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{{Short description|View that the Indo-Aryans are indigenous to India}} | |||
{{pp|small=yes}} | |||
{{semiprotected|small=yes}} | {{semiprotected|small=yes}} | ||
{{Indo-European topics}} | {{Indo-European topics}} | ||
'''Indigenous Aryanism''', also known as the '''Indigenous Aryans theory''' (IAT) and the '''Out of India theory''' ('''OIT'''), is the conviction{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=4}} that the ]s are indigenous to the ],{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxx}} and that the ] radiated out from a homeland in India into their present locations.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxx}} It is a "]" view of Indian history,{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=95}}{{sfn|Jamison|2006}} and propagated as an ] to the established ],<ref name="Elst_2016"/> which considers the ] to be the area of origin of the Indo-European languages.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xiii}}{{sfn|Anthony|2007}}{{sfn|Parpola|2015}}{{refn|group=note|name="Entry of the Indo-Aryans"}} | |||
{{Hindu politics}} | |||
The theory of '''Indigenous Aryans''' posits that speakers of ] are "]" to the ]. | |||
Reflecting traditional Indian views{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=95}} based on the ], ] propose an older date than is generally accepted for the ], and argue that the ] was a Vedic civilization. In this view, "the Indian civilization must be viewed as an unbroken tradition that goes back to the earliest period of the ] (or ]) tradition (7000 or 8000 BCE)."{{sfn|Kak|2001b}} | |||
The "Indigenous Aryans" position necessarily entails an Indian origin of ],<ref name = "Bryant 2001">{{Citation|title=The quest for the origins of Vedic culture: the Indo-Aryan migration debate |author= ]|year= 2001|publisher=]|page=6|quote=It must be stated immediately that there is an unavoidable corollary of an Indigenist position. If the Indo-Aryan languages did not come from outside South Asia, this necessarily entails that India was the original homeland of all the other Indo-European languages.|postscript=.|isbn=0-19-513777-9}}</ref> and in recent years, the concept has been increasingly conflated with an "Out of India" origin of the Indo-European language family. This contrasts with the mainstream model of ] which posits that ] tribes migrated to ] from Central Asia. | |||
Support for the IAT mostly exists among a subset of Indian scholars of ] and the ] and ] of India,{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=292-293}}{{sfn|Bryant|Patton|2005}}{{sfn|Singh|2008|p=186}}{{sfn|Bresnan|2017|p=8}}<ref name="Elst_2016"/> and plays a significant role in ] politics.{{sfn|Fosse|2005|p=435-437}}{{sfn|Ravinutala|2013|p=6}}{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=95}}<ref group=web name="Doniger_2017"/><ref group=web name="Shahane_2019"/> It has no relevance or support in mainstream scholarship.{{refn|group=note|name="no support"}} | |||
==Scenarios== | |||
<!-- Why was this deleted? | |||
Michael Witzel identifies three major types of revisionist scenario:{{sfn|Witzel|2006|p=217}} | |||
#a "mild" version that insists on the indigeneity of the Rigvedic Aryans to the North-Western region of Indian subcontinent in the tradition of ] and ]; | |||
#the "out of India" school that posits India as the ], originally proposed in the 18th century, revived by the ] sympathizer ] (1999), and further popularized within Hindu nationalism by ] (2000); | |||
#the position that all the world's languages and civilizations derive from India, represented e.g. by ]. --> | |||
{{TOC limit|3}} | |||
==Historiographical context== | |||
{{See also|Indo-Aryan migration}} | |||
Indigenous Aryans is usually taken to imply that the people of the ] were linguistically Indo-Aryans.<ref name = "Bryant 2001"/> In any "Indigenous Aryan" scenario, speakers of Indo-European languages must have left India at some point prior to the 10th century BC, when first mention of ] is made in Assyrian records, but likely before the 16th century BC, before the emergence of the ] which is often identified as a Proto-Iranian culture.<ref>See, e.g., ], ''L'Iran et la migration des Indo-aryens et des Iraniens'' (Leiden 1977). Cited by Carl .C. Lamberg-Karlovsky, ''Archeology and language: the case of the Bronze Age Indo-Iranians'', in Laurie L. Patton & Edwin Bryant, ''Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History'' (Routledge 2005), p.162.</ref> | |||
==Historical background== | |||
The scholars proposing "Indigenous Aryan" scenario typically base their understanding on archaeology, genetics, linguistics and on literary interpretations of the ], the oldest surviving vedic text, which they date to the 3rd millennium BC or earlier<ref name="Kazanas - The Collapse of the AIT and the prevalence of Indigenism">{{cite web|last1=Kazanas|first1=Nicholas|title=The Collapse of the AIT and the prevalence of Indigenism: archaeological, genetic, linguistic and literary evidences.|url=http://www.omilosmeleton.gr/pdf/en/indology/The_Collapse_of_the_AIT_13_2_2013.pdf|website=www.omilosmeleton.gr|accessdate=23 January 2015}}</ref>, in particular based on arguments involving identifying the ] with the ] and ], the supposed lack of ] and ] evidence present to support migration{{refn|group=note|The term "invasion" is only being used nowadays by opponents of the Indo-Aryan Migration theory.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} The term "invasion" does not reflect the contemporary scholarly understanding of the Indo-Aryan migrations,{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} and is merely being used in a polemical and distractive way.}} into North West India as postulated by the Aryan migration theory, and sometimes ].<ref>{{Citation|author=] |publisher= Indian Council for Historical Research |place= Delhi |date=7 January 2002 |url=http://www.geocities.com/ifihhome/articles/bbl001.html |title=The Homeland of Indo-European Languages and Culture: Some Thoughts |quote=The shift of the “original homeland” from Sogdiana to a few hundred miles to the south - i.e. to the region now comprising eastern Afghanistan, Pakistan and north-west India should not upset anyone, since the archaeological-cum-literary evidence from this area is more positive than that from Sogdiana.|postscript=.|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20041229103236/http://www.geocities.com/ifihhome/articles/bbl001.html|archivedate=2004-12-29}}</ref> | |||
{{main|Indo-Aryan migrations|Indo-European migrations}} | |||
] | |||
The standard view on the origins of the Indo-Aryans is the Indo-Aryan migration theory, which states that they entered north-western India at about 1500 BCE.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xiii}} The ], the timeline of events in ancient Indian history as narrated in the ], the ], and the ], envisions a much older chronology for the Vedic culture. In this view, the Vedas were received thousands of years ago, and the start of the reign of ], the ] of the current ] (aeon) and the progenitor of humanity, may be dated as far back 7350 BCE.{{sfn|Rocher|1986|p=122}} The ], the background-scene of the ], which may relate historical events taking place ca. 1000 BCE at the heartland of ],{{sfn|Witzel|1995}}{{sfn|Singh|2009|p=19}} is dated in this chronology at ca. 3100 BCE. | |||
Indigenists, reflecting traditional Indian views on history and religion,{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=95}} argue that the Aryans are indigenous to India, which challenges the standard view.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xiii}} In the 1980s and 1990s, the indigenous position has come to the foreground of the public debate.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xiii-xv}} | |||
When the finding of connections between languages from India to Europe led to the creation of ] in the late 18th century, some Indians and Europeans believed that the ] must be ], or something very close to it. A few early Indo-Europeanists, such as ] pioneers ],<ref name="savitri">], '']: Savitri Devi, the Hindu-Aryan Myth, and Neo-Nazism'' (] Press, 1998, hardcover: ISBN 0-8147-3110-4, paperback: ISBN 0-8147-3111-2)</ref> ],<ref name="savitri"/> and ]<ref>Friedrich von Schlegel: Ueber die Sprache und Weisheit der Indier (1808)</ref> had a firm belief in this and essentially created the idea that India was the ] (origin) of all Indo-European languages. In a 1775 letter, Voltaire expressed his belief that the "dynasty of the ]s" taught the rest of the world: "I am convinced that everything has come down to us from the banks of the ]."<ref name="savitri"/> The idea intrigued Kant who "suggested that mankind together with all science must have originated on the roof of the world ] ]."<ref name="savitri"/> | |||
===Indian homeland and Aryan Invasion theory=== | |||
The development of ], specifically the law of palatals and the discovery of the ] in Hittite, affected Sanskrit's preeminent status as the most venerable elder in this reconstructed family.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bryant|2001|p=69}}</ref> This eroded support of India as the homeland of Indo-European languages. The ethnologist and philologist ] was the first to state that, according to the principles of ], a language family's most likely point of origin is in the area of its greatest diversity which, in the case of Indo-European, is roughly in Central-eastern Europe, where the ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ] branches of the Indo-European language family are attested, as opposed to South Asia, where only the Indo-Aryan branch is.<ref name=jpm152>{{Harvcoltxt|Mallory|1989|pp=152–153}}</ref> ] responded by arguing that the greater linguistic diversity of Indo-European in Europe is the result of absorbing foreign linguistic elements, and that a language family's point of origin should be sought in the area of least linguistic change, since it has been least affected by substrate interference. Dhar's line of argument has a history in Western debates on the Indo-European homeland (e.g. Feist 1932 and Pissani 1974 as cited in {{Harvnb|Bryant|2001|pp=142–143}}) where it has been used to locate the Indo-European homeland near the area where the ] and ] branches of Indo-European are attested. | |||
In 19th century ], the language of the ] was the most archaic Indo-European language known to scholars, indeed the only records of Indo-European that could reasonably claim to date to the ]. This primacy of Sanskrit inspired scholars such as ], to assume that the locus of the ] had been in India, with the other dialects spread to the west by historical migration. {{sfn|Senthil Kumar|2012|p=123}}{{sfn|Hewson|1997|p=229}} With the 20th-century discovery of Bronze-Age attestations of Indo-European (], ]), ] lost its special status as the most archaic Indo-European language known.{{sfn|Senthil Kumar|2012|p=123}}{{sfn|Hewson|1997|p=229}} | |||
In the 1850s, ] introduced the notion of two Aryan races, a western and an eastern one, which migrated from the Caucasus into Europe and India respectively. Müller dichotomized the two groups, ascribing greater prominence and value to the western branch. Nevertheless, this "eastern branch of the Aryan race was more powerful than the indigenous eastern natives, who were easy to conquer."{{sfn|McGetchin|2015|p=116}} By the 1880s, his ideas had been adapted by racist ]. For example, as an exponent of ], colonial administrator ] (1851–1911) used the ratio of nose width to height to divide ] into Aryan and Dravidian races, as well as seven castes.{{sfn|Trautmann|1997|p=203}}{{sfn|Walsh|2011|p=171}} | |||
==Out of India theory== | |||
The '''Out of India theory''' (OIT), also known as the '''Indian Urheimat Theory''', is the proposition that the ] ] in ] and spread to the remainder of the Indo-European region through a series of migrations.<ref name="Kazanas - The Collapse of the AIT and the prevalence of Indigenism" /> | |||
The idea of an Aryan "invasion" was fueled by the discovery of the ], which ] around the period of the Indo-Aryan migration, suggesting a destructive invasion. This argument was developed by the mid-20th century archaeologist ], who interpreted the presence of many unburied corpses found in the top levels of Mohenjo-daro as the victims of conquests. He famously stated that the Vedic god "] stands accused" of the destruction of the Indus Civilisation.{{sfn|Possehl|2002|p=238}} Scholarly critics have since argued that Wheeler misinterpreted his evidence and that the skeletons were better explained as hasty interments, not unburied victims of a massacre.{{sfn|Possehl|2002|p=238}} | |||
===Chronology=== | |||
] | |||
The Indian Urheimat proposal put forward by {{Harvtxt|Elst|1999}}, which he dubs the "emerging non-invasionist model", suggests the following scenario: | |||
===Indo-Aryan migration theory=== | |||
During the 6th millennium BC Proto-Indo-Europeans lived in the ] of ]. As the result of demographic expansion, they spread into ] as the ]. The ] moved further and inhabited the ] coast and much of central Asia while the ]s moved northwards and inhabited the ] in northwestern China, forming the ] group of I-E speakers. These groups were ] and inhabited that region by 2000 BC. These people took the oldest form of the Proto Indo-European (PIE) language with them and, while interacting with people of the Anatolian and Balkan region, transformed it into a separate dialect. While inhabiting central Asia they discovered the uses of the horse, which they later sent back to the ].<ref name="The Aryan-Non Invasionist Model"> by Koenraad Elst</ref> Later on during their history, they went on to occupy western Europe and thus spread the Indo-European languages to that region.<ref name="The Aryan-Non Invasionist Model"/> | |||
{{See also|Language shift|Sanskritisation}} | |||
====Migrations==== | |||
During the 4th millennium BC, civilisation in India started evolving into what became the urban ]. During this time, the PIE languages evolved to ]<ref name="The Aryan-Non Invasionist Model"/> Some time during this period, the Indo-Iranians began to separate as the result of internal rivalry and conflict, with the Iranians expanding westwards towards ] and ], these possibly were the ]s. They also expanded into parts of central Asia. By the end of this migration, India was left with the Proto-Indo-Aryans. At the end of the ] period, the Sarasvati river began drying up and the remainder of the Indo-Aryans split into separate goups. Some travelled westwards and established themselves as rulers of the ] ] kingdom by around 1500 BC (see ]). Others travelled eastwards and inhabited the ] while others travelled southwards and interacted with the ].<ref name="The Aryan-Non Invasionist Model"/> | |||
] | |||
]-wheeled ] finds (purple), and the adjacent and overlapping ], ], and ] cultures (green).]] | |||
] ] and ] ] (after ]). The ], ] and ]s have often been associated with ] migrations. The ], ], ] and ] cultures are candidates for cultures associated with ] ].]] | |||
The idea of an "invasion" has been discarded in mainstream scholarship since the 1980s,{{sfn|Kazanas|2002}} and replaced by more sophisticated models,{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=311}}{{refn|group=note|Witzel: "For some decades already, linguists and philologists such as Kuiper 1955, 1991, Emeneau 1956, Southworth 1979, archaeologists such as Allchin 1982, 1995, and historians such as R. Thapar 1968, have maintained that the Indo-Aryans and the older local inhabitants ('Dravidians', 'Mundas', etc.) have mutually interacted from early on, that many of them were in fact frequently bilingual, and that even the RV already bears witness to that. They also think, whether explicitly following Ehret's model (1988, cf. Diakonoff 1985) or not, of smaller infiltrating groups (Witzel 1989: 249, 1995, Allchin 1995), not of mass migrations or military invasions. However, linguists and philologists still maintain, and for good reasons, that some IA speaking groups actually entered from the outside, via some of the (north)western corridors of the subcontinent."{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=32}}}} referred to as the ]. It posits the introduction of ] into South Asia{{refn|group=note|name="Entry of the Indo-Aryans"}} through migrations of ]-speaking people from their ''Urheimat'' (original homeland) in the ] via the Central European Corded ware culture, and Eastern European/Central Asian Sintashta culture, through Central Asia into the Levant (]), south Asia, and Inner Asia (] and ]). It is part of the ], which further describes the spread of Indo-European languages into western Europe via migrations of Indo-European speaking people. | |||
===Linguistics=== | |||
:''See also ] or ].'' | |||
] provides the main basis for the theory, analysing the development and changes of languages, and establishing relations between the various Indo-European languages, including the time frame of their development. It also provides information about shared words, and the corresponding area of the origin of Indo-European, and the specific vocabulary which is to be ascribed to specific regions.{{sfn|Anthony|2007}}{{sfn|Witzel|2001}}{{sfn|Witzel|2005}} The linguistic analyses and data are supplemented with archaeological and genetical data{{sfn|Reich|2018}}{{sfn|Narasimhan et al.|2019}}{{refn|group=note|The Ancient DNA revolution since about 2015, along with genome-wide techniques like ] has provided a fresh new perspective and large amounts of relevant data regarding the steppe migrations.{{sfn|Reich|2018}}{{sfn|Witzel|2019|p=58}}{{sfn|Anthony|2021|p=9,12}} For Europe, Corded Ware and later Bell Beaker cultures are now shown to be the result of large-scale steppe pastoralist takeovers which replaced the local genetics up to 75% and 90% respectively,{{sfn|Haak|Lazaridis|Patterson|Rohland|2015}}{{sfn|Olalde|Brace|Allentoft|Armit|2018}}{{sfn|Saag|Varul|Scheib|Stenderup|2017}} while recent genetic research further confirmed the migration of Steppe pastoralists into Western Europe and South Asia.<ref name="Joseph 2017"/>{{sfn|Reich|2018}}{{sfn|Anthony|2019}}{{sfn|Witzel|2019}}{{sfn|Anthony|2021}} Even in areas where population turnover is lower, there is a marked sex bias in the resulting mixed population in favor of steppe males, such as in India.{{sfn|Silva et al.|2017}}}} and anthropological arguments, which together provide a coherent model{{sfn|Anthony|2007}}{{sfn|Reich|2018}} that is widely accepted.{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|2006|p=460-461}} | |||
According to {{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|p=75}}, OIT proponents tend to be linguistic dilettantes who either ignore the linguistic evidence completely, dismiss it as highly speculative and inconclusive (e.g. Chakrabarti 1995 and ] 1995, as cited in {{Harvcolnb|Bryant|2001|p=74}}), or attempt to tackle it with hopelessly inadequate qualifications; this attitude and neglect significantly minimises the value of most OIT publications.<ref>{{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|pp=74–107}}</ref><ref>Edwin F. Bryant, Linguistic Substrata and the Indigenous Aryan Debate (1996)</ref> | |||
In the model, the first archaeological remains of the Indo-Europeans is the ],{{sfn|Anthony|2007}} from which emerged the Central European Corded Ware culture, which spread eastward creating the ] ] (2100–1800 BCE), from which developed the ] (1800–1400 BCE). Around 1800 BCE, Indo-Aryan people split-off from the Iranian branches, and migrated to the ] (2300–1700 BCE),{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=408}} and further to the Levant, northern India, and possibly Inner Asia.{{sfn|Beckwith|2009}} | |||
{{Harvtxt|Talageri|2000}} and {{Harvtxt|Kazanas|2002}} have adapted the language dispersal model proposed by ] (in {{Harvnb|Blench|Spriggs|1997}}) to support OIT by moving Nichols' proposed Indo-European point of origin from ]-] to India. These ideas have not been accepted in mainstream linguistics. | |||
====Cultural continuity and adaptation==== | |||
{{Harvtxt|Elst|1999}} argues that it is altogether more likely that the Urheimat was in ] territory. The alternative from the angle of an Indian Urheimat theory (IUT) would be that India had originally had the ] form, that the dialects which first emigrated (Hittite, Italo-Celtic, Germanic, Tocharic) retained the centum form and took it to the geographical borderlands of the IE expanse (Europe, Anatolia, China), while the dialects which emigrated later (Baltic, Thracian, Phrygian) were at a halfway stage and the last-emigrated dialects (Slavic, Armenian, Iranian) plus the staybehind Indo-Aryan languages had adopted the satem form. This would satisfy the claim of the so-called Lateral Theory that the most conservative forms are to be found at the outskirts rather than in the metropolis.<ref>Elst 1999:""</ref> | |||
The migration into northern India was not necessarily of a large population, but may have consisted of small groups,{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=342-343}} who introduced their language and social system into the new territory when looking for pasture for their herds.{{sfn|Bresnan|2017|p=13}} These were then emulated by larger groups,{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=117}}{{refn|group=note|David Anthony (1995): "Language shift can be understood best as a social strategy through which individuals and groups compete for positions of prestige, power, and domestic security What is important, then, is not just dominance, but vertical social mobility and a linkage between language and access to positions of prestige and power A relatively small immigrant elite population can encourage widespread language shift among numerically dominant indigenes in a non-state or pre-state context if the elite employs a specific combination of encouragements and punishments. Ethnohistorical cases demonstrate that small elite groups have successfully imposed their languages in non-state situations."{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=27}}}}{{refn|group=note|Witzel: "Just one "Afghan" IndoAryan tribe that did not return to the highlands but stayed in their Panjab winter quarters in spring was needed to set off a wave of acculturation in the plains, by transmitting its 'status kit' (Ehret) to its neighbors."{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=13}} "Actually, even this is, strictly speaking, not necessary. The constant interaction of "Afghan" highlanders and Indus plain agriculturists could have set off the process. A further opening was created when, after the collapse of the Indus Civilization, many of its people moved eastwards, thus leaving much of the Indus plains free for IA style cattle breeding. A few agricultural communities (especially along the rivers) nevertheless continued, something that the substrate agricultural vocabulary of the RV clearly indicates (Kuiper 1991, Witzel 1999a,b). In an acculturation scenario the actual (small) number of people (often used a 'clinching' argument by autochthonists) that set off the wave of adaptations does not matter: it is enough that the 'status kit' (Ehret) of the innovative group (the pastoralist Indo-Aryans) was copied by some neighboring populations, and then spread further.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=13, note 27}}}} who adopted the new language and culture.{{sfn|Hickey|2010|p=151}}{{sfn|Thomason|Kaufman|1988|p=39}}{{refn|group=note|Thomason and Kaufman note that Dravidian features in Sanskrit and later Indic languages may be explained by "absorption". They quote Emeneau: "absorption, not displacement, is the chief mechanism in radical language changes of the kind we are considering."{{sfn|Thomason|Kaufman|1988|p=39}} Thomason and Kaufman note that a basic assumption is that Dravidians shifted in considerable numbers, so they could not only impose their own habits on Indic, but were also numerous enough to influence Indic as a whole.{{sfn|Thomason|Kaufman|1988|p=39}}}} Witzel also notes that "small-scale semi-annual | |||
transhumance movements between the Indus plains and the Afghan and Baluchi highlands continue to this day."{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=13}} | |||
==Indigenous Aryanism== | |||
====Linguistic center of gravity==== | |||
{{See also|Yuga|Hinduism}} | |||
The linguistic center of gravity principle states that a language family's most likely point of origin is in the area of its greatest diversity. Only one branch of Indo-European, Indo-Aryan, is found in India, whereas the ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ] branches of Indo-European are all found in Central-eastern Europe. Because it requires a greater number of long migrations, an Indian Urheimat is far less likely than one closer to the center of Indo-European linguistic diversity.<ref name=jpm152/><ref>{{Harvcoltxt|Sapir|1949|p=455}}</ref><ref>Dyen (1965), as quoted in {{Harvnb|Bryant|2001|p=142}}</ref> However, the existence of the ] language family in Western China would shift the center of gravity eastward. Some scholars argue that the various language families in Central and eastern Europe evolved fairly recently, which implies that there was less diversity in the western side of the Indo-European language family during the 2nd millennium BCE at a time contemporaneous with Vedic Sanskrit.<ref>{{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|p=150}}</ref>{{clarify|date=June 2014}}<!--For the non-expert reader, could someone please add a statement that explains how this is relevant in either supporting or criticizing the Out of India theory?--> | |||
According to Bryant, Indigenists | |||
====Comparative linguistics==== | |||
{{blockquote|... share a conviction that the theory of an external origin of the Indo-Aryan speaking people on the Indian subcontinent has been constructed on flimsy or false assumptions and conjectures. As far as such scholars are concerned, no compelling evidence has yet been produced to posit an external origin of the Indo-Aryans they have taken it upon themselves to oppose | |||
] ] in red. The central area of Satemization is shown in darker red, corresponding to the ]/]/] cultures.]]There are twelve accepted branches of the ]. The two ] branches, ] (Indo-Aryan) and ], dominate the eastern cluster, historically spanning ], ] and ]. While the exact sequence in which the different branches separated, or migrated, away from a homeland is disputed, linguists generally agree that ] was the first branch to be separated from the remaining body of Indo-European. | |||
the theory of Aryan invasions and migrations—hence the label Indigenous Aryanism.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=4}}}} | |||
The "Indigenist position" started to take shape after the discovery of the ], which predates the Vedas.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxviii-xxix}} According to this alternative view, the Aryans are indigenous to India,{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxx}} the Indus Civilisation is the Vedic Civilisation,{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxx}} the Vedas are older than the second millennium BCE,{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxviii}} there is no discontinuity between the (northern) Indo-European part of India and the (southern) Dravidian part,{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxviii}} and the Indo-European languages radiated out from a homeland in India into their present locations.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxx}} According to Bresnan, it is a natural response to the 19th century narrative of a superior Aryan race subjecting the native Indians, implicitly confirming the ethnocentric superiority of the European invaders of colonial times, instead supporting "a theory of indigenous development that led to the creation of the Vedas."{{sfn|Bresnan|2017|p=12}} | |||
Additionally, ] isoglosses seem suggestive that Greek and Indo-Iranian may have shared a common homeland for a while, after the splitting of the other IE branches. Such a homeland could be northwestern India (which is preferred by proponents of the OIT) or the ]s (as preferred by the mainstream supporters of the ]). | |||
===Main arguments of the Indigenists=== | |||
According to ], if evidence like linguistic isogloss patterns is ignored, then the hypothesis of an Out-of-India migration becomes "relatively easy to maintain".<ref>{{Citation | last=Hock | first=H.H. | author-link=Hans Hock | chapter=Out of India? The linguistic evidence | year=1996 | editor-last =Bronkhorst | editor-first=J. | editor2-last=Deshpande | editor2-first=M.M. | title=Aryan and Non-Aryan in South Asia: Evidence, Interpretation, and Ideology | publisher=] | publication-date=1999 | isbn=1-888789-04-2 }}. On page 14 is Figure 1, the cladistic tree of the IE branches. On p. 15 is Fig 2, the diagram of isoglosses. On p. 16 he states that if only the model in Fig 1 is accepted, then the hypothesis of an Out-of-India migration would be "relatively easy to maintain", i.e. provided the evidence of Fig 2 were ignored.</ref> | |||
The idea of "Indigenous Aryans" is supported with specific interpretations of archaeological, genetic, and linguistic data, and on literal interpretations of the ].{{sfn|Bryant|2001}}{{sfn|Bryant|Patton|2005}}<ref group=web name="Kazanas-Collapse" /> Standard arguments, both in support of the "Indigenous Aryans" theory and in opposition the mainstream Indo-Aryan Migration theory, are: | |||
* Questioning the Indo-Aryan Migration theory: | |||
** Presenting the Indo-Aryan Migration theory as an "Indo-Aryan Invasion theory",{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}}{{refn|group=note|name="invasion"|The term "invasion" is only being used nowadays by opponents of the Indo-Aryan Migration theory.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} The term "invasion" does not reflect the contemporary scholarly understanding of the Indo-Aryan migrations;{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} and is merely being used in a polemical and distracting way.}} which was invented by 19th century colonialists to suppress the Indian people.<ref>Ram Kelkar (12 April 2021), , thewire.in</ref> | |||
** Questioning the methodology of linguistics;{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=68-75}}{{sfn|Elst|2005}}{{sfn|Kak|2001}} | |||
** Arguing for an indigenous cultural continuity, arguing there is a lack of ] remains of the Indo-Aryans in north-west India;{{sfn|Elst|2005}} | |||
** Questioning the ]<ref group=web name="Sachan2015">Dinsa Sachan (4 July 2015), </ref><ref group=web name="Chavda">A.L. Chavda (05-05-2017), </ref> | |||
** Contesting the possibility that small groups can change culture and languages in a major way;<ref group=web name="Kazanas-Collapse" /> | |||
* Re-dating India's history by postulating a Vedic-Puranic chronology:{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxviii-xxx}} | |||
** Arguing for ancient, indigenous origins of Sanskrit,{{sfn|Elst|1999}}{{sfn|Elst|2005}} dating the Rigveda and the Vedic people to the 3rd millennium BCE or earlier;{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxviii}}{{sfn|Kak|1987}}{{sfn|Kak|1996}}{{sfn|Kak|2001}} This includes: | |||
*** Identifying the ], described in the Rig Veda as a mighty river, with the ], which had dried up c. 2000 BCE, arguing therefore for an earlier dating of the Rig Veda;{{sfn|Danino|2010}} | |||
*** Arguing for the presence of horses and horse-drawn chariots before 2000 BCE; | |||
** Identifying the Vedic people with the Harappan civilisation;{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxx}}{{sfn|Kak|1987}} | |||
** Redating Indian history based on the Vedic-Puranic chronology.{{sfn|Kak|2015}} | |||
===Questioning the Aryan Migration model=== | |||
====Substratum influences in Vedic Sanskrit==== | |||
{{Main|Substratum in Vedic Sanskrit}} | |||
====Rhetorics of "Aryan invasion"==== | |||
According to ], evidence of a pre-Indo-European linguistic ] in South Asia is a solid reason to exclude India as a potential Indo-European homeland.<ref>{{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|p=76}}</ref> | |||
The outdated notion of an "Aryan invasion" has been used as a ] to attack the Indo-Aryan Migration theory.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}}{{refn|group=note|name="invasion"}} According to Witzel, the invasion model was criticised by Indigenous Aryanists for being a justification for colonial rule:{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} | |||
{{blockquote|The theory of an immigration of IA speaking Arya ("Aryan invasion") is simply seen as a means of British policy to justify their own intrusion into India and their subsequent colonial rule: in both cases, a "white race" was seen as subduing the local darker colored population.}} | |||
While according to Koenraad Elst, a supporter of Indigenous Aryans:{{sfn|Elst|2005|p=234-235}} | |||
The Indic languages show the influence of the ] and ] language families. No other branch of Indo-European does. If the Indo-European homeland had been located in India, then the Indo-European languages should have shown some influence from Dravidian and Munda.<ref>{{Harvnb|Parpola|2005|p=48}}. "...numerous loanwords and even structural borrowings from Dravidian have been identified in Sanskrit texts composed in northwestern India at the end of the second and first half of the first millennium BCE, before any intensive contact between North and South India. External evidence thus suggests that the Harappans most probably spoke a Dravidian language."</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Mallory|1989|p=44}}. "The most obvious explanation of this situation is that the Dravidian languages once occupied nearly all of the Indian subcontinent and it is the intrusion of Indo-Aryans that engulfed them in north India leaving but a few isolated enclaves."</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|The theory of which we are about to discuss the linguistic evidence, is widely known as the "Aryan invasion theory" (AIT). I will retain this term even though some scholars object to it, preferring the term "immigration" to "invasion." ... North India's linguistic landscape leaves open only two possible explanations: either Indo-Aryan was native, or it was imported in an invasion.{{refn|group=note|Koenraad Elst: "The theory of which we are about to discuss the linguistic evidence, is widely known as the "Aryan invasion theory" (AIT). I will retain this term even though some scholars object to it, preferring the term "immigration" to "invasion." They argue that the latter term represents a long-abandoned theory of Aryan warrior bands attacking and subjugating the peaceful Indus civilization. This dramatic scenario, popularized by Sir Mortimer Wheeler, had white marauders from the northwest enslave the black aboriginals, so that "Indra stands accused" of destroying the Harappan civilization. Only the extremist fringe of the Indian Dalit (ex-Untouchable) movement and its Afrocentric allies in the USA now insist on this black-and-white narrative (vide Rajshekar 1987; Biswas 1995). But, for this once, I believe the extremists have a point. North India's linguistic landscape leaves open only two possible explanations: either Indo-Aryan was native, or it was imported in an invasion. In fact, scratch any of these emphatic "immigration" theorists and you'll find an old-school invasionist, for they never fail to connect Aryan immigration with horses and spoked-wheel chariots, that is, with factors of military superiority.{{sfn|Elst|2005|p=234-235}}}}}} | |||
====Linguistic methodology==== | |||
] compiled a list of approximately 500 foreign words in the ] that he considered to be loans predominantly from ]. Kuiper identified 383 Ṛigvedic words as non-Indo-Aryan – roughly 4% of its liturgical vocabulary – borrowed from Old ], Old ], and several other languages. ] has questioned Dravidian etymologies proposed for Vedic words, for most of which he gives Indoaryan or Sanskrit etymologies, and condemned what he characterises as a misplaced “] for hunting up ] loans in ]”. ] contends that there is “''not a single case'' in which a ''communis opinio'' has been found confirming the foreign origin of a Rigvedic (and probably Vedic in general) word". Burrow in turn has criticised the "resort to tortuous reconstructions in order to find, by hook or by crook, Indo-European explanations for Sanskrit words". Kuiper reasons that given the abundance of Indo-European comparative material—and the scarcity of Dravidian or Munda—the inability to clearly confirm whether the etymology of a Vedic word is Indo-European implies that it is not. {{Harvtxt|Witzel|1999}} argues that the earliest level of the Rigveda shows signs of para-] influence and only later levels of Dravidian, suggesting—against the older widespread two-century-old belief—that the original inhabitants of Punjab were ] rather than ], whom the Indo-Aryans encountered only in middle Rigvedic times.<ref>], ], and ], as cited in {{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|pp=86–88}}<br>Kuiper, as cited in {{Harvcoltxt|Witzel|1999}} and {{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|pp=87}}</ref> | |||
Indigenists question the methodology and results of linguistics.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=68-75}}{{sfn|Elst|2005}}{{sfn|Kak|2001}} According to Bryant,{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=75}} OIT proponents tend to be linguistic dilettantes who either ignore the linguistic evidence completely, dismiss it as highly speculative and inconclusive,{{refn|group=note|E.g. Chakrabarti 1995 and Rajaram 1995, as cited in Bryant 2001.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=75}}}} or attempt to tackle it with hopelessly inadequate qualifications; this attitude and neglect significantly minimises the value of most OIT publications.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|pp=74–107}}{{sfn|Bryant|1996}} | |||
====Archaeological finds and cultural continuity==== | |||
Dravidian and other South Asian languages share with Indo-Aryan a number of ] and ] features that are alien to other Indo-European languages. ], there is the introduction of ]es, which alternate with ] in Indo-Aryan; ] there are the ]s; and ] there is the use of a ] ] ("iti"). Several linguists, all of whom accept the external origin of the Aryan languages on other grounds, are quite open to considering that various syntactical developments in Indo-Aryan could have been internal developments (Hamp 1996 and Jamison 1989, as cited in {{Harvcolnb|Bryant|2001|pp=81–82}} rather than the result of substrate influences, or have been the result of ] (Hock 1975/1984/1996 and Tikkanen 1987, as cited in {{Harvcolnb|Bryant|2001|pp=80–82}}.<ref>{{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|pp=78–82}}</ref> About retroflexion {{Harvcoltxt|Tikkanen|1999}} states that "in view of the strictly areal implications of retroflexion and the occurrence of retroflexes in many early loanwords, it is hardly likely that Indo-Aryan retroflexion arose in a region that did not have a substratum with retroflexes." | |||
{{Main|Indo-Aryan_migrations#Archaeology: migrations from the steppe Urheimat|l1=Archaeology of the Indo-Aryan migrations}} | |||
In the 1960s, archaeological explanations for cultural change shifted from migration-models to internal causes of change.{{sfn|Anthony|2021}} Given the lack of archaeological remains of the Indo-Aryans, ], writing in the 1980s and 1990s, has argued for an indigenous cultural continuity between Harappan and post-Harappan times.{{sfn|Shaffer|2013}}{{sfn|Shaffer|Lichtenstein|1999}} According to Shaffer, there is no archaeological indication of an Aryan migration into northwestern India during or after the decline of the Harappan city culture.{{sfn|Shaffer|Lichtenstein|1999}}{{refn|group=note|], in his '']'', has provided an extensive overview of the archaeological trail of the Indo-European people across the Eurasian steppes and central Asia.}} Instead, Shaffer has argued for "a series of cultural changes reflecting indigenous cultural developments."{{sfn|Shaffer|2013|p=88}} According to Shaffer, linguistic change has mistakenly been attributed to migrations of people.{{sfn|Shaffer|2013|p=85-86}}{{refn|group=note|name=Shaffer_Sanskrit|While arguing for an indigenous cultural continuity, Shaffer gives two possible alternative explanations for the similarities between Sanskrit and western languages, arguing for non-Indian origins.{{sfn|Shaffer|2013|p=86-87}}<br>1. The first is a linguistic relationship with a "Zagrosian family of language linking Elamite and Dravidian on the Iranian Plateau," ]. According to Shaffer "linguistic similarities may have diffused west from the plateau as a result of the extensive trading networks linking cultures in the plateau with those in Mesopotamia and beyond," while also linking with the ] in Central Asia.{{sfn|Shaffer|2013|p=87}} Yet, Shaffer also notes that the Harappan culture was not extensively tied to this network in the third millennium BCE, leaving the possibility that "membership in a basic linguistic family - Zagrosian - may account for some of the linguistic similarities of later periods."{{sfn|Shaffer|2013|p=87}}{{refn|group=subnote|According to Franklin Southworth, "The Dravidian languages, now spoken mainly in peninsular India, form one of two main branches of the Zagrosian language family, whose other main branch consists of Elamitic and Brahui."<ref>{{Cite journal|doi = 10.1007/s12284-011-9076-9|title = Rice in Dravidian|year = 2011|last1 = Southworth|first1 = Franklin|journal = Rice|volume = 4|issue = 3–4|pages = 142–148|s2cid = 12983737|doi-access = free| bibcode=2011Rice....4..142S }}</ref>}}<br>2. The second possibility is that "such linguistic similarities are a result of post-second millennium B.C. contacts with the west"{{sfn|Shaffer|2013|p=87}} by trade, taken over by people who also adopted a new way of societal organisation.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=14}} This language was used to record the myths preserved in the Vedas. According to Shaffer, "nce codified, it was advantageous for the emerging hereditary social elites to stabilize such linguistic traits with the validity of the explanations offered in the literature enhancing their social position."{{sfn|Shaffer|2013|p=87-88}}}} Likewise, Erdosy also notes the absence of evidence for migrations, and states that "Indo-European languages may well have spread to South Asia through migration,"{{sfn|Erdosy|1995|p=90}} but that the Rigvedic ''aryas'', as a specific ethno-linguistic tribe holding a specific set of ideas,{{sfn|Erdosy|1995|p=75, 89-90}}{{refn|group=note|Parpola, as referred to by Bronkhorst, also notes that the term ''arya'' may not have referred to all ethnic groups who spoke an Indo-Aryan language.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007|p=265-266}}}} may well have been indigenous people whose "set of ideas" soon spread over India.{{sfn|Erdosy|1995|p=90}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007|p=266}} | |||
Another concern raised is that there is large time gap between the comparative materials, which can be seen as a serious methodological drawback.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bryant|2001|p=82}} – the syntax of the ] is being compared with a reconstructed proto-Dravidian. The first completely intelligible, datable, and sufficiently long and complete epigraphs that might be of some use in linguistic comparison are the ] inscriptions of the ] of about 550 c.e. (Zvelebil 1990), two entire millennia after the commonly accepted date for the Rigveda. Similarly there is much less material available for comparative ] and the interval in their case at least is a staggering thirty-five hundred years.</ref> The latter is, however, not a cogent argument if one compares, for example, modern Lithuanian (laukas patis) with early Vedic Sanskrit (loka-pati), which, too, are divided by a time span of c. 3200 years. | |||
Since the 1990s, attention has shifted back to migrations as an explanatory model.{{sfn|Anthony|2021}} Pastoral societies are difficult to identify in the archaeological record, since they move around in small groups and leave little traces.<ref group=web>''Encyclopedia Britannica'', </ref> In 1990, ] published a defense of migratory models,{{sfn|Anthony|2021}} and in his '']'' (2007), has provided an extensive overview of the archaeological trail of the Indo-European people across the Eurasian steppes and central Asia.{{sfn|Anthony|2007}} The development and "revolutionary"{{sfn|Witzel|2019|p=58}}{{sfn|Anthony|2021|p=9,12}}{{sfn|Khan|2019|p=146}} improvement of genetic research since the early 2010s{{sfn|Anthony|2021|p=9,12}}{{sfn|Khan|2019|p=146}} has reinforced this shift in focus, as it has unearthed previously unaccessible data, showing large-scale migrations in prehistoric times.{{sfn|Anthony|2021}} | |||
{{Harvtxt|Elst|1999}} proposes that any Dravidian in Sanskrit can still be explained via the OIT. He suggests through David McAlpin's ], that the ancient homeland for Proto-Elamo-Dravidian was in the Mesopotamia region, from where the languages spread across the coast towards ] and eventually to ] where they still remain.<ref>D. McAlpin ''Linguistic Prehistory: The Dravidian Situation'' 1979</ref> According to Elst, this theory would support the idea that Early Harappan culture was possibly bi- or multi-lingual. {{Harvtxt|Elst|1999}} claims that the presence of the ], and similarities between Elamite and Harappan script as well as similarities between Indo-Aryan and Dravidian indicate that these languages may have interacted prior to the spread of Indo-Aryans southwards and the resultant intermixing of races and languages. | |||
====Genetic evidence==== | |||
Elfenbein (as cited in {{Harvnb|Witzel|2000}}) argues that the presence of Brahui in Baluchistan is explained by a late immigration that took place within the last thousand years. | |||
{{Main|Indo-Aryan migrations#Genetics: ancient ancestry and multiple gene flows|l1=Genetic evidence of Indo-Aryan migrations}} | |||
OIT-proponents have questioned the findings of genetic research,<ref group=web name="Sachan2015"/><ref group=web name="Chavda"/><ref group=web name="dnaindia.com">{{cite web |url=http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report-new-research-debunks-aryan-invasion-theory-1623744 |title=New research debunks Aryan invasion theory|date=10 December 2011}}</ref> and some older DNA-research had questioned the Indo-Aryan migrations.{{sfn|Underhill et al.|2010}}{{sfn|Metspalu et al.|2011}} Since 2015 however, genetic research has "revolutionarily"{{sfn|Witzel|2019|p=58}}{{sfn|Anthony|2021|p=9,12}} improved, and further confirmed the migration of Steppe pastoralists into Western Europe and South Asia,<ref name="Joseph 2017">{{cite news |first=Tony |last=Joseph |date=16 June 2017 |url= https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/how-genetics-is-settling-the-aryan-migration-debate/article19090301.ece |title=How genetics is settling the Aryan migration debate |work=The Hindu}}</ref>{{sfn|Reich|2018}}{{sfn|Anthony|2019}}{{sfn|Witzel|2019}}{{sfn|Anthony|2021}}{{refn|group=note|See, among others: {{harvtxt|Lazaridis et al.|2016}},{{harvtxt|Silva et al.|2017}}, {{harvtxt|Narasimhan et al.|2019}}}} and "many scientists who were either sceptical or neutral about significant Bronze Age migrations into India have changed their opinions."<ref name="Joseph 2017"/>{{refn|group=note|While {{harvtxt|Shinde et al.|2019}}, published in Cell, confirmed the Indo-Aryan migrations, news-reports stated that the study proved the Indo-Aryan migration theory to be wrong.<ref group=web>Pratul Sharma (6 september 2019), , The Week</ref><ref group=web>The Times of India (7 september 2019), </ref> This suggestion was reinforced by Shinde himself and Niraj Rai, stating that their study "completely sets aside the Aryan Migration/Invasion Theory."<ref group=web name=scroll.in_two_studies>Shoaib Daniyal (9 september 2019), , Scroll.in</ref><ref group=web name=The_Wire_party_line>C.P. Rajendran (13 september 2019), , The Wire</ref><br>Shinde's statements were refuted by his co-author Nick Patterson, and by Vagheesh Narasimhan, Shinde's co-author on {{harvtxt|Narasimhan et al.|2019}},<ref group=web name=scroll.in_two_studies/> and met with scepticism in other news reports.<ref group=web name=scroll.in_two_studies/><ref group=web name=The_Wire_party_line/> ] repeated that Steppe people contributed to the genetic make-up of India,<ref group=web>Anubhuti Vishnoi (9 september 2019),, The Economic Times</ref> while {{harvtxt|Friese|2019}} commented on the political complications of doing genetic research on India's history.{{sfn|Friese|2019}}}} | |||
Elst believes that there is evidence suggesting that Dravidian influences in ] and ] were largely lost over the years. He traces this to linguistic evidence. Some occurrences in ], or ancient forms of Tamil, indicate small similarities with ] or ]. As the oldest recognisable forms of Tamil have influences of Indo-Aryan, it is possible that they had Sanskrit influence as a result of a migration through the coastal regions of western India.<ref>Elst (1999){{Page needed|date=September 2010}}; Influence of Sanskrit or Prakrit on Sangam Tamil can be seen in some particular terms. For example, ''AkAyam'' (meaning sky) is thought to be derived from ''AkAsha'', while ''Ayutham'' (meaning weapon) is thought to be derived from ''Ayudha''.</ref> | |||
====Cultural change==== | |||
Writing specifically about language contact phenomena, {{Harvcoltxt|Thomason|Kaufman|1988}} state that there is strong evidence that Dravidian influenced Indic through "shift", that is, native Dravidian speakers learning and adopting Indic languages. Even though the innovative traits in Indic could be explained by multiple internal explanations, early Dravidian influence is the only explanation that can account for all of the innovations at once – it becomes a question of ]; moreover, early Dravidian influence accounts for several of the innovative traits in Indic better than any internal explanation that has been proposed.<ref>{{Harvcoltxt|Thomason|Kaufman|1988|pp=141–144}}</ref> | |||
Indigenists contest the possibility that small groups can change culture and languages in a major way.<ref group=web name="Kazanas-Collapse" /> Mainstream scholarship explains this by elite dominance and ].{{sfn|Parpola|2015|p=67}}{{sfn|Mallory|2002b}}{{sfn|Salmons|2015|pp=114–119}} Small groups can change a larger cultural area,{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=347}}{{sfn|Anthony|2007}} when an elite male group integrates in small indigenous groups which takes over the elite language, in this case leading to a language shift in northern India.{{sfn|Basu et al.|2003|p=2287}}{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=117–118}}{{sfn|Pereltsvaig|Lewis|2015|pp=208–215}} Indo-Aryan languages were further disseminated with the spread of the ] in the process of ]. In this process, local traditions ("little traditions") became integrated into the "great tradition" of Brahmanical religion,{{sfn|Turner|2020}} disseminating Sanskrit texts and Brahmanical ideas throughout India, and abroad.{{sfn|Sanskritization (Encyclopedia Britannica)}} This facilitated the development of the ],{{sfn|Flood|2013|p=148}}{{sfn|Sanskritization (Encyclopedia Britannica)}}{{sfn|Turner|2020}} in which the ] absorbed "local popular traditions of ritual and ideology."{{sfn|Flood|2013|p=148}} | |||
===Redating Indian history=== | |||
{{Harvcoltxt|Erdosy|1995|p=18}} states that the most plausible explanation for the presence of Dravidian structural features in Old Indo-Aryan is that the majority of early Old Indo-Aryan speakers had a Dravidian mother tongue which they gradually abandoned. | |||
====Redating the Rig Veda and the Rig Vedic people==== | |||
====Hydronymy==== | |||
] are the oldest source of place and ] in northern India – which ] sees as an argument in favour of seeing Indo-Aryan as the oldest documented ].<ref name=talageri>Talageri 2000:""</ref> | |||
=====Sanskrit===== | |||
According to Witzel, river names are conservative, and "in northern India, rivers in general have early Sanskrit names from the Vedic period, and names derived from the daughter languages of Sanskrit later on."<ref name=witzel>Witzel. "Early Indian history: Linguistic and textual parametres", in {{Harvtxt|Erdosy|1995}}</ref> Talageri cites this in support of the Out of India theory,<ref name=talageri/> though Witzel himself would dispute jumping to that conclusion.<ref name=witzel/> Rather, he points out that non-Sanskritic names are common in the "Sarasvati" (Ghaggar) area. | |||
According to the mainstream view, Sanskrit arose in South Asia after Indo-Aryan languages had been introduced by the Indo-Aryans in the first half of the second millennium BCE.{{sfn|Dyson|2018|p=14–15}}{{sfn|Pinkney|2014|p=38}}{{refn|group=note|name="Entry of the Indo-Aryans"}} The most archaic form of Sanskrit is ] found in the ], composed between 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE.{{sfn|Lowe|2015|p=1–2}}{{sfn|Witzel|2006b|p=158–190, 160}}{{refn|group=note|name="Vedas"}} | |||
Taking recourse to "Hindu astronomical lore"{{sfn|Elst|1999}}{{sfn|Witzel|2001}} Indigenists argue for ancient, indigenous origins of Sanskrit,{{sfn|Elst|1999}}{{sfn|Elst|2005}}{{refn|group=note|name="Shaffer_Sanskrit"}} dating the Rigveda and the Vedic people to the 3rd millennium BCE or earlier.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxviii}}{{efn-la|See {{harvtxt|Kak|1987}}; {{harvtxt|Kak|1996}}, {{harvtxt|Kazanas|2001}}; {{harvtxt|Kazanas|2002}}<br>{{harvtxt|Elst|1999}}: "The astronomical lore in Vedic literature provides elements of an absolute chronology in a consistent way. For what it is worth, this corpus of astronomical indications suggests that the Rg-Veda was completed in the 4th millennium AD, that the core text of the Mahabharata was composed at the end of that millennium, and that the Brahmanas and Sutras are products of the high Harappan period towards the end of the 3rd millennium BC. This corpus of evidence is hard to reconcile with the AIT, and has been standing as a growing challenge to the AIT defenders for two centuries."}} According to ], situating the arrival of the Aryans in the seventh millennium BCE, the hymns of the Rig Veda are organised in accordance with an astronomical code, supposedly showing "a tradition of sophisticated observational astronomy going back to events of 3000 or 4000 BCE."{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=85-86}} His ideas have been ].<ref name="Plofker_Centaurus">{{ Citation | last = Plofker | first = Kim | author-link = Kim Plofker | date = December 1996 | title = Review of Subash Kak, ''The Astronomical Code of the Ṛgveda'' | journal = Centaurus | volume = 38 | issue = 4 | pages = 362–364 | issn = 0008-8994 | doi = 10.1111/j.1600-0498.1996.tb00021.x }}</ref>{{sfn|Witzel|2001}}{{sfn|Kurien|2007|p=255}}<ref name=":5">{{Cite book|title=Prophets Facing Backward : Postmodern Critiques of Science and Hindu Nationalism in India.|first=Meera|last=Nanda|date=2004|publisher=Rutgers University Press|isbn=9780813536347|pages=112|oclc=1059017715}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Mehendale|first=M. A.|date=1996|title=Review of THE ASTRONOMICAL CODE OF THE ṚGVEDA|journal=Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute|volume=77|issue=1/4|pages=323–325|issn=0378-1143|jstor=41702197}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Dani|first=S. G.|date=1994|title=The astronomical code of the Rigveda|journal=Current Science|volume=66|issue=11|pages=814|issn=0011-3891|jstor=24095698}}</ref> | |||
Kazanas argues that this indicates that the ] civilisation must have been dominated by ] speakers, supposing that the arrival of Indo-Aryan migrants in Late Harappan times to the remnants of an ] formerly stretching over a vast area could not have resulted in the suppression of the entire native hydronymy.<ref name = "Kazanas 2001B">Kazanas, Nicholas 2001b — Indigenous Indoaryans and the Rgveda — Journal of Indo-European Studies, volume 29, pages 257–93</ref> | |||
=====Horses and chariots===== | |||
However, Witzel argues exactly that: "The failure to preserve old hydronomes even in the Indus Valley (with a few exceptions, noted above) indicates the extent of the social and political collapse experienced by the local population."<ref name=witzel/> | |||
{{See also|History of the horse in the Indian subcontinent}} | |||
Several archaeological finds are interpreted as evidencing the presence of typical Indo-Aryan artefacts before 2000 BCE. Examples include the interpretation of animal bones from before 2000 BCE as horse-bones,{{refn|group=note|See ], ]}} and interpreting the ] cart burials as chariots.{{r|Subramanian2018_Royal|group=web}}{{r|Daniyal2018|group=web}}{{r|Pattanaik2020|group=web}}{{refn|group=note|name=chariot}} While horse remains and related artifacts have been found in Late Harappan (1900-1300 BCE) sites, indicating that horses may have been present at Late Harappan times,{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=270-271, 273}} horses did not play an essential role in the Harappan civilisation,{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=273}} in contrast to the Vedic period (1500-500 BCE).{{sfn|Reddy|2006|p=A93}}{{refn|group=note|R.S. Sharma (1995), as quoted in {{harvnb|Bryant|2001}}: "the ''Rg Vedic'' culture was pastoral and horse-centered, while the Harappan culture was neither horse-centered nor pastoral."}} The earliest undisputed finds of horse remains in South Asia are from the ], also known as the Swat culture (c. 1400-800 BCE),{{sfn|Reddy|2006|p=A93}} related to the Indo-Aryans{{sfn|Kennedy|2012|p=46}} | |||
Paralleling Witzel, {{Harvtxt|Villar|2000}} characterises place names as the deepest ethnic and linguistic layer, and states that the first network of river and place names in Spain was created by very ancient Indo-European populations, and was dense enough to resist successive language changes. According to {{Harvtxt|Villar|2000}}, even in those areas which are historically Basque (i.e. non-Indo-European), the ancient names of places and people have a prevailing Indo-European character, with very few names of non-Indo-European Basque etymology documented in ancient sources. {{Harvtxt|Alinei|2003}} cites this in support of the ]. | |||
Horse remains from the Harappan site ] (dated to 2400-1700 BC) have been identified by A.K. Sharma as ''Equus ferus caballus''.{{refn|group=note|Sharma (1974), as cited in {{harvnb|Bryant|2001|p=271}}}}{{refn|group=note|Bökönyi, as cited by ], stated that "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 (toe bones)."{{harvnb|Lal|1998|p=111}}, quoted from Bökönyi's letter to the Director of the Archaeological Survey of India, 1993-12-13.}} However, archaeologists like Meadow (1997) disagree, on the grounds that the remains of the ''Equus ferus caballus'' horse are difficult to distinguish from other equid species such as ''Equus asinus'' (]s) or ''Equus hemionus'' (]s).{{sfn|Bryant|2001|pp=169-175}} | |||
====Position of Sanskrit==== | |||
Vedic Sanskrit conserves many archaic aspects. In the words of T. Burrow: "Vedic is a language which in most respects is more archaic and less altered from original Indo-European than any other member of the family".<ref>T Burrow — The Sanskrit Language (1973): "Vedic is a language which ''in most respects is more archaic and less altered'' from original Indo-European ''than any other member'' of the family" (34: emphasis added); he also states that root nouns, "very much in decline in the earliest recorded Indo-European languages", are preserved better in Sanskrit, and later adds, "Chiefly owing to its antiquity the Sanskrit language is more readily analysable, and its roots more easily separable from accretionary elements than... any other IE language" (123, 289); see also Beekes, R.S.P., 1990: Vergelijkende Taalwetenschap cited by K Elst 2005. Tussen Sanskrit en Nederlands, Het Spectrum, Utrecht, "The distribution in Sanskrit is the oldest one" (Beekes 1990:37); "PIE had 8 cases, which Sanskrit still has" (Beekes 1990:122); "PIE had no definite article. That is also true for Sanskrit and ], and still for Russian. Other languages developed one" (Beekes 1990:125); " we ought to reconstruct the ] first,... But we will do with the ] because we know that it has preserved the essential information of the ]" (Beekes 1990:148); "While the accentuation systems of the other languages indicate a total rupture, Sanskrit, and to a lesser extent Greek, seem to continue the original IE situation" (Beekes 1990:187); "The root aorist... is still frequent in Indo-Iranian, appears sporadically in Greek and Armenian, and has disappeared elsewhere" (Beekes 1990:279)</ref> | |||
] solid-disk wheel carts were found at ] in 2018. They were related to the ], and dated at ca. 2000-1800 BCE.{{sfn|Parpola|2020}} They were interpreted by some as horse-pulled ], predating the arrival of the horse-centered Indo-Aryans.{{sfn|Witzel|2019|p=5}}{{sfn|Parpola|2020}}{{r|Subramanian2018_Royal|group=web}}{{r|Daniyal2018|group=web}}{{r|Pattanaik2020|group=web}}{{refn|group=note|name=chariot}} According to Parpola, the carts were ox-pulled charts, and related to a ] into the Indian subcontinent,{{sfn|Parpola|2020}} noting that the ] (2000-1500 BCE) shows similarities with both the Late Harappan culture and steppe-cultures.{{sfn|Parpola|2020}} | |||
Kazanas argues that linguistic stability corresponds to geographic stability, claiming that if "the Indo-Aryans were on the move over many thousands of miles (from the ], Europe and/or ]) over a very long period of centuries encountering many different other cultures", their "language should have suffered faster and greater changes".<ref name="A new date for the Rgveda" > by N Kazanas published in Philosophy and Chronology, 2000, ed G C Pande & D Krishna, special issue of Journal of Indian Council of Philosophical Research (June 2001)</ref> | |||
=====Sarasvati river===== | |||
{{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|p=144}} points out that this reasoning can be countered by arguing that Vedic retained the Indo-European accent because, as a ], it artificially preserved forms that would otherwise have evolved in a normal spoken language. Vedic Sanskrit is, like other ]s, an ], having evolved into ] by the 6th century BC, reaching stability long after northern India had been settled by Indo-Aryans. | |||
In the Rig Veda, the goddess Sarasvati is described as a mighty river. Indigenists take these descriptions as references to a real river, the ], identified with the ], an eastern tributary to the Indus. Given the fact that the Ghaggar-Hakkra had dried-up at 2000 BCE, Indigenists argue that the Vedic people must therefore have been present much earlier.{{sfn|Danino|2010}} | |||
Rig Vedic references to a physical river indicate that the Sarswati "had already lost its main source of water supply and must have ended in a terminal lake (samudra),"{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=93}} "depicting the present-day situation, with the Sarasvatī having lost most of its water."{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=93}}{{refn|group=note|name=Witzel1|Witzel: "The autochthonous theory overlooks that RV 3.33206 already speaks of a necessarily smaller Sarasvatī: the Sudås hymn 3.33 refers to the confluence of the Beas and Sutlej (Vipåś, Śutudrī). This means that the Beas had already captured the Sutlej away from the Sarasvatī, dwarfing its water supply. While the Sutlej is fed by Himalayan glaciers, the Sarsuti is but a small local river depending on rain water.<br/>In sum, the middle and later RV (books 3, 7 and the late book, 10.75) already depict the present-day situation, with the Sarasvatī having lost most of its water to the Sutlej (and even earlier, much of it also to the Yamunå). It was no longer the large river it might have been before the early Rgvedic period.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=81}}}} "Sarasvati" may also be identified with the ] or Haraxvati river in southern ],<ref name=Kochhar/> the name of which may have been reused in its Sanskrit form as the name of the Ghaggar-Hakra river, after the Vedic tribes moved to the ].<ref name=Kochhar>{{citation |last=Kochhar |first=Rajesh |chapter=On the identity and chronology of the Ṛgvedic river Sarasvatī |title=Archaeology and Language III; Artefacts, languages and texts |editor1=Roger Blench |editor2=Matthew Spriggs |publisher=Routledge |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-415-10054-0 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h8jfBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA257}}</ref><ref name="Thapar2004">{{cite book|author=Romila Thapar|title=Early India: From the Origins to AD 1300|year=2004|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-24225-8|page=|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/earlyindiafromor00thap/page/42}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|The Helmand river historically, besides Avestan ''Haetumant'', bore the name ''Haraxvaiti'', which is the ] form cognate to Sanskrit ''Sarasvati''.}} ''Sarasvati'' of the Rig Veda may also refer to two distinct rivers, with the family books referring to the Helmand River, and the more recent 10th mandala referring to the Ghaggar-Hakra.<ref name=Kochhar/> | |||
By contrast, ] is a ], ] language that has preserved Indo-European archaisms to the present day, thousands of years longer than Vedic did.<ref>{{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|pp=239–240}} "Lithuanian, for example, preserves archaic Indo-European features to this very day."</ref><ref>{{Citation | last = Meillet | first = A. | authorlink = Antoine Meillet | title = Introduction à l'étude comparative des langues indo-européennes | edition = 2<sup>ème</sup> corrigé et augmentée | year = 1908 | publisher = Hachette | location = Paris | language = French | quote =Le lituanien est remarquable par son aspect d'antiquité indo-européenne; il est frappant d'y trouve encore au XVI<sup>e</sup> siècle et jusqu'aujourd'hui des formes qui recouvrent exactement des formes védiques ou homériques et qui reproduisent presque parfaitement des formes indo-européennes supposées "Lithuanian is remarkable for its aspect of Indo-European antiquity; it is striking to still find in Lithuanian in the 16th century and until today forms which are exactly congruent with Vedic or Homeric forms and which reproduce almost perfectly supposed Indo-European forms." | page = 46}}</ref> But then it can be argued that Lithuanian remained in comparative isolation, being attested only around 1500 AD, which is comparable to the ], which has maintained an arguably more archaic form of an Indo-European language as a living vernacular.{{citation needed|date=June 2014}} {{clarify|date=June 2014}}<!--I tried to make sense of this last sentence and put it into Standard English, but it might still need work.--> | |||
====Identifying the Vedic people with the Harappan civilisation==== | |||
===Philology=== | |||
Indigenists claim a continuous cultural evolution of India, denying a discontinuity between the Harappan and Vedic periods,{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxiiiv–xxx}}{{sfn|Kak|1987}} identifying the IVC with the Vedic people.{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xxx}} According to Kak, "the Indian civilization must be viewed as an unbroken tradition that goes back to the earliest period of the Sindhu-Sarasvati (or Indus) tradition (7000 or 8000 BCE).{{sfn|Kak|2001b}}{{refn|group=note|See also {{harvnb|Kak|1996}}}}{{sfn|Kak|1987}} This identification is incompatible with the archaeological, linguistic and genetic data, and rejected by mainstream scholarship.{{sfn|Witzel|2001}} | |||
The determination of the age in which Vedic literature started and flourished has its consequences for the Indo-Aryan question. The oldest text, the ], is full of precise references to places and natural phenomena in what are now Punjab and Haryana, and thus was unmistakably recorded in that part of India.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Vedas: An Introduction to Hinduism’s Sacred Texts|page=141|publisher=Penguin UK|author=Roshen Dalal}}</ref> The date at which it was composed is a firm '']'' for the presence of the Vedic Aryans in India. In the academic mainstream view it was composed in the mid- to late-2nd millennium BC (Late Harappan)<ref>But Indo-Aryan presence may predate the Rigveda by several centuries even in the immigrationist view; according to ]'s scenario , the Rigvedic Aryans were not the first wave to reach India; his Indo-Aryan "Indian Dasa" were the bearers of the ] culture from around 1900 BC; Asko Parpola, 'The formation of the Aryan branch of Indo-European', in Blench and Spriggs (eds), Archaeology and Language III, London and New York (1999).</ref> while OIT proponents propose a pre-Harappan date.{{citation needed|date=October 2014}} | |||
====Postulating a Puranic chronology==== | |||
OIT proponents claim that the bulk of the Rigveda was composed prior to the Indus Valley Civilization by linking archaeological evidence with data from Vedic texts and archaeo-astronomical evidence.{{citation needed|date=June 2014}} | |||
{{Main|Puranic chronology}} | |||
The idea of "Indigenous Aryanism" fits into traditional Hindu ideas of religious history, namely that Hinduism has timeless origins, with the Vedic Aryans inhabiting India since ancient times.{{refn|group=note|The Vedic Foundation states: "The history of Bharatvarsh (which is now called India) is the description of the timeless glory of the Divine dignitaries who not only Graced the soils of India with their presence and Divine intelligence, but they also showed and revealed the true path of peace, happiness and the Divine enlightenment for the souls of the world that still is the guideline for the true lovers of God who desire to taste the sweetness of His Divine love in an intimate style."<ref group=web name="VF-Intro" />}} The ideas Indigenist ideas are rooted in the chronology of the ], the ] and the ], which contain lists of kings and genealogies{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=69}}{{sfn|Trautmann|2005|p=xx}} used to construct the traditional chronology of ancient India.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=69-70}} "Indigenists" follow a "Puranic agenda",{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=72, note 178}} emphasizing that these lists go back to the fourth millennium BCE. Megasthenes, the Greek ambassador to the Maurya court at Patna at {{circa}} 300 BCE, reported to have heard of a traditional list of 153 kings that covered 6042 years, beyond the traditional beginning of the '']'' in 3102 BCE.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=69}} The royal lists are based on Sūta bardic traditions, and are derived from lists which were orally transmitted and constantly reshaped.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=69}} | |||
To postulate the migration of PIE speakers out of India necessitates an earlier dating of the Rigveda than is normally accepted by Vedic scholars to make a deep enough period of migration to allow for the longest migrations to be completed.{{Harv|Mallory|1989}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}} | |||
These lists are supplemented with astronomical interpretations, which are also used to reach an earlier dating for the ].{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=85-90}} Along with this comes a redating of historical personages and events, in which the Buddha is dated to 1100 BCE or even 1700 BCE, and Chandragupta Maurya (c. 300 BCE) is replaced by Chandragupta, the Gupta king.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=88 note 220}}<!-- **START OF NOTE** -->{{refn|group=note|Witzel calls these "absurd dates", and refers to Elst 1999, ''Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate'', p.97 for more of them.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=88 note 220}}<br>Elst: "It is not only the Vedic age which is moved a number of centuries deeper into the past, when comparing the astronomical indications with the conventional chronology. Even the Gupta age (and implicitly the earlier ages of the Buddha, the Mauryas etc.) could be affected. Indeed, the famous playwright and poet Kalidasa, supposed to have worked at the Gupta court in about 400 AD, wrote that the monsoon rains started at the start of the sidereal month of Ashadha; this timing of the monsoon was accurate in the last centuries BCE. This implicit astronomy-based chronology of Kalidasa, about 5 centuries higher than the conventional one, tallies well with the traditional high chronology of the Buddha, whom Chinese Buddhist tradition dates to c. 1100 BC, and the implicit Puranic chronology even to c. 1700 BC.<ref group=web name="Elst2.3">{{Cite web |url=http://www.bharatvani.org/books/ait/ch23.htm |title=Koenraad Elst, ''2.3. THE PRECESSION OF THE EQUINOX'' |access-date=2015-02-07 |archive-date=2020-09-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200922182934/http://www.bharatvani.org/books/ait/ch23.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref><br>Elst 1999 2.3 note 17: "The argument for a higher chronology (by about 6 centuries) for the Guptas as well as for the Buddha has been elaborated by K.D. Sethna in Ancient India in New Light, Aditya Prakashan, Delhi 1989. The established chronology starts from the uncertain assumption that the Sandrokottos/ Chandragupta whom Megasthenes met was the Maurya rather than the Gupta king of that name. This hypothetical synchronism is known as the sheet-anchor of Indian chronology.<ref group=web name="Elst2.3" />}}<!-- **END OF NOTE** --> The Bharata War is dated at 3139–38 BCE, the start of the kali Yuga.{{refn|group=note|Elst: "In August 1995, a gathering of 43 historians and archaeologists from South-Indian universities (at the initiative of Prof. K.M. Rao, Dr. N. Mahalingam and Dr. S.D. Kulkarni) passed a resolution fixing the date of the Bharata war at 3139–38 BC and declaring this date to be the true sheet anchor of Indian chronology."<ref group=web name="Elst2.3" /><br>The Indic Studies Foundation reports of another meeting in 2003: "Scholars from across the world came together, for the first time, in an attempt to establish the 'Date of Kurukshetra War based on astronomical data.'"<ref group=web></ref>}} | |||
====Sarasvati River==== | |||
{{Main|Sarasvati river}} | |||
==Indigenous Aryans scenarios== | |||
Many hymns in all ten Books of the ] (except the 4th) extol or mention a divine and very large river named the ],<ref> ''India's miracle river ''</ref> which flows mightily "from the mountains to the Ocean".<ref name="A new date for the Rgveda"/><ref>] VII, 95, 2. ''giríbhya aaZ samudraZat''</ref><ref>Kazanas 2000:4</ref> ] states that "the references to the Sarasvati far outnumber the references to the ]" and "The Sarasvati is so important in the whole of the ] that it is worshipped as one of the Three Great Goddesses".<ref>Talageri, 2000: Ch 4: The Rigvedic Rivers</ref><ref name="The RigVeda — A Historical Analysis"> by Shrikant G. Talageri</ref> | |||
</ref>]] | |||
] identifies three major types of "Indigenous Aryans" scenarios:{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=28}} | |||
1. A "mild" version that insists on the indigeneity of the Rigvedic Aryans to the North-Western region of the Indian subcontinent in the tradition of ] and ];{{refn|group=note|Witzel mentions:{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=28}} | |||
The ] hymn (RV 10.75) gives a list of names of rivers where Sarasvati is merely mentioned while Sindhu receives all the praise. This may well indicate that ] could be dated to a period after the first drying up of Sarasvati when the river lost its preeminence.<ref name="A new date for the Rgveda"/> It is agreed that the tenth book of the ] is later than the others.<ref>(Kazanas 2000:4, 5)</ref> | |||
* Aurobindo (no specific source) | |||
* Waradpande, N.R., "Fact and fictions about the Aryans." In: Deo and Kamath 1993, 14-19 | |||
* Waradpande, N.R., "The Aryan Invasion, a Myth." Nagpur: Baba Saheb Apte Smarak Samiti 1989 | |||
* S. Kak 1994a, "On the classification of Indic languages." Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 75, 1994a, 185-195. | |||
* Elst 1999, "Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate." Delhi: Aditya Prakashan. p.119 | |||
* Talageri 2000, "Rigveda. A Historical Analysis." New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, p.406 sqq,{{sfn|Talageri|2000}} | |||
* Lal 1997, "The Earliest Civilization of South Asia (Rise, Maturity and Decline)." New Delhi: Aryan Books International, p.281 sqq.}} | |||
2. The "out of India" school that posits India as the ], originally proposed in the 18th century, revived by the ] sympathiser{{sfn|Hansen|1999|p=262}} ] (1999), and further popularised within Hindu nationalism{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=344}} by Shrikant Talageri (2000);{{sfn|Talageri|2000}}{{refn|group=note|In any "Indigenous Aryan" scenario, speakers of Indo-European languages must have left India at some point prior to the 10th century BCE, when first mention of ] is made in Assyrian records, but likely before the 16th century BCE, before the emergence of the ] which is often identified as a Proto-Iranian culture. (See, e.g., ], ''L'Iran et la migration des Indo-aryens et des Iraniens'').<ref>], ''L'Iran et la migration des Indo-aryens et des Iraniens''(Leiden 1977). Cited by Carl .C. Lamberg-Karlovsky, ''Archaeology and language: The case of the Bronze Age Indo-Iranians'', in Laurie L. Patton & Edwin Bryant, ''Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History'' (Routledge 2005), p. 162.</ref>}} | |||
The present Ghaggar/Hakra is a remnant of the Rgvedic Sarasvati, which was the lifeline of the Indus Civilisation.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=167}} The dating of the full-flowing Ghaggar/Hakra, corresponding to its description in the RgVeda, is seen as a powerful archaeological evidence for the dating of the RgVeda.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=167}} | |||
3. The position that all the world's languages and civilisations derive from India, represented e.g. by ]. | |||
According to palaeoenvironmental scientists, the desiccation of the Sarasvati came about as a result of the diversion of at least two rivers that fed it, the ] and the ]; | |||
{{quote|The chain of tectonic events diverted the ] westward (into the ]) and the Palaeo Yamuna eastward (into the ]) This explains the 'death' of such a mighty river (the Sarasvati) because its main ], the Satluj and Palaeo Yamuna were weaned away from it by the Indus and the Gangaa respectively".<ref>Rao 1991: 77–9</ref><ref>Feuerstein et al. 1995: 87–90</ref>}} | |||
Kazanas adds a fourth scenario: | |||
This ended at ca. 1750, but it started much earlier, perhaps with the upheavals and the large flood of 1900, or more probably 2100{{clarify|date=June 2014}}<!--Is this AD or BC? How can 1900 be "much earlier" than "c 1750"?-->.<ref>Elst 1993: 70</ref><ref>Allchins 1997: 117</ref> | |||
4.The Aryans entered the Indus Valley before 4500 BCE and got integrated with the Harappans, or might have been the Harappans.{{sfn|Kazanas|2002}} | |||
In contrast, Mughal notes that the Yamuna was cut off in the middle of the third millennium BCE, but the Sutlej kept providing water until the end of the second millennium BCE, or the beginning of the first millennium BCE.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=167}} | |||
===Aurobindo's Aryan world-view=== | |||
The 414 archaeological sites along the bed of Saraswati dwarf the number of sites so far recorded along the entire stretch of the Indus River, which number only about three dozen. About 80 percent of the sites are datable to the fourth or third millennium BCE, suggesting that the river was in its prime during this period.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=167}} | |||
For Aurobindo, an "Aryan" was not a member of a particular race, but a person who "accepted a particular type of self-culture, of inward and outward practice, of ideality, of aspiration."{{sfn|Heehs|2008|p=255-256}} Aurobindo wanted to revive India's strength by reviving Aryan traditions of strength and character.{{sfn|Boehmer|2010|p=108}} He denied the historicity of a racial division in India between "Aryan invaders" and a native dark-skinned population. Nevertheless, he did accept two kinds of culture in ancient India, namely the Aryan culture of northern and central India and Afghanistan, and the un-Aryan culture of the east, south and west. Thus, he accepted the cultural aspects of the division suggested by European historians.{{sfn|Varma|1990|p=79}} | |||
===Out of India model=== | |||
P. H. Francfort, utilising images from the French satellite SPOT, finds that the large river Sarasvati is pre-Harappan altogether and started drying up in the middle of the ]; during ] times only a complex ]-canal network was being used in the southern region of the ]. With this the date should be pushed back to c 3800 BC.<ref name="Francfort">{{cite journal | last1 = Francfort | first1 = Paul Henri | year = 1992 | title = Evidence for Harrappan Irrigation System in Haryana and Rajasthan | url = | journal = Eastern Anthropology | volume = 45 | issue = | page = 91 }}</ref> According to Francfort, those sites were not at all located at a riverside, but were outside of them, irrigated by small river channels.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=169}} Bryant notes: | |||
] | |||
{{quote|Ironically, the findings of the French team have served to reinforce the "mythico-religious tradition of Vedic origins." Rajaram's reaction (1995) to the team's much earlier date assigned to the perennial river is that "this can only mean that the great Sarasvati that flowed 'from the mountain to the sea' must belong to a much earlier epoch, to a date well before 3000 BCE."{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=169}}}} | |||
The "Out of India theory" (OIT), also known as the "Indian Urheimat theory," is the proposition that the ] ] in ] and spread to the remainder of the Indo-European region through a series of migrations.<ref group=web name="Kazanas-Collapse" /> It implies that the people of the ] were linguistically Indo-Aryans.{{sfn|Bryant|2001}} | |||
Ashoke Mukherjee is critical of the attempts to identify the Rigvedic Sarasvati, noticing that the attempts to push back the dating of the Vedic peoples are unrealistic and not in line with the accepted data, namely no earlier than 1500 BCE.{{sfn|Mukherjee|2001|p=2, 8-9}} Mukherjee further notices that | |||
{{quote|The entire fanfare created around its existence, disappearance and recent discovery is geared to the ongoing attempts of the BJP-led Governments at the centre and in some States to boost up Hindu religious sentiments and prejudices over some of the sensitive areas of Indian history."{{sfn|Mukherjee|2001|p=7}}}} | |||
==== |
====Theoretical overview==== | ||
Koenraad Elst, in his ''Update in the Aryan Invasion Debate'', investigates "the developing arguments concerning the Aryan Invasion Theory".{{sfn|Elst|1999}} Elst notes:{{sfn|Elst|1999|p=$6.2.3}} | |||
Some items typical of later Sanskrit literature are absent from the Rigveda. This is usually taken as strong evidence that the Rigvedic hymns have a geographical background restricted to the extreme northwest of the Indian subcontinent, corresponding to the route of immigration. OIT proponents have taken the same evidence as indicating an extremely early date for the Rigveda, predating the Harappan civilisation. | |||
{{blockquote|Personally, I don't think that either theory, of Aryan invasion and of Aryan indigenousness, can claim to have been proven by prevalent standards of proof; even though one of the contenders is getting closer. Indeed, while I have enjoyed pointing out the flaws in the AIT statements of the politicized Indian academic establishment and its American amplifiers, I cannot rule out the possibility that the theory which they are defending may still have its merits.}} | |||
Edwin Bryant also notes that Elst's model is a "theoretical exercise:"{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=147}} | |||
*The ] does not mention silver, though it does mention ''ayas'' (metal or copper/]) and ''candra'' or ''hiran-ya'' (gold). Silver is denoted by ''rajatám híran-yam'' literally 'white gold' and appears in post-Rigvedic texts. There is a generally accepted demarcation line for the use of ] and this metal is archaeologically attested in the Harappan civilization<ref name="A new date for the Rgveda"/><ref>Allchins 1969: 285</ref><ref>Rao 1991: 171</ref><ref>Allchins et. all cited by Kazanas 2000:1</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|...a purely theoretical linguistic exercise as an experiment to determine whether India can definitively be excluded as a possible homeland. If it cannot, then this further problematizes the possibility of a homeland ever being established anywhere on linguistic grounds.}} | |||
And in ''Indo-Aryan Controversy'' Bryant notes:{{sfn|Bryant|Patton|2005|p=468}} | |||
*The Rigveda makes no reference to the Harappan culture. The characteristic features of the Harappan culture are ] life, large buildings, permanently erected fire altars and bricks. There is no word for brick in the Rigveda and ''iswttakaa'' (brick) appears only in post-Rigvedic texts. (Kazanas 2000:13)<ref name="A new date for the Rgveda"/> The Rigvedic altar is a shallow bed dug in the ground and covered with grass (e.g. RV 5.11.2, 7.43.2–3; Parpola 1988: 225). Fixed brick-altars are very common in post-Rigvedic texts.<ref name="Rig-Veda is pre-Harappan - 2006" > by N Kazanas</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|Elst, perhaps more in a mood of devil's advocacy, toys with the evidence to show how it can be reconfigured, and to claim that no linguistic evidence has yet been produced to exclude India as a homeland that cannot be reconfigured to promote it as such.}} | |||
===="The emerging alternative"==== | |||
*The Rigveda mentions no rice or cotton. A compound term is used which later referred to rice cakes used for sacrificial purposes, but the word vrīhí, meaning 'rice', does not occur. Rice was found in at least three Harappan sites: ] (2000 BCE – 1500 BCE), ] (c. 2000 BCE) and ] (c. 2500 BCE) as Piggott,<ref>Piggott 1961: 259</ref> Grist<ref>Grist 1965</ref> and others testify.<ref>Rao 1991: 24, 101, 150 etc</ref> Yet, despite the importance of rice in ritual in later times, the Rigveda makes no mention of it. The cultivation of cotton is well attested in the Harappan civilisation and is found at many sites thereafter.<ref name="A new date for the Rgveda"/><ref>Piggott et. all cited by Kazanas 2000:13</ref><ref>Elst 1999: Ch 5.3.10</ref><ref name="Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate"> by Koenraad Elst</ref> | |||
Koenraad Elst summarises "the emerging alternative to the Aryan Invasion Theory" as follows.{{sfn|Elst|1999|p=$6.3}} | |||
During the 6th millennium BCE, Proto-Indo-Europeans lived in the ] of ]. As the result of demographic expansion, they spread into ] as the ]. The ] moved further and inhabited the ] coast and much of central Asia while the ] moved northwards and inhabited the ] in northwestern China, forming the ] group of I-E speakers. These groups were ] and inhabited that region by 2000 BCE. These people took the oldest form of the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) language with them and, while interacting with people of the Anatolian and Balkan region, transformed it into a separate dialect. While inhabiting central Asia they discovered the uses of the horse, which they later sent back to the ].{{sfn|Elst|1999|p=$6.3}} Later on during their history, they went on to occupy western Europe and thus spread the Indo-European languages to that region.{{sfn|Elst|1999|p=$6.3}} | |||
*] were developed in 2400 BCE. They are important in a religious context, yet the ] does not mention this, which suggests the ] is before 2400 BCE. The youngest book only mentions ]s,<ref>RV 10:85:2</ref> a concept known to all cultures, without specifying them as lunar mansions.<ref>Bernard Sergent: Genèse de l’Inde, 1997 p.118 cited by Elst 1999: Ch 5.5) by Koenraad Elst</ref> | |||
During the 4th millennium BCE, civilisation in India started evolving into what became the urban ]. During this time, the PIE languages evolved to ].{{sfn|Elst|1999|p=$6.3}} Some time during this period, the Indo-Iranians began to separate as the result of internal rivalry and conflict, with the Iranians expanding westwards towards ] and ], these possibly were the ]s. They also expanded into parts of central Asia. By the end of this migration, India was left with the Proto-Indo-Aryans. At the end of the ] period, the Sarasvati river began drying up and the remainder of the Indo-Aryans split into separate groups. Some travelled westwards and established themselves as rulers of the ] ] kingdom by around 1500 BCE (see ]). Others travelled eastwards and inhabited the ] while others travelled southwards and interacted with the ].{{sfn|Elst|1999|p=$6.3}} | |||
*On the other hand, it has been claimed that the ] has no term for "]", while ] were used aplenty in the ]n culture and in ]. ] uses "sword" twelve times in his translation, including in the old books 5 and 7, but in most cases a literal translation would be more generic "sharp implement" (e.g. ''{{IAST|vāśī}}''), the transition from "]" to "]" in the ] being a gradual process. | |||
===David Frawley=== | |||
The afore-mentioned features are found in post Rigvedic texts – the Samhitas, the Brahmanas and fully in the Sutra literature. For instance, brick altars are mentioned in Satapatha Brahmanaṇa 7.1.1.37, or 10.2.3.1 etc. Rice ( ''vrihi'' ) is found in AV 6.140.2; 7.1.20; etc. Cotton karpasa appears first in Gautama's (1.18) and in Bandhāyana's (14.13.10) Dharmasūtra. The fact of the convergence of the post-Rigvedic texts and the Harappan culture was noted long ago by archaeologists. ] and ] stated unequivocally that these features are of the kind "described in detail in the later Vedic literature" (1982: 203).<ref name="Rig-Veda is pre-Harappan - 2006" > by N Kazanas</ref> | |||
In books such as ''The Myth of the Aryan Invasion of India'' and '']'' ], Frawley criticises the 19th century ], such as the theory of conflict between invading ] and Dravidians.{{sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=298}} In the latter book, Frawley, ], and ] reject the Aryan Invasion theory and support Out of India. | |||
Bryant commented that Frawley's historical work is <!-- unambiguously "pro-Hindu" and //needs explaining from page 290 --> more successful as a popular work, where its impact "is by no means insignificant", rather than as an academic study,{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=291}} | |||
Based on this set of statements, OIT proponents argue that the whole of the Rigveda, except for some few passages which may be of later date, must have been composed prior to the Indus Valley Civilization.<ref name="A new date for the Rgveda"/><ref name="Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate"/> | |||
and that Frawley "is committed to channelling a symbolic spiritual paradigm through a critical empirico rational one".{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=347}} | |||
]{{sfn|Fritze|2009|pp=214–218}} ] (2002) quotes Frawley's historical work extensively for the proposal of highly evolved ancient civilisations prior to the end of the ]. including in India.{{sfn|Hancock|2002|pp=137, 147–8, 157, 158, 166–7, 181, 182}} Kreisburg refers to Frawley's "The Vedic Literature and Its Many Secrets".{{sfn|Kreisburg|2012|p=22–38}} | |||
====Memories of an Urheimat==== | |||
The fact that the Vedas<ref>Cardona 2002: 33–35; Cardona, George. The Indo-Aryan languages, RoutledgeCurzon; 2002 ISBN 0-7007-1130-9</ref> do not mention the Aryans' presence in India as being the result of a migration or mention any possible ], has been taken as an argument in favour of the OIT. The reasoning is that it is not uncommon for migrational accounts to be found in early mythological and religious texts, a classical example being the ] in the ], describing the legendary migration of the Israelites from Egypt to Canaan. | |||
==Significance for colonial rule and Hindu politics== | |||
Proponents of the OIT, such as Koenraad Elst, argue that it would have been expected that migrations, and possibly an Urheimat, would be mentioned in the Rigveda if the Aryans had only arrived in India some centuries before the composition of the earliest Rigvedic hymns. They argue that other migration stories of other Indo-European people have been documented historically or archaeologically, and that the same would be expected if the Indo-Aryans had migrated into India.<ref name="Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate"/><ref>Elst 1999: Ch 4.6</ref> | |||
{{Further|Indian independence movement|Hindu nationalism|Hindutva pseudohistory}} | |||
The Aryan Invasion theory plays an important role in Hindu nationalism, which favors Indigenous Aryanism.{{sfn|Fosse|2005|p=435}} | |||
From the mainstream academic viewpoint, the concern is the degree of historical accuracy that can be expected from the Rigveda, which is a collection of hymns, not an account of tribal history, and those hymns that are assumed to reach back to within a few centuries of the period of Indo-Aryan arrival in Gandhara make for just a small portion of the text.<ref>e.g. Thomas Oberlies, Die Religion des Rgveda, Wien 1998, p. 188.</ref> | |||
=== |
===Colonial India=== | ||
{{Main|Colonial India}} | |||
Regarding migration of Indo-Aryans and imposing language on Harappans, Kazanas notes, | |||
<!-- In the 18th and 19th century Britain colonised India. The British Raj invested colonial rule, aimed at the benefits of Great Britain, and disregarding the rights and interests of the Indians. Reactions against colonial rule arose early on, with socially and religiously inspired movements as the ] and the ], but also political organisations who opposed colonial rule.<ref>{{cite book|title=Indian Government And Politics|page=31|author=Abbas Hoveyda|publisher=Pearson Education India}}</ref> Eventually these movements succeeded, leading to the independence of an united India. | |||
{{quote|The intruders would have been able to rename the rivers only if they were conquerors with the power to impose this. And, of course, the same is true of their Vedic language: since no people would bother of their own free will to learn a difficult, inflected foreign language, unless they had much to gain by this, and since the Aryan immigrants had adopted the “material culture and lifestyle” of the Harappans<ref>Allchins 1997: 223</ref> and consequently had little or nothing to offer to the natives, the latter would have adopted the new language only under pressure. Thus here again we discover that the substratum thinking is invasion and conquest But invasion is the substratum of all such theories even if words like ‘migration’ are used. There could not have been an Aryan immigration because (apart from the fact that there is no archaeological evidence for this) the results would have been quite different. Immigrants do not impose their own demands or desires on the natives of the new country: they are grateful for being accepted, for having the use of lands and rivers for farming or pasturing and for any help they receive from the natives; in time it is they who adopt the language (and perhaps the religion) of the natives. You cannot have a migration with the results of an invasion."<ref>`The AIT and scholarship' by Kazanas July 2001 Page 2,3</ref>}} | |||
Yet, how India is to be governed and united, was and is an enormous challenge. India exists of a multiplicity of cultures, languages and religions. Various political and religious groupings exist, with various, often clashing, views. Hindu nationalism, which sees India as an united, Hindu country, has increasingly gained popularity.<ref>{{cite book|title=Political Ideas in Modern India: Thematic Explorations|pages=238–241|author=Vrajendra Raj Mehta, Thomas Pantham|publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
In contrast, Witzel notes that small groups can change a larger cultural area.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=347}}{{sfn|Anthony|2007}} Michael Witzel refers to Ehret’s model{{refn|group=note|Michael Witzel: Ehret, Ch., 1988. "Language Change and the Material Correlates of Language and Ethnic Shift," Antiquity, 62: 564–74; derived from Africa, cf. Diakonoff 1985.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=347}}}} which stresses the ], or a "billiard ball," or Mallory’s "Kulturkugel", effect of cultural transmission.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=347}} According to Ehret, ethnicity and language can shift with relatively easy in small societies, due to the cultural, economic and military choices made by the local population in question. The group bringing new traits may initially be small, contributing features that can be fewer in number than those of the already local culture. The emerging combined group may then initiate a recurrent, expansionist process of ethnic and language shift.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=347}} | |||
--> | |||
Curiosity and the colonial requirements of knowledge about their subject people led the officials of the East India Company to explore the history and culture of India in the late 18th century.{{sfn|Thapar|1996|p=3}} When similarities between Sanskrit, Greek and Latin were discovered by ], a suggestion of "monogenesis" (single origin) was formulated for these languages as well as their speakers. In the latter part of the 19th century, it was thought that language, culture and race were inter-related, and the notion of biological race came to the forefront{{sfn|Thapar|1996|p=4}} The presumed "Aryan race" which originated the Indo-European languages was prominent among such races, and was deduced to be further subdivided into "European Aryans" and "Asian Aryans," each with their own homelands.{{sfn|Thapar|1996|p=5}} | |||
], who translated the ] during 1849–1874, postulated an original homeland for all Aryans in central Asia, from which a northern branch migrated to Europe and a southern branch to India and Iran. The Aryans were presumed to be fair-complexioned Indo-European speakers who conquered the dark-skinned ''dasas'' of India. The upper castes, particularly the Brahmins, were thought to be of Aryan descent whereas the lower castes and Dalits ("untouchables") were thought to be the descendants of ''dasas''.{{sfn|Thapar|1996|p=6}} | |||
David Anthony notes that the spread of the Indo-European languages probably did not happen through "chain-type folk migrations," but by the introduction of these languages by ritual and political elites, which are emulated by large groups of people.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=117}}{{refn|group=note|Compare the process of ] in India.}} Anthony gives the example of the Luo-speaking Acholi in northern Uganda in the 17th and 18th century, who's language spread rapidly in the 19th century.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=117-118}} Indo-European languages may have spread in a similar way among the tribal societies of prehistoric Europe, with Indo-European chiefs bringing with them an ideology of political clientage.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=118}} Anthony notes that "elite recruitment" may be a suitable term for this system.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=118}}{{refn|group=note|Another example Anthony gives of how an open social system can encourage recruitment and language shift, are the Pathans in estern Afganistan. Traditionally status depended on agricultural surpluses and landownership. The neighbouring Baluch, outnumbered by the Pathans, were pastoral herders, and has hierarchical political system. Pathans who lost their land, could take refuge among the Baluch. As Anthony notes, "chronic tribal warfare might generally favor pastoralism over sedentary economics as herds can be defended by moving them, whereas agricultural fields are an immobile target."{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=118-119}}}} | |||
The Aryan theory served politically to suggest a common ancestry and dignity between the Indians and the British. ] spoke of ] as a "reunion of parted cousins." ] ] endorsed the antiquity of ''Rigveda'', dating it to 4500 BCE. He placed the homeland of the Aryans somewhere ]. From there, Aryans were believed to have migrated south in the post-glacial age, branching into a European branch that relapsed into barbarism and an Indian branch that retained the original, superior civilisation.{{sfn|Thapar|1996|p=8}} | |||
===Material archaeology=== | |||
However, Christian missionaries such as John Muir and John Wilson drew attention to the plight of lower castes, who they said were oppressed by the upper castes since the Aryan invasions. ] argued that the ''dasas'' and ''sudras'' were indigenous people and the rightful inheritors of the land, whereas Brahmins were Aryan and alien.{{sfn|Thapar|1996|p=7}} | |||
The opinion of the majority of professional archaeologists interviewed seems to be that there is no archaeological evidence to support external Indo-Aryan origins.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bryant|2001|p=231}}</ref> Thus, while the linguistic community stands firm with the ], the archaeological community tends to be more agnostic. According to one archaeologist, ]: | |||
===Hindu revivalism and nationalism=== | |||
<blockquote>Although the overall socioeconomic organization changed, continuities in technology, subsistence practices, settlement organization, and some regional ] show that the indigenous population was not displaced by invading hordes of ] speaking people. For many years, the 'invasions' or 'migrations' of these Indo-Aryan-speaking Vedic/Aryan tribes explained the decline of the Indus civilization and the sudden rise of urbanization in the Ganga-] valley. This was based on simplistic models of culture change and an uncritical reading of Vedic texts....<ref>{{Citation|first1=Jonathan Mark |last1=Kenoyer |title=The Indus Valley Tradition of Pakistan and Western India |journal=Journal of World Prehistory |volume=5 |issue=4 |year=1991 |pages=331–85 |jstor=25800603|postscript= |doi=10.1007/bf00978474}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
In contrast to the mainstream views, the ] denied an external origin to Aryans. ], the founder of the ] (Society of Aryans), held that Vedas were the source of all knowledge and were revealed to the Aryans. The first man (an Aryan) was created in ] and, after living there for some time, the Aryans came down and inhabited India, which was previously empty.{{sfn|Jaffrelot|1996|p=16}} | |||
The ] held that the Aryans were indigenous to India, but that they were also the progenitors of the European civilisation. The Society saw a dichotomy between the spiritualism of India and the materialism of Europe.{{sfn|Thapar|1996|p=9}} | |||
The examination of 300 skeletons from the Indus Valley Civilization and comparison of those skeletons with modern-day Indians by ] has also been a supporting argument for the OIT. Kennedy claims that the Harappan inhabitants of the Indus Valley Civilization are no different from the inhabitants of India in the following millennia.<ref>(Hemphill, Lukacs and Kennedy 1991, see also Kenneth Kennedy 1995)</ref> However, this does not rule out one version of the Aryan Migration Hypothesis which suggests that the only "migration" was one of languages as opposed to a complete displacement of the indigenous population. | |||
According to Romila Thapar, the ], eager to construct a Hindu identity for the nation, held that the original Hindus were the Aryans and that they were indigenous to India. There was no Aryan invasion and no conflict among the people of India. The Aryans spoke Sanskrit and spread the Aryan civilization from India to the west.{{sfn|Thapar|1996|p=9}} However, ] creator ] believed that Aryans migrated to South Asia.<ref name="y233">{{cite web | title=The father of Hindutva believed Aryans migrated to India | website=Quartz | date=2019-08-20 | url=http://qz.com/india/1691223/new-savarkar-biography-sheds-light-on-the-origins-of-hindutva}}</ref> | |||
Häusler (as cited in {{Harvcolnb|Bryant|2001|p=141}}) also found that archaeological evidence in central Europe showed continuous linear development, with no marked external influences. | |||
Witzel traces the "indigenous Aryan" idea to the writings of ]. Golwalkar (1939) denied any immigration of "Aryans" to the subcontinent, stressing that all Hindus have always been "children of the soil", a notion which according to Witzel is reminiscent of the '']'' of contemporary fascism. Witzel adds that Savarkar offered a religious and cultural definition of Hindu-ness which he called "Hindutva". It has different components: territorial, political, nationalisitic, ancestral, cultural and religious. Since these ideas emerged on the brink of the internationalist and socially oriented Nehru-Gandhi government, they lay dormant for several decades after the independence, and only rose to prominence in the 1980s.{{sfn|Witzel|2006|pp=204–205}} | |||
{{Harvcoltxt|Bryant|2001|p=236}} grants that "there is at least a series of archaeological cultures that can be traced approaching the Indian subcontinent, even if discontinuous, which does not seem to be the case for any hypothetical east-to-west emigration." | |||
Bergunder likewise identifies Golwalkar as the originator of the "Indigenous Aryans" notion, and Goel's ] as the instrument of its rise to notability:{{sfn|Bergunder|2004}} | |||
==Criticism== | |||
{{blockquote|The Aryan migration theory at first played no particular argumentative role in Hindu nationalism. This impression of indifference changed, however, with Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar (1906–1973), who from 1940 until his death was leader of the extremist paramilitary organization the ] (RSS). In contrast to many other of their openly offensive teachings, the Hindu nationalists did not seek to keep the question of the Aryan migration out of public discourses or to modify it; rather, efforts were made to help the theory of the indigenousness of the Hindus achieve public recognition. For this the initiative of the publisher Sita Ram Goel (b. 1921) was decisive. Goel may be considered one of the most radical, but at the same time also one of the most intellectual, of the Hindu nationalist ideologues. Since 1981 Goel has run a publishing house named ‘Voice of India' that is one of the few which publishes Hindu nationalist literature in English which at the same time makes a 'scientific' claim. Although no official connections exist, the books of 'Voice of India' — which are of outstanding typographical quality and are sold at a subsidized price — are widespread among the ranks of the leaders of the Sangh Parivar. The increasing political influence of Hindu nationalism in the 1990s resulted in attempts to revise the Aryan migration theory also becoming known to the academic public.}} | |||
Michael Witzel has severely criticised the "Indigenous Aryans" position: | |||
{{quote|The 'revisionist project' certainly is not guided by the principles of critical theory but takes, time and again, recourse to pre-enlightenment beliefs in the authority of traditional religious texts such as the Purånas. In the end, it belongs, as has been pointed out earlier, to a different 'discourse' than that of historical and critical scholarship. In other words, it continues the writing of religious literature, under a contemporary, outwardly 'scientific' guise The revisionist and autochthonous project, then, should not be regarded as scholarly in the usual post-enlightenment sense of the word, but as an apologetic, ultimately religious undertaking aiming at proving the 'truth' of traditional texts and beliefs. Worse, it is, in many cases, not even scholastic scholarship at all but a political undertaking aiming at 'rewriting' history out of national pride or for the purpose of 'nation building'.{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=95}}}} | |||
===Present-day political significance=== | |||
In her review of Bryant's "The Indo-Aryan Controversy" Stephanie Jamison comments: | |||
Lars Martin Fosse notes the political significance of "Indigenous Aryanism".{{sfn|Fosse|2005|p=435}} He notes that "Indigenous Aryanism" has been adopted by Hindu nationalists as a part of their ideology, which makes it a ''political'' matter in addition to a scholarly problem.{{sfn|Fosse|2005|p=435}} The proponents of Indigenous Aryanism necessarily engage in "moral disqualification" of Western Indology, which is a recurrent theme in much of the indigenist literature. The same rhetoric is being used in indigenist literature and the Hindu nationalist publications like the '']''.{{sfn|Fosse|2005|p=437}} | |||
{{quote|...the parallels between the Intelligent Design issue and the Indo-Aryan "controversy" are distressingly close. The Indo-Aryan controversy is a manufactured one with a non-scholarly agenda, and the tactics of its manufacturers are very close to those of the ID proponents mentioned above. However unwittingly and however high their aims, the two editors have sought to put a gloss of intellectual legitimacy, with a sense that real scientific questions are being debated, on what is essentially a religio-nationalistic attack on a scholarly consensus.{{sfn|Jamison|2006}}}} | |||
According to Abhijith Ravinutala, the indigenist position is essential for Hindutva exclusive claims on India:{{sfn|Ravinutala|2013|p=6}} | |||
==Political significance== | |||
{{blockquote|The BJP considers Indo-Aryans fundamental to the party's conception of Hindutva, or "Hindu-ness": India is a nation of and for Hindus only. Only those who consider India their holy land should remain in the nation. From the BJP's point of view, the Indo-Aryan peoples were indigenous to India, and therefore were the first 'true Hindus'. Accordingly, an essential part of 'Indian' identity in this point of view is being indigenous to the land.}} | |||
Repercussions of the disagreements about Aryan origins have reached Californian courts with the ], where according to '']''<ref group=web name="ToI" /> historian and president of the Indian History Congress, ] in a "crucial affidavit" to the Superior Court of California:<ref group=web name="ToI" /> | |||
{{Further|Nationalism and ancient history}} | |||
{{blockquote|...iving a hint of the Aryan origin debate in India, ... asked the court not to fall for the 'indigenous Aryan' claim since it has led to 'demonisation of Muslims and Christians as foreigners and to the near denial of the contributions of non-Hindus to Indian culture'.}} | |||
According to Thapar, Modi's government and the BJP have "peddled myths and stereotypes", such as the insistence on "a single uniform culture of the Aryans, ancestral to the Hindu, as having prevailed in the subcontinent, subsuming all others", despite the scholarly evidence for migrations into India, which is "anathema to the Hindutva construction of early history".<ref group=web name="Thapar2019" /> | |||
Repercussions of the disagreements about Aryan origins have reached ]n courts with the ], where according to the ]<ref>{{cite news|title=US text row resolved by Indian|author= Mukul, Akshaya|date= 9 September 2006|url=http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2006-09-09/india/27800566_1_aryans-textbook-affidavit|work=]}}</ref> historian and president of the Indian History Congress, ] in a "crucial affidavit" to the Superior Court of California, "iving a hint of the Aryan origin debate in India, asked the court not to fall for the 'indigenous Aryan' claim since it has led to 'demonisation of Muslims and Christians as foreigners and to the near denial of the contributions of non-Hindus to Indian culture'". | |||
==Rejection by mainstream scholarship== | |||
===Hindu nationalism=== | |||
The Indigenous Aryans theory has no relevance, let alone support, in mainstream scholarship.<!-- **START OF NOTE** -->{{refn|group=note|name="no support"|No support in mainstream scholarship: | |||
* {{harvtxt|Mallory|2013}}: "The speakers at this symposium can generally be seen to support one of the following three ‘solutions’ to the Indo-European homeland problem: 1. The Anatolian Neolithic model 2. The Near Eastern model 3. The Pontic-Caspian model." | |||
* Romila Thapar (2006): "there is no scholar at this time seriously arguing for the indigenous origin of Aryans".{{sfn|Thapar|2006|p=127}} | |||
* Wendy Doniger (2017): "The opposing argument, that speakers of Indo-European languages were indigenous to the Indian subcontinent, is not supported by any reliable scholarship. It is now championed primarily by Hindu nationalists, whose religious sentiments have led them to regard the theory of Aryan migration with some asperity."<ref group=web name="Doniger_2017">Wendy Doniger (2017), ", review of Asko Parpola's ''The Roots of Hinduism''; in: ''Inference, International Review of Science'', Volume 3, Issue 2</ref> | |||
* {{harvtxt|Truschke|2020}}: "As Tony Joseph has pointed out, the Out of India theory lacks support from even “a single, peer-reviewed scientific paper” and is best considered nothing “more than a kind of clever and angry retort.”" | |||
* Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), in response to Narasimhan et al. (2019): "Hindutva activists, however, have kept the Aryan Invasion Theory alive, because it offers them the perfect strawman, 'an intentionally misrepresented proposition that is set up because it is easier to defeat than an opponent's real argument' The Out of India hypothesis is a desperate attempt to reconcile linguistic, archaeological and genetic evidence with Hindutva sentiment and nationalistic pride, but it cannot reverse time's arrow The evidence keeps crushing Hindutva ideas of history."<ref group=web name="Shahane_2019">Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), , Scroll.in</ref> | |||
* Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016): "Of course it is a fringe theory, at least internationally, where the Aryan Invasion Theory (AIT) is still the official paradigm. In India, though, it has the support of most archaeologists, who fail to find a trace of this Aryan influx and instead find cultural continuity."<ref name="Elst_2016">Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016), Koenraad Elst: "I am not aware of any governmental interest in correcting distorted history", ''Swarajya Magazine''</ref>}}<!-- **END OF NOTE** --> According to Michael Witzel, the "indigenous Aryans" position is not scholarship in the usual sense, but an "apologetic, ultimately religious undertaking":{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=95}} | |||
{{blockquote|The "revisionist project" certainly is not guided by the principles of critical theory but takes, time and again, recourse to pre-enlightenment beliefs in the authority of traditional religious texts such as the Purāṇas. In the end, it belongs, as has been pointed out earlier, to a different 'discourse' than that of historical and critical scholarship. In other words, it continues the writing of religious literature, under a contemporary, outwardly 'scientific' guise ... The revisionist and autochthonous project, then, should not be regarded as scholarly in the usual post-enlightenment sense of the word, but as an apologetic, ultimately religious undertaking aiming at proving the "truth" of traditional texts and beliefs. Worse, it is, in many cases, not even scholastic scholarship at all but a political undertaking aiming at "rewriting" history out of national pride or for the purpose of "nation building".}} | |||
In her review of Bryant's ''The Indo-Aryan Controversy'', which includes chapters by Elst and other "indigenists", Stephanie Jamison comments:{{sfn|Jamison|2006}} | |||
Witzel traces the "indigenous Aryan" idea to the writings of ] and ]. Golwalkar (1939) denied any immigration of "Aryans" to the subcontinent, stressing that all Hindus have always been "children of the soil", a notion Witzel compares to the '']''. Since these ideas emerged on the brink of the internationalist and socially oriented Nehru-Gandhi government, they lay dormant for several decades, and only rose to prominence in the 1980s.<ref>{{harvtxt|Witzel|2006|p=204-205}}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|... the parallels between the Intelligent Design issue and the Indo-Aryan "controversy" are distressingly close. The Indo-Aryan controversy is a manufactured one with a non-scholarly agenda, and the tactics of its manufacturers are very close to those of the ID proponents mentioned above. However unwittingly and however high their aims, the two editors have sought to put a gloss of intellectual legitimacy, with a sense that real scientific questions are being debated, on what is essentially a religio-nationalistic attack on a scholarly consensus.}} | |||
Sudeshna Guha, in her review of ''The Indo-Aryan Controversy'', notes that the book has serious methodological shortcomings, by not asking the question what exactly constitutes historical evidence.{{sfn|Guha|2007|p=341}} This makes the "fair and adequate representation of the differences of opinion" problematic, since it neglects "the extent to which unscholarly opportunism has motivated the rebirth of this genre of 'scholarship{{'"}}.{{sfn|Guha|2007|p=341}} Guha:{{sfn|Guha|2007|p=341}} | |||
{{harvtxt|Bergunder|2004}} likewise identifies Golwalkar as the originator of the "Indigenous Aryans" notion, and Goel's ] as the instrument of its rise to notability: | |||
{{blockquote|Bryant's call for accepting "the valid problems that are pointed out on both sides" (p. 500), holds intellectual value only if distinctions are strictly maintained between research that promotes scholarship, and that which does not. Bryant and Patton gloss over the relevance of such distinctions for sustaining the academic nature of the Indo-Aryan debate, although the importance of distinguishing the scholarly from the unscholarly is rather well enunciated through the essays of Michael Witzel and Lars Martin Fosse.}} | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The Aryan migration theory at first played no particular argumentative role in Hindu nationalism. This impression of indifference changed, however, with Madhev Sadashiv Golwalkar (1906–1973), who from 1940 until his death was leader of the extremist paramilitary organization the ] (RSS). In contrast to many other of their openly offensive teachings, the Hindu nationalists did not seek to keep the question of the Aryan migration out of public discourses or to modify it; rather, efforts were made to help the theory of the indigenousness of the Hindus achieve public recognition. For this the initiative of the publisher Sita Ram Goel (b. 1921) was decisive. Goel may be considered one of the most radical, but at the same time also one of the most intellectual, of the Hindu nationalist ideologues. Since 1981 Goel has run a publishing house named ‘Voice of India’ that is one of the few which publishes Hindu nationalist literature in English which at the same time makes a 'scientific' claim. Although no official connections exist, the books of 'Voice of India' — which are of outstanding typographical quality and are sold at a subsidized price — are widespread among the ranks of the leaders of the Sangh Parivar. The increasing political influence of Hindu nationalism in the 1990s resulted in attempts to revise the Aryan migration theory also becoming known to the academic public. | |||
According to Bryant,{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=75}} OIT proponents tend to be linguistic dilettantes who either ignore the linguistic evidence completely, dismiss it as highly speculative and inconclusive,{{refn|group=note|E.g. Chakrabarti 1995 and ] 1995, as cited in Bryant 2001.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|p=74}}}} or attempt to tackle it with hopelessly inadequate qualifications; this attitude and neglect significantly minimises the value of most OIT publications.{{sfn|Bryant|2001|pp=74–107}}{{sfn|Bryant|1996}}{{refn|group=note|Witzel: "linguistic data have generally been neglected by | |||
</blockquote> | |||
advocates of the autochthonous theory. The only exception so far is a thin book by the Indian linguist S. S. Misra (1992) which bristles with inaccuracies and mistakes (see below) and some, though incomplete discussion by Elst (1999)."{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=32}}}} | |||
Fosse notes crucial theoretical and methodological shortcomings in the indigenist literature.{{sfn|Fosse|2005}} Analysing the works of Sethna, Bhagwan Singh, Navaratna and Talageri, he notes that they mostly quote English literature, which is not fully explored, and omitting German and French Indology. It makes their works in various degrees underinformed, resulting in a critique that is "largely neglected by Western scholars because it is regarded as incompetent".{{sfn|Fosse|2005|p=438}} | |||
According to Erdosy, the indigenist position is part of a "lunatic fringe" against the mainstream migrationist model.{{sfn|Erdosy|2012|p=x}}{{refn|group=note|Erdosy: "Assertions of the indigenous origin of Indo-Aryan languages and an insistence on a long chronology for Vedic and even Epic literature are only a few of the most prominent tenets of this emerging lunatic fringe."{{sfn|Erdosy|2012|p=x}}}} | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{div col|colwidth=22em}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
'''Indo-Aryans''' | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
'''Politics''' | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
'''Indigenists''' | |||
**] | |||
* |
* ] | ||
** ] | |||
** ] | |||
* ] | |||
'''Books''' | |||
* '']'' (1903) | |||
* '']'' | |||
* '']'' (1993) | |||
* '']'' (1999) | |||
* '']'' (2000) | |||
'''Other''' | |||
*] | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{notelist}} | |||
{{reflist|group=note|2}} | |||
{{reflist|group=note|2|refs= | |||
<!-- chariot --> | |||
{{refn|group=note|name=chariot|These carts dubbed as "chariots" does not however have any spokes on the wheels like the chariots(Sanskrit: '']'') mentioned in Vedic literature.{{sfn|Parpola|2020}}}} | |||
<!-- "Entry of the Indo-Aryans" --> | |||
{{refn|group=note|name="Entry of the Indo-Aryans"|Entry of the Indo-Aryans:<br>* {{harvtxt|Lowe|2015|pp=1–2}}: "... the eastward migration of the Indo-Aryan tribes from the mountains of what is today northern Afghanistan across the Punjab into north India."<br>* {{harvtxt|Dyson|2018|pp=14–15}}: "Although the collapse of the Indus valley civilization is no longer believed to have been due to an ‘Aryan invasion’ it is widely thought that, at roughly the same time, or perhaps a few centuries later, new Indo-Aryan-speaking people and influences began to enter the subcontinent from the north-west. Detailed evidence is lacking. Nevertheless, a predecessor of the language that would eventually be called Sanskrit was probably introduced into the north-west sometime between 3,900 and 3,000 years ago. This language was related to one then spoken in eastern Iran; and both of these languages belonged to the Indo-European language family."<br>* {{harvtxt|Pinkney|2014|p=38}}: "According to ], the Proto-Indo-Aryan civilization was influenced by two external waves of migrations. The first group originated from the southern Urals (c. 2100 BCE) and mixed with the peoples of the Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex (BMAC); this group then proceeded to South Asia, arriving around 1900 BCE. The second wave arrived in northern South Asia around 1750 BCE and mixed with the formerly arrived group, producing the Mitanni Aryans (c. 1500 BCE), a precursor to the peoples of the ''Ṛgveda''."}} | |||
<!-- "Vedas" --> | |||
{{refn|group=note|name="Vedas"|Vedas:<br>* {{harvtxt|Lowe|2015|pp=1–2}}: "It consists of 1,028 hymns (suktas), highly crafted poetic compositions originally intended for recital during rituals and for the invocation of and communication with the Indo-Aryan gods. Modern scholarly opinion largely agrees that these hymns were composed between around 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE, during the eastward migration of the Indo-Aryan tribes from the mountains of what is today northern Afghanistan across the Punjab into north India."<br>* {{harvtxt|Witzel|2006b|pp=158–190, 160}}: "The Vedas were composed (roughly between 1500-1200 and 500 BCE) in parts of present-day Afghanistan, northern Pakistan, and northern India. The oldest text at our disposal is the ''Rgveda (RV)''; it is composed in archaic Indo-Aryan (Vedic Sanskrit)."<br>* {{harvtxt|Pinkney|2014|p=38}}: " ] has assigned an approximate chronology to the strata of Vedic languages, arguing that the language of the ''Ṛgveda'' changed through the beginning of the Iron Age in South Asia, which started in the Northwest (Punjab) around 1000 BCE. On the basis of comparative philological evidence, Witzel has suggested a five-stage periodization of Vedic civilization, beginning with the ''Ṛgveda''. On the basis of internal evidence, the ''Ṛgveda'' is dated as a late Bronze Age text composed by pastoral migrants with limited settlements, probably between 1350 and 1150 BCE in the Punjab region."}} | |||
}} | |||
{{reflist|group=subnote}} | |||
== |
==References== | ||
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{{refend}} | |||
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==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
;Literature by "Indigenous Aryans" proponents | |||
;Overview | |||
{{Further|Voice of India}} | |||
], a cultural historian, has given an overview of the various "Indigenist" positions in his PhD-thesis and two subsequent publications: | |||
*], ], ], '']: New Light on Ancient India'' Quest Books (IL) (October, 1995) ISBN 0-8356-0720-8 | |||
* {{cite thesis |last=Bryant |first=Edwin |title=The indigenous Aryan debate |publisher=Columbia University |date=1997 |ref=none}} | |||
* {{Citation | last=Kazanas | first=Nicholas | title=Indigenous Indo-Aryans and the Rigveda | journal=Journal of Indo-European Studies |volume=30 | year=2002 | month= | pages=275–334 | postscript=. }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bryant |first=Edwin |date=2001 |title=The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-513777-9 |ref=none}} | |||
*Lal, B. B., ''The Sarasvati flows on: The continuity of Indian culture'', Aryan Books International (2002), ISBN 81-7305-202-6. | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Bryant |first1=Edwin F. |last2=Patton |first2=Laurie L. |date=2005 |title=The Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History |publisher=Routledge |ref=none}} | |||
*{{citation|last=Mukhyananda|first= |title= Vedanta: In the context of modern science : a comparative study |publisher= Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan |year=1997|id=ASIN: B0000CPAAF}} | |||
*], ''The politics of history : Aryan invasion theory and the subversion of scholarship'' (New Delhi : Voice of India, 1995) ISBN 81-85990-28-X. | |||
''The Indigenous Aryan Debate'' and ''The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture'' are reports of his fieldwork, primarily interviews with Indian researchers, on the reception of the Indo-Aryan migration theory in India. ''The Indo-Aryan Controversy'' is a bundle of papers by various "indigenists", including Koenraad Elst, but also a paper by Michael Witzel. | |||
*Talageri, S. G., ], Aditya Prakashan, New Delhi in 2000 ISBN 81-7742-010-0 | |||
Another overview has been given by ]: | |||
* {{cite book |last=Trautmann |first=Thomas |date=2005 |title=The Aryan Debate |publisher=Oxford University Press |ref=none}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Trautmann |first=Thomas |date=2006 |title=Aryans and British India |publisher=Yoda Press |isbn=9788190227216 |ref=none}} | |||
;Literature by "indigenous Aryans" proponents | |||
* {{cite book |last=Elst |first=Koenraad |author-link=Koenraad Elst |date=1999 |title=Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate |place=New Delhi |publisher=] |isbn=81-86471-77-4 |url= http://www.bharatvani.org/books/ait/ |access-date=2006-12-21 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130807014007/http://www.bharatvani.org/books/ait/ |archive-date=2013-08-07 |url-status=dead |ref=none}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Kazanas |first=Nicholas |title=Indigenous Indo-Aryans and the Rigveda |journal=Journal of Indo-European Studies |volume=30 |date=2002 |pages=275–334 |ref=none}} | |||
* ], ], ], '']: New Light on Ancient India'' Quest Books (IL) (October, 1995) {{ISBN|0-8356-0720-8}} | |||
* Lal, B. B. (2002), ''The Sarasvati flows on: The continuity of Indian culture'', Aryan Books International, {{ISBN|81-7305-202-6}}. | |||
* Lal, B. B. (2015), ''The Rigvedic People: Invaders? Immigrants? or Indigenous?''. See also Koenraad Elst, | |||
* {{cite book |last=Mukhyananda |title=Vedanta: In the Context of Modern Science – A Comparative Study |publisher=Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan |date=1997 |id=ASIN: B0000CPAAF |ref=none}} | |||
* ], ''The Politics of History: Aryan Invasion Theory and the Subversion of Scholarship'' (New Delhi: Voice of India, 1995) {{ISBN|81-85990-28-X}}. | |||
* Talageri, S. G., '']'', New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, 2000 {{ISBN|81-7742-010-0}} {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060616191414/http://www.voi.org/books/rig/ |date=2006-06-16 }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Danino |first=Michel |title=A Brief Note on the Aryan Invasion Theory |journal=Pragati Quarterly Research Journal |date=April–June 2009 |url= http://www.vicharakendram.org/Journels/Pragathy108-April-June2009.pdf |access-date=2015-02-03 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150203093925/http://www.vicharakendram.org/Journels/Pragathy108-April-June2009.pdf |archive-date=2015-02-03 |url-status=dead |ref=none}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Motwani |first=Jagat |date=2011 |title=None but India (Bharat): The Cradle of Aryans, Sanskrit, Vedas, & Swastika – 'Aryan Invasion of India' and 'IE Family of Languages' Re-examined and Rebutted |publisher=iUniverse |ref=none}} | |||
;Bharat | |||
* {{cite book |last=Frawley |first=David |date=1993 |title=Gods, Sages and Kings: Vedic Secrets of Ancient Civilization |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |ref=none}} | |||
;Criticism | ;Criticism | ||
* ] (2008), ''The Aryan homeland debate in India'', in Philip L. Kohl, Mara Kozelsky, Nachman Ben-Yehuda "Selective remembrances: archaeology in the construction, commemoration, and consecration of national pasts", pp 349–378 | |||
* {{Citation | last =Witzel | first =Michael | year =2001 | title =Autochthonous Aryans? The Evidence from Old Indian and Iranian Texts | journal =Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies 7-3 (EJVS) 2001(1-115) | url =http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~witzel/EJVS-7-3.pdf}} | |||
* ] (2002), "Aryanization of the Indus Civilization" in Panikkar, KN, Byres, TJ and Patnaik, U (Eds), ''The Making of History'', pp 41–55. | |||
* ] (2008), “The Aryan homeland debate in India”, in Kohl, PL, M Kozelsky and N Ben-Yehuda (Eds) ''Selective remembrances: archaeology in the construction, commemoration, and consecration of national pasts'', pp 349-378 | |||
* {{Citation | last =Thapar | first =Romila | year =2019 | title =They Peddle Myths and Call It History | work =New York Times | url =https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/17/opinion/india-elections-modi-history.html |ref=none}} | |||
* ] (2002), “Aryanization of the Indus Civilization” in Panikkar, KN, Byres, TJ and Patnaik, U (Eds), ''The Making of History'', pp 41-55. | |||
;Other | |||
* {{cite book |last=Guichard |first=Sylvie |date=2010 |title=The Construction of History and Nationalism in India: Textbooks, Controversies and Politics |publisher=Routledge |ref=none}} | |||
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View that the Indo-Aryans are indigenous to India
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Indigenous Aryanism, also known as the Indigenous Aryans theory (IAT) and the Out of India theory (OIT), is the conviction that the Aryans are indigenous to the Indian subcontinent, and that the Indo-European languages radiated out from a homeland in India into their present locations. It is a "religio-nationalistic" view of Indian history, and propagated as an alternative to the established migration model, which considers the Pontic–Caspian steppe to be the area of origin of the Indo-European languages.
Reflecting traditional Indian views based on the Puranic chronology, indigenists propose an older date than is generally accepted for the Vedic period, and argue that the Indus Valley civilisation was a Vedic civilization. In this view, "the Indian civilization must be viewed as an unbroken tradition that goes back to the earliest period of the Sindhu-Sarasvati (or Indus) tradition (7000 or 8000 BCE)."
Support for the IAT mostly exists among a subset of Indian scholars of Hindu religion and the history and archaeology of India, and plays a significant role in Hindutva politics. It has no relevance or support in mainstream scholarship.
Historical background
Main articles: Indo-Aryan migrations and Indo-European migrationsThe standard view on the origins of the Indo-Aryans is the Indo-Aryan migration theory, which states that they entered north-western India at about 1500 BCE. The Puranic chronology, the timeline of events in ancient Indian history as narrated in the Mahabaratha, the Ramayana, and the Puranas, envisions a much older chronology for the Vedic culture. In this view, the Vedas were received thousands of years ago, and the start of the reign of Manu Vaivasvate, the Manu of the current kalpa (aeon) and the progenitor of humanity, may be dated as far back 7350 BCE. The Kurukshetra War, the background-scene of the Bhagavad Gita, which may relate historical events taking place ca. 1000 BCE at the heartland of Aryavarta, is dated in this chronology at ca. 3100 BCE.
Indigenists, reflecting traditional Indian views on history and religion, argue that the Aryans are indigenous to India, which challenges the standard view. In the 1980s and 1990s, the indigenous position has come to the foreground of the public debate.
Indian homeland and Aryan Invasion theory
In 19th century Indo-European studies, the language of the Rigveda was the most archaic Indo-European language known to scholars, indeed the only records of Indo-European that could reasonably claim to date to the Bronze Age. This primacy of Sanskrit inspired scholars such as Friedrich Schlegel, to assume that the locus of the proto-Indo-European homeland had been in India, with the other dialects spread to the west by historical migration. With the 20th-century discovery of Bronze-Age attestations of Indo-European (Anatolian, Mycenaean Greek), Vedic Sanskrit lost its special status as the most archaic Indo-European language known.
In the 1850s, Max Müller introduced the notion of two Aryan races, a western and an eastern one, which migrated from the Caucasus into Europe and India respectively. Müller dichotomized the two groups, ascribing greater prominence and value to the western branch. Nevertheless, this "eastern branch of the Aryan race was more powerful than the indigenous eastern natives, who were easy to conquer." By the 1880s, his ideas had been adapted by racist ethnologists. For example, as an exponent of race science, colonial administrator Herbert Hope Risley (1851–1911) used the ratio of nose width to height to divide Indian people into Aryan and Dravidian races, as well as seven castes.
The idea of an Aryan "invasion" was fueled by the discovery of the Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilisation, which declined around the period of the Indo-Aryan migration, suggesting a destructive invasion. This argument was developed by the mid-20th century archaeologist Mortimer Wheeler, who interpreted the presence of many unburied corpses found in the top levels of Mohenjo-daro as the victims of conquests. He famously stated that the Vedic god "Indra stands accused" of the destruction of the Indus Civilisation. Scholarly critics have since argued that Wheeler misinterpreted his evidence and that the skeletons were better explained as hasty interments, not unburied victims of a massacre.
Indo-Aryan migration theory
See also: Language shift and SanskritisationMigrations
The idea of an "invasion" has been discarded in mainstream scholarship since the 1980s, and replaced by more sophisticated models, referred to as the Indo-Aryan migration theory. It posits the introduction of Indo-Aryan languages into South Asia through migrations of Indo-European-speaking people from their Urheimat (original homeland) in the Pontic Steppes via the Central European Corded ware culture, and Eastern European/Central Asian Sintashta culture, through Central Asia into the Levant (Mitanni), south Asia, and Inner Asia (Wusun and Yuezhi). It is part of the Kurgan-hypothesis/Revised Steppe Theory, which further describes the spread of Indo-European languages into western Europe via migrations of Indo-European speaking people.
Historical linguistics provides the main basis for the theory, analysing the development and changes of languages, and establishing relations between the various Indo-European languages, including the time frame of their development. It also provides information about shared words, and the corresponding area of the origin of Indo-European, and the specific vocabulary which is to be ascribed to specific regions. The linguistic analyses and data are supplemented with archaeological and genetical data and anthropological arguments, which together provide a coherent model that is widely accepted.
In the model, the first archaeological remains of the Indo-Europeans is the Yamnaya culture, from which emerged the Central European Corded Ware culture, which spread eastward creating the Proto-Indo-Iranian Sintashta culture (2100–1800 BCE), from which developed the Andronovo culture (1800–1400 BCE). Around 1800 BCE, Indo-Aryan people split-off from the Iranian branches, and migrated to the BMAC (2300–1700 BCE), and further to the Levant, northern India, and possibly Inner Asia.
Cultural continuity and adaptation
The migration into northern India was not necessarily of a large population, but may have consisted of small groups, who introduced their language and social system into the new territory when looking for pasture for their herds. These were then emulated by larger groups, who adopted the new language and culture. Witzel also notes that "small-scale semi-annual transhumance movements between the Indus plains and the Afghan and Baluchi highlands continue to this day."
Indigenous Aryanism
See also: Yuga and HinduismAccording to Bryant, Indigenists
... share a conviction that the theory of an external origin of the Indo-Aryan speaking people on the Indian subcontinent has been constructed on flimsy or false assumptions and conjectures. As far as such scholars are concerned, no compelling evidence has yet been produced to posit an external origin of the Indo-Aryans they have taken it upon themselves to oppose the theory of Aryan invasions and migrations—hence the label Indigenous Aryanism.
The "Indigenist position" started to take shape after the discovery of the Harappan civilisation, which predates the Vedas. According to this alternative view, the Aryans are indigenous to India, the Indus Civilisation is the Vedic Civilisation, the Vedas are older than the second millennium BCE, there is no discontinuity between the (northern) Indo-European part of India and the (southern) Dravidian part, and the Indo-European languages radiated out from a homeland in India into their present locations. According to Bresnan, it is a natural response to the 19th century narrative of a superior Aryan race subjecting the native Indians, implicitly confirming the ethnocentric superiority of the European invaders of colonial times, instead supporting "a theory of indigenous development that led to the creation of the Vedas."
Main arguments of the Indigenists
The idea of "Indigenous Aryans" is supported with specific interpretations of archaeological, genetic, and linguistic data, and on literal interpretations of the Rigveda. Standard arguments, both in support of the "Indigenous Aryans" theory and in opposition the mainstream Indo-Aryan Migration theory, are:
- Questioning the Indo-Aryan Migration theory:
- Presenting the Indo-Aryan Migration theory as an "Indo-Aryan Invasion theory", which was invented by 19th century colonialists to suppress the Indian people.
- Questioning the methodology of linguistics;
- Arguing for an indigenous cultural continuity, arguing there is a lack of archaeological remains of the Indo-Aryans in north-west India;
- Questioning the genetic evidence
- Contesting the possibility that small groups can change culture and languages in a major way;
- Re-dating India's history by postulating a Vedic-Puranic chronology:
- Arguing for ancient, indigenous origins of Sanskrit, dating the Rigveda and the Vedic people to the 3rd millennium BCE or earlier; This includes:
- Identifying the Sarasvati River, described in the Rig Veda as a mighty river, with the Ghaggar-Hakra River, which had dried up c. 2000 BCE, arguing therefore for an earlier dating of the Rig Veda;
- Arguing for the presence of horses and horse-drawn chariots before 2000 BCE;
- Identifying the Vedic people with the Harappan civilisation;
- Redating Indian history based on the Vedic-Puranic chronology.
- Arguing for ancient, indigenous origins of Sanskrit, dating the Rigveda and the Vedic people to the 3rd millennium BCE or earlier; This includes:
Questioning the Aryan Migration model
Rhetorics of "Aryan invasion"
The outdated notion of an "Aryan invasion" has been used as a straw man to attack the Indo-Aryan Migration theory. According to Witzel, the invasion model was criticised by Indigenous Aryanists for being a justification for colonial rule:
The theory of an immigration of IA speaking Arya ("Aryan invasion") is simply seen as a means of British policy to justify their own intrusion into India and their subsequent colonial rule: in both cases, a "white race" was seen as subduing the local darker colored population.
While according to Koenraad Elst, a supporter of Indigenous Aryans:
The theory of which we are about to discuss the linguistic evidence, is widely known as the "Aryan invasion theory" (AIT). I will retain this term even though some scholars object to it, preferring the term "immigration" to "invasion." ... North India's linguistic landscape leaves open only two possible explanations: either Indo-Aryan was native, or it was imported in an invasion.
Linguistic methodology
Indigenists question the methodology and results of linguistics. According to Bryant, OIT proponents tend to be linguistic dilettantes who either ignore the linguistic evidence completely, dismiss it as highly speculative and inconclusive, or attempt to tackle it with hopelessly inadequate qualifications; this attitude and neglect significantly minimises the value of most OIT publications.
Archaeological finds and cultural continuity
Main article: Archaeology of the Indo-Aryan migrationsIn the 1960s, archaeological explanations for cultural change shifted from migration-models to internal causes of change. Given the lack of archaeological remains of the Indo-Aryans, Jim G. Shaffer, writing in the 1980s and 1990s, has argued for an indigenous cultural continuity between Harappan and post-Harappan times. According to Shaffer, there is no archaeological indication of an Aryan migration into northwestern India during or after the decline of the Harappan city culture. Instead, Shaffer has argued for "a series of cultural changes reflecting indigenous cultural developments." According to Shaffer, linguistic change has mistakenly been attributed to migrations of people. Likewise, Erdosy also notes the absence of evidence for migrations, and states that "Indo-European languages may well have spread to South Asia through migration," but that the Rigvedic aryas, as a specific ethno-linguistic tribe holding a specific set of ideas, may well have been indigenous people whose "set of ideas" soon spread over India.
Since the 1990s, attention has shifted back to migrations as an explanatory model. Pastoral societies are difficult to identify in the archaeological record, since they move around in small groups and leave little traces. In 1990, David Anthony published a defense of migratory models, and in his The Horse, the Wheel, and Language (2007), has provided an extensive overview of the archaeological trail of the Indo-European people across the Eurasian steppes and central Asia. The development and "revolutionary" improvement of genetic research since the early 2010s has reinforced this shift in focus, as it has unearthed previously unaccessible data, showing large-scale migrations in prehistoric times.
Genetic evidence
Main article: Genetic evidence of Indo-Aryan migrationsOIT-proponents have questioned the findings of genetic research, and some older DNA-research had questioned the Indo-Aryan migrations. Since 2015 however, genetic research has "revolutionarily" improved, and further confirmed the migration of Steppe pastoralists into Western Europe and South Asia, and "many scientists who were either sceptical or neutral about significant Bronze Age migrations into India have changed their opinions."
Cultural change
Indigenists contest the possibility that small groups can change culture and languages in a major way. Mainstream scholarship explains this by elite dominance and language shift. Small groups can change a larger cultural area, when an elite male group integrates in small indigenous groups which takes over the elite language, in this case leading to a language shift in northern India. Indo-Aryan languages were further disseminated with the spread of the Vedic-Brahmanical culture in the process of Sanskritisation. In this process, local traditions ("little traditions") became integrated into the "great tradition" of Brahmanical religion, disseminating Sanskrit texts and Brahmanical ideas throughout India, and abroad. This facilitated the development of the Hindu synthesis, in which the Brahmanical tradition absorbed "local popular traditions of ritual and ideology."
Redating Indian history
Redating the Rig Veda and the Rig Vedic people
Sanskrit
According to the mainstream view, Sanskrit arose in South Asia after Indo-Aryan languages had been introduced by the Indo-Aryans in the first half of the second millennium BCE. The most archaic form of Sanskrit is Vedic Sanskrit found in the Rig Veda, composed between 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE.
Taking recourse to "Hindu astronomical lore" Indigenists argue for ancient, indigenous origins of Sanskrit, dating the Rigveda and the Vedic people to the 3rd millennium BCE or earlier. According to Subhash Kak, situating the arrival of the Aryans in the seventh millennium BCE, the hymns of the Rig Veda are organised in accordance with an astronomical code, supposedly showing "a tradition of sophisticated observational astronomy going back to events of 3000 or 4000 BCE." His ideas have been rejected by mainstream scholars.
Horses and chariots
See also: History of the horse in the Indian subcontinentSeveral archaeological finds are interpreted as evidencing the presence of typical Indo-Aryan artefacts before 2000 BCE. Examples include the interpretation of animal bones from before 2000 BCE as horse-bones, and interpreting the Sinauli cart burials as chariots. While horse remains and related artifacts have been found in Late Harappan (1900-1300 BCE) sites, indicating that horses may have been present at Late Harappan times, horses did not play an essential role in the Harappan civilisation, in contrast to the Vedic period (1500-500 BCE). The earliest undisputed finds of horse remains in South Asia are from the Gandhara grave culture, also known as the Swat culture (c. 1400-800 BCE), related to the Indo-Aryans
Horse remains from the Harappan site Surkotada (dated to 2400-1700 BC) have been identified by A.K. Sharma as Equus ferus caballus. However, archaeologists like Meadow (1997) disagree, on the grounds that the remains of the Equus ferus caballus horse are difficult to distinguish from other equid species such as Equus asinus (donkeys) or Equus hemionus (onagers).
Bronze Age solid-disk wheel carts were found at Sinauli in 2018. They were related to the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture, and dated at ca. 2000-1800 BCE. They were interpreted by some as horse-pulled "chariots", predating the arrival of the horse-centered Indo-Aryans. According to Parpola, the carts were ox-pulled charts, and related to a first wave of Ino-Iraninan migrations into the Indian subcontinent, noting that the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture (2000-1500 BCE) shows similarities with both the Late Harappan culture and steppe-cultures.
Sarasvati river
In the Rig Veda, the goddess Sarasvati is described as a mighty river. Indigenists take these descriptions as references to a real river, the Sarasvati river, identified with the Ghaggar-Hakra, an eastern tributary to the Indus. Given the fact that the Ghaggar-Hakkra had dried-up at 2000 BCE, Indigenists argue that the Vedic people must therefore have been present much earlier.
Rig Vedic references to a physical river indicate that the Sarswati "had already lost its main source of water supply and must have ended in a terminal lake (samudra)," "depicting the present-day situation, with the Sarasvatī having lost most of its water." "Sarasvati" may also be identified with the Helmand or Haraxvati river in southern Afghanistan, the name of which may have been reused in its Sanskrit form as the name of the Ghaggar-Hakra river, after the Vedic tribes moved to the Punjab. Sarasvati of the Rig Veda may also refer to two distinct rivers, with the family books referring to the Helmand River, and the more recent 10th mandala referring to the Ghaggar-Hakra.
Identifying the Vedic people with the Harappan civilisation
Indigenists claim a continuous cultural evolution of India, denying a discontinuity between the Harappan and Vedic periods, identifying the IVC with the Vedic people. According to Kak, "the Indian civilization must be viewed as an unbroken tradition that goes back to the earliest period of the Sindhu-Sarasvati (or Indus) tradition (7000 or 8000 BCE). This identification is incompatible with the archaeological, linguistic and genetic data, and rejected by mainstream scholarship.
Postulating a Puranic chronology
Main article: Puranic chronologyThe idea of "Indigenous Aryanism" fits into traditional Hindu ideas of religious history, namely that Hinduism has timeless origins, with the Vedic Aryans inhabiting India since ancient times. The ideas Indigenist ideas are rooted in the chronology of the Puranas, the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, which contain lists of kings and genealogies used to construct the traditional chronology of ancient India. "Indigenists" follow a "Puranic agenda", emphasizing that these lists go back to the fourth millennium BCE. Megasthenes, the Greek ambassador to the Maurya court at Patna at c. 300 BCE, reported to have heard of a traditional list of 153 kings that covered 6042 years, beyond the traditional beginning of the Kali Yuga in 3102 BCE. The royal lists are based on Sūta bardic traditions, and are derived from lists which were orally transmitted and constantly reshaped.
These lists are supplemented with astronomical interpretations, which are also used to reach an earlier dating for the Rigveda. Along with this comes a redating of historical personages and events, in which the Buddha is dated to 1100 BCE or even 1700 BCE, and Chandragupta Maurya (c. 300 BCE) is replaced by Chandragupta, the Gupta king. The Bharata War is dated at 3139–38 BCE, the start of the kali Yuga.
Indigenous Aryans scenarios
Michael Witzel identifies three major types of "Indigenous Aryans" scenarios:
1. A "mild" version that insists on the indigeneity of the Rigvedic Aryans to the North-Western region of the Indian subcontinent in the tradition of Aurobindo and Dayananda;
2. The "out of India" school that posits India as the Proto-Indo-European homeland, originally proposed in the 18th century, revived by the Hindutva sympathiser Koenraad Elst (1999), and further popularised within Hindu nationalism by Shrikant Talageri (2000);
3. The position that all the world's languages and civilisations derive from India, represented e.g. by David Frawley.
Kazanas adds a fourth scenario:
4.The Aryans entered the Indus Valley before 4500 BCE and got integrated with the Harappans, or might have been the Harappans.
Aurobindo's Aryan world-view
For Aurobindo, an "Aryan" was not a member of a particular race, but a person who "accepted a particular type of self-culture, of inward and outward practice, of ideality, of aspiration." Aurobindo wanted to revive India's strength by reviving Aryan traditions of strength and character. He denied the historicity of a racial division in India between "Aryan invaders" and a native dark-skinned population. Nevertheless, he did accept two kinds of culture in ancient India, namely the Aryan culture of northern and central India and Afghanistan, and the un-Aryan culture of the east, south and west. Thus, he accepted the cultural aspects of the division suggested by European historians.
Out of India model
The "Out of India theory" (OIT), also known as the "Indian Urheimat theory," is the proposition that the Indo-European language family originated in Northern India and spread to the remainder of the Indo-European region through a series of migrations. It implies that the people of the Harappan civilisation were linguistically Indo-Aryans.
Theoretical overview
Koenraad Elst, in his Update in the Aryan Invasion Debate, investigates "the developing arguments concerning the Aryan Invasion Theory". Elst notes:
Personally, I don't think that either theory, of Aryan invasion and of Aryan indigenousness, can claim to have been proven by prevalent standards of proof; even though one of the contenders is getting closer. Indeed, while I have enjoyed pointing out the flaws in the AIT statements of the politicized Indian academic establishment and its American amplifiers, I cannot rule out the possibility that the theory which they are defending may still have its merits.
Edwin Bryant also notes that Elst's model is a "theoretical exercise:"
...a purely theoretical linguistic exercise as an experiment to determine whether India can definitively be excluded as a possible homeland. If it cannot, then this further problematizes the possibility of a homeland ever being established anywhere on linguistic grounds.
And in Indo-Aryan Controversy Bryant notes:
Elst, perhaps more in a mood of devil's advocacy, toys with the evidence to show how it can be reconfigured, and to claim that no linguistic evidence has yet been produced to exclude India as a homeland that cannot be reconfigured to promote it as such.
"The emerging alternative"
Koenraad Elst summarises "the emerging alternative to the Aryan Invasion Theory" as follows.
During the 6th millennium BCE, Proto-Indo-Europeans lived in the Punjab region of northern India. As the result of demographic expansion, they spread into Bactria as the Kambojas. The Paradas moved further and inhabited the Caspian coast and much of central Asia while the Cinas moved northwards and inhabited the Tarim Basin in northwestern China, forming the Tocharian group of I-E speakers. These groups were Proto-Anatolian and inhabited that region by 2000 BCE. These people took the oldest form of the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) language with them and, while interacting with people of the Anatolian and Balkan region, transformed it into a separate dialect. While inhabiting central Asia they discovered the uses of the horse, which they later sent back to the Urheimat. Later on during their history, they went on to occupy western Europe and thus spread the Indo-European languages to that region.
During the 4th millennium BCE, civilisation in India started evolving into what became the urban Indus Valley civilization. During this time, the PIE languages evolved to Proto-Indo-Iranian. Some time during this period, the Indo-Iranians began to separate as the result of internal rivalry and conflict, with the Iranians expanding westwards towards Mesopotamia and Persia, these possibly were the Pahlavas. They also expanded into parts of central Asia. By the end of this migration, India was left with the Proto-Indo-Aryans. At the end of the Mature Harappan period, the Sarasvati river began drying up and the remainder of the Indo-Aryans split into separate groups. Some travelled westwards and established themselves as rulers of the Hurrian Mitanni kingdom by around 1500 BCE (see Indo-Aryan superstrate in Mitanni). Others travelled eastwards and inhabited the Gangetic basin while others travelled southwards and interacted with the Dravidian people.
David Frawley
In books such as The Myth of the Aryan Invasion of India and In Search of the Cradle of Civilization (1995), Frawley criticises the 19th century racial interpretations of Indian prehistory, such as the theory of conflict between invading Caucasoid Aryans and Dravidians. In the latter book, Frawley, Georg Feuerstein, and Subhash Kak reject the Aryan Invasion theory and support Out of India.
Bryant commented that Frawley's historical work is more successful as a popular work, where its impact "is by no means insignificant", rather than as an academic study, and that Frawley "is committed to channelling a symbolic spiritual paradigm through a critical empirico rational one".
Pseudo-historian Graham Hancock (2002) quotes Frawley's historical work extensively for the proposal of highly evolved ancient civilisations prior to the end of the last glacial period. including in India. Kreisburg refers to Frawley's "The Vedic Literature and Its Many Secrets".
Significance for colonial rule and Hindu politics
Further information: Indian independence movement, Hindu nationalism, and Hindutva pseudohistoryThe Aryan Invasion theory plays an important role in Hindu nationalism, which favors Indigenous Aryanism.
Colonial India
Main article: Colonial IndiaCuriosity and the colonial requirements of knowledge about their subject people led the officials of the East India Company to explore the history and culture of India in the late 18th century. When similarities between Sanskrit, Greek and Latin were discovered by William Jones, a suggestion of "monogenesis" (single origin) was formulated for these languages as well as their speakers. In the latter part of the 19th century, it was thought that language, culture and race were inter-related, and the notion of biological race came to the forefront The presumed "Aryan race" which originated the Indo-European languages was prominent among such races, and was deduced to be further subdivided into "European Aryans" and "Asian Aryans," each with their own homelands.
Max Mueller, who translated the Rigveda during 1849–1874, postulated an original homeland for all Aryans in central Asia, from which a northern branch migrated to Europe and a southern branch to India and Iran. The Aryans were presumed to be fair-complexioned Indo-European speakers who conquered the dark-skinned dasas of India. The upper castes, particularly the Brahmins, were thought to be of Aryan descent whereas the lower castes and Dalits ("untouchables") were thought to be the descendants of dasas.
The Aryan theory served politically to suggest a common ancestry and dignity between the Indians and the British. Keshab Chunder Sen spoke of British rule in India as a "reunion of parted cousins." Indian nationalist Bal Gangadhar Tilak endorsed the antiquity of Rigveda, dating it to 4500 BCE. He placed the homeland of the Aryans somewhere close to the North Pole. From there, Aryans were believed to have migrated south in the post-glacial age, branching into a European branch that relapsed into barbarism and an Indian branch that retained the original, superior civilisation.
However, Christian missionaries such as John Muir and John Wilson drew attention to the plight of lower castes, who they said were oppressed by the upper castes since the Aryan invasions. Jyotiba Phule argued that the dasas and sudras were indigenous people and the rightful inheritors of the land, whereas Brahmins were Aryan and alien.
Hindu revivalism and nationalism
In contrast to the mainstream views, the Hindu revivalist movements denied an external origin to Aryans. Dayananda Saraswati, the founder of the Arya Samaj (Society of Aryans), held that Vedas were the source of all knowledge and were revealed to the Aryans. The first man (an Aryan) was created in Tibet and, after living there for some time, the Aryans came down and inhabited India, which was previously empty.
The Theosophical Society held that the Aryans were indigenous to India, but that they were also the progenitors of the European civilisation. The Society saw a dichotomy between the spiritualism of India and the materialism of Europe.
According to Romila Thapar, the Hindu nationalists, eager to construct a Hindu identity for the nation, held that the original Hindus were the Aryans and that they were indigenous to India. There was no Aryan invasion and no conflict among the people of India. The Aryans spoke Sanskrit and spread the Aryan civilization from India to the west. However, Hindutva creator V. D. Savarkar believed that Aryans migrated to South Asia.
Witzel traces the "indigenous Aryan" idea to the writings of M. S. Golwalkar. Golwalkar (1939) denied any immigration of "Aryans" to the subcontinent, stressing that all Hindus have always been "children of the soil", a notion which according to Witzel is reminiscent of the blood and soil of contemporary fascism. Witzel adds that Savarkar offered a religious and cultural definition of Hindu-ness which he called "Hindutva". It has different components: territorial, political, nationalisitic, ancestral, cultural and religious. Since these ideas emerged on the brink of the internationalist and socially oriented Nehru-Gandhi government, they lay dormant for several decades after the independence, and only rose to prominence in the 1980s.
Bergunder likewise identifies Golwalkar as the originator of the "Indigenous Aryans" notion, and Goel's Voice of India as the instrument of its rise to notability:
The Aryan migration theory at first played no particular argumentative role in Hindu nationalism. This impression of indifference changed, however, with Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar (1906–1973), who from 1940 until his death was leader of the extremist paramilitary organization the Rashtriya Svayamsevak Sangh (RSS). In contrast to many other of their openly offensive teachings, the Hindu nationalists did not seek to keep the question of the Aryan migration out of public discourses or to modify it; rather, efforts were made to help the theory of the indigenousness of the Hindus achieve public recognition. For this the initiative of the publisher Sita Ram Goel (b. 1921) was decisive. Goel may be considered one of the most radical, but at the same time also one of the most intellectual, of the Hindu nationalist ideologues. Since 1981 Goel has run a publishing house named ‘Voice of India' that is one of the few which publishes Hindu nationalist literature in English which at the same time makes a 'scientific' claim. Although no official connections exist, the books of 'Voice of India' — which are of outstanding typographical quality and are sold at a subsidized price — are widespread among the ranks of the leaders of the Sangh Parivar. The increasing political influence of Hindu nationalism in the 1990s resulted in attempts to revise the Aryan migration theory also becoming known to the academic public.
Present-day political significance
Lars Martin Fosse notes the political significance of "Indigenous Aryanism". He notes that "Indigenous Aryanism" has been adopted by Hindu nationalists as a part of their ideology, which makes it a political matter in addition to a scholarly problem. The proponents of Indigenous Aryanism necessarily engage in "moral disqualification" of Western Indology, which is a recurrent theme in much of the indigenist literature. The same rhetoric is being used in indigenist literature and the Hindu nationalist publications like the Organiser.
According to Abhijith Ravinutala, the indigenist position is essential for Hindutva exclusive claims on India:
The BJP considers Indo-Aryans fundamental to the party's conception of Hindutva, or "Hindu-ness": India is a nation of and for Hindus only. Only those who consider India their holy land should remain in the nation. From the BJP's point of view, the Indo-Aryan peoples were indigenous to India, and therefore were the first 'true Hindus'. Accordingly, an essential part of 'Indian' identity in this point of view is being indigenous to the land.
Repercussions of the disagreements about Aryan origins have reached Californian courts with the Californian Hindu textbook case, where according to The Times of India historian and president of the Indian History Congress, Dwijendra Narayan Jha in a "crucial affidavit" to the Superior Court of California:
...iving a hint of the Aryan origin debate in India, ... asked the court not to fall for the 'indigenous Aryan' claim since it has led to 'demonisation of Muslims and Christians as foreigners and to the near denial of the contributions of non-Hindus to Indian culture'.
According to Thapar, Modi's government and the BJP have "peddled myths and stereotypes", such as the insistence on "a single uniform culture of the Aryans, ancestral to the Hindu, as having prevailed in the subcontinent, subsuming all others", despite the scholarly evidence for migrations into India, which is "anathema to the Hindutva construction of early history".
Rejection by mainstream scholarship
The Indigenous Aryans theory has no relevance, let alone support, in mainstream scholarship. According to Michael Witzel, the "indigenous Aryans" position is not scholarship in the usual sense, but an "apologetic, ultimately religious undertaking":
The "revisionist project" certainly is not guided by the principles of critical theory but takes, time and again, recourse to pre-enlightenment beliefs in the authority of traditional religious texts such as the Purāṇas. In the end, it belongs, as has been pointed out earlier, to a different 'discourse' than that of historical and critical scholarship. In other words, it continues the writing of religious literature, under a contemporary, outwardly 'scientific' guise ... The revisionist and autochthonous project, then, should not be regarded as scholarly in the usual post-enlightenment sense of the word, but as an apologetic, ultimately religious undertaking aiming at proving the "truth" of traditional texts and beliefs. Worse, it is, in many cases, not even scholastic scholarship at all but a political undertaking aiming at "rewriting" history out of national pride or for the purpose of "nation building".
In her review of Bryant's The Indo-Aryan Controversy, which includes chapters by Elst and other "indigenists", Stephanie Jamison comments:
... the parallels between the Intelligent Design issue and the Indo-Aryan "controversy" are distressingly close. The Indo-Aryan controversy is a manufactured one with a non-scholarly agenda, and the tactics of its manufacturers are very close to those of the ID proponents mentioned above. However unwittingly and however high their aims, the two editors have sought to put a gloss of intellectual legitimacy, with a sense that real scientific questions are being debated, on what is essentially a religio-nationalistic attack on a scholarly consensus.
Sudeshna Guha, in her review of The Indo-Aryan Controversy, notes that the book has serious methodological shortcomings, by not asking the question what exactly constitutes historical evidence. This makes the "fair and adequate representation of the differences of opinion" problematic, since it neglects "the extent to which unscholarly opportunism has motivated the rebirth of this genre of 'scholarship'". Guha:
Bryant's call for accepting "the valid problems that are pointed out on both sides" (p. 500), holds intellectual value only if distinctions are strictly maintained between research that promotes scholarship, and that which does not. Bryant and Patton gloss over the relevance of such distinctions for sustaining the academic nature of the Indo-Aryan debate, although the importance of distinguishing the scholarly from the unscholarly is rather well enunciated through the essays of Michael Witzel and Lars Martin Fosse.
According to Bryant, OIT proponents tend to be linguistic dilettantes who either ignore the linguistic evidence completely, dismiss it as highly speculative and inconclusive, or attempt to tackle it with hopelessly inadequate qualifications; this attitude and neglect significantly minimises the value of most OIT publications.
Fosse notes crucial theoretical and methodological shortcomings in the indigenist literature. Analysing the works of Sethna, Bhagwan Singh, Navaratna and Talageri, he notes that they mostly quote English literature, which is not fully explored, and omitting German and French Indology. It makes their works in various degrees underinformed, resulting in a critique that is "largely neglected by Western scholars because it is regarded as incompetent".
According to Erdosy, the indigenist position is part of a "lunatic fringe" against the mainstream migrationist model.
See also
Indo-Aryans
Politics
Indigenists
Books
- The Arctic Home in the Vedas (1903)
- In Search of the Cradle of Civilization
- Aryan Invasion of India: The Myth and the Truth (1993)
- Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate (1999)
- The Rigveda: A Historical Analysis (2000)
Other
Notes
- See Kak (1987); Kak (1996), Kazanas (2001); Kazanas (2002)
Elst (1999): "The astronomical lore in Vedic literature provides elements of an absolute chronology in a consistent way. For what it is worth, this corpus of astronomical indications suggests that the Rg-Veda was completed in the 4th millennium AD, that the core text of the Mahabharata was composed at the end of that millennium, and that the Brahmanas and Sutras are products of the high Harappan period towards the end of the 3rd millennium BC. This corpus of evidence is hard to reconcile with the AIT, and has been standing as a growing challenge to the AIT defenders for two centuries."
- ^ Entry of the Indo-Aryans:
* Lowe (2015, pp. 1–2): "... the eastward migration of the Indo-Aryan tribes from the mountains of what is today northern Afghanistan across the Punjab into north India."
* Dyson (2018, pp. 14–15): "Although the collapse of the Indus valley civilization is no longer believed to have been due to an ‘Aryan invasion’ it is widely thought that, at roughly the same time, or perhaps a few centuries later, new Indo-Aryan-speaking people and influences began to enter the subcontinent from the north-west. Detailed evidence is lacking. Nevertheless, a predecessor of the language that would eventually be called Sanskrit was probably introduced into the north-west sometime between 3,900 and 3,000 years ago. This language was related to one then spoken in eastern Iran; and both of these languages belonged to the Indo-European language family."
* Pinkney (2014, p. 38): "According to Asko Parpola, the Proto-Indo-Aryan civilization was influenced by two external waves of migrations. The first group originated from the southern Urals (c. 2100 BCE) and mixed with the peoples of the Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex (BMAC); this group then proceeded to South Asia, arriving around 1900 BCE. The second wave arrived in northern South Asia around 1750 BCE and mixed with the formerly arrived group, producing the Mitanni Aryans (c. 1500 BCE), a precursor to the peoples of the Ṛgveda." - ^ No support in mainstream scholarship:
- Mallory (2013): "The speakers at this symposium can generally be seen to support one of the following three ‘solutions’ to the Indo-European homeland problem: 1. The Anatolian Neolithic model 2. The Near Eastern model 3. The Pontic-Caspian model."
- Romila Thapar (2006): "there is no scholar at this time seriously arguing for the indigenous origin of Aryans".
- Wendy Doniger (2017): "The opposing argument, that speakers of Indo-European languages were indigenous to the Indian subcontinent, is not supported by any reliable scholarship. It is now championed primarily by Hindu nationalists, whose religious sentiments have led them to regard the theory of Aryan migration with some asperity."
- Truschke (2020): "As Tony Joseph has pointed out, the Out of India theory lacks support from even “a single, peer-reviewed scientific paper” and is best considered nothing “more than a kind of clever and angry retort.”"
- Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), in response to Narasimhan et al. (2019): "Hindutva activists, however, have kept the Aryan Invasion Theory alive, because it offers them the perfect strawman, 'an intentionally misrepresented proposition that is set up because it is easier to defeat than an opponent's real argument' The Out of India hypothesis is a desperate attempt to reconcile linguistic, archaeological and genetic evidence with Hindutva sentiment and nationalistic pride, but it cannot reverse time's arrow The evidence keeps crushing Hindutva ideas of history."
- Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016): "Of course it is a fringe theory, at least internationally, where the Aryan Invasion Theory (AIT) is still the official paradigm. In India, though, it has the support of most archaeologists, who fail to find a trace of this Aryan influx and instead find cultural continuity."
- Witzel: "For some decades already, linguists and philologists such as Kuiper 1955, 1991, Emeneau 1956, Southworth 1979, archaeologists such as Allchin 1982, 1995, and historians such as R. Thapar 1968, have maintained that the Indo-Aryans and the older local inhabitants ('Dravidians', 'Mundas', etc.) have mutually interacted from early on, that many of them were in fact frequently bilingual, and that even the RV already bears witness to that. They also think, whether explicitly following Ehret's model (1988, cf. Diakonoff 1985) or not, of smaller infiltrating groups (Witzel 1989: 249, 1995, Allchin 1995), not of mass migrations or military invasions. However, linguists and philologists still maintain, and for good reasons, that some IA speaking groups actually entered from the outside, via some of the (north)western corridors of the subcontinent."
- The Ancient DNA revolution since about 2015, along with genome-wide techniques like Admixture Analysis and PCA has provided a fresh new perspective and large amounts of relevant data regarding the steppe migrations. For Europe, Corded Ware and later Bell Beaker cultures are now shown to be the result of large-scale steppe pastoralist takeovers which replaced the local genetics up to 75% and 90% respectively, while recent genetic research further confirmed the migration of Steppe pastoralists into Western Europe and South Asia. Even in areas where population turnover is lower, there is a marked sex bias in the resulting mixed population in favor of steppe males, such as in India.
- David Anthony (1995): "Language shift can be understood best as a social strategy through which individuals and groups compete for positions of prestige, power, and domestic security What is important, then, is not just dominance, but vertical social mobility and a linkage between language and access to positions of prestige and power A relatively small immigrant elite population can encourage widespread language shift among numerically dominant indigenes in a non-state or pre-state context if the elite employs a specific combination of encouragements and punishments. Ethnohistorical cases demonstrate that small elite groups have successfully imposed their languages in non-state situations."
- Witzel: "Just one "Afghan" IndoAryan tribe that did not return to the highlands but stayed in their Panjab winter quarters in spring was needed to set off a wave of acculturation in the plains, by transmitting its 'status kit' (Ehret) to its neighbors." "Actually, even this is, strictly speaking, not necessary. The constant interaction of "Afghan" highlanders and Indus plain agriculturists could have set off the process. A further opening was created when, after the collapse of the Indus Civilization, many of its people moved eastwards, thus leaving much of the Indus plains free for IA style cattle breeding. A few agricultural communities (especially along the rivers) nevertheless continued, something that the substrate agricultural vocabulary of the RV clearly indicates (Kuiper 1991, Witzel 1999a,b). In an acculturation scenario the actual (small) number of people (often used a 'clinching' argument by autochthonists) that set off the wave of adaptations does not matter: it is enough that the 'status kit' (Ehret) of the innovative group (the pastoralist Indo-Aryans) was copied by some neighboring populations, and then spread further.
- Thomason and Kaufman note that Dravidian features in Sanskrit and later Indic languages may be explained by "absorption". They quote Emeneau: "absorption, not displacement, is the chief mechanism in radical language changes of the kind we are considering." Thomason and Kaufman note that a basic assumption is that Dravidians shifted in considerable numbers, so they could not only impose their own habits on Indic, but were also numerous enough to influence Indic as a whole.
- ^ The term "invasion" is only being used nowadays by opponents of the Indo-Aryan Migration theory. The term "invasion" does not reflect the contemporary scholarly understanding of the Indo-Aryan migrations; and is merely being used in a polemical and distracting way.
- Koenraad Elst: "The theory of which we are about to discuss the linguistic evidence, is widely known as the "Aryan invasion theory" (AIT). I will retain this term even though some scholars object to it, preferring the term "immigration" to "invasion." They argue that the latter term represents a long-abandoned theory of Aryan warrior bands attacking and subjugating the peaceful Indus civilization. This dramatic scenario, popularized by Sir Mortimer Wheeler, had white marauders from the northwest enslave the black aboriginals, so that "Indra stands accused" of destroying the Harappan civilization. Only the extremist fringe of the Indian Dalit (ex-Untouchable) movement and its Afrocentric allies in the USA now insist on this black-and-white narrative (vide Rajshekar 1987; Biswas 1995). But, for this once, I believe the extremists have a point. North India's linguistic landscape leaves open only two possible explanations: either Indo-Aryan was native, or it was imported in an invasion. In fact, scratch any of these emphatic "immigration" theorists and you'll find an old-school invasionist, for they never fail to connect Aryan immigration with horses and spoked-wheel chariots, that is, with factors of military superiority.
- E.g. Chakrabarti 1995 and Rajaram 1995, as cited in Bryant 2001.
- David Anthony, in his The Horse, the Wheel, and Language, has provided an extensive overview of the archaeological trail of the Indo-European people across the Eurasian steppes and central Asia.
- ^ While arguing for an indigenous cultural continuity, Shaffer gives two possible alternative explanations for the similarities between Sanskrit and western languages, arguing for non-Indian origins.
1. The first is a linguistic relationship with a "Zagrosian family of language linking Elamite and Dravidian on the Iranian Plateau," as proposed by McAlpin. According to Shaffer "linguistic similarities may have diffused west from the plateau as a result of the extensive trading networks linking cultures in the plateau with those in Mesopotamia and beyond," while also linking with the Kelteminar culture in Central Asia. Yet, Shaffer also notes that the Harappan culture was not extensively tied to this network in the third millennium BCE, leaving the possibility that "membership in a basic linguistic family - Zagrosian - may account for some of the linguistic similarities of later periods."
2. The second possibility is that "such linguistic similarities are a result of post-second millennium B.C. contacts with the west" by trade, taken over by people who also adopted a new way of societal organisation. This language was used to record the myths preserved in the Vedas. According to Shaffer, "nce codified, it was advantageous for the emerging hereditary social elites to stabilize such linguistic traits with the validity of the explanations offered in the literature enhancing their social position." - Parpola, as referred to by Bronkhorst, also notes that the term arya may not have referred to all ethnic groups who spoke an Indo-Aryan language.
- See, among others: Lazaridis et al. (2016),Silva et al. (2017), Narasimhan et al. (2019)
- While Shinde et al. (2019), published in Cell, confirmed the Indo-Aryan migrations, news-reports stated that the study proved the Indo-Aryan migration theory to be wrong. This suggestion was reinforced by Shinde himself and Niraj Rai, stating that their study "completely sets aside the Aryan Migration/Invasion Theory."
Shinde's statements were refuted by his co-author Nick Patterson, and by Vagheesh Narasimhan, Shinde's co-author on Narasimhan et al. (2019), and met with scepticism in other news reports. David Reich repeated that Steppe people contributed to the genetic make-up of India, while Friese (2019) commented on the political complications of doing genetic research on India's history. - Vedas:
* Lowe (2015, pp. 1–2): "It consists of 1,028 hymns (suktas), highly crafted poetic compositions originally intended for recital during rituals and for the invocation of and communication with the Indo-Aryan gods. Modern scholarly opinion largely agrees that these hymns were composed between around 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE, during the eastward migration of the Indo-Aryan tribes from the mountains of what is today northern Afghanistan across the Punjab into north India."
* Witzel (2006b, pp. 158–190, 160): "The Vedas were composed (roughly between 1500-1200 and 500 BCE) in parts of present-day Afghanistan, northern Pakistan, and northern India. The oldest text at our disposal is the Rgveda (RV); it is composed in archaic Indo-Aryan (Vedic Sanskrit)."
* Pinkney (2014, p. 38): " Michael Witzel has assigned an approximate chronology to the strata of Vedic languages, arguing that the language of the Ṛgveda changed through the beginning of the Iron Age in South Asia, which started in the Northwest (Punjab) around 1000 BCE. On the basis of comparative philological evidence, Witzel has suggested a five-stage periodization of Vedic civilization, beginning with the Ṛgveda. On the basis of internal evidence, the Ṛgveda is dated as a late Bronze Age text composed by pastoral migrants with limited settlements, probably between 1350 and 1150 BCE in the Punjab region." - See History of the horse in the Indian subcontinent, note 37
- ^ These carts dubbed as "chariots" does not however have any spokes on the wheels like the chariots(Sanskrit: Ratha) mentioned in Vedic literature.
- R.S. Sharma (1995), as quoted in Bryant 2001: "the Rg Vedic culture was pastoral and horse-centered, while the Harappan culture was neither horse-centered nor pastoral."
- Sharma (1974), as cited in Bryant 2001, p. 271
- Bökönyi, as cited by B. B. Lal, stated that "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 (toe bones)."Lal 1998, p. 111, quoted from Bökönyi's letter to the Director of the Archaeological Survey of India, 1993-12-13.
- Witzel: "The autochthonous theory overlooks that RV 3.33206 already speaks of a necessarily smaller Sarasvatī: the Sudås hymn 3.33 refers to the confluence of the Beas and Sutlej (Vipåś, Śutudrī). This means that the Beas had already captured the Sutlej away from the Sarasvatī, dwarfing its water supply. While the Sutlej is fed by Himalayan glaciers, the Sarsuti is but a small local river depending on rain water.
In sum, the middle and later RV (books 3, 7 and the late book, 10.75) already depict the present-day situation, with the Sarasvatī having lost most of its water to the Sutlej (and even earlier, much of it also to the Yamunå). It was no longer the large river it might have been before the early Rgvedic period. - The Helmand river historically, besides Avestan Haetumant, bore the name Haraxvaiti, which is the Avestan form cognate to Sanskrit Sarasvati.
- See also Kak 1996
- The Vedic Foundation states: "The history of Bharatvarsh (which is now called India) is the description of the timeless glory of the Divine dignitaries who not only Graced the soils of India with their presence and Divine intelligence, but they also showed and revealed the true path of peace, happiness and the Divine enlightenment for the souls of the world that still is the guideline for the true lovers of God who desire to taste the sweetness of His Divine love in an intimate style."
- Witzel calls these "absurd dates", and refers to Elst 1999, Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate, p.97 for more of them.
Elst: "It is not only the Vedic age which is moved a number of centuries deeper into the past, when comparing the astronomical indications with the conventional chronology. Even the Gupta age (and implicitly the earlier ages of the Buddha, the Mauryas etc.) could be affected. Indeed, the famous playwright and poet Kalidasa, supposed to have worked at the Gupta court in about 400 AD, wrote that the monsoon rains started at the start of the sidereal month of Ashadha; this timing of the monsoon was accurate in the last centuries BCE. This implicit astronomy-based chronology of Kalidasa, about 5 centuries higher than the conventional one, tallies well with the traditional high chronology of the Buddha, whom Chinese Buddhist tradition dates to c. 1100 BC, and the implicit Puranic chronology even to c. 1700 BC.
Elst 1999 2.3 note 17: "The argument for a higher chronology (by about 6 centuries) for the Guptas as well as for the Buddha has been elaborated by K.D. Sethna in Ancient India in New Light, Aditya Prakashan, Delhi 1989. The established chronology starts from the uncertain assumption that the Sandrokottos/ Chandragupta whom Megasthenes met was the Maurya rather than the Gupta king of that name. This hypothetical synchronism is known as the sheet-anchor of Indian chronology. - Elst: "In August 1995, a gathering of 43 historians and archaeologists from South-Indian universities (at the initiative of Prof. K.M. Rao, Dr. N. Mahalingam and Dr. S.D. Kulkarni) passed a resolution fixing the date of the Bharata war at 3139–38 BC and declaring this date to be the true sheet anchor of Indian chronology."
The Indic Studies Foundation reports of another meeting in 2003: "Scholars from across the world came together, for the first time, in an attempt to establish the 'Date of Kurukshetra War based on astronomical data.'" - Witzel mentions:
- Aurobindo (no specific source)
- Waradpande, N.R., "Fact and fictions about the Aryans." In: Deo and Kamath 1993, 14-19
- Waradpande, N.R., "The Aryan Invasion, a Myth." Nagpur: Baba Saheb Apte Smarak Samiti 1989
- S. Kak 1994a, "On the classification of Indic languages." Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 75, 1994a, 185-195.
- Elst 1999, "Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate." Delhi: Aditya Prakashan. p.119
- Talageri 2000, "Rigveda. A Historical Analysis." New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, p.406 sqq,
- Lal 1997, "The Earliest Civilization of South Asia (Rise, Maturity and Decline)." New Delhi: Aryan Books International, p.281 sqq.
- In any "Indigenous Aryan" scenario, speakers of Indo-European languages must have left India at some point prior to the 10th century BCE, when first mention of Iranian peoples is made in Assyrian records, but likely before the 16th century BCE, before the emergence of the Yaz culture which is often identified as a Proto-Iranian culture. (See, e.g., Roman Ghirshman, L'Iran et la migration des Indo-aryens et des Iraniens).
- E.g. Chakrabarti 1995 and Rajaram 1995, as cited in Bryant 2001.
- Witzel: "linguistic data have generally been neglected by advocates of the autochthonous theory. The only exception so far is a thin book by the Indian linguist S. S. Misra (1992) which bristles with inaccuracies and mistakes (see below) and some, though incomplete discussion by Elst (1999)."
- Erdosy: "Assertions of the indigenous origin of Indo-Aryan languages and an insistence on a long chronology for Vedic and even Epic literature are only a few of the most prominent tenets of this emerging lunatic fringe."
- According to Franklin Southworth, "The Dravidian languages, now spoken mainly in peninsular India, form one of two main branches of the Zagrosian language family, whose other main branch consists of Elamitic and Brahui."
References
- ^ Bryant 2001, p. 4.
- ^ Trautmann 2005, p. xxx.
- ^ Witzel 2001, p. 95.
- ^ Jamison 2006.
- ^ Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016), Koenraad Elst: "I am not aware of any governmental interest in correcting distorted history", Swarajya Magazine
- ^ Trautmann 2005, p. xiii.
- ^ Anthony 2007.
- Parpola 2015.
- ^ Kak 2001b.
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- Haak, Wolfgang; Lazaridis, Iosif; Patterson, Nick; Rohland, Nadin; Mallick, Swapan; Llamas, Bastien; Brandt, Guido; Nordenfelt, Susanne; Harney, Eadaoin; Stewardson, Kristin; Fu, Qiaomei; Mittnik, Alissa; Bánffy, Eszter; Economou, Christos; Francken, Michael; Friederich, Susanne; Pena, Rafael Garrido; Hallgren, Fredrik; Khartanovich, Valery; Khokhlov, Aleksandr; Kunst, Michael; Kuznetsov, Pavel; Meller, Harald; Mochalov, Oleg; Moiseyev, Vayacheslav; Nicklisch, Nicole; Pichler, Sandra L.; Risch, Roberto; Rojo Guerra, Manuel A.; Roth, Christina; Szécsényi-Nagy, Anna; Wahl, Joachim; Meyer, Matthias; Krause, Johannes; Brown, Dorcas; Anthony, David; Cooper, Alan; Alt, Kurt Werner; Reich, David (2015). "Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo-European languages in Europe". Nature. 522 (7555): 207–211. arXiv:1502.02783. Bibcode:2015Natur.522..207H. doi:10.1038/nature14317. ISSN 0028-0836. PMC 5048219. PMID 25731166.
- Olalde, Iñigo; et al. (2018). "The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe". Nature. 555 (7695): 190–196. Bibcode:2018Natur.555..190O. doi:10.1038/nature25738. ISSN 0028-0836. PMC 5973796. PMID 29466337.
- Saag, Lehti; Varul, Liivi; Scheib, Christiana Lyn; Stenderup, Jesper; Allentoft, Morten E.; Saag, Lauri; Pagani, Luca; Reidla, Maere; Tambets, Kristiina; Metspalu, Ene; Kriiska, Aivar; Willerslev, Eske; Kivisild, Toomas; Metspalu, Mait (2017). "Extensive Farming in Estonia Started through a Sex-Biased Migration from the Steppe". Current Biology. 27 (14): 2185–2193.e6. Bibcode:2017CBio...27E2185S. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2017.06.022. ISSN 0960-9822. PMID 28712569.
- Web-sources
- ^ Wendy Doniger (2017), "Another Great Story"", review of Asko Parpola's The Roots of Hinduism; in: Inference, International Review of Science, Volume 3, Issue 2
- ^ Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), Why Hindutva supporters love to hate the discredited Aryan Invasion Theory, Scroll.in
- ^ Kazanas, Nicholas. "The Collapse of the AIT and the prevalence of Indigenism: archaeological, genetic, linguistic and literary evidences" (PDF). www.omilosmeleton.gr. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
- ^ Dinsa Sachan (4 July 2015), Aryan invasion debunked. Genetic study shows South Asians have a diverse ancestry
- ^ A.L. Chavda (05-05-2017), Aryan Invasion Myth: How 21st Century Science Debunks 19th Century Indology
- Encyclopedia Britannica, Emergence of the pastoral way of life
- "New research debunks Aryan invasion theory". 10 December 2011.
- Pratul Sharma (6 september 2019), New DNA study debunks Aryan invasion theory, The Week
- The Times of India (7 september 2019), DNA analysis of Rakhigarhi remains challenges Aryan invasion theory
- ^ Shoaib Daniyal (9 september 2019), Two new genetic studies upheld Indo-Aryan migration. So why did Indian media report the opposite?, Scroll.in
- ^ C.P. Rajendran (13 september 2019), Scientists Part of Studies Supporting Aryan Migration Endorse Party Line Instead, The Wire
- Anubhuti Vishnoi (9 september 2019),Indus Valley Civilisation is largest source of ancestry for South Asians: David Reich, The Economic Times
- ^ Subramanian, T. S. (28 September 2018). "Royal burial in Sanauli". Frontline.
- ^ Shoaib Daniyal (2018), Putting the horse before the cart: What the discovery of 4,000-year-old ‘chariot’ in UP signifies, Scroll.in
- ^ Devdutt Pattanaik (2020), Who is a Hindu? The missing horse of Baghpat, MumbaiMirror
- The Vedic Foundation, Introduction
- ^ "Koenraad Elst, 2.3. THE PRECESSION OF THE EQUINOX". Archived from the original on 2020-09-22. Retrieved 2015-02-07.
- Indic Studies Foundation, Dating the Kurukshetra War
- ^ Mukul, Akshaya (9 September 2006). "US text row resolved by Indian". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 7 September 2011.
- Thapar, Romila (17 May 2019). "Opinion | They Peddle Myths and Call It History (Published 2019)". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
Further reading
- Overview
Edwin Bryant, a cultural historian, has given an overview of the various "Indigenist" positions in his PhD-thesis and two subsequent publications:
- Bryant, Edwin (1997). The indigenous Aryan debate (Thesis). Columbia University.
- Bryant, Edwin (2001). The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513777-9.
- Bryant, Edwin F.; Patton, Laurie L. (2005). The Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History. Routledge.
The Indigenous Aryan Debate and The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture are reports of his fieldwork, primarily interviews with Indian researchers, on the reception of the Indo-Aryan migration theory in India. The Indo-Aryan Controversy is a bundle of papers by various "indigenists", including Koenraad Elst, but also a paper by Michael Witzel.
Another overview has been given by Thomas Trautmann:
- Trautmann, Thomas (2005). The Aryan Debate. Oxford University Press.
- Trautmann, Thomas (2006). Aryans and British India. Yoda Press. ISBN 9788190227216.
- Literature by "indigenous Aryans" proponents
- Elst, Koenraad (1999). Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan. ISBN 81-86471-77-4. Archived from the original on 2013-08-07. Retrieved 2006-12-21.
- Kazanas, Nicholas (2002). "Indigenous Indo-Aryans and the Rigveda". Journal of Indo-European Studies. 30: 275–334.
- Georg Feuerstein, Subhash Kak, David Frawley, In Search of the Cradle of Civilization: New Light on Ancient India Quest Books (IL) (October, 1995) ISBN 0-8356-0720-8
- Lal, B. B. (2002), The Sarasvati flows on: The continuity of Indian culture, Aryan Books International, ISBN 81-7305-202-6.
- Lal, B. B. (2015), The Rigvedic People: Invaders? Immigrants? or Indigenous?. See also Koenraad Elst, "Book Review: The Rig Vedic People Were Indigenous to India, Not Invaders"
- Mukhyananda (1997). Vedanta: In the Context of Modern Science – A Comparative Study. Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. ASIN: B0000CPAAF.
- N. S. Rajaram, The Politics of History: Aryan Invasion Theory and the Subversion of Scholarship (New Delhi: Voice of India, 1995) ISBN 81-85990-28-X.
- Talageri, S. G., The Rigveda: A Historical Analysis, New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, 2000 ISBN 81-7742-010-0 Archived 2006-06-16 at the Wayback Machine
- Danino, Michel (April–June 2009). "A Brief Note on the Aryan Invasion Theory" (PDF). Pragati Quarterly Research Journal. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-02-03. Retrieved 2015-02-03.
- Motwani, Jagat (2011). None but India (Bharat): The Cradle of Aryans, Sanskrit, Vedas, & Swastika – 'Aryan Invasion of India' and 'IE Family of Languages' Re-examined and Rebutted. iUniverse.
- Bharat
- Frawley, David (1993). Gods, Sages and Kings: Vedic Secrets of Ancient Civilization. Motilal Banarsidass.
- Criticism
- Shereen Ratnagar (2008), The Aryan homeland debate in India, in Philip L. Kohl, Mara Kozelsky, Nachman Ben-Yehuda "Selective remembrances: archaeology in the construction, commemoration, and consecration of national pasts", pp 349–378
- Suraj Bhan (2002), "Aryanization of the Indus Civilization" in Panikkar, KN, Byres, TJ and Patnaik, U (Eds), The Making of History, pp 41–55.
- Thapar, Romila (2019), "They Peddle Myths and Call It History", New York Times
- Other
- Guichard, Sylvie (2010). The Construction of History and Nationalism in India: Textbooks, Controversies and Politics. Routledge.
External links
- Thapar, Romila: The Aryan question revisited (1999)
- Witzel, Michael: The Home of the Aryans
- Witzel, Horseplay at Harappa, Harvard University
- A tale of two horses – Frontline, 11–24 November 2000.
- Linda Hess, The Indigenous Aryan Discussion on RISA-L: The Complete Text (to 10/28/96)
- Thomas Trautmann (2005), The Aryan Debate: Introduction
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