece of the massive evidence given in the above article, you will only succeed in making more of a fool of yourself than you are doing now. So you choose the safe path of quoting outdated and disproved arguments.
See your silly claim "Alternative non-IE etymologies do exist for major rivers such as Sindhu, Shutudri, Ganga and Anitabha." Please see the paper "Hydronymia Rgvedica" by Blazek, an AIT supporter. All the 29 rivers have IE names, while people have tried to present non-IE names and managed to concoct only a handful of alternative suggestions.
Besides, nowhere else in the world (not even in Europe and America) have newcomers obliterated old river-names. Why do you insist on a special exception being made for the Rigvedic area alone, just to fit in with your childish stubbornness that the AIT has to be right?
I have been continuously adding to the evidence all the time. I cannot afford to waste my time repeatedly answering already-answered objections by trolls with spoilt-brat tendencies.
And yes, the unbiased readers will judge. Please keep up your trolling. The perfectness and completeness of a case only gets highlighted when the only "points" and objections raised against it are pathetically substandard ones.
Even as a comparative illiterate on this subject, there are 3 points that come to mind re Mr Banerjee’s post:
Delete1) it truly can’t be a serious suggestion that 2 independent groups of people would have collectively completely forgotten entirely their past cultural heritage over a period as short as 200 years. If the migrating aryans somehow suffered from such amnesia, atleast the natives who had to abandon their erstwhile homelands for whatever reason would have some cultural memory of a place they had lived in for presumably atleast a thousand years given the IVC dates. This is even more unbelievable given that the migrating Aryans as soon as they settled in India seem to have suddenly established such a love for this new land that they found a way to preserve and transit their new experiences over millennia. It’s almost as if they settled in India, and suddenly found a way to establish and preserve cultural memory of their present times with not even a salute to the lands they came from.
2) it seems clear from excavations in the Gangetic plains that they were not “empty” at the time the IVC was at its peak. The OCP culture was flourishing at exactly the same time as the IVC, so if the IVC people were to migrate inwards as a result of the coming of aryans or drying up of the Sarasvati, it doesn’t seem plausible that they would have encountered no one and no resistance, unless the OCP and IVC cultures were atleast interrelated (as was the Vedic Aryan culture presumably)
3) similar to the cow lineage, from what I understand, the same applies to the house mice. I think house mice found all over the world can trace their maternal dna to the subcontinent, suggesting that agriculture was perhaps the first Indian export
Hi sir, how is the Norse god Odinn the same or related to Varuna, the Rig Vedic god? Linguistic similarity does not make the same/related in anyway. This same logic applies to Ṛbhu (Vedic), Elbe (Germanic) gods. The case for Zeus and Dyuas are well established as well as the Indo-Iranian gods but not the rest.
ReplyDeleteThe connection between rbhu and elf/elbe is an accepted one, I did not originate it.
DeleteAbout Varuna and Odin, please read the chapter "Positive Evidence in the Rigveda" in my 1993 book "The Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism". I will not repeat it here.
"A completely different etymology, making elf a cognate with the Rbhus, semi-divine craftsmen in Indian mythology, was also suggested by Kuhn, in 1855.[38] In this case, *ɑlβi-z connotes the meaning, "skillful, inventive, clever", and is a cognate with the Latin labor, in the sense of "creative work". While often mentioned, this etymology is not widely accepted.[39]" - from Wiki.
DeleteI don't think this is well established, this is not accepted by all Indo-Europeanist.
Franz Felix Adalbert Kuhn, in his Mythologische Studien, had identified the words elf and rbhu. He was the founder of the school of Comparative mythology based on linguistics or philology. If you point out that his view is not accepted by everyone, let that point also be on record.
DeleteRaghavar
DeleteSection 2f below
http://omilosmeleton.gr/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/IDR.pdf
Superb article Talagri Ji, I really enjoyed reading clear cut, factual arguments.
ReplyDeleteI would also recommend you to go through Dr. Premandra Priyadarshi's article "Mulberry gives evidence of the Indo-European Homeland"
https://aryaninvasionmyth.wordpress.com/2014/09/27/mulberry-gives-evidence-of-the-indo-european-homeland/
This article too unequivocally proves your point(I.E. PIE was east of Caspian Sea). I humbly request you to use this evidence(Mulberry) too, in your flora and fauna section.
Mr. Talageri,
ReplyDeleteI don't get the logic behind your dates for the new books of the Rig Veda. You date them 2600 BCE onward, and book 5 is the oldest among the new books, which does mention spoked wheels. You also write "Spoked wheels were invented (supposedly around Central Asia) in the second half of the third millennium BCE." So, if spoked wheels were invented in Central Asia after 2500 BCE, and must have reached around 2300-2200 BCE, shouldn't book 5 then be dated after 2300 BCE, and probably much closer to 2000 BCE?
All the hymns in any one book were not written in a single day by a single author. The point is that the period of the New Books continued into the post-spoked-wheel period, while the Old Books were all completed well before the spoked wheels, camels, Mitanni-type names, etc. and were fixed by 2500 BCE (not an absolute date to the day, by the way), except for the Redacted hymns, which were used in popular narration and therefore acquired a few new words but not new contexts (i.e. they did not include new geographical areas, personalities, technological inventions, etc., only new words and grammar).
DeleteThe point is that the Old Books and the New Books belong to two distinct linguistic eras. Within that second era, Book 5 is the oldest book, and the first finalization of the six-book Rigveda must have been done after this oldest book of the New Era was finalized, some time after 2300 BCE. The other books of the New period were completed after that, with the very last hymns in Book 10 reaching down to 15-00 BCE.
Book 5 is still not acquainted with the western areas and animals so well as the other New Books and its cultural epicentre is still concentrated in the east, but it belongs linguistically to the new era. This in fact emphasizes the eastern origin of the Rigvedic-Avestan-Mitanni vocabulary.
Would like to submit two pointers from tamizh etymology. cakkai is fiber. Arai is grind. Cakkarai - sugar cane grinding is one of the oldest activities that gave raise to this word. Again natural sound to a word completely against Ferdinand Saussure hypothesis of no relation between the word and object. It requires stone rotors. cakkaram is derived thus and today the word for Sugar is Shakkar. The Sakya muni reference to Buddha and buddhism's use of wheel to explain 8 ways is also a pointer. The word for spoke in samskrit Ara is also in tamizh which relates to radius in english.
Delete@Shrikant,
ReplyDeleteOne doubt that I have is that the Steppes
was never a place with such a large
population in the first place. Whereas
India was and is a well populated country.
Could the Steppes have generated such a large population drive towards India such that there could ever have been such a mass admixture with the Indian population? Large enough to reflect in the genetic record?
Seems doubtful. What do you think?
@Shrikant,
ReplyDeleteIs it not more likely that the Steppes would have received Indian genetic admixture
due to the migrations of the Druhyu and Anu
tribes in the past towards Central Asia and the Steppes? Koenraad Elst makes an observation on demographic commonsense such that migrations from India would be small by Indian standards but noticeable enough in the peripheral areas of Central Asia and Steppes. I am not sure if the genetic information is being deliberately misinterpreted or not, but I think it is more likely that the Steppes has Indian genetic input than the other way around, and that if any genetic commonality exists between India and Steppes, then it is more likely due to Indian infusion of Gene's into the Steppe. What do you think?
Mr. Talageri,
ReplyDeleteAs per your theory, proto-Europeans (Druhyus) left India around 3000-2800 BCE (after the Hittites and Tocharians) and thus they wouldn't have reached Europe before 2500 BCE. However, the archaeology records (that have detected a massive change in Europe's material culture) date to the 1st half of the third millennium (3000-2500 BCE). How would you explain this dichotomy?
Instead of asking me to explain so-called "dichotomies" in European data (I don't remember ever claiming that I have specific dates for the Indo-European entry into Europe), why don't you deal with the data as pertains to India which is the field in which I have done research which no-one can challenge?
DeleteWhen (see above article) even western archaeologists are firm in saying that archaeology disproves the AIT, and when even the geneticists admit that "Steppe Aryans" could not have entered India before 2000 BCE, how do you explain the fact that the ancestral culture of the proto-Mitanni of 1700 BCE in Syria represents the culture of the New Rigveda, and the geography of the Old Rigveda is in a purely "Indo-European" area in Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh?
FROM:G.V.SUBRAMANIAM M.Tech.BL. Patent Attorney CHENNAI-9840027943 /manshan43@yahoo.co.in & ( Dr.G.V.Sridharan,FRCS-UK & G.V.Ravishankar, exTCS ,16th Rd.KHAR.Mumbai)
ReplyDeleteSir, (1)The only place where all RIVERS originate & where it is Ice Bound is only Pamir.(2)Indra releasing waters from Ice can be located here and time line must be PLESTOCEAN-HOLOCENE CHANGE in 11000 BC. Steppes are not this type of Place. (2)Secondly at this time , Spencer Wells locates the Homosapiens existed from Shyadri (20000 BC) to Pamir (20000BC). (3)whole europe and even Iran was Ice Bound. (4) This Indra event is followed by Great Flood in 9000 BC.(5)Vaivaswata Manu from near Goa (Dravida Desa) escapes the flood through Saraswati (6) Dwaraka of pre Krisna days is where he lands as per Puranas. (7)Your whole Research of Rig Veda Fits here exactly.WHY DONT YOU EXTEND YOUR RESEARCH TO THIS LINK/ If in order I can reach relevant videos through my Mumbai brother. My other brother in UK feels your completing with this shape will be great. WISHING YOU ALL THE BEST.
Sir,FROM G.V.SUBRAMANIAM (as per reference above) We clearly understand your statement that the RIG VEDA IS A BOOK OF THE PURUS. For fixing Time Line and Location we suggested as per our above blog.
ReplyDeleteWill it not be advisible to take cognizance of (A)Mandala 4 Hymn 18 for Indra -Vritra War in 10000 BC in Pamir AND (B) Book 10 Hymn 63 for Manu Vaivaswata Flood near Cambay/Saraswati Mouth Area as 9000 BC. This will enable to fix the Theatre of RIG VEDA in the Geographical Region between Cambay and Pamir with time line subsequent to these two Legends after !0000-9000 BC. Soma Aryans can be fitted herein with seals of Tiamet Battle. Regards. G.V.Subramaniam
Hi, Im curious to know if tribes speaking Kannada, Tamil, Tulu and other who lives in south india did travel/migrate from their ancient homes Balochistan or Afhganistan to southern part of india? Please point me to your work if it is related to it or any other sources. Thank you in advance.
ReplyDeleteThere is an extant Accepted theory of OUT of Africa by Stephen Oppenheimer, based on Mitochondrial Genetics. It ends with a statement "All Human beings (Homosapiens) are from this group that entered India from Africa through HORMUZ straight 60000 years ago INTO INDIA, via southern Baluchistan ,into Kutch. As it was peak ice age till 10000BC, they were restricted in INDIA southern Coast, and were called Beach Combers. A group of them, went in land ,beteween Sind River and Saraswati River as HUNTER GATHERERS ,maximum upto Pamir. This is genetically also proved by Spencer Wells. He identifies one Virumandi in Southern most Shyadri Hills. Wells also identifies one Nyasav in Pamir Tajik border.(See Wells Elaborate Videos sponsored by National Geographic )
ReplyDeleteTalgheris Rig Vedic events take place when HUNTER GATHERES had become Settled Agro Societies. A group of PURU's clans only become SOMA-ARYANS by moving West from Sarasawati Area.
THUS, Talegheri's thesis of Indigenous Origin of Vedas and OIT (Out Of India Theory ) is amply proven by Genetics also. Some other blogger had mentioned extensive genetic work by a medical doctor by name Priyadarsi. It is better we use all these to establish Talagheri's remarkable work , FOR POSTERITY. This will stand the scrutiny of Peer Reviews. G.V.Subramaniam
Spencer Wells is an AIT proponent 10:26 for people who understand Hindi
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIeiHsGUeEU
for others
https://knowstorm.wordpress.com/2019/10/22/is-there-steppe-in-the-aryan-migration/
From: G.V.Subramaniam : Research is done not by classifying authors as AIT or OIT. Wells monumental work in almost 13 videos is sponsored by National Geographic. Intelligent Research Methodology is to cull out the data produced by Wells and prove ont only OIT (BUT) to prove him wrong by his own Data. The Axiom is that till the advent of Agri Societies in about 10 t0 12000 BC the MITOCHONDRIAL DNA as the basis to track movement of Hunter Gatherers is easy. But after on set of Agri Societies forward backward movements take place. This period is studied , as per modern genetics practice by Y-Chromosomes. Mitochondrial basis is given up by researches.
DeleteWELLS DATA that betray him are HIS LOCATING TWO OF THE OLDEST MITOCHONDRIAL MARKERS at the TWO DOORS OF INDIA: at PAMIR and Near SHAYYADRI. Wells Video that I mentioned is a proper research paper. I was only suggesting that Mr. Talagheri must study if my cotentions are alright AND include it as part of his Magnum Opus.This will help worldwide acceptability as a matter of right and compulsion on Reviewers.
From: G.V.Subramaniam : Research is done not by classifying authors as AIT or OIT. Wells monumental work in almost 13 videos is sponsored by National Geographic. Intelligent Research Methodology is to cull out the data produced by Wells and prove ont only OIT (BUT) to prove him wrong by his own Data. The Axiom is that till the advent of Agri Societies in about 10 t0 12000 BC the MITOCHONDRIAL DNA as the basis to track movement of Hunter Gatherers is easy. But after on set of Agri Societies forward backward movements take place. This period is studied , as per modern genetics practice by Y-Chromosomes. Mitochondrial basis is given up by researches.
ReplyDeleteWELLS DATA that betray him are HIS LOCATING TWO OF THE OLDEST MITOCHONDRIAL MARKERS at the TWO DOORS OF INDIA: at PAMIR and Near SHAYYADRI. Wells Video that I mentioned is a proper research paper. I was only suggesting that Mr. Talagheri must study if my cotentions are alright AND include it as part of his Magnum Opus.This will help worldwide acceptability as a matter of right and compulsion on Reviewers.
From : G.V.Subramaniam et. al.
ReplyDeletePLEASE SEE THIS FORWARD OF Dr.PTREMENDRA PRIYADARSI,FRCS video justifying my arguments and REQUEST & SUGGESTION to Dr.TALAGHERI to hormonious blending of Dr.Talagheri's work with Priyadarsi Genetics: https://youtu.be/8DSJ0vT-Ggk
Hi, I read through this article and have watched your lectures previously. I am not linguist but I have this interest in new indigenous indology. Your arguments are very convincing indeed. I have this point to make about Burushaksi. One australian researcher in recent time has shown link between burshaksi and phrygian ( i.e. paleo balkan language from which greek, albanian originated and also the language of king Midas) "Burushaski-Phrygian Lexical Correspondences in Ritual, Myth, Burial and Onomastics
ReplyDeleteIlija Čašule". My question is did you come across this article? In certain sense, vaguely in a way...this guy must have been at least initially motivated to show link between burushaksi and alexander's army. Now again is this the case of west to east migration...or this language isolate actually proves that origin of paleobaltic languages in India itself...also point to be noted here is that the geographical location of burushaksi is very near to where the tarim basin is, and probably the ancient languages of tarim basin and their relation to indian languages too need to reexamined...also this Brushaksi area too is very near Brokpa community in ladakh...they CLAIm descent from Alexander Army again...but recent genetic evidence suggest they are south indian in origin! ...Thus it seems many clues need to REEXAMINED
Hi, I read through this article and have watched your lectures previously. I am not linguist but I have this interest in new indigenous indology. Your arguments are very convincing indeed. I have this point to make about Burushaksi. One australian researcher in recent time has shown link between burshaksi and phrygian ( i.e. paleo balkan language from which greek, albanian originated and also the language of king Midas) "Burushaski-Phrygian Lexical Correspondences in Ritual, Myth, Burial and Onomastics
ReplyDeleteIlija Čašule". My question is did you come across this article? In certain sense, vaguely in a way...this guy must have been at least initially motivated to show link between burushaksi and alexander's army. Now again is this the case of west to east migration...or this language isolate actually proves that origin of paleobaltic languages in India itself...also point to be noted here is that the geographical location of burushaksi is very near to where the tarim basin is, and probably the ancient languages of tarim basin and their relation to indian languages too need to reexamined...also this Brushaksi area too is very near Brokpa community in ladakh...they CLAIm descent from Alexander Army again...but recent genetic evidence suggest they are south indian in origin! ...Thus it seems many clues need to REEXAMINED
presence of Indian ( ie languages), iranian ( ie languages), nuristani, burushaksi ( supposed paleo baltic language ), tocharian language ....all these branches in the vicinity of larger-kashmir-punjab sphere of influence...so also presence of the most ancient attested language i.e. vedic language whose geographical area can be traced to this region, and Mittani can be traced to india...this tells me that your theory has very substantial weight. This means ROOTS of all major branches can directly be traced to this larger kashmir-punjab region...till today...this is very interesting and significant.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteDear sir,
ReplyDeleteI have some views about Centum / Satem divide, I had mailed it to NS Rajaram, 7 years back ,but as he was skeptical of linguistics itself, his reply reflected this.
As there is a Centum word koto in Proto Bangani ( which is not universally accepted), there is a word in Sanskrit too , कोटि which has one of the meaning as 10,000,000 ie ten million or a core.
( Koṭi (कोटि)—Sanskrit word corresponding the highest number in the old system of numbers: ten million (10,000,000). From an online dictionary).
If this कोटि is cognate with Centrum, then Sanskrit has retained both the Centum and Satem forms of numbers , the meaning of कोटि being transferred to a number of higher value.
I had a Sankrit teacher, when I studied Sanskrit in school, who had studied Sanskrit in BHU, (at post graduate or doctoral level).
He used to say that, the correct pronunciation of षटकोण was खटकोण , as he was taught in BHU, and not with a मूर्धन्य ' ष '.
It shows that older teachers of Sanskrit had retained memory of the word before palatization of velar happened in षटकोण.
Hindi too has both वर्षा and बरखा coexisting simultaneously, along with many other such words.
And if बरखा came later than वर्षा, then even palatization is a reversible process? Like SS Misra made a case about vowel shift being a two way process.
This is what late Satya Swarup Misra wrote -
"Moreover, Sanskrit has doublets like vakya:
vacya with both k and c before y."
So here he is also proposing both forms being reatined in Sankrit as well.
Dr Navin Singh
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That is very interesting, but the change from ष to ख is apparently an accepted one in Sanskrit, and like the Hindi example given by you of वर्षा and बरखा, I had also pointed out (as long ago as in 1993, during a discussion on my first book) that the Sanskrit word औषधी or औषध becomes वक्कद or ओखद in Konkani, but I was told that this does not represent the centum-satem change, which does not involve ष but the completely different (in Sanskrit) sound श. The centum to satem change is from क to श.
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ReplyDeleteSir, You have performed an amazing feat of scholarship and rational inference. It is a real pity that you will not be asked by the government to rewrite our textbooks. Your work needs to be circulateed and recirculated all over the internet. I wonder if perhaps you could split it into parts that could be searately forwarded? Otherwise, its sheer size may deter potential readers.
ReplyDeleteI have two small queries. First, while youhave made a convincing case as to why the Rigveda could not have been composed later than say 1900 BC, is there also another limit before which it could not have been composed? Could you please elaborate? Secondly, what are the verses that refer to Babylonian words relevant to commerce?
Thank you so much sir for your exhaustive gathering of evidence. Your point regarding DNA is well taken. Is there any possibility that evidence from Sanauli would buttress your claims?
ReplyDeleteFrom what little I know of the topic, there are serious disagreements over the interpretation of Sintashta Culture, BMAC, Andronovo Culture, Pontic Steppe theory and Anatolian Hypothesis within experts on those topics themselves. It is only the section of so called Indologists that are speaking in a coordinated voice on the Aryan Migration Theory. It is incumbent on the powers that be to spend more on sending teams of people to seminars on the topics and to utilise these disagreements to establish the truth. Only a sustained and concerted effort will turn the tide against baseless theories such as AMT.
ReplyDeleteShrikantji, thanks for the detailed information.
ReplyDeleteMy doubt is - you have pointed out that Southern and Eastern Prakrits possess many features absent in Vedic Sanskrit and Avestan and that this points out to presence of another branch/branches of Indo-European other than the 12 known ones (in Eastern and Southern Prakrit speaking territory).
So is it safe to conclude that Prakrit of east and south represents another branch of Indo-European or should be consider it as Eastern branch of Indo-Aryan which developed differently from Vedic dialect?
o please
ReplyDeleteDear Mr Talageri, I am a huge fan of yours. I have currently almost finished your 2000 book on the Rigveda, and after that I look forward to reading The Rigveda and The Avesta.Recently, I came across an article and some references which I thought would be of interest to you, regarding the dating of wheeled transport, and spoked wheels, in ancient India (it is pretty convincing on the fact that the first wheeled carts were made here, and also takes the date of spoked wheels to well before what was traditionally thought). I would like to send you these things by email.My own email is guharuby30@gmail.com, so if you drop me an email I will very gladly get back to you.
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ReplyDeleteHow can u consider Rig Veda as a historical document which gives geographical data? We all know that Rig Veda is a religious text. So it is mainly based on myths not "FACTS". All the religious texts are based on myths. Religious texts cannot be taken as historical documents. If it is taken so then the Egyptian & Greek mythologies are also historical. And by that Horus & Zeus were also historical figures.
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"The Anu tribes to their North in the areas of Kashmir and the areas to its immediate west"
ReplyDeletePuranic sources mentions Eastern Anu's north of Anga desha which position itself as East .
Is it possible for you to post a proper map of tribes and their location based on your assumption .
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ReplyDeleteSir please read this and comment on this
As you have asked this question on this blog, I am assuming that you have gone through the whole article. If so, you should be knowing the whole OIT case as set out by me. Does the article by that madman ( I really cannot find words to describe him) deal with even one single piece of evidence for the OIT given by me, or does he show in even one case where my disproving of the AIT arguments is wrong? So exactly what comment do you want me to give on his abusive tirade?
DeleteI have seen this filth long ago, and very honestly his level is far, far far below mine.
Yes sir you are true.
DeleteAfter reading this shit blog of this man I remember arun shourie's eminent intellectual book review by romila thapar.
Sir are you going to write any new book on this issue
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ReplyDeleteThe SOMA story seems to have resemblance to the opium cultivation of current day Afghanistan. Drugs are expensive and gang wars are common these days. . No wonder Indo-Aryans went to war with those who were controlling the Soma trade in Afghanistan. In the old days with the priests getting high after consuming Soma might be directly in communication with the gods. Even today we have Sadhus smoking Ganja to calm their minds to meditate better. The tribes that migrated earlier may not have an idea of Soma otherwise they should have introduced it to the near east. Did the Iranian/Anu/Bhrigu introduced this plant to the near east and Egyptians? Kurds/Yezidis might throw in some light.
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This article by Talageri seems to me ignores important genetic evidence without even understanding genetics. David Reich has conclusively shown from genetic evidence there is male-line-only descent haplotypes present in small amounts amoung brahmin populations in india (in some groups in afghanistan and beyond it is higher at 35 to 40 percent) and the absence or sparsity of female line shows that male only groups came over to ancient india and mixed with the non-aryan populations (which indicates invasion, as "migration" would imply females as well) to some extent or another. I think talageri ji your opposition seems a bit foolish and wordy, kindly remember that david reich is a jew, he has no axe to grind on the genetic debate and is merely a genetic scholar studying different populations, and also remember that harvard has high scholarship.
ReplyDeleteSecondly, talageri ji, you are wrong to say there is no evidence archeologically in south russia etc. There has been plenty of credible finds and documentation (pls read david anthony's book, which is totally ignored in your discussion but which is also referred to by tony joseph, so don't fight poor tony joseph who is only a journo, but there is a long queue of well qualified russian and american scholars who have seen and written about the archeological evidence also, this you unfortunately igore.
I wish people would stop the cowardly, gutless, spineless habit of writing under pseudonyms, or as "anonymous" and "Unknown" when they have nothing concrete, factual or data-based to say except to abuse and do name-dropping and status-citing. But your reference to the venomous propagandist Tony Joseph as "poor" shows your ideology and intentions, if not your name.
DeletePlease take the trouble of reading before making empty comments. And don't introduce your racist ideas here". It does not matter whether Reich is a Christian, a Martian or a Jew (so is Wendy Doniger, I believe). When I have constantly been defending classical Indologists from the accusation that they write what they write because they are Christians, how dare you bring in racist issues? And thre are many Jews who are Israel-haters, and many more Hindus who are Hindu-haters. Talk about data and facts pertaining to the subject matter.
Reich is indeed a scholar: from the fact that the earliest Steppe DNA he has found in India is only from 1100-100 BCE (as per his report) and only in the northernmost parts of Pakistan, he has concluded that the Steppe Aryans had spread out all over northern India teill westernmost UP by 1200 BCE and completed a text which has no memory of foreign origins!
Please produce a list of "well qualified russian and american scholars who have seen and written about the archeological evidence" in india for the Aryan invasion. In the whole world, only you must have read their works.
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ReplyDeleteMany thanks and congratulations to you, Mr. Shrikant Talageri, for this decades-long monumental effort in unraveling the historical evidences present in the Rgveda and other Indian texts, and for clarifying so many confusions introduced into the study of Indo-European history by people lacking in clarity of thought. Lest anyone thinks that your work isn't getting the recognition it deserves, it is only a matter of time before it certainly will. Some of the evidence that you have presented over the years is so incontrovertible, that I am sure your work has already been recognized as honest and of the highest caliber by discerning minds from all camps, if only silently and without acknowledgement. Eventually, Indians are bound to wake up from their colonized mindsets. Textbooks may or may not change. Thanks to the internet, ordinary non-indologists like me are able to access true impartial scholarship and inform ourselves. Please do keep writing.
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