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The
Harappan Civilization and Myth of Aryan "Invasion"
The Harappan Civilization
From, The Hindustan Times
By N.S. Rajaram
Until quite recently, the famous Harappan civilization of the
Indus valley has
been an enigma. Many questions still remain about the identity of
the people
who created this great ancient civilization. Stretching over a
million and a
half square kilometers, from the borders of Iran to east UP and
with some
sites as
far south as the Godavari valley, it was larger than ancient Egypt
and
Mesopotamia combined. What is perhaps most puzzling about it is
the fact that
all major sites spread over this immense belt went into sudden
decline and
disappeared more or less simultaneously. The renowned
archeologist, S.R. Rao,
probably the foremost authority on Harappan archeology recently
wrote:
"In circa 1900 B.C., most of the mature Harappan sites were
wiped out
forcing the inhabitants to seek new lands for settlement. They
seem to have
left in a great hurry and in small groups, seeking shelter
initially on the
eastern flank of the Ghaggar and gradually moving towards the
Yamuna. The
refugees from Mohen-jo-daro and southern sites in Sind fled to
Saurashtra and
later occupied the interior of the peninsula."
From this it is apparent that the Harappans, though inhabiting a
vast
area, fell victim to a sudden calamity which forced them to seek
shelter in
other parts of ancient India. The usual explanation found in
history books is
that the inhabitants of the Harappan cities were driven out by the
invading
Aryans. However it is now recignised by scholars that the Aryan
invasion
theory of India is a myth that owes more to European politics than
anything in
Indian records or archaeology. (The politics of History, The
Hindustan Times,
Nov. 28 1993). The evidence against any such invasion is now far
too strong
to be
taken seriously. To begin with, sites spread over such a vast
stretch,
measuring well over a thousand miles across would not have been
all abandoned
simultaneously due to the incursion of nomadic bands at one
extremity.
Further, there is profuse archaeological evidence including the
presence of
sacrificial altars that go to show that the Harappans were part of
the Vedic
aryan fold. As a result, it can safely by said that the Vedic age
also ended
with the Harappan civilisation.
From all this it is clear that the loss of these sites must have
been
associated with some natural catastrophe. A few scholars have
pointed to
evidence of frequent floods to account for the abandonement. But,
floods are
invariably local in nature and do not cause the collapse of a
civilisation
over
a vast belt. People adapt. Floods bring death but they also
sustain life.
Some of the most flood prone areas of the world - like the Nile
valley, Bengal
and the Yangtse valley, in China,- area also among the most
densely
populated.
It is the loss of water or dessication that causes massive
disruptions on the
scale witnessed at the end of the Harappan civilization. Thanks to
the latest
data from two major archaeological and satellite based studies, we
now know
that this is exactly what happened. It was ecological change that
ended the
great civilization not only in India but over a vast belt that
included
Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Aegean.
On the basis of extensive explorations carried out in Northern
Mesopotamia, a joint French-American team led by H. Weiss of Yale
University
has determined that most of the old world civilization were
severely affected
by a prolonged drought that began about 2200 B.C. and persisted
for about 300
years. The most drastically hit region seems to have been the
Akkadian
civilization neighbouring India. The drought may have been
triggered by
massive volcanic eruptions. According to the findings of this
historic study
concluded only recently:
"At approximately 2200 B.C., occupations of Tell Leilan and
Tell Brak
(in Northern Mesopotamia) were suddenly abandoned...a marked
increase in
aridity and wind circulation, subsequent to a volcanic eruption,
induced
considerable degradation in land use conditions.... this abrupt
climatic
change caused
abandonement of Tell Leilan, regional desertion, and collapse of
the
Akkadian empire based in southern Mesopotamia. Synchronous
collapse in
adjacent regions suggests the impact of abrupt climatic change was
excessive.
An end uncannily like that of the Harappans. The authors of this
momentous study note that the collapse of the Akkdians more or
less coincided
with similar climate change, land degradation and collapse noted
in the
Aegean, Palestine,
Egypt, and India. The date of 1900 BC given by S.R. Rao for the
collapse of the Harappans should be seen as approximate. More
accurate
methods are
now available that show this date to have been sometime before
2000 BC,
and they
are well within the calibration error of radiocation and other
scientific
dating techniques. The basic point is: as a result of several
independent
explorations conducted over a vast belt from southern Europe to
India, it is
now clear that civilizations over a large part of the ancient
world were
brought to a calamitous end by an abrupt climate change on a
global scale. To
attribute a global calamity of such colossal magnitude to nomadic
'Aryan'
tribes is simplistic in the extreme.
These discoveries should help put an end to all speculation
regarding
the Aryan invasion as the cause of breakup of the Harappan
civilisation. On
the other hand we now know that the Vedic civilization far from
coming into
existance after the Harappan, in fact ended with it; the mature
Harappan
civilization was the last glow of the Vedic age. This recognition
has brought
about a fundamental change in perpective in the history and
chronology of not
only ancient India, but also nearly all ancient civilizations. It
helps
answer several
fundamental questions about the source of the Harappans - they
should
now be called the Vedic Harappans - and the age of the Rig Veda.
Thanks to
recent discoveries about the mathematics and geography of Vedic
India, we are
now in a position to answer both questions.
This shift in perspective,that the Harappan civilization came at
the
end of the Vedic age also helps explain a major puzzle; the
technological
basis for
this great civilisation. Even a superficial study of Harappan
sites
suggests that its builders were extremely capable town planners
and
engineers. And
this requires a sophisticated knowledge of mathematics especially
geometry. Elaborate structures like the Great Bath of
Mohen-jo-daro, the
Lothal harbour or the citadel at Harappa are inconcievable without
a detailed
knowldge of geometry. The world had to wait 2000 years more, till
the rise of
the Roman civilisation for sanitation and town planning to reach a
comparable
level. The question is: where did the Harappans get the necessary
mathematical and
engineering knowledge? History books tell us that Indians borrowed
their
geometry from the Greeks. This is absurd. The Harappans must have
had the
neccessary technical knowledge at least 2000 years before the
Greeks. Without
it the civilization would never have seen the light of day. It is
as simple
as that.
But once we recognise that Harappan archaeology belongs to the
closing
centuries of the Vedic age, the mystery vanishes. The late Vedic
literature
includes mathematical texts known as the Sulba-sutras which
contain detailed
instruction for the building of sacrificial altars. After a
monumental study
spanning more than 20 years, the distinguished American
mathematician and
historian of science, A. Seidenberg showed that the Sulba-sutras
are the
source of
both Egyptian and old Babylonian mathematics. The Egyptian texts
based on
the Sulba-sutras go back to before 2000 BC. This provides
independent
cofirmation that Indian mathematical knowledge existed long before
that date,
ie, during the height of the Harappan era.
The sulba-sutras are part of the vedic religious literature known
as
the Kalpasutras. They were created originally to serve as
technical manuals
for the design and construction of Vedic altars. As previously
noted,
Harappan sites
contain many such altars, a fact that supplies a link between
Vedic
literature and Harappan archaeology. It serves also to show that
the vedic
literature could not have been brought in by any invaders - they
were needed
for building the altars that are very much part of the Harappan
archaeology!
The sulba-sutra are the oldest mathematical texts known. A careful
comparison
of the sulba-sutras with the mathematics of Egypt and old
Babylonia led
Seidenberg to conclude:
"... the elements of ancient geometry found in Egypt and old
Babylonia
stem from a ritual system of the kind found in the Sulba-sutras."
What is interesting is that the origins of ancient mathematics are
to
be found in religion and ritual. So the great engineering feats of
the
Harappans can be seen as secular off-shoots of the religious
mathemtics found
in vedic literature. This can in a way be compared to the history
of books
and publishing,
The first books printed were Bibles, like the Gutenberg bible;
but the
technique of printing soon transcended its original niche adn led
to an
explosion of knowledge that made possible the European
renaissance. similarly,
the 'ritual mathematics' in the sulba-sutras led eventually to the
purely
secular achievements of the Harappans like city planning and the
design of
harbours.
So the vedic civilisaion ended well before 2000 BC, with the
ending of
the Harappans following the Great Drought. The next question is,
when did it
actually begin. Here we cannot be certain although some experts on
Vedic
astronomy claim to be able to find statements in the Rig Veda that
point to
dates like 6500 BC and beyond. I feel it safer at this time to be
consevative
and stick to reliable archaeological evidence. Although some sites
dating to
almost 7000 BC have been found, I believe that a lot more
supporting data must
be found before such dates can be accepted. But thanks to new data
made
available by the French SPOT satellite and the Indo-French field
study, we can
definitely conclude that the Rig-Veda describes the geography of
North India
as it
was long before 3000 BC. The clinching evidence is provided by the
fate of
the Saraswati river.
It is well known that in the Rig Veda, the greatest and the
holiest of
rivers was not the Ganga, but the now dry Saraswati. The Ganga is
mentioned
only once while the Saraswati is mentioned some 50 tomes. There is
a whole
hymn devoted to her. Extensive research by the late Dr. Wakankar
has shown
that the Saraswati changed her course several times, going
completely dry
around 1900 BC. This date may now have to be moved back by a few
centuries in
light of what we now know about the disappearence of the
neighbouring
Akkadians. In any event we know now ehich Dr. Wakankar did not,
that the
Saraswati described in the Rig Veda belongs to a date long before
3000 BC.
The Rig
Veda calls the Saraswati the greatest of rivers (Naditame) that
flowed
from "the
mountain to the sea". The latest satellite data combined with
field
archaeological studies have shown that the Rig Vedic Saraswati had
stopped
being a perrenial river long before 3000 BC.
As Paul-Henri Francfort of CNRS, Paris recently observed,
"...we now
know, thanks to the field work of the Indo-French expedition that
when the
protohistoric people settled in this area, no large river had
flowed there
for a long
time."
The protohistoric people he refers to are the early Harappans of
3000
BC. But satellite 'photos show that a great prehistoric river that
was over 7
kilometers wide did indeed flow through the area at one time. This
was the
Saraswati described in the Rig Veda. Numerous archaeological sites
have also
been located along the course of this great prehistoric river
thereby
confirming Vedic accounts. The great Saraswati that flowed
"from the mountain
to the sea" is now seen to belong to a date long anterior to
3000 BC. This
means that the Rig Veda describes the geography of North India
long before
3000 BC.
This is further supported by the fact that the Drishadvati river,
also
described in the Rig Veda, had itself gone dry long before 3000
BC. All this
shows that the Rig Veda must have been in existece no later than
3500 BC.
There is other evidence from metallurgy and astronomy that lend
further
support for
this date.
What does this all mean? In our book, Vedic Aryans and the Origins
of
Civilisation, David Frawley and I have shown that the Rig Veda
belongs to an
earlier layer of civilisation before the rise of the civilisation
of Egypt,
Mesopotamia, and the Indus Valley (Harappa). This calls for a
fundamental
change in our idea of Mesopotamia as the cradle of civilisation.
In the same
book, on the basis of ecology and ancient literature, it is also
suggested
that the
Rig Vedic aryans were the beneficiary of an age of abundance in
north
India, brought about by the melting of the ice caps at the end of
the last Ice
Age. The last Ice age ended in about 8000 BC. For the next several
thousand
years, many areas that are now arid, like Rajasthan, Sind,
Baluchistan - were
fertile and supported agriculture. This of course was due to the
discharge of
waters in the form of numerous streams from melting ice caps. This
is
apparent from the French satellite study. In the course of time,
the ice caps
accumulated during the long ice age came to be depleted and
aridity began to
dpread across the sub continent. This ofcourse culminated in the
great
drought
of 2200 BC that wrought havoc with the civilisations of the
ancient world.
In summary, all this new evidence, when examined in the light of
science, gives a totally different picture of the ancient world.
The rise and
fall of the Vedic civilisation of which the Harappan was a part
can be seen to
have resulted from the vagaries of nature, inseparably bound to
the boom and
bust ecological cycle that followed the last ice age. The vedic
age and more
specifically the Rig Veda were the beneficiaries of nature's
bounties - a
unique age in water abundance in the wake of the last ice age. Its
end was
also brought about by nature in the form of a killing drought. The
Harappan
civilisation was its twilight. And this is the verdict of science
- what
nature giveth, nature also taketh away.
[Note: Typing errors are mine]
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