IndiaStar Review of Books



Early India:
From the Origins to AD 1300
by Romila Thapar

Berkeley: Univ of California Press, 2003

Reviewed by Kalavai Venkat

[Editor's intro: Kalavai Venkat is a
Silicon Valley based writer and the
moderator of the excellent yahoo
discussion list IndianCivilization.
This review is thoroughly annotated.
-- c. j. s. wallia]


The first striking feature of this revised
edition of Thapar's A History of India is
that barring rare exceptions, none of the
claims and sweeping generalizations she
makes in this book, as in the earlier
edition, is annotated by any references.
Thapar calls such historians of stature as
K. A. Nilakanta Sastri and R. C. Majumdar
"nationalistic" and whose interpretations
she claims "were biased by nationalistic
sentiments".[1] The reader wishes that
Thapar had at least meticulously backed
her arguments with references to primary
sources, as those historians did. For a
serious student of history, this book
would indeed be a disappointment because
there is no way the reader could validate
the often outlandish claims, by referring
to the primary sources. For the history
neophyte, this book could be dangerous, if
students gulp it unquestioningly.
Ultimately, it is not difficult to
understand why Thapar hasn't bothered to
provide corroborating references for her
claims: many of her claims have no basis.

The very first chapter "Perceptions of the
Past" reads like a political pamphlet
where she sets up the BJP[2] as her
political rivals, and uses her supposed
historical tomb as if it were an op-ed
piece, to lambaste the Sangh Parivar.[3]
She even falsely claims that in the
Hindutva[4] worldview the Christians and
the Muslims are not regarded as the
inheritors of India.[5] It is bad enough
to settle contemporary political scores in
a book on Ancient Indian History, it is
worse to resort to lies and hate-speech as
the means to achieve that. On the same
page, she claims that the Hindus of the
1920s accepted AIT[6] because that helped
the upper-caste Hindus to identify
themselves with the British. It is not
surprising that sections of colonized
Indians accepted AIT, as it was the
prevailing theory then. It would have been
nearly impossible for most Indian
academics to oppose AIT in a colonial
India because many British academics
didn't tolerate any opposition to AIT. At
times, they even resorted to no-holds
barred attack on the Indian scholars who
challenged the imperialistic paradigms.[7]

What Thapar fails to mention, rather
conveniently, is that large sections of
very influential Hindus of that period,
Swami Vivekananda and Sri Aurobindo for
example, as well as several academics like
A. C. Das, had opposed AIT. Ironically, it
was one of Thapar's mentors, A. L. Basham,
who continued to support AIT even in the
1960s. Today, several archeological
excavations[8] have established that there
has been no Aryan invasion or break in
India's civilization. Yet, it is the
historians of the Marxist school of
India,[9] like Thapar, who still continue
to propagate the myth of AIT.

"Anything but Sarasvati please!"

Her discussion of IVC/SSC[10] is no more
accurate and up to date than it would have
been three decades ago in the original
version of this book, for in this much
heralded revised edition she does not even
take cognizance of the numerous
archeological and satellite imaging
discoveries of the past two decades. The
discovery of numerous archeological sites
on the banks of the erstwhile Sarasvati,
about which the Vedas talk in glorious
terms doesn't merit any attention in her
book. There is no mention about such
things as the mapping of the paleo
channels of the Vedic Sarasvati. Instead,
Thapar objects to calling the civilization
SSC and argues that even though far more
numerous sites have been found on the
banks of the Sarasvati than the Indus,
they had not reached the threshold of
quality to rename the civilization![11]

Thapar argues that the signs of
urbanization were less noticeable at these
sites. She doesn't tell us what qualifies
a site as urban. If it is size then the
number of sites to the east of the Indus
that were about a hundred hectares was no
less numerous than those to its west.[12]
More importantly, the sites on the eastern
side, such as Kalibangan, reveal
utilization of advanced techniques in crop
cultivation.[13] The techniques from these
ancient times are still in use in Punjab
today. Likewise, excavations at Kalibangan
reveal that its residents not only
fortified their Lower Town,[14] a feature
unknown in Mohenjo-daro, but also showed
ingenuity by making their houses
termite-proof.[15] In fact, Lothal, a port
to the east of the Indus, was not matched
by anything similar to the west of the
Indus.[16] Stone statues have been found
in Dholavira,[17] a rarity among the
Harappan sites.

If diversity were the factor, then one
should acknowledge the importance of the
Sarasvati side of the civilization as it
had more to offer. If the size of the
urban centers were the factor, then the
ones on the banks of the Sarasvati were
comparable to those on the banks of the
Indus. If sheer number of sites unearthed
were the factor, then we have more on the
banks of the Sarasvati than the Indus.[18]
Gregory Possehl points out[19] that most
of the agricultural produce of IVC/SSC
came from the Sarasvati system. Jane
McIntosh, pointing to the density of the
clusters of sites even declares[20] that
calling that civilization IVC is actually
a misnomer, as the Sarasvati played a far
greater role in nourishing it.

McIntosh[21] says that though some of the
sites like Lothal were smaller than
Mohenjo-daro, internally they were very
complex structures. The same author also
draws our attention[22] to the finds by
the leading archeologist J. P. Joshi of
huge settlements varying between 100 and
225 hectares in size on the Sarasvati part
of the civilization. The sites identified
- Dhalewan, Gurni Kalan I, Hasanpur II,
Lakhmirwala, and Baglian Da Theh - are all
located within a small area along the
Sirhind stream [a tributary of the
Ghaggar] within 30 km of each other.

Thapar vigorously opposes the renaming of
Indus Valley Civilization to Sarasvati
Sindhu Civilization, but fails to tell us
the reasons for her opposition. Instead of
objectively receiving the archeological
evidence, she accuses the archeologists,
both Indian and foreign, of projecting an
Indian home of the Aryans[23]. Negation at
its best! It is indeed sad that Thapar
should without question or even a modicum
of academic objectivity, stick to AIT or
AMT[24] and shy away from discussing
contrary evidence. Ironically, though
Thapar is on the defensive these days in
her public lectures and vehemently denies
that she ever subscribed to AIT, she still
replaces it with the equally baseless AMT.

"The evil Aryans arrive at Kot Diji"

In this book itself, she unmistakably
argues in favor of AIT.[25] Here, Thapar
argues that there is archeological
evidence at Kot Diji[26] to support AIT.
She even implies, on the same page, that
the supposed destruction finds mention in
the Rig Veda, but as is often her ploy,
fails to specify the verses. Which verses,
Professor Historian? Ironically, Thapar
doesn't realize that the example of Kot
Diji that she cites, actually demolishes
her case for AIT/AMT.

Kot Diji belonged to the Regionalization
Era[27] of IVC/SSC. This phase was the
final critical one that led to the
formation of urban centers. This phase
thrived between 3300 BCE and 2600 BCE.[28]
The ash layer present at this site is
indicative of destruction by fire.
Assuming that the invading Aryans were the
destroyers, as Thapar implies, one must
then accept the presence of the Aryans in
IVC/SSC even before its Mature [i.e.
urban] Phase had started. The Marxist
historians defiantly claim that the Aryans
invaded India only towards the end of the
Mature Phase of IVC, which is around 1900
BCE.[29] If that were the case, how could
the Aryans have been the destroyers of the
Kot Diji settlement? This brings up
another interesting question: Was there
really an intentional hostile
destruction[30] at Kot Diji? Kenoyer[31]
tells us that the fire at Kot Diji needn't
have been intentional [and hostile], that
the settlement was rebuilt at once and
that there was strong continuity in
ceramics and other artifacts suggesting
that the inhabitants were not replaced by
a new culture. Thus, Thapar falsely
portrays a non-hostile fire at Kot Diji as
wanton destruction by the Aryans, even
before they are supposed to have arrived
at IVC/SSC! She conveniently suppresses
the facts regarding the continuity of the
culture before and after the fire.

"The Horse"

Thapar claims[32] that the horse was
unknown to the people of IVC/SSC and says
that it was irrelevant to them
ritualistically. The obvious implication
being that for the Aryans, the horse was
very important, as it supposedly finds
several mentions in the Vedas, and hence
the Aryans couldn't have been the
architects of IVC/SSC. This claim is
contrary to the facts. Lal has summarized
evidence that unequivocally points to the
presence of the horse.[33] Apart from the
terracotta figurine from Lothal, he lists
the finding of a second upper molar. He
also lists the findings of horse bones
from Surkotada and Kachcha, an
identification that has been endorsed by
Sandor Bokonyi.[34] Lal also draws[35] the
reader's attention to Jarrige's find of
terracotta horse figurines from Nausharo.
It is certainly true that horse remains
and artifacts depicting the horse from
IVC/SSC have not been numerous, but they
definitely belie Thapar's claims that the
horse was non-existent in IVC/SSC.

Even pretending that Thapar is correct, it
is simplistic to argue on this basis alone
that IVC/SSC was a non-Aryan civilization.
If we are to assume literal meaning for
the use of the word asva in the Rig Veda
and that the Aryans introduced the horse
to IVC/SSC during the Pirak phase,[36]
then we are faced with a more interesting
question: Is there a quantum jump in the
finds of horse remains during and after
the period the Aryans are supposed to have
invaded the IVC/SSC? The answer is a clear
no. We find such a jump only posterior to
the end of the Pirak phase. Likewise, if
the Aryans had indeed invaded IVC/SSC
between 1900 BCE and 1400 BCE, one would
expect to see several horse remains in
such potential staging points as BMAC,[37]
in the period just anterior to this. Much
to the disappointment of the proponents of
AIT, such evidence doesn't exist either.
So, far from strengthening the claims that
the lack of horse remains in IVC/SSC
points to the Aryan invasion, the lack of
such remains in BMAC and other potential
staging spots, a pre-condition for any
invasion to have occurred, weakens the
proposition of AIT.

This leaves the question of horse a vexed
one. Did the word asva[38] necessarily
always mean the horse in the Rig Veda? Sri
Aurobindo convincingly argues[39] that the
words go [40] and asva are constantly
associated in the Vedas, as in gomati[41]
or asvavati[42]. So, they can't refer
merely to the physical steed. Instead, he
says, that they symbolically refer to
light and energy respectively. He draws
our attention to the conception of
vyahrtis and ritam in the Vedas. It is
also worth mentioning that the Rig Veda
itself explicitly states that its words
are metaphors and not literal.[43] It is
ironical that Thapar, who negates all
explicit and graphic descriptions of
atrocities by the Islamic invaders against
the Hindus, despite the contemporary
epigraphs and chronicles detailing them,
reads literal meaning into the Vedas
regardless the Vedas cautioning against
such. A classic case of bending the
evidences to fit the theory?

The Brahmins' hearth?

She tries hard to wish away strong
archeological evidence that establish the
Vedic nature of IVC/SSC. For example,
Thapar dismisses the presence of the fire
altars in many of the sites as mere
hearths.[44] Lal tells us[45] that there
is very strong archeological evidence for
the practices of animal sacrifice and
worship associated with fire altar having
existed in IVC/SSC. He also explains how
these altars were unlike the Parsi[46]
fire altars. The altars of the Lower Town
of Kalibangan were sunk into the ground
and had a central stele. Circular or
biconvex cakes of clay, as if placed as
offerings, have also been found. There is
also a presence of ash and charcoal
leaving no doubt that these were used as
fire altars. The altars were situated such
that those offering worship face eastwards
- a practice common in today's Hinduism as
well. The Citadel in Kalibangan has thrown
up seven contiguous altars. In the
proximity of these altars was a well,
bathing pavement, and drain, all clearly
indicative of the ritualistic bath seen
among today's Hindus. Lal also draws our
attention to the presence of a sacrificial
pit in the Citadel of Kalibangan, as well
as to the terracotta figures that confirm
this practice. Excavations at other
IVC/SSC sites such as Lothal, Banawali and
Rangpur have also revealed that the fire
altars were a common feature.

V. H. Sonawane and R. N. Mehta[47] draw
our attention to the site of Vagad in
Gujarat that belongs to the middle of the
second millennium BCE. The numerous fire
altars here were internally plastered with
cow-dung paste mixed with clay, while the
pits contained ash of probably cow dung
cakes. The absence of any bones clearly
rules out any purpose other than
ritualistic. The authors also draw our
attention to the three Vedic fires of
Garhapatya, Ahavaniya and Daksinatya along
as well as Utkar seen in the traditional
Vedic yajnasalas. Then, they draw the
attention of the reader to the striking
parallel of the three bigger altars dug in
the north, south and western portions of
the trench at this settlement, their
diameters being 1 m, 1.45 m and 1.30 m
respectively. They were arranged in a
triangular form at an approximate distance
of about 90 cm between the two. The fourth
one, cylindrical in shape, having a
diameter of 40 cm., was placed a little
inside between the southern and the
western pits.

It is pathetic scholarship to dismiss such
strong evidence without offering any
explanation. Unfortunately, this tendency
is to be noted all over this book.
Contrast this with McIntosh, who
admits[48] that the discovery of several
Vedic fire altars or what resembles them
is indeed an embarrassment for those who
have all along maintained that IVC/SSC was
not IA in nature. Such honesty while faced
with new archeological evidence, as one
sees in McIntosh, has never been the
virtue of Indian Marxist historians.

Avesta

Thapar avers[49] that the Avesta talks of
"repeated" migrations from Persia to the
Indus Valley! She neither cites any
references nor offers any arguments to
back such an extraordinary claim. So, it
is impossible for any reader to validate
her claim. David Frawley has convincingly
argued, while discussing the ocean
symbolism in the Rig Vedic verse 7:88:3,
that the Yasht 5 of the middle Avesta
itself might have borrowed this symbolism
from the Rig Veda.[50] This would suggest
that there is evidence that the Iranian
text borrowed from the Vedas. We do have
incontrovertible evidences from the Vedic
texts that the Aryans indeed migrated both
westwards and eastwards starting from the
Sapta Sindhu region.

The Pururava-Urvasu legend is mentioned in
the Vedic and other texts.[51] In the
former, the couple and their son Ayu are
related to the Agnyadheya rite. Among
these, the information contained in
Baudhayana Srautasutra is of special
interest to us. Willem Caland, the
Samavedin from Utrecht, translates[52] the
verse in question as: "To the East went
Ayus; from him descend the Kurus,
Pancalas, Kasis and Videhas. These are the
peoples that originated as a consequence
of Ayus's going forth. To the West went
Amavasu; from him descend the Gandharis,
the Sparsus and the Arattas. These are the
peoples which originated as a consequence
of Amavasu's going forth." Other renowned
experts translate the verse in the same
way as Caland does.[53] Baudhayana
Dharmasutra declares[54] that Aryavarta is
the land that lies west of Kalakavana,[55]
east of adarsana,[56] south of the
Himalayas and north of the Vindhyas.
Another sutra[57] confines Aryavarta to
the Ganga - Yamuna doab, and considers
people from beyond this area as of mixed
origin,[58] and hence not worthy of
emulation by the Aryans. Yet another
sutra[59] recommends expiatory acts for
those who have crossed the boundaries of
Aryavarta. Baudhayana Srautasutra[60]
recommends the same for those who have
crossed the boundaries of Aryavarta and
ventured into Afghanistan and other far
away places.

So much evidence from the Indian sources
assigns an Indian home for the Aryans.
Even if we pretend that the Avesta talks
of "repeated" migrations from Iran to
India, how does one reconcile the opposing
pronouncements? That is, if at all one
should accord any merit to the
unsubstantiated claim of Thapar that there
is literary evidence for the migration of
the Aryans from Iran to India.

The Mittani Gods and Kikkuli's Horses

Elsewhere,[61] she claims that the
earliest evidence of the Indo-Aryan comes
from Northern Syria. The references here,
though not stated by Thapar, are to "The
Mittani Treaty", "The Kikkuli Horse
Training Manual" and "A Hurrian text from
Yorgan Tepe".[62] The implication is that
since these are supposedly the earliest
evidences of Indo-Aryan, and since they
occur in Northern Syria, they point to the
migration of the Aryans from there into
India. Is that really so?

The Mittani ruled a vast area between the
Mediterranean and Northern Syria in the
fifteenth and the fourteenth centuries
BCE. They spoke Hurrian, a non-IA
language. All the words that are cognate
with IA[63] are found in martial contexts
in connection with horses, warriors and
chariots. A few men among the Mittani had
IA names, while this is not to be noticed
among their women. What does this mean? As
Mallory suggests, this could mean that
these warriors of Indic origin
superimposed themselves on the Hurrians
and became their noble class. This
wouldn't mean, by any stretch of
imagination, that the Aryans themselves
originated from Northern Syria. If that
were so, one should expect to see
predominantly IA words in non-martial
contexts. One would also expect to see a
prevalence of IA names among their
females. This is not the case.

Let us pretend that the Aryans originated
from Northern Syria. Since they had
inscribed in Syria, one would expect to
see them as literate during the earliest
phases when they were supposed to have
entered India. Rather, the earliest
inscriptions in India are from the Mauryan
era.[64] Does Thapar expect her readers to
believe that the Aryans who were literate
in Syria in 1500 BCE forgot to write as
they entered India? A more logical
explanation is that these Mittani were the
Kshatriyas[65] who had left India for
Northern Syria. Since writing was present
in that area even a few centuries earlier,
it is reasonable to assume that these
Kshatriyas, who had not known any lipi
before, had learnt them as they settled in
their new Western homes. Since they
emerged as the royalty, their own Vedic
Gods were invoked while signing the
treaties.[66] So, far from strengthening
AIT/AMT, these treaties and texts actually
point to Westward migrations of select
groups of Aryans from India. One hopes
that at least the unfortunate readers of
the book are more perceptive and logical
than its author!

"Dravidian Elephant?"

Thapar claims that the Aryans were curious
about the elephant and called it mriga
hastin, the animal with one hand.[67] Why
not? After all, the Aryans invaded India
from outside, and the elephant, an Indian
animal, should have been new to them.
Naturally, this should mean that the
Dravidians, who Thapar implies[68] were
the earlier residents of IVC/SSC, must
have been more familiar with the elephant
ahead of the Aryans, right? Thapar has
repeated this claim about the elephant
having been a novelty to the Aryans
earlier too.[69] Let us hear about the
elephant from the horse's mouth!

The Dravidian family of languages is
largely confined to Peninsular India.
Among them, Tamil has the oldest extant
corpus of literature, the Sangam
anthologies. These are basically
collections of bardic poetries dating from
100 - 250 AD.[70] Sangam literature speaks
of Tirupati[71] as the northern boundary
of the Tamil country, beyond which was
spoken a language other than Tamil.
Another Sangam poem[72] talks of the
Pandyas fighting their wars deploying the
elephants raised in Tirupati. Yet another
Sangam song[73] talks of the elephants
that were trained in Tirupati. One may
ask, while all these references establish
that the elephant was trained in, and
probably resided too, in the region that
was either at the northern most part of
the Tamil country or beyond that, how all
of this would prove whether or not the
Dravidians were ahead of the Aryans in
domesticating the elephant.

We have references from three more Sangam
poems that pronounce the judgment. One of
them[74] talks of "the great male elephant
trained by the Aryans with the help of a
cow elephant." Another[75] says that "the
mahouts trained the elephants using
Sanskrit."[76]
Yet another[77] says that "the mahouts
used a mixed [Sanskrit and Tamil] language
to train the elephant." This settles the
argument game, set, and match! If the
Dravidians were the first to have tamed
the wild elephant, then there is no need
for the Sangam works to talk of the
Northern Aryans as its trainers and
tamers. Not only that, the oldest Tamil
records also speak of having used
Sanskrit, and not Tamil, to train them.
This only means that the Dravidians learnt
the art of domestication of the wild
elephant from the Aryans. The last of the
references above, which talks of training
the elephant with a mixed tongue, suggests
that a transition regarding the
domestication and the training of the wild
elephant was happening between the Aryans,
the original domesticators and the
Dravidians, who received that art from
them. Or, would Thapar like her readers to
believe that the Dravidians had somehow
forgotten the art of domestication of the
elephant, and a 1500 years later,
re-learnt it from the Aryans?

Those familiar with Tamil as well as
Sanskrit can see on what pathetic
scholarship Thapar's argument[78] regards
mriga hastin is concocted. The Tamil word
for the elephant's trunk is puzhaikkai, as
in literary Tamil or tumpikkai, as in the
colloquial. This means, freely translated,
tubular hand. Would Thapar argue that the
elephants were unknown to the Dravidians
as well, as they didn't have a generic
name for its most distinctive part? These
methods of history writing are
inscrutable, and devoid of any logic!

In any case, it is worth noting that the
Rig Veda uses atleast 3 generic terms to
refer to the elephant: varana,[79]
srni[80] and ibha.[81] It is not at all a
bad idea for this "eminent historian" to
familiarize herself with India's ancient
literature, both Tamil and Sanskrit,
before offering her "expert judgment"
spiced with Marxist masala. She may
consider learning those two languages for
starters. It takes considerable time to
master these languages and appreciate the
nuances, so she may as well cultivate a
belief in reincarnation, so that in a
future birth she could do better justice
as a historian!

Suppressio veri suggestio falsi

Thapar's attempts at whitewashing the
Islamic crimes, no matter how extensively
they have been documented by contemporary
chroniclers, are very well known. For
various reasons, this has been the
methodology of history writing practiced
by the Marxist historians since the
independence. This tendency, even though
of no utility to an objective scholar of
history, is easily understandable when we
notice the proximity of these Leftist
historians to the most fundamentalist of
the Muslim organizations.[82]

Along with this negation goes the
demonizing of the Hindus. Thapar has
indulged in every sleight of hand and even
outright bluffing to portray the Hindus as
the destroyers of the Buddhist and the
Jaina places of worship.[83] Sita Ram Goel
demanded that she produce evidence. She
cited 3 cases, hoping that Goel would go
away. Alas, Goel returned after completing
a thorough research on the inscriptions
she had quoted. Two of them had no
connection at all with the Buddhist or the
Jaina monuments, while the authorities
held the third as a concoction. In any
case, it told a story very different from
what Thapar had insinuated.[84] Goel has
thoroughly catalogued[85] the destruction
of the Hindu temples by the Muslims, and
has demanded that Thapar substantiate
likewise the supposed destruction of the
Buddhist and Jaina places of worship by
Hindus. Predictably, once cornered, Thapar
has turned incommunicado!

There is no evidence that the Hindus ever
destroyed the Buddhist places of worship
or persecuted its practitioners. This
catholicity of the Hindus existed in the
past, and it exists today. While RNI[86]
historians like Thapar denigrate the
Hindus and their culture, non-partisan
practitioners[87] of the Buddhist Dharma,
haven't failed to recognize the
accommodating spirit of the Hindus.

The Oracle has spoken!

A reader, while going through this book,
would often wonder if he were some Prophet
to whom Gabriel is revealing the axioms!
It must be conceded that proofs and
logical analyses are for mere historians
and their students. Archangels and
Prophets needn't be constrained by such
trivia. Hence, the reader must dispel all
such doubts arising in his or her mind,
and instead be grateful that he or she is
not burdened with the demands of reason,
as those pursuing objective academic
studies are. Consider a few "revelations"
in this book:

* The Mahabharata "may have been" a
localized feud, and the Bhagavad Gita a
wholesale interpolation![88]
* The Ramayana "probably" was a local
feud, and the Southern locales in the
Ramayana "may" have been later day
interpolations![89]
* Alexander the Great was "perhaps"
hostile to the Brahmins, and so they hated
the Yavanas![90]
* Ashoka didn't inscribe in Tamil,
"perhaps" because that language didn't
have a script then![91]
* The Greek Goddess Ardochsho enters India
at the turn of the first millennium AD,
and gets absorbed into the Hindu pantheon
as Shri![92]
* The Gupta Age was not the Golden age.
Archeological evidence reveals that the
laity was more impoverished than under the
previous rulers![93]

This "eminent historian" adduces no
references for such claims. This is the
usual trick in the Marxist trade. They
start their hypotheses with uncertainty,
using the word perhaps, but conclude the
statement quite assertively, as if their
uncertain speculation in itself has
metamorphosed into evidence as well. Many
of them repeat the same claims,[94] using
almost similar phrases, making you wonder
if they are drawing from the same source.
Let us look at the specific claims.

If the Mahabharata and the Ramayana were
indeed local feuds, a claim that Thapar
fails to substantiate, then how would she
explain their popularity across the
sub-continent? Of course, she would say
that they became popular because they were
transmitted through ballads. Sure, they
were, but the question is, why only these
"local feuds" were rendered through
ballads and why not any other feud? Even
at the beginning of the first millennium
AD, the Tamils were very familiar with
these two epics and had internalized them.
So thorough was the internalization that
these epics find expression even in poetry
that was connected with such themes as war
and love.

A Sangam song[95] praises the Chera King
of having provided food for the Pandava
and the Kaurava armies, while they battled
at Kurukshetra. One can very well say that
this is a mere exaggeration, as no Chera
king is mentioned in the Mahabharata.
True, but the point is why would a bard
insult his patron king of having provided
culinary feast for some "local feud"? A
Sangam anthologist[96] is well known as
the translator of the Mahabharata.

In another Sangam song[97], a poet
eulogizes his Chola king, and is rewarded
with expensive jewelry. He distributes his
fortune among his relatives, who,
overwhelmed by the royal jewelry, wear
them quite awkwardly. The poet draws an
analogy to a scene in the Kishkinda
Kanda,[98] where the monkeys of Sugriva,
says the Tamil poet, toyed with the
jewelry that Sita had dropped, while
Ravana was abducting her. In yet another
Sangam song,[99] the heroine's liaison
with her lover becomes the gossip of the
town. Then he marries her, and the town
settles quietly. The poet compares this
with a scene in the Ramayana, where Rama
meditates at Dhanushkoti[100] before
waging war on Sri Lanka. The poet says
that just as the banyan tree, under which
Rama meditated, fell silent after the
chirpy birds vacated it, the town too got
cleansed of the gossip once the lovers
married. Ironically, according to our
Marxist "eminence", the Southern locales
in the Ramayana "may have been" later day
interpolations! May I suggest that the
"later day editors" not only
"interpolated" those verses in the
Sanskrit original, but also made sure that
the same was replicated in an analogy in a
song of love in a Sangam Tamil anthology?

The Tamil poets of the Sangam age
demonstrate familiarity with the
proverbial wealth of the Nandas that the
monarchs had hidden beneath the bed of the
Ganges;[101] the military might of the
Mauryas,[102] in addition to the
traditions of the Ramayana and the
Mahabharata. Strangely, they display
little awareness of Ashoka, regardless how
the edicts portray him. So, it is fair to
conclude that those only events and
legends of real significance, and not some
"local feuds", that caught the attention
of those poets, found literary expression.
Yet, in the rich Marxist tradition
anything Hindu must be discounted as myth
or interpolation, while even blatant myths
pertaining to other religions must be
bestowed with an aura of legitimacy.
Having denounced the Ramayana, Thapar
admits that any historical evidence for
the myth[103] of the supposed arrival of
St. Thomas in the Tamil country in AD 52
is lacking, but in the very next line
unhesitatingly declares that such a visit
is plausible![104] Sure, even the
Miraj[105] is plausible right Ms. Thapar?

To reject the Bhagavad Gita as an integral
portion of the "original" Mahabharata
betrays Thapar's ignorance of the subject
matter. The nucleus of the epic as it
exists today, based on the internal
testimony of the text, was the Jaya
Samhita containing 8800 verses. In
Vaishampayana's Bharata, this was enlarged
to 24000 verses. By the time of its last
canonical recital by the time of Ugrasrava
Sauti, this text had come into modern form
and came to be called the Mahabharata. In
other words, the Bhagavad Gita has always
been an integral part of the Mahabharata.
Had she argued that the Bhagavad Gita
wasn't part of the Jaya Samhita, perhaps
she might have had a case, albeit a case
that can't be substantiated with
incontrovertible evidence.

There are several internal references to
the Bhagavad Gita in the Mahabharata, the
most important of them being the
instruction of Krishna to Arjuna, in the
form of the Anu Gita, long after the
Kurukshetra war is over. In the Anu
Parvan, the protégé insists that Krishna
again impart the teachings that He
originally had given during the war. The
Friend and the Philospher doesn't oblige
[literally speaking], though He delivers
the Anu Gita. What else could have been
this reference to the teaching in the
battlefield, if not the Bhagavad Gita?

If there is ever an unkind word for the
Yavanas, in any Sanskrit work, then it
must only be because Alexander supposedly
didn't patronize the Brahmins and so they
cultivated a hatred for him! Never mind
that Thapar wouldn't substantiate this
claim too. The Sangam Tamils too described
the Yavanas quite unkindly, calling them
mlecchas;[106] in the same song, the
Yavanas are portrayed as serving the Tamil
royalty. Now, is this also a brahminical
reaction to the supposed denial of
patronage?

She is of course right that Ashoka didn't
inscribe his edicts in Tamil, but the
reason she gives, that Tamil didn't have a
script then, is misleading. Marxist
historians have always argued that in
ancient India, only the upper castes were
literate, a point which Thapar repeats in
this book too.[107] If what she says were
true, then only the upper castes would
have been able to read the inscription in
any case. So, even if Tamil hadn't had a
script, Ashoka could have inscribed his
Tamil edicts in the Brahmi script, as
inscriptions following soon were. Since
she claims, without any evidence of
course, that the Brahmins were Sanskrit
speakers who supposedly were forced to
learn Tamil[108] upon arriving in the
Tamil country, they would have had no
difficulty understanding the Brahmi
inscriptions, right? The true reasons that
Ashoka didn't inscribe in Tamil are, one
that his rule didn't extend over the Tamil
country but ended with Southern Karnataka,
and two that the Tamil language was not
spoken in Karnataka. As the Tamil sources
themselves state explicitly,[109] the land
where Tamil was spoken, had Tirupati as
its northern boundary.

Her unsubstantiated claim that Shri is a
Greek import must be treated as the
product of her own fertile imagination,
just as her claim that Christianity
influenced Madhvacharya's doctrines[110]
or her suggestion that the Bhakti movement
of the South "may have been" influenced by
Christianity![111] Every Marxist historian
proposes a different place origin for
Shri. Anything is fine, so long as She did
not originate in India, or so long as one
endows her with a non-Aryan pedigree. D.
N. Jha asserts[112] that Shri "may have
been" a non-Aryan fertility Goddess, who
was absorbed into the Arthashastra, and
later on ended up as the wife of Vishnu.
Evidence? The Oracle has spoken!

Thapar reads nothing but class struggle
into India's past; a struggle in which
Sanskrit supposedly came to symbolize the
ethos of the upper castes, while the laity
was at best indifferent to the same for
they remained unlettered. Nevertheless,
when confronted with the fact that
Shilpashastras were mostly written in
Sanskrit,[113] and since they were
prescriptive texts for the benefit of the
artisans, who must have then understood
Sanskrit, she sheepishly suggests that it
"probably" meant that the status of the
artisans was improving! Under whom? The
temple destroying jizya-imposing Mughals,
Ms. Thapar? Jha blatantly summarizes[114]
the bottom line of the Marxist tirade
against India's past: "The truly golden
age of the people doesn't lie in the past,
but in the future!" No matter what the
epigraphs, chronicles, travelogues,
inscriptions and archeological evidences
say to the contrary, the "eminent
historians" must be right! If you are
still wondering why she discounts the
Gupta era as the Golden age, she doesn't
keep you guessing for long. Weren't the
Chola and the Mughal eras golden too, she
tamely asks.[115] In case you hadn't
comprehended, that was her "evidence" for
the earlier claim that during the Gupta
rule, the laity was poorer than they were
under the previous rulers!

When was the Anklet smashed?

Thapar is almost clueless while talking
about Tamil literary and historical
traditions. This is not surprising given
that she doesn't even have a cursory
knowledge of the language, which is
crucial for analyzing the primary sources
that throw information on the ancient
Tamil society. She dates
Silappadikaram[116] to the 5th century
AD,[117] and as usual fails to furnish any
supporting reference or argument. She, and
certainly her readers, would have
benefited had she at least perused the
seminal works written over the last
several centuries on the dating of this
epic. V. R. R. Dikshitar has summarized
many of those methods, with necessary
critique.[118] Three of the methods that
he discusses[119] are noteworthy. One of
them, mostly the product of modern
Indological research, arranges the Tamil
epics and anthologies, on a relative
chronological scale, using the percentage
of Sanskrit words used as the basis. As
per this method, Silappadikaram uses
eleven percent Sanskrit words, as compared
to the thirty percent used in the Bhakti
literature of the Azhwars and the
Nayanmars. Since, the latter two lived
between the 5th and the 10th century AD,
and allowing for at least 3 centuries for
Sanskritization of literary Tamil from
eleven percent to thirty percent, the epic
is dated to the 2nd century AD.[120]

Even though Dikshitar is not being
judgmental, it is easy to notice the
fundamental flaw in this method. Firstly,
it assumes that Sanskrit entered the Tamil
country at a certain time, anterior to
which a pure Tamil literary tradition
existed. There is little evidence to
support such a hypothesis, and much to the
contrary. So, one can't make inferences
starting with an unproven hypothesis.
Secondly, the relative usage of Sanskrit
words in Tamil literature after the 5th
century AD doesn't reveal any certain
pattern. There are later day works that
deploy fewer Sanskrit words, while there
are earlier works that deploy more. The
same can be said of the Sangam epoch also.
Most importantly, the entire Sangam corpus
is not only aware of the Aryans, but the
Brahmins were among its poets too. They
enjoyed the most exalted position in the
society, and the brahminical norms were
the ideals of the society. A terse line
from the oldest extant Tamil grammar tells
that the ideal education is that which
leads to the realization of tat tvam
asi.[121] None of the Sangam works even
implies that the Brahmins ever came from
the outside. This being the case, the
increased usage of Sanskrit words in the
Bhakti corpus can't be due to any
migration. Such a proposition is
simplistic. So, even though the
Indological speculation arrived at a
correct date for this epic, albeit
inadvertently, it is fundamentally flawed.

The second method that Dikshitar
discusses, is sound, and is based on the
astronomical references contained in the
epic, as well as by matching those keys
with those in another contemporary epic
Manimekhalai. A medieval commentator of
Silappadikaram, Adiyarkkunallar collates
information regards the calendar used in
the epic and the position of the stars
recorded therein. Dikshitar correctly
points out that the commentator has used
the Sauramana method of reckoning, thereby
eliminating any confusion that may arise
to due identification with the Chandramana
reckoning. The calculations based on this
data places the critical events of the
epic in the year 174 AD.[122]

The third method is the well-known
Gajabahu synchronism[123] that is based on
the reference in the epic to the Sri
Lankan king by that name, who attended the
coronation of the Chera monarch. Gajabahu
ascended the throne around 171 AD, so the
reference to him in the narrative of the
epic is credible.

In short, taking any of the routes, and
objectively analyzing, one can place the
narrative of the epic around 170 AD. Not
Thapar, to whom the epic belongs to the
5th century AD. Perhaps, she is optimistic
that the bulk of her readers wouldn't be
any more inquisitive, empirical or
informed than she is! It may not be a
misplaced optimism given the caliber of
the students who end up at JNU. There are
2 categories of students that specialize
in history in India. The first category is
those who seek the truth about the past.
They are non-partisan, sensitive, and have
a healthy regard for the traditions of the
society they wish to study. They have few
agendas to push. Unfortunately, such
students could never hope to rise in their
career, given the nepotism and intolerance
at JNU. The second category is those who
ended up at the bottom of their classes in
their preceding high school examinations.
For them, history was not the choice but
the last refuge, after they were denied
admissions to any science stream. This is
in particular true of India. Such
students, if they are willing to follow
the cabal of Marxist historians, can be
assured of meteoric rise in their career.

Sati

The earliest evidence for Sati,[124]
claims our historian, occurs in Eran[125]
in AD 510, and as usual fails to provide
any references. It is imperative to
discuss at length how far off the mark
Thapar has been on this subject matter.
This practice was found across several
cultures even from the Mesolithic
settlements. While discussing the Early
Bronze Age cultures of Italy, Mallory
tells us[126] about the Tomb of the Widow
that offers evidence for the burial of the
wife, when her warrior husband died. The
same was noticed in the Southeastern
Europe as well.[127] Now, let us turn our
focus to the historical times. Strabo[128]
says that the Greeks under Alexander
noticed this practice being observed in
Punjab. Yet, the most vivid recordings of
this practice come from the Sangam Tamil
literature. Evidently, a woman either
joined her husband in his funeral pyre or
burial urn, or led the austere life of a
widow comparable to that of an ascetic.
Most cases of Sati are spoken of in the
martial context. It can be argued that
when the king died not only his queen[s],
but also his attendants committed sati. A
queen chastises the courtiers for not
[apparently] performing sati and tells
them that she would rather join her
beloved husband in the pyre than lead the
spartan life of a widow. Not for her, says
she, is the life of a widow who eats one
meal of rice mixed with gingili oil and
neem leaves, and who sleeps on the bare
floor. May you not commit sati, the queen
tells the courtiers, rather sarcastically,
but for me the cold water of the lake is
not different from the fire of the
pyre.[129] And the very next song confirms
that she did commit sati.

Another Tamil woman implores the potter to
make her husband's burial urn large enough
to hold the widow as well.[130]
Tolkappiyam[131] says that the highest
glory that a woman can aspire for is to
join her husband's funeral pyre. Those
ethos were emulated not only by the common
women, but even Kambar, who appeared
towards the end of the first millennium AD
seems to have regarded sati quite highly,
for he lets Mandodhari die at the
battlefield once Ravana had fallen. N.
Subramaniam has suggested[132] that even
the great sage Tiruvalluvar alludes to the
glory of a woman who performs sati.
Manimekhalai has an interesting
narrative[133] where the chaste Adhirai
wrongly concludes that her trader husband
had died and attempts to commit sati, but
the fire refuses to engulf her. Then her
husband returns and they live happily ever
after! It is reflective of the belief of
the social milieu that a chaste wife is
the one who protects her husband.

A woman wasn't always allowed to commit
sati. A Sangam song says[134] that after
her son's father departed, the widow's
head was tonsured and her bangles were
removed. Then onwards, lily with rice
became her staple food. So, scholars have
argued[135] that those women, who had
children, were rather expected to observe
widowhood than commit sati. Interestingly,
Manusmriti[136] doesn't prescribe sati
even for those widows who have no
offspring. It expects them to lead an
ascetic life of honor. Its prescriptions,
barring the tonsuring of a widow, are very
similar to the descriptions of a widow's
life that one finds in the Sangam poetry.
It is evident that the wives of the
deceased themselves looked down upon the
plight of a widow, who had to tonsure her
head, and rather thought of sati as a
glorious option.[137] G. L. Hart
draws[138] our attention to the
prescriptions of Skanda Purana, which
includes even the tonsuring of the widow;
he points out that Skanda Purana's
injunctions regards the vows of a widow
exactly match the social mores of ancient
Tamilnadu.

Why then, does Thapar falsely claim that
sati is evidenced only in AD 510?
Ignorance? None would doubt that. Is it
also because this augments the usual
Marxist rhetoric that the Gupta era
supposedly led to the ascendancy of the
Hindu orthodoxy, and hence the
marginalizing of the woman, an ideal
recipe that "could have" resulted in sati?
In the same page, Thapar claims that with
sati in place, the emerging debate over
widow remarriage "could've been" nipped!
Elsewhere,[139] she claims that cattle
raids were very common in Peninsular
India, and alleges that the commemorative
stones depicting sati were meant to
cultivate a heroic ethos in defense of the
settlements not protected by the royal
army! She provides no evidence. In the
Marxist scheme of things, any Indian war
has to be a "cattle raid" and practices
like sati have to be reduced to utter
banality. If she were right, then what
does one do with all those instances of
the women of royal households committing
sati? Tonsuring of the widows continued
even till a few decades ago among the
Brahmins of Tamilnadu. The Brahmins are
not known to have participated in the
battlefield, until mid medieval times. Was
this tonsuring of the Brahmin widows too a
practice aimed at cultivating heroic ethos
for defense against "cattle raids"?

Even during the Sangam times, sati was
more an ideal than common practice. In
every instance where it occurred, the
widow performed sati willingly. The
internal references in the poems regards
the spartan living of the widows is
abundant proof that most widows took to
ascetic living. For all practical
purposes, it was only the royalty that
took to sati. This was practiced on a
large scale only during the times of
Islamic invasions. The Rajput women
embraced the funeral pyre of their
husbands, to avoid being raped and ending
up in the harem of the Islamic aggressors.
The Leftist historians, to whitewash the
Islamic culpability, have often tried to
project sati as a retrograde Hindu
religious practice, which it wasn't. In
fact, Manusmrti,[140] even prescribes the
duties of a widow, but has no word on
sati. No other Hindu law book either.
Barring inevitable exceptions, it is
evident that the women, who performed
sati, did so joyfully. Friar
Jordanus,[141] the Christian missionary,
observes succinctly sometime in the early
1300s AD: "In this India, on the death of
a noble, or of any people of substance,
their bodies are burned; and eke their
wives follow them alive to the fire, and,
for the sake of worldly glory, and for the
love of their husbands, and for eternal
life, burn along with them, with as much
joy as if they were going to be wedded;
and those who do this have the higher
repute for virtue and perfection among the
rest. Wonderful! I have sometimes seen,
for one dead man who was burnt, five
living women take their places on the fire
with him, and die with their dead."
Despite his contempt for the Hindus and
his missionary zeal, he was honest in his
observation that sati wasn't forced.

Devi Chandra Gupta

While discussing the play Devi Chandra
Gupta, written a full two centuries after
the reign of Chandra Gupta II had ended,
Thapar claims[142] that this play
"supposedly" deals with the events that
followed the death of Samudra Gupta.
According to the narrative of the play,
Rama Gupta was defeated by the Sakas, to
whom he then agreed to surrender his wife.
His younger brother was enraged by this,
and he assassinated the Saka king as well
as Rama Gupta. Then she claims that the
play was written to justify the usurpation
of the throne by the younger brother [by
slandering the elder]. This beats common
sense. The play was written two centuries
after the supposed event. By the time it
was written, the Gupta dynasty was long
gone. Why would anyone write a play based
on an invented myth to vindicate the
monarch of a bygone era, when his dynasty
had effectively crumbled? Vindicate the
"usurper" in whose eyes? For whose
benefit? Searching for logic in our
historian's writing would prove more
elusive than looking for the proverbial
needle in the haystack!

Devi Chandra Gupta, unfortunately, has
been lost to us. All we have are
references to and quotations from this
drama in five other works.[143] The
original has been attributed to
Vishakadatta,[144] who also authored
Mudrarakshasa. According to the quotations
in Natyadarpana,[145] Rama Gupta was an
elder brother of Chandra Gupta II. In a
battle with the Saka king Rudrasimha,[146]
Rama Gupta was defeated, and agreed to
surrender his wife Dhruvadevi to the
victor. The royal house thought of many
ideas to avoid this ignominy, and finally
decided to send Madhavasena, disguised as
the queen herself. Madhavasena was the
courtesan, and Chandra Gupta II was in
love with her. At the sight of his beloved
in disguise, Chandra Gupta changed his
plans, and instead disguised himself as
the queen. He went to the Saka king's
palace and killed him. Then, he returned
to kill his brother.

This story finds a close parallel in an
Arabic work,[147] dated to the 11th
century AD[148]. In that, says Dikshitar,
Vikrama [Chandra Gupta II] becomes
Barkamaris and Rama Gupta becomes Rawwal.
According to that version, Barkamaris was
originally in love with a woman [this is
an allusion to Dhruvadevi], but when he
came to know that Rawwal too loved the
same woman, he sacrificed his love and
instead took to a life of a scholar, until
his brother was defeated by the Saka king,
and ignominy descended on the royal house.
Rest of the story is the same as in the
Natyadarpana extract.

The question is: Is this story having some
basis in history, or was it concocted to
vindicate the "usurper" as Thapar alleges?
Dikshitar draws[149] the attention of the
readers to the Sajjan copperplate
inscription of Amoghavarsha I that
belittles Chandra Gupta II for marrying
his brother's wife. Dikshitar also tells
us[150] that rebuke of the same
ignominious act finds mention in the
Sangali and Cambay plates of the
Rashtrakuta king Govinda IV. Such a
marriage should have invited some rebuke,
because, as Dikshitar points out the law
of those times didn't allow such
marriages. So, it turns out that the drama
indeed was based on history, and was not a
Brahminical attempt to vindicate the
"usurper".

Thapar also claims,[151] that the
discovery of the coins of Rama Gupta,
indeed suggests that he was the ruler
before the "usurper" displaced him. She
cites no references, so one doesn't know
which coins she is talking about.
Dikshitar[152] has addressed this issue in
detail. There has been some scholarly
debate as to who issued the coins that
carry the name of Kacha Gupta, for history
doesn't know of an Imperial Gupta king by
that name. Some have suggested that it was
the formal name of Samudra Gupta, but
there is no evidence for that. If Thapar
is talking of these coins, then she hasn't
given any basis for equating this Kacha
Gupta with Rama Gupta. Dikshitar offers a
better explanation. He points out that
Samudra Gupta had issued coins
commemorative of his father, Chandra Gupta
I. Then he points out that Samudra Gupta's
grandfather was Ghatotkacha Gupta, who was
greatly known was his adherence to the
Vedic sacrifices, and suggests that
Samudra Gupta might have issued the Kacha
coins in celebration of his grandfather's
memory.

Throughout the book, she reduces the
historic traditions of India to a mere
class struggle. It was a struggle in which
the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas
"supposedly" colluded to aggrandize
themselves. The Kshatriyas were all from
"supposedly" inconsequential backgrounds,
while the Brahmins "supposedly" invented a
pedigree for the former, to "supposedly"
elevate them in the eyes of the laity, of
course in return for monetary
considerations! Not even once does she
corroborate this ridiculous theory with
evidence. India had time and again
witnessed one dynasty being replaced by
another, often violently. Constant wars
among the neighboring kingdoms were well
known. If indeed a king had been bestowed
a fake pedigree by the "manipulating"
Brahmins, how come none of his enemies or
their bards even make a mention of that?

The ancient Tamil Society

Thapar's observations on the Tamil society
would have provided comic relief but for
the fact that such insidious and blatantly
false theories have been deployed by the
missionaries and the Dravidianists[153] in
the 19th and the 20th century Tamilnadu to
spew hatred against the Brahmins and
Non-Tamils. Thapar builds her theory as
follows:

* There is no reference to the Varna
system in the Sangam Tamil
literature.[154]
* Around 500 AD, references to the Brahmin
settlements begin to appear.[155]
* The Brahmins introduce the Varna system
around the 8th century AD, though with
limited success.[156]
* The Brahmins, upon settling in the Tamil
country, had become vegetarians.[157]
* While the Brahmins were hierarchy
conscious, the other Tamil poets were
egalitarian.[158]
* The Bhakti movement was a rebellion
against the Vedic religion; the Bhakti
saints opposed the Vedic religion, the
Brahmins and the Varna system; the
Brahmins were opposed to the Bhakti
tradition.[159]

Even though she offers no evidences for
any of these phenomenal claims, for
several decades, the Dravidianists have
eagerly lapped up such nonsense to
advocate hatred. The likes of the
unscrupulous E. V. Ramaswami Naicker have
often made calls to take Tamilnadu back to
the old times when the society was
supposedly egalitarian, when there was
supposedly no Brahmin, nor was there any
of the appendages like the Varna system
that the Brahmin supposedly brought in.

There are numerous references to the Varna
system in the Sangam literature. The four
Varnas were the norm as well as the ideal.
One of the songs says[160] that even
though a person may belong to a lower
Varna among the four, if he were to
acquire knowledge, then those born of the
higher Varnas would respect him. Another
song[161] says that even if those of
higher birth fell into poverty, the
virtues of their higher birth wouldn't
desert them, while yet another says that
one's character could only be commensurate
with what is befitting the Varna into
which he is born.[162] The oldest extant
Tamil grammatical treatise prescribes
under what circumstances men of each Varna
can go on sabbatical or separation. It
says that a Brahmin can go away for
learning the Vedas or on diplomacy,[163] a
king for matters of war and intrigue
[164], and then adds that for the sake of
establishing dharma and theistic life, men
of all the four Varnas can separate [from
their homes].[165] Elsewhere, the same
book also lists what the duties of each of
the four Varnas have traditionally been.
It says that a Brahmin wears the sacred
thread, carries the kamandala and uses the
tortoise shaped wooden plank as his seat
[for studying the scriptures],[166] and he
can also be a minister or the king.[167] A
Kshatriya wears the sacred thread, uses
the seat for reading the scriptures, and
rules over the land,[168] but there is no
mention that he ever carried the
kamandala. A Vaishya trades[169] and a
Shudra works in the agricultural
field.[170]

Tiruvalluvar categorically stated that
while morality is the virtue of higher
birth, immorality is to be found among
those born low.[171] The fact that he
considered virtue a birth based
inheritance is confirmed in the very next
verse[172] where he argues that a Brahmin
who forgets the Vedas could learn them
again, but should he ever cease to be
moral, the virtue of his high birth is
lost forever. He argues[173] that the mind
that mistakes the unreal for the real is a
sign of low birth. Elsewhere,[174] he
argues that the scruples of a king are
measured against his ability to safeguard
the Vedic learning of the Brahmins.

In another Sangam song, we get glimpses,
so as to speak figuratively, of the life
in a Brahmin household, The poet says that
having listened to the recital of the
Vedic hymns even the parrot that the
Brahmins keep, repeats those mantras![175]
Thapar's claim regards the appearance of
the Brahmin settlements by the 5th century
AD would imply that that there were no
Brahmins in the Tamil country before that.
If that were really the case, then what do
we do with the following references [among
several others], all of which from a
period anterior to the one she proposes?

* Silappadikaram says that when Madurai
burned because of the curse of Kannagi,
the quarters where each Varna resided were
destroyed except the ones where the
Brahmins lived.[176]
* The king, while laying siege to an enemy
town, should first ensure that the
Brahmins residing there move away to a
safer place.[177]
* A warrior in the barracks gets nostalgic
about his lover, as he looks at the
budding flowers at dawn, the appearance of
which, he says, look like a conch shell
that a Brahmin, who has taken to
professions [in this case conch shell
cutting and bangle making] other than the
Vedic sacrifice, has left behind, after
sawing portions off for making
bangles.[178]
* A Jaina saint considers it inauspicious
when the Brahmins give up chanting of the
Vedas and take to other professions. In
Silappadikaram, the newly married Kovalan
and Kannagi are dissuaded from entering a
settlement where the Brahmins musicians
reside.[179]
* A woman suspects her man of infidelity,
because of the new fragrance on his body,
which she believes he acquired from a
prostitute. He protests that he is
innocent, takes a vow on the Brahmins
[because they were revered in the society]
and pleads that the fragrance on his body
is due to his traversing the path full of
groves where the wafting breeze carried
the fragrance of the flowers that grew
there![180]
* The grateful Brahmin poet has not
forgotten his patron king; after the
latter dies, he brings the king's
daughters under his tutelage, declares
them as his own, and proposes to an
illustrious king who, the poet says, is
the forty ninth scion of the dynasty that
ruled Dwaraka once, that he marry
them.[181] His selfless gratitude must
have been widely known during the Sangam
age, for another poet praises[182] him as
the Brahmin without a blemish in his
character, and alludes to the incident the
previously quoted song talks about.
* The Vedic recitals and yajnas of the
dvijas.[183]
* The dakshina a king offers the
sacrificing Brahmins who are well versed
in the Vedas.[184]
* The delicious vegetarian cuisine that a
Panan[185] is served while he visits a
Brahmin Household.[186]

There is no evidence at all that the
Brahmins in the Tamil country ever ate
meat. The song quoted above indicates that
they were vegetarians. Likewise, her claim
that the Bhakti saints had opposed the
Varna system, the Brahmins and the Vedic
religion, is belied by what the saints
themselves have written. The great Saiva
saint Appar, one of the Nayanmars, praises
Siva[187] as the Lord of the Vedas. He
declares that he was a Jaina ascetic once,
during which time he was distracted [from
pursuing the truth].[188] Sambantar,
another great Saiva saint has written at
length about the greatness of the Vedic
sacrifices, and has sharp words for those
[the reference here is to the Jainas and
the other heterodox sects] that oppose the
Vedic sacrifices.[189] Her claim that the
Brahmins opposed the Bhakti tradition is
belied by the very words of another great
Saivite saint Tirumular who sings.[190]

Of crystal made is the Linga, the Brahmins
worship
Of gold, the Kings worship
Of emerald, the Vaishyas worship
Of stone is the Linga, the Shudras worship

In several songs, Siva is called The
Brahmin.[191] This is clearly indicative
of the fact that the Brahmins, due to
their austerity and scruples, to which we
have allusions, were highly respected. The
Brahmin woman is described as very chaste
and shy, and is compared to the Northern
star Arundhati,[192] while another song
says[193] that a Brahmin should never
accept anything unless he earns it [by
reciting the mantras or performing one of
the duties prescribed to him]. Even
between the Saivite and the Vaishnavite
saints of the great Bhakti tradition,
there was many a Brahmin.[194] All of
this, in our historian's interpretation,
translates into antipathy between the
Bhakti tradition on the one hand, and the
Brahmins, the Vedas and the Varna system
on the other!

Thapar makes claims about the Tamil Bhakti
tradition that would startle its
traditional practitioners. She claims that
the Bhakti saints tried to establish a
parallel between the God and the
king![195] She then portrays the entire
Bhakti movement as something that actually
strengthened the institution of the king.
Even a cursory knowledge of the Bhakti
hymns would have told our author that the
Bhakti saints didn't praise the king at
all, let alone present him as something
divine. One of the Vaishnavite Bhakti
saints, Poigai Azhwar, emphatically
sings[196] that he wouldn't praise anyone
but Vishnu.

Elsewhere,[197] Thapar claims that
Tirukkural is a post-Sangam literature.
One doesn't know how the author arrives at
such fanciful claims. Barring a few
pieces, it is difficult to date the Sangam
literature with any accuracy. At best we
can present a range of dates for their
composition. In any case, her claim is
false. A Sangam song[198] makes an
unmistakable reference to Kural 110, while
another[199] carries a paraphrase of Kural
134. This must tell any reader that the
anthologies had a chronological overlap.
She nonchalantly declares that most of the
Sangam poetry describes raids, plunder and
bride capturing![200] One doesn't know
from where she gets this idea. This is not
only contrary to the facts, but also
insulting to the ancient Tamil ethos that
considered it a virtue not to harm women,
let alone "capturing" them as brides.

Conclusion

Now, the reader may be wondering why the
Leftist historians take such a rabid
anti-Hindu and anti-India position, often
negating evidences while formulating their
false notions of India's history. Part of
the malice was inherited from the times of
Macaulay, whose system of education was
designed to destroy any reasonable pride
the Hindus may derive from their past.
This was coupled with the missionary zeal
that aimed at undermining the Hindu
religious belief, and thus help
proselytize the Hindus to Christianity.
Most importantly, most of the Leftist
historians, as Dilip Chakrabarti points
out,[201] hail from very affluent, urban,
westernized, upper caste Hindu families.
They have never been associated with the
traditions that make Hinduism. They have
rarely ever had a first hand experience of
rural Indian life, where the Indian
culture is nourished. Since most of them
lack even a cursory knowledge of India's
classical languages, and very little
fieldwork or traditional learning to their
credit, they are forced to fall back upon
the 19th century Euro centric
interpretations of India's culture.

As Chakrabarty again correctly points out,
these historians also have a lot to gain
materially by politicizing history. The
material rewards come in the form of
fellowships, lecture tours or even a
faculty position abroad, if one is willing
to sell oneself to propagating the Euro
centric notions. The association of the
Leftist historians with the Congress party
over the past 3 decades is well known. The
Congress party has been quite infamous in
forging a vote bank of the Muslims, the
Harijans and the upper caste Hindus, in
furthering dynastic rule. So, it is only
inevitable that the Leftist historians,
who have been cozying up to the Congress
party, should attempt to whitewash the
uncomfortable aspects of the Islamic
history, while at the same time
denigrating Hinduism.

The prospect of unity among the Hindus
creates panic amidst these Leftist
historians and their allies, the
fundamentalist Islamic organizations. An
objective assessment of India's past,
based only on factual evidences and not
some conjured up theories, not only
damages the prospects of the Marxist
historians in landing rewarding positions
abroad, but also undermines their
political careers. As a result, they
resort to negation of history,
politicizing the academia and invention of
lies, to keep alive their hitherto
fiercely defended theories, which
themselves manifested out of their
ignorance of the primary sources that hold
the key to India's past.

An objective reader, after reading the
book under review, would be most disturbed
to see the eulogy that graces the cover of
the book.[202] For an informed reader this
shouldn't come as a surprise, because a
recent book that Metcalf has
authored[203], starts with the Islamic
rule in India! The long history of India,
the contributions of the Hindus, Buddhists
and Jainas in the period anterior to the
Islamic rule, have all been simply
ignored.

Acknowledgement

Vishal Agarwal - for his valuable inputs
especially regards the migration mentioned
in the Sutra texts, additional data on the
fire altars, and his incisive feedback.

Yvette Rosser, PhD - for her valuable
editorial suggestions, and helping
moderate my style of language [which I am
not sure I complied fully with!].








[1] Romila Thapar, Early India, University
of California Press ISBN 0-520-23899-0
cloth [here after referred to as EI] pp.
16

[2] BJP - Bharatiya Janata Party, the
largest constituent of India's multi-party
National Democratic Alliance [NDA].

[3] Sangh Parivar - All socio-political
organizations sharing the same Hindutva
ideology.

[4] Jagmohan, Hinduism and Hindutva: What
Supreme Court says?, The Hindustan Times,
January 8, 1996. Available at:
http://www.hvk.org/articles/0103/352.html.
Paraphrase: The Supreme Court of India has
defined Hindutva as a way of life based on
traditional practices from every walk of
life, and has declared that it can't be
equated with sectarian religious practices
alone. Hindutva is also the ideology of a
cohesive group of social and political
organizations in India that are concerned
about safeguarding Indian traditions and
providing a sense of common identity to
all Indians, irrespective of their
religious affiliations. The Hindutva
organizations are opposed to
discrimination based on one's religious
affiliation that has been the bane of
Nehruvian India. It is to be noted that
India has separate civil laws based on the
Islamic Sharia't for the Muslims, even
allowing such obscurantist practices as
polygamy and denial of alimony to the
divorced Muslim destitute women.

[5] EI pp. 14

[6] AIT - Aryan Invasion Theory, which
proposes that the Aryans originated
outside of India and invaded India. There
is no unanimity on their point of origin
or their date of entry into India, nor is
there any archeological evidence for any
such invasion, though the theory itself
has become mainstream due to mere
repetition.

[7] A. C. Das, Rig Vedic India [1920] had
proposed a greater antiquity and Indian
home for the Vedas, presenting geological
and geographical evidences. Instead of
objectively reviewing the evidences, A. B.
Keith dismissed the work in the following
words [letter quoted Ibid pp. 47]: "...The
fact that for many generations no one has
felt the difficulties you have raised and
most of them do not appreciate them as and
argument of considerable weight against
their validity."

[8] B. B. Lal, India 1947 - 1997: New
Light on the Indus Civilization

J. M. Kenoyer, Ancient Cities of the Indus
Valley Civilization.

[9] JNU - Jawaharlal Nehru University, New
Delhi, where Thapar taught, is the bastion
of Marxism. A handful of historians,
Thapar included, had colluded for well
over 4 decades to present a distorted
version of India's history. This cabal had
also indulged in several financial
irregularities, as Arun Shourie
demonstrated in his book Eminent
Historians: Their Technology, their Line,
their Fraud. Though adept at politicking,
these historians often lacked knowledge of
India's Classical languages [Appointment
of Professor Romila Thapar to the Kluge
Chair at the Library of Congress,
Washington, D.C.
An Open Letter of Protest
http://www.bharatvani.org/klugethapar.html
see "A. Prof. Thapar's Lack of Required
Skills"] and shied away from public
debates over their methods of history
writing. On one occasion, an associate of
Thapar, K. M. Shrimali, made the cardinal
error of appearing on a television debate.
Much to the chagrin of the Marxist
historians, he was shown completely
lacking in knowledge of the Vedas and
other old Sanskrit texts, which are key to
understanding India's past. It was indeed
a pathetic day for the Marxist historians,
as one of their ilks couldn't present a
line of evidence for the false claims
regards beef eating in ancient India that
he made, and was exposed in the full view
of the television audience. A member of
the audience even brought forth copies of
the Vedas and read verses from the Vedas
condemning beef eating, thus falsifying
the Marxist claim. The audience demanded
that K. M. Shrimali point to the verses to
substantiate his claims. The Marxist
historian couldn't. [Ibid pp. 40 - 43].
These Marxist historians have perfected
suppressio veri suggestio falsi into an
art!

[10] IVC/SSC - Indus Valley Civilization
or Sarasvati Sindhu Civilization.

[11] EI pp. 78

[12] Kalibangan, Banawali, Lothal,
Surkotada, Rakhigarhi and Dholavira were
some of the major urban centers on the
Sarasvati side of the civilization, while
Harappa and Mohenjo-daro were on the Indus
side.

[13] B. B. Lal, India 1947 - 1997: New
Light on the Indus Civilization, pp. 57,
for details regarding the oldest
agricultural field in the world unearthed
at Kalibangan.

[14] Ibid pp. 19

[15] Ibid pp. 21

[16] Ibid pp. 67, for a discussion on
Lothal, "The Earliest Dockyard Known To
Humanity". This site served as the conduit
for sea trade. The boats plied through a
river that connected the dockyard to the
Sabarmati, which in turn flowed into the
Arabian Sea.

[17] Ibid pp. 40

[18] A total of 2600 sites have been
identified so far, a large number of them
on the Sarasvati plains.

[19] Gregory L. Possehl, Indus Age, the
Beginnings, pp. 53

[20] Jane R. McIntosh, A Peaceful Realm -
The Rise and Fall of the Indus
Civilization, pp. 24

[21] Ibid pp. 88 - 89

[22] Ibid pp. 104

[23] EI pp. 69

[24] AMT - Aryan Migration Theory is the
new avatar of AIT. Ever since
archeological and other evidences
discounted the probability of AIT, its
dogmatic adherents like Thapar have
switched over to propounding AMT. As per
this theory, the Aryans still came from
outside, but in trickles, without leaving
any archeological trace. Now with AMT, it
is not even necessary to present any
archeological evidence, as pastoral
immigrants supposedly leave no traces. So,
the hypothesis itself becomes proof too!

[25] EI pp. 88

[26] Kot Diji - An IVC/SSC settlement from
the North West.

[27] J. G. Shaffer, The Indus Valley,
Baluchistan and Helmand Traditions:
Neolithic Through Bronze Age for a
discussion on this.

[28] J. M. Kenoyer, Ancient Cities of the
Indus Valley Civilization, pp. 40

[29] B. B. Lal, India 1947 - 1997: New
Light on the Indus Civilization, pp. 113 -
115 for dating.

[30] There could have been intentional
non-hostile destruction too. Burning
settlements to get rid of pestilence was a
known practice.

[31] J. M. Kenoyer, Ancient Cities of the
Indus Valley Civilization, pp. 42

[32] EI pp. 85

[33] B. B. Lal, India 1947 - 1997: New
Light on the Indus Civilization, pp. 109 -
113.

[34] Ibid pp. 111 quoting Sandor Bokonyi:
"Through a thorough study of the equid
remains of the pre-historic settlement of
Surkotada, Kachcha, excavated under the
direction of Dr. J. P. Joshi, I can state
the following: 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].
Since no wild horses lived in India in
post-Pleistocene times, the domestic
nature of the Surkotada horses is
undoubtful. This is also supported by an
inter-maxilla fragment whose incisor tooth
shows clear signs of crib biting, a bad
habit only existing among domestic horses
which are not extensively used for war."

[35] Ibid pp. 112

[36] Dated 1800 BCE - 800 BCE, J. M.
Kenoyer, Ancient Cities of the Indus
Valley Civilization, pp. 177

[37] BMAC - Bactria Margiana Archeological
Complex.

[38] Asva - Horse, when literally
translated, but also means [spiritual]
energy in the metaphoric constructs of the
Rg Veda.

[39] Sri Aurobindo, The Secret of the
Veda, pp. 44

[40] Go - Cow, when literally translated,
but also means [accompanying] light or
knowledge in the metaphoric constructs of
the Rg Veda.

[41] Gomati - Accompanied by [the] light
[of knowledge].

[42] Asvavati - The manifestation of
knowledge in the mind of the seer as
spiritual energy.

[43] Rig Veda 1:164:45

[44] EI pp. 85

[45] B. B. Lal, India 1947 - 1997: New
Light on the Indus Civilization, pp. 92 -
99

[46] Parsis - Followers of Zoroastrianism.
They fled Persia under Islamic persecution
and took refuge in India, which welcomed
and embraced them with open arms, just as
it had embraced the Jews and the
Christians at an earlier time. The Avesta
of the Parsis has some similarities with
the Vedic texts. Since the Parsis are fire
worshippers, fire altars were a feature in
their worship too, though these altars
were structurally different from the
Vedic.

[47] V. H. Sonawane and R. N. Mehta, Vagad
- A Rural Harappan Settlement in Gujarat:
Man and Environment, Vol. IX, pp. 38 - 44

[48] Jane R. McIntosh, A Peaceful Realm -
The Rise and Fall of the Indus
Civilization, pp. 121

[49] EI pp. 107, pp. 113.

[50] David Frawley, A Reply To Michael
Witzel's Article "A Maritime Rigveda? How
not to read the Ancient Texts", The Hindu,
25th June 2002 available at:
http://www.bharatvani.org/davidfrawley/Rep
lytoWitzel.html.

[51] Rig Veda 10:95

Satapatha Brahmana [Madhyandina] 11:5:1:1

Baudhayana Srautasutra 18:44 - 45

Vadhula Anvakhyana 1:1:2

[52] Willem Caland, Eene Nieuwe Versie van
de Urvasi-Mythe. Album-Kern, Opstellen
Geschreven Ter Eere van Dr. H. Kern, pp.
57 - 60. Translated from the original
Dutch by Koenraad Elst, and compiled by
Vishal Agarwal.

[53] Chintamani Ganesh Kashikar,
Baudhayana Srautasutra [Ed., with an
English translation, 3 volumes, volume
III, pp. 1235: "Ayu moved towards the
east. Kuru - Pancala and Kasi - Videha
were his regions. This is the realm of
Ayu. Amavasu proceeded towards the west.
The Gandharis, Sparsus and Arattas were
his regions. This is the realm of
Amavasu."

D. S. Triveda, The Original home of the
Aryans, ABORI volume XX, pp. 49 - 68: "The
Kalpasutra asserts that Pururavas had two
sons by Urvasi - Ayus and Amavasu. Ayu
went eastwards and founded Kuru - Pancala
and Kasi - Videha nations, while Amavasu
went westwards and founded Gandhara,
Sprsava and Aratta."

[54] Baudhayana Dharmasutra 1:1:2:10

[55] Kalakavana is modern day Allahabad.

[56] Adarsana - the spot where the
Sarasvati disappears in the desert

[57] Baudhayana Dharmasutra 1:1:2:11

[58] Ibid 1:1:2:14

[59] Ibid 1:1:12:15

[60] Baudhayana Srautasutra 18:13

[61] EI pp. 107

[62] J. P. Mallory, In Search of the Indo
Europeans, pp. 37: The Mittani Treaty was
signed between the
Hittites and the Mittani. The king of the
latter invokes both the Hurrian Gods as
well as a few others whose names are
cognate with that of the Vedic deities
Mitra, Indra, Varuna and Nasatya.

The Kikkuli Horse training manual, which
goes by the name of its Mittani author, is
a Hittite text on horse training and
chariotry. It deploys numerals that are
cognate with the Indic numerals eka, tri,
pancha, sapta and nava.

A Hurrian text from Yorgan Tepe employs a
few words cognate with those in Indo-Aryan
to describe the color of the horses -
babhru, palita and pingala.

[63] IA - Indo Aryan.

[64] Around 250 BCE, when Ashoka ruled.

[65] Kshatriyas - Kings and warriors among
the Aryans.

[66] J. P. Mallory, In Search of the Indo
Europeans, pp. 38

[67] EI pp. 114

[68] EI pp. 106. Here, Thapar claims that
IA incorporated elements of Dravidian and
Munda and states that these languages
[what she means is language families!]
were known only to India. This naturally
means that the Dravidians, in her opinion,
were the original residents, and the
Aryans, the invaders. Other Marxist
historians like Irfan Habib have been more
vocal about the Dravidian authorship of
IVC/SSC, while Thapar just alludes to it.

[69] R. Thapar, The Aryan Question
Revisited, hosted by the web page of the
Academic Staff College, JNU:
http://members.tripod.com/adm/popup/roadma
p.shtml?member_name=ascjnu&path=aryan.html
&client_ip=198.81.26.45&ts=1058079070&ad_t
ype=POPUP&category=teens&search_string=asc
+cjnu+cnew+delhi&id=b4758c95dc3e6602e7263a
d00a45ad05. Here Thapar argues: "There has
been a lot said about for example words
for flora and fauna, animals particularly.
Why is it that the elephant is called not
by any other generic name but is called
"mrga hastin", "the animal with a hand".
It is because these people [the Aryans]
were unfamiliar with elephants, and the
elephant is of course is a very familiar
animal from the Harappan seals."

R. Thapar, [Ed.] K. N. Panikkar, T. J.
Byres, U. Patnaik, The Making of History,
Essays Presented to Irfan Habib, "The Rg
Veda: Encapsulating Social Change", pp. 21

[70] Kamil Zvelebil, The Smile of Murugan
On Tamil Literature of South India, pp. 23
- 45, for a discussion on these dates. The
dates assigned by Zvelebil are reasonable,
though not always correct. There are other
estimates.

[71] Akananuru 211:7 - 8. Venkatam is
modern Tirupati.

[72] Ibid 27:6 - 8

[73] Purananuru 389:9 - 11

[74] Akananuru 276:9 - 10

[75] Mullaippattu 35

[76] Vatamozhi, literally meaning the
Northern language, was the term used to
refer to Sanskrit.

[77] Malaipatukatam 326 - 327

[78] EI pp. 114

[79] Rig Veda 1:140:2, 8:33:8, 10:40:4

[80] Ibid 10:106:6

[81] Ibid 9:57:3

[82] Arun Shourie, Eminent Historians:
Their Technology, their Line, their Fraud,
pp. 9. R. Thapar is closely associated
with the fundamentalist and highly
obscurantist Sunni Waqf Board, which is
opposed to granting alimony to destitute
Muslim women, who have been arbitrarily
divorced by their husbands. In the highly
politicized Ayodhya case, R. Thapar
appeared as witness number 66 on behalf of
the Waqf Board.

[83] R. Thapar, Times of India, October 2,
1986. In her letter, R. Thapar claimed
that the Hindus had destroyed the Buddhist
and the Jaina monuments. Quoted:
http://www.bharatvani.org/books/htemples2/
app4.htm

[84] Arun Shourie, Eminent Historians:
Their Technology, their Line, their Fraud,
pp. 99.

[85] Sita Ram Goel, Hindu Temples: What
Happened to them? Volume II, The Islamic
Evidence, Appendix 4, available at:
http://www.bharatvani.org/books/htemples2/
app4.htm.
[86] RNI - Resident Non-Indians, a term
coined by Rajeev Srinivasan, a columnist
with Rediff.com, Patriot Games and
resident non-Indians
http://www.rediff.com/news/2003/may/22raje
ev.htm. This refers to those born in India
and of Indian descent, but hate its
culture and spare no attempt to distance
themselves from the same or denigrate it
through means often foul. Brown on the
outside, but white within [vicariously
fantasizing themselves to be the colonial
masters whom they willingly serve], they
are also called coconuts!

[87] Light of Truth Award for Indians,
http://headlines.sify.com/1546news3.html?h
eadline=Richard%7EGere%27s%7E%27Light%7Eof
%7ETruth%27%7Eaward%7Efor%7Eindians.
Richard Gere said, "No nation has helped
the Tibetans more than India. Its
contribution remains unparalleled as the
displaced people have not only been able
to rebuild their monastic institutions but
have also prospered materially." One may
note that the Tibetans came to India as
refugees, after the Communist China
invaded Tibet, and created a blood bath.
It is worth noting that the Marxist
historians of India have no harsh words
for such acts of genocide perpetuated by
the Communists.

[88] EI pp. 102, pp. 277

[89] EI pp. 103 - 104

[90] EI pp. 160, pp. 217

[91] EI pp. 182

[92] EI pp. 223

[93] EI pp. 282

[94] Arun Shourie, Eminent Historians:
Their Technology, their Line, their Fraud,
"Maybe perhaps, probably mostly ....
Therefore", pp.157 - 177, for an excellent
deconstruction of similar Marxist
chicanery in D. N. Jha, Ancient India, An
Introductory Outline

[95] Purananuru 2:13 - 16

[96] Bharatam Padiya Peruntevanar,
Peruntevanar who translated the
Mahabharata, wrote the invocation hymns to
a few Sangam anthologies such as
Akananuru, Purananuru, Kuruntokai,
Narrinai and Ainkurunuru. His translation
of the Mahabharata has not come down to
us, though he has attained fame for that.

[97] Purananuru 378:16 - 21

[98] Kishkinda Kanda, Canto 6 depicts this
scene differently. Here, Sugriva presents
the jewelry tied in a scarf to Rama, and
tells Him that Sita had dropped them. The
narration of the monkeys wearing that
jewelry is not found in the original.

[99] Akananuru 70:15

[100] Koti, Dhanushkoti, a location in
Southern coastal Tamilnadu.

[101] Akananuru 251:5, 265:4 - 6

K. A. Nilakanta Sastri, Age of the Nandas
and Mauryas, pp. 12, draws our attention
to the immense wealth of the Nandas that
Xenophon alludes to. So, it is reasonable
to assume that the Tamil poets were
referring to a tradition that has its
roots in history.

[102] Akananuru 69:10 talks of the roads
that the Mauryas had laid for their
chariots to ply.

Ibid 281:8 talks of the expedition of the
Mauryas to conquer the South.

Purananuru 175:6

[103] Thapar carefully uses the terms
legend and tradition, while referring to
this Christian myth, regardless the fact
that this tradition is a 14th century AD
Portuguese concoction, while any Hindu
tradition, however well attested
literarily, is invariably called a myth.

See, Ishwar Sharan, The Myth of Saint
Thomas and the Mylapore Shiva Temple,
available at http://hamsa.org/index.htm,
for a very systematic and thoroughly
referenced deconstruction of the myth of
St. Thomas.

[104] EI pp. 279

[105] An Islamic myth, as found in the
Fath al Bari, a collection of Hadiths. As
per this myth, Prophet Mohammad started
from Mecca, traveled to Jerusalem and then
to the seven heavens where he had
auditions with the previous prophets, all
in the course of a night!

[106] Mullaippattu 66

[107] EI pp. 387

[108] EI pp. 234

[109] Akananuru 211:7 - 8. Venkatam is
modern Tirupati.

Panamparanar, Tolkappiyam, Invocatory
hymn, states that the land where Tamil was
spoken extended between Tirupati and
Kumari.

[110] EI pp. 401

[111] EI pp. 356

[112] D. N. Jha, Ancient India, An
Introductory Outline, pp. 66

[113] EI pp. 404

[114] D. N. Jha, Ancient India, An
Introductory Outline, pp. 115 - 116

[115] EI pp. 280 - 282

[116] Silappadikaram, Lay of the Anklet is
one of the 5 epics from the Tamil country.

[117] EI pp. 345

[118] V. R. R. Dikshitar, The
Silappadikaram

[119] Ibid Appendices I and II

[120] V. R. R. Dikshitar, The
Silappadikaram pp. 350 - 353

[121] Tolkappiyam, Poruladikaram 186. A
superficial reading of this verse
misleadingly suggests that the ideal
education should be confined to 3 years of
studying. This is ridiculous because the
wise grammarian couldn't have been
restrictive about learning.
Nacchinarkiniyar, the medieval commentator
of the grammatical treatise, gave the more
meaningful interpretation that the
reference is to the realization as
expounded in the Vedanta.

[122] V. R. R. Dikshitar, The
Silappadikaram pp. 353 - 357

[123] Ibid pp. 14

[124] Ceremonial union of the wife with
her parted husband, in his funeral pyre or
in burial.

[125] EI pp. 304

[126] J. P. Mallory, In Search of the Indo
Europeans, pp. 93

[127] Ibid pp. 184

[128] H. L. Jones, The Geography of
Strabo, 15:1:30, 62

[129] Purananuru 246

[130] Ibid 256

[131] Tolkappiyam, Poruladhikaram 77

[132] N. Subrahmanian, Sangam Polity, pp.
300. He draws the attention of the readers
to Kural 56, where the sage delineates the
duties of the wife towards her husband and
the need for her to keep her honor. He
almost repeats the same message, a rarity
in his pithy expression, in the next
couplet where he says that a prison is of
no avail if a woman can't keep her honor.
Subramanian argues that this is an
allusion to the reality that a woman
choosing to lead the spartan life of a
widow has none but herself to guard her.
In the very next couplet, the sage says
that the woman who earns the opportunity
of serving [following] her husband shall
earn the blessings of the gods of the
heaven. The author says that this could be
construed as the sage approving sati.

[133] Manimekhalai XVI

[134] Purananuru 250

[135] S. K. Aiyangar, Beginnings, pp. 145

[136] Manusmriti 156 - 160

[137] Purananuru 280

[138] G. L. Hart, The Poems of Ancient
Tamil, Their Milieu and Their Sanskrit
Counterparts, pp. 115

[139] EI pp. 342

[140] Manusmriti 156 - 160

[141] K. A. N. Sastri, Foreign Notices of
South India, From Megasthenes to Ma Huan,
pp. 203

[142] EI pp. 285

[143] V. R. R. Dikshitar, Gupta Polity,
pp. 44 - 52, lists them: Abhinavabharati
XVIII, Sringaprakasha XII, Natyadarpana,
Natakalakshana Ratnakosha, and an Arabic
work Mujmalu-t-Tawarikh.

[144] Ibid pp. 44

[145] Ibid pp. 45

[146] Ibid pp. 47, Dikshitar says that
according to some other sources, this king
who fought Rama Gupta was Rudrasena II.
[147] Mujmalu-t-Tawarikh

[148] V. R. R. Dikshitar, Gupta Polity,
pp. 48

[149] Ibid pp. 46, quoting Ep. Ind.,
XVIII, pp. 235 ff

[150] Ibid pp. 46, quoting Ep. Ind., VII,
pp. 26 ff

[151] EI pp. 287

[152] V. R. R. Dikshitar, Gupta Polity,
pp. 58 - 65

[153] The terms Dravidian and Dravidianist
must be distinguished. The former is a
very benign term used in the geographical
sense. It was originally used to denote
the Brahmins of the South, the Pancha
Dravidas, just as those of the North were
called Pancha Gaudas. Later on, during the
medieval times, this term was used to
refer to all Southern people. In the mid
19th century, this term acquired a
linguistic connotation when Bishop
Caldwell classified the Southern languages
as belonging to the Dravidian family. It
was in the year 1886 AD that the upper
caste non-Brahmin students of the
University of Madras were told by a
British governor, Mountstuart Grant-Duff
that they belonged to the Dravidian race.
That was when this term acquired racial
connotation. The next 2 decades was spent
in searching for a pedigree for this
newborn race! V. Kanakasabhai Pillai
proposed a Tibetan Homeland of the
Dravidian race! This race was to include
only the upper caste non-Brahmins and was
to exclude the Brahmins, the Backwards and
the Harijans.

Blended with the divisive AIT, the notions
of the Dravidian race were used by E. V.
Ramaswami Naicker, to further his
political career by spewing hatred on the
Brahmins. He often thundered that he would
physically eliminate the Brahmins from
Tamilnadu. He declared that the Brahmins
were outsiders. To date, the Marxist
historians feed such hate campaigns. So,
the Dravidianists are those who usurped
the term Dravidian, gave it a political
and racist connotation, and used it for
their hate agenda against the original
Dravidians!

[154] EI pp. 232

[155] EI pp. 231

[156] EI pp. 337

[157] EI pp. 381

[158] EI pp. 356

[159] EI pp. 350, 351, 355, 356, 362

[160] Purananuru 183:8 - 10

[161] Pazhamozhi 21. Pazhamozhi means
adage. It seems even in the early medieval
times, this was considered a collection of
older proverbs.

[162] Ibid 310

[163] Tolkappiyam Poruladhikaram 28

[164] Ibid 29

[165] Ibid 31

[166] Ibid 615

[167] Ibid 627

[168] Ibid 616

[169] Ibid 622

[170] Ibid 625

[171] Tirukkural 133

[172] Ibid 134

[173] Ibid 351

[174] Ibid 543

[175] Perumpanarruppadai 300 - 301

[176] Silappadikaram 22:109 - 114

[177] Purananuru 9:1

[178] Akananuru 24:1

[179] Silappadikaram 13:38 - 40.
Adiyarkkunallar, the medieval commentator,
says that even though music itself
originated from Sama Veda, by the time of
the epic in discussion, the orthodox
society considered it a deviation on the
path of the Brahmins if they turned away
from Vaidiha lifestyle; and hence the
notion of such musician Brahmins having
been inauspicious.


[180] Paripadal 8:51 - 55

[181] Purananuru 201:6 - 10

[182] Ibid 126:11 - 13

[183] Ibid 367:12 - 13

[184] Patirruppattu 64:3 - 5

[185] Panans were a jati of people who
played on their lute.

[186] Perumpanarruppadai 301 - 310

[187] Appar, Tevaram, "4th Tirumurai",
"Namacchivayat Tiruppatigam"

[188] Appar, Tevaram, "4th Tirumurai"

[189] Tirujnanasambantar, Tevaram, "Alavai
Patigam"

[190] Tirumantiram 1721

[191] Paripadal 5:22 - 30

[192] Perumpanarruppadai 302 - 304

[193] Inna Narpatu 1 - 3

[194] For example, Sambantar, Sundarar,
Manickavasagar, Periyazhwar etc. were
Brahmins.

Kamil Zvelebil, The Smile of Murugan On
Tamil Literature of South India, pp. 192
estimates that thirty five percent of the
Bhakti saints were the Brahmins. Not
everyone agrees with this estimate though;
but suffice to say that the Brahmins
constituted a large number of the Bhakti
saints.

[195] EI pp. 386

[196] Nalayira Divya Prabhantam, "1st
Tiruvandadi", 11, 63 - 64, 88, 94.

[197] EI pp. 231

[198] Purananuru 34

[199] Kurinchippattu 15 - 18

[200] EI pp. 231

[201] Dilip Chakrabarti, Colonial Indology
- Sociopolitics of the Ancient Indian
Past, pp. 2 - 8

[202] In the jacket of EI, Thomas R.
Metcalf, hails Thapar as one of the
world's most eminent historians of India!

[203] T. R. Metcalf and B. D. Metcalf, A
Concise History of India