Title: Analysis of
1Analysis of The ARYAN INVASION THEORY PART 2
2The Linguistic Arguments - Summary
- To sum up the linguistic arguments for the AIT
- 1. The eminent linguist Hock admits that the sum
total of the linguistic case for the AIT or
against the Indian homeland is not based on
hard-core linguistic evidence such as sound
changes, which can be subjected to critical and
definitive analysis, but only on arguments
based on plausibility and simplicity. - 2. But, as we saw, all the arguments in fact are
actually based on naïve and simplistic notions
rather than on simple logic, and examination
shows that they actually go against all
principles of plausibility. - 3. And in examining the AIT arguments, all kinds
of linguistic evidence is uncovered which in fact
makes a strong case for an Indian homeland 1.
the evidence of place and river names in north
India (especially in the greater Punjab region,
which is the Harappan as well as Vedic region),
2. the evidence of the one-way Uralic borrowings,
3. the evidence of Indian and Central Asian
animal names in the European IE languages, etc.
3The Linguistic Arguments - Summary
- 4. The linguistic case for the AIT (or against
the Indian homeland hypothesis) is completely
flawed and fallacious. Yet it is on the basis of
this fictitious case that all modern studies of
ancient Indian texts and traditions (as well as
all interpretations of ancient archaeological
finds in India) have been converted into an
exercise in trying to find evidence for the
external origins and likely arrival in the 2nd
millennium BC of Indo-Aryan languages
(Erdosy). - Erdosy, an AIT proponent, frankly admits We
reiterate that there is no indication in the
Rigveda of the Aryas memory of any ancestral
home, and by extension, of migrations. - 5. But the mesmerising effect of the fallacious
idea that the external origin of the IE Aryans is
linguistically well-established is so strong that
great scholars (notably Ambedkar and Pargiter)
who studied and examined these texts and
traditions in detail and stated categorically
that there was no evidence there at all for the
external origin of the Vedic people (Pargiter
even finds that the traditional evidence shows
that the IEs outside India emigrated from India)
have later capitulated to the idea that Aryans
must have come from outside since the linguists
say so. It is time to examine the texts with the
knowledge that this linguistic theory is flawed
and fallacious.
4The Textual Arguments
- The texts and traditions do not contain anything
explicit about an Aryan invasion, or about any
foreign ancestral origins. And, until the AIT was
formulated a little over two centuries ago,
no-one had even the shadow of any suspicion that
these texts could be assumed to have been written
by immigrants from outside India, much less that
there could be presumed to be data or clues to
that effect in the texts. - Hence, the Indologists concentrate on trying to
find indirect evidence from the texts, for the
external origin of the Aryans, in the form of - 1. Indirect references in the form of vague
reminiscences of foreign localities and tribes in
the Rigvedaand the migration of
river-nameswhich retain a vague memory of the
route followed (Witzel). - 2. Indirect references to non-IE natives of
India, and of conflicts between the incoming
Aryans and these native non-IEs. - 3. Evidence from the geographical data, within
the texts, showing a movement or expansion of the
Vedic Aryans from the west to the east within
India during the Vedic period. - However, an examination of the arguments in
respect of each of these three criteria proves
the exact opposite
51. Vague Memories of Western Areas
- The Factual Situation
- The explicit geography of the Rigveda is limited
to an area from the eastern areas of Afghanistan
in the west to the western areas of the Ganga and
the Yamuna in the east. In modern terms, it
covers the eastern and southern areas of
Afghanistan, the northern half of Pakistan (NWFP,
Punjab), the Indian Punjab and Haryana, and
adjoining parts of western Uttar Pradesh. - There is no reference to any area west of this,
in spite of all efforts to find at least one. - AIT Argument
- Witzel hopefully tries to go as far west as
possible by doubtfully referring to the rather
vague identification of Rigvedic rip- with the
Rhipaean mountains, the modern Urals
(Bongard-Levin 1980). - This poor imitation of P N Oaks identifications
can not be discussed seriously! Witzel can not
name a single other foreign locality. - In the absence of any other western geographical
name, the presence of two river-names in India,
Sarasvati and Sarayu, which are also names of two
other rivers found in Avestan Afghanistan, is
treated as evidence of the migration of river
names from west to east.
61. Vague Memories of Western Areas
- OIT Argument
- The only river names common to the Rigveda and
the Avesta are the Sarasvati (Avestan Haraquaiti)
and Sarayu (Avestan Haroyu). But - a) Linguistically, the words Haraquaiti and
Haroyu are derived from Sarasvati and Sarayu (by
change of sgth and svgtqu) and not vice versa. - b) There is no actual textual evidence to show
that the Vedic Aryans ever lived in Afghanistan,
but in the early parts of the Rigveda, the
Iranian tribes (Persians, Parthians, Pakhtoons
and Baluchis) are named as inhabitants of the
areas in the central parts of the Punjab on the
banks of the Parushni (Ravi). - c) The Rigveda can be divided into old and new
parts. And, as we will see, the entire Avesta is
contemporaneous with the new part of the Rigveda.
Further, even within the Rigveda, Sarasvati is
named most frequently in the oldest parts. And
even within the Avesta, the Haraquaiti is named
just once in a late part, the Vendidad. So the
Avestan reference is far, far posterior to the
Rigvedic references. - Conclusion
- All the evidence shows that the movement of the
names was not from west to east, but from east to
west
72. Non-Aryan natives in the Rigveda
- AIT Compulsion Old Elements in the Rigveda
- Witzel insists that the IAs, as described in the
RV, represent something definitely new in the
subcontinent, and that the obvious conclusion
should be that these new elements somehow came
from the outside (Witzel). But these new
elements mysteriously not only have no memories
at all of any extra-Indian homeland or migration,
or even of acquaintance with any extra-Indian
areas, but even the local rivers already (as we
saw, a circumstance unparalleled in world
history) all have well- established names in the
Vedic language of these new elements rather
than in the language of the alleged old
elements in the area. - Did these old elements somehow disappear
completely into thin air (along with their
river-names) the moment these new elements
stepped into the area? - Even so, some clue to their existence should
necessarily be found in the records of the new
elements - a total absence of non-IE old elements in the
Rigveda would be one more piece of evidence
sufficient in itself to disprove the AIT. - So hunting out references to non-IE old
elements, and to conflicts between old and
new elements, in the Rigveda is a matter of
life and death for the AIT!
82. Non-Aryan natives in the Rigveda
- Facts
- The Rigveda does not contain a single reference
to any person or tribe whose name can be
identified as Dravidian or Austric, the two main
non-IE families of languages in India (and the
two main old element suspects in Indological
speculations). Nor any other specific language
family found in India or found or recorded
anywhere in the world. Over two centuries of
frenzied efforts in this direction have drawn a
complete blank. - Except for a handful of vague, subjective and
non-specific suggestions - Macdonell suggests that two of the names of the
demons of darkness, Srbinda and Ilibisha, have
an un-Aryan appearance. - Kosambi suggests that the word Pani does not
seem to be Aryan. - Rahurkar suggests that some of the names of
rishis of the Kanva family (including
Ashva-suktin Go-suktin!) are strange and show
non-Aryan influence. - Witzel even finds Aryan kings with non-Aryan
names, Brbu and Balbutha.
92. Non-Aryan natives in the Rigveda
- AIT Arguments
- In over two centuries of speculations, different
scholars have discovered non-Aryans in every
category of names. - The words most consistently identified as
referring to the non-Aryan old elements are
dasa, dasyu, asura and pani. - Next in line are all names of demons destroyed by
Indra (Vrtra, Shushna, Shambara, Vala, Pipru,
Namuchi, Cumuri, Dhuni, Varcin, Ahishuva, Arbuda,
etc., etc.) - followed by all classes of supernatural beings
other than devas (danavas, daityas, rakshasas,
yakshas, gandharvas, kinnaras, pishachas, etc.). - Finally, on the criterion that all conflicts in
the Rigveda point to non-Aryans, scholars have
discovered non-Aryans even among - The Vedic tribes (including Ikshvakus, Purus,
Anus, Druhyus, Yadus and Turvashas), - The Vedic gods (including Varuna, Mitra, Rudra,
Ushas, Surya, Pushan, Savitr, Vishnu, even Indra
from the paternal side!), - The Vedic rishis (Kanvas, Agastyas, Vasishthas,
Bhrgus, even all rishis except the Vishvamitras)
102. Non-Aryan natives in the Rigveda
- Flaws
- This desperate non-Aryan-hunting, besides
producing absurd results, is also a clear
admission of total failure to locate any genuine
non-IEs in the Rigveda - a) Non-Aryan can only and only refer to non-IE
in the linguistic sense, but, except for a
handful of names cited, which do not have clear
IE or Sanskrit etymologies (but no known non-IE
ones either), all the names identified as
non-Aryan have clear and indisputable IE
etymologies. - b) Most of the names identified as non-Aryans
encountered by the Aryans inside India, are found
in the languages and myths of Iran and Europe to
note just the four main ones, dasa, dasyu and
asura in Iranian (dasa and asura in the Uralic
languages as well), asura and pani in Germanic,
and pani in Greek. - c) All the conflicts in the Rigveda, which have
been identified as conflicts between Aryans and
non-Aryans, are nothing but nature myths
pertaining to mythical conflicts between the
forces of nature, mainly the thunder god versus
the demons who prevent rainfall or the demons who
hide the rays of the dawn and these myths are
found in the IE mythologies outside India with
related names and similar mythological details.
113. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- AIT Argument
- The geographical area of the Rigveda extends from
eastern Afghanistan in the west, to western Uttar
Pradesh in the east. - Within this area, the geographical data in the
Rigveda, as per the AIT, shows that the Aryan
expansion was from west to east first the Aryans
entered India from the northwest, then they
settled down in the Saptasindhu region (the land
of the seven rivers the Indus in the west, the
Sarasvati in the east, and the five rivers of
Punjab in the middle) where they composed the
Rigveda, and then later they expanded eastwards. - The logic behind postulating a west to east
movement within the geographical area of the
Rigveda is that the Rigveda shows close
familiarity with the western areas, referring
frequently to many small rivers of Afghanistan
which flow into the Indus from the west but in
the east, it only refers once or twice to the two
westernmost rivers of interior India, the Ganga
and Yamuna. - Is this logic right? Or rather, is this the
correct interpretation of the data?
123. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- Geographical divisions of the Rigveda
- To examine the direction of expansion, it is
necessary to first understand the three regions
into which the Rigvedic area can be divided from
west to east - 1. The western region the areas to the west of
the Indus (i.e. NWFP, and eastern Afghanistan). - 2. The central region the areas between the
Indus and the Sarasvati (i.e. the greater
Punjab). - 3. The eastern region the areas to the east of
the Sarasvati (i.e. Haryana, western Uttar
Pradesh). - The western and eastern rivers in the Rigveda
- Western rivers
- Trshtama, Susartu, Anitabha, Rasa, Shvetya,
Kubha, Krumu, Gomati, Sarayu, Mehatnu,
Shvetyavari, Suvastu, Gauri, Sindhu (Indus),
Sushoma, Arjikiya. - Eastern rivers
- Sarasvati, Drshadvati/Hariyupiya/Yavyavati,
Apaya, Ashmanvati, Amshumati, Yamuna, Ganga,
Jahnavi.
133. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- It is also necessary to understand the internal
chronology of the Rigveda (i.e. which parts of
the text are old and which are new) - Chronological Divisions of the Rigveda
- The Rigveda itself consists of ten books
(mandalas) composed at various times. On the
basis of stage of language and principles of
arrangement of the hymns, the western scholars
have classified them chronologically as follows - The Rigveda was composed and assembled in the
following stages, beginning at the centre with
books 2-7 (Witzel). These are called the family
books. - At a later stage, Books 1 and 8 were
addedthen book 9 was addedLastly the
heterogenous material in Book 10 was appended to
the entire collection (Proferes). These are
called the non-family books. - Of the family books, the connections of Book 5
is with Books 1 and 8 and not with the other
clan books (2-4, 6-7) (Proferes). - So we get the following three chronological
categories of books as per the western scholars
Old books 2-4, 6-7. Middle book 5. New books
1, 8-10. - If the books are further arranged chronologically
within each group, we get the following order - Earlier Old books 6, 3, 7.
- Later Old books 4, 2.
- Earlier New book 5.
- Later New books 1, 8, 9, 10.
143. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- Geographical Facts (Rivers)
- The following is the distribution of the eastern
rivers - The eastern rivers
- Three Earlier Old books
- VI.27.5,6 45.31 49.7 50.12 52.6
61.1-7,10-11, 13-14. - III.4.8 23.4 54.13 58.6.
- VII.2.8 9.5 18.19 35.11 36.6 39.5 40.3
95.1-2,4-6 96.1,3-6. - Two Later Old books
- II.1.11 3.8 30.8 32.8 41.16-18.
- One Earlier New book
- V.5.8 42.12 43.11 46.2 52.17.
- Four Later New books
- I.3.10-12 13.9 89.3 116.19 142.9 164.49,52
188.8. - VIII.21.17,18 38.10 54.4 96.13.
- IX.5.8 67.32 81.4.
- X.17.7-9 30.12 53.8 64.9 65.1,13 66.5 75.5
110.8 131.5 141.5 184.2.
153. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- Contrast this with the distribution of the
western rivers - The western rivers
- Three Earlier Old books
- NONE.
- Two Later Old books
- IV.30.12,18 43.6 54.6 55.3.
- One Earlier New book
- V.41.15 53.9.
- Four Later New books
- I.44.12 83.1 112.12 122.6 126.1 164.4 186.5
a praise of the Indus river in a refrain
repeated in the last verse of 19 hymns
I.94-96,98,100-103,105-115. - VIII.7.29 12.3 19.37 20.24-25 24.30 25.14
26.18 64.11 72.7,13. - IX.41.6 65.23 97.58.
- X.64.9 65.13 66.11 75.1,3-9 108.1-2 121.4.
163. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- Conclusion
- A comparison of the references to the eastern and
the western rivers in the Rigveda shows that the
movement of the Vedic Aryans during the Rigvedic
period was from east to west - a) Four of the five old books show great
familiarity with the Sarasvati and rivers to its
east the easternmost river of the Rigveda, the
Ganga/Jahnavi is mentioned in the two oldest
books of the Rigveda, 6 and 3 (VI.45.31
III.58.6) and the second easternmost river, the
Yamuna, in the third oldest book 7 (VII.18.19).
Likewise the Sarasvati is referred to in a total
of 33 verses in these three oldest books (books
6,3,7), and has three whole hymns in its praise
(VI.61 VII.95-96). It is also the only river
mentioned in the fourth old book (book 2). - b) But these four old books (all three of the
earlier old books, and one of the two later old
books) show absolutely no acquaintance with the
Indus and rivers to its west. - c) The Indus and rivers to its west first appear
in the later old book 4, become more familiar in
the earlier new book 5, and are very familiar
geographical features in the later new books
1,8,9,10. But these new books also continue to
show equal familiarity with the eastern rivers as
well.
173. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- Other Geographical Facts
- An examination of the other (than rivers) eastern
and western geographical data in the Rigveda
confirms this picture of a movement from east to
west to a stunning degree - The Place-names in the Rigveda
- Western Gandhari, (indirect) gandharva.
- Eastern Kikata, Ilaspada/Ilayaspada, (indirect)
nabhaprthivya, vara-a-prthivya. - The Mountains in the Rigveda
- Western Sushom, Arjik, Mujavat.
- The Lakes in the Rigveda
- Western Sharyanavat(i).
- Eastern Manusha.
- The Animals in the Rigveda
- Western Ushtra, Mathra, Chaga, Mesha, Vrshni,
Ura, Varaha. - Eastern ibha/varana/hastin/srni, mahisha, gaura,
mayura, prshati.
183. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- The distribution of the eastern geographical
data - Four Earlier Old books
- Book VI 1.2 4.5 8.4 17.11 20.8.
- Book III 5.9 23.4 26.4,6 29.4 45.1 46.2
53.11,14. - Book VII 40.3 44.5 69.6 98.1.
- Two Later Old books
- Book IV 4.1 16.14 18.11 21.8 58.2.
- Book II 3.7 10.1 34.3,4 36.2.
- One Earlier New book
- Book V 29.7,8 42.15 55.6 57.3 58.6 60.2.
- Four Later New books
- Book I 16.5 37.2 39.6 64.7-8 85.4-5 87.4
89.7 95.9 121.2 128.1,7 140.2 141.3 143.4
162.21 186.8 191.14. - Book VIII 1.25 4.3 7.28 12.8 33.8 35.7-9
45.24 69.15 77.10. - Book IX 57.3 69.3 72.7 73.2 79.4 82.3
86.8,40 87.7 92.6 95.4 96.6,18-19 97.41
113.3. - Book X 1.6 8.1 28.10 40.4 45.3 51.6 60.3
65.8 66.10 70.1 91.1 100.2 106.2,6 123.4
128.8 140.6 189.2 191.1.
193. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- The Distribution of the western geographical
data - Five Old books
- Book III 38.6. (a hymn classified as late)
- One Earlier New book NONE
- Four Later New books
- Book I 10.2 22.14 43.6 52.1 61.7 84.14
88.5 114.5 116.16 117.17-18 121.11 126.7
138.2 162.3 163.2. - Book VIII 1.11 2.40 5.37 6.39,48 7.29 34.3
46.22-23,31 64.11 66.8 77.5,10 97.12. - Book IX 8.5 65.22-23 83.4 85.12 86.36,47
97.7 107.11 113.1-3. - Book X 10.4 11.2 27.17 28.4 34.1 35.2
67.7 80.6 85.40-41 86.4 91.14 95.3 99.6
106.5 123.4,7 136.6 139.4-6 177.2. - Conclusion
- The eastern geographical data (place-names,
mountains, lakes, animals) is distributed evenly
throughout all the ten books of the Rigveda. - But the western geographical data is found only
in the later new books. The one verse in an old
book is in a hymn in book 3 which is classified
(in the Aitareya Brahmana VI.18) as a late
addition into book 3. This again shows that the
movement was from east to west.
203. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- The movement east to west
- It is clear, from the data for the eastern and
western geographical names, that the Vedic
Indo-Aryans were originally inhabitants of the
areas to the east of the Sarasvati during the
period of the three oldest books of the Rigveda
(books 6,3 and 7) and they had expanded westwards
into the areas to the west of the Indus by the
time of composition of the new books (1, 9-10). - If so, this expansion east to west should also be
seen in the distribution of the geographical data
pertaining to the central region (the area
between the Sarasvati and the Indus) - The central rivers Marudvrdha , Shutudri,
Vipash, Parushni, Asikni, Vitasta. - The central place-names Saptasaindhavah,
(indirect) sapta sindhu. - No mountain or lake names of the central region
are found in the Rigveda. Nor are there any
specific animals peculiar to the region the
eastern and western animals spill into this
region from either side.
213. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
The Distribution of the central geographical
data
- Three Earlier Old books
- Book III 33.1.
- Book VII 5.3 18.8,9.
- Two Later Old books
- Book IV 22.2 30.11.
- Five New books
- Book V 52.9.
- Book VIII 20.75 75.15.
- Book X 75.5.
- Three Earlier Old Books
- NONE.
- Two Later Old books
- Book IV 28.1.
- Book II 12.3,12.
- Five New books
- Book I 32.12 35.8.
- Book VIII 24.27 54.4 69.12.
- Book IX 66.6.
- Book X 43.3 67.12.
223. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- Distribution of River names
233. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- Distribution of Place names
243. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- The expansion westwards through the central
region during the period of the old books of the
Rigveda is confirmed by the distribution of the
central geographical data in the Rigveda - a) The oldest book 6 does not mention a single
river west of the Sarasvati. - b) The second oldest book 3 describes an
Ashvamedha yajna performed by the Bharata king
Sudas still in areas east of the Sarasvati, and
his expansion east, west and north (III.53.11).
Then it describes (hymn III.33) Sudas and the
Bharata warriors crossing the first two
easternmost rivers of the central area, Vipash
and Shutudri (Beas and Satlej). - c) The third oldest book 7 describes the great
battle fought against the expanding Bharatas on
the banks of the third easternmost river of the
central area, Parushni (Ravi) (VII.18.8,9), by
the kings and people of the areas of the fourth
easternmost river, the Asikni (Chenab) (VII.5.3).
253. Direction of Expansion of the Vedic Aryans
- d) During the period of these three oldest books,
even the word saptasaindhavah for the central
region is totally missing (it is found only once
in the new book 8 VIII.24.27). But even the form
saptasindhu, which is is found in most of the
other books, is totally missing in these three
oldest books. - d) The fourth oldest book 4 for the first time
takes the Vedic Indo-Aryans into the areas beyond
the Indus when it describes the final battle
fought on the banks of the Sarayu (Siritoi), a
western tributary of the Indus in the NWFP, in
the time of Sudas descendants Sahadeva and his
son Somaka (IV.15.7-10) . This book for the first
time mentions the Indus (IV.30.12 54.6 55.3)
and rivers beyond (Sarayu IV.30.18 Rasa
IV.43.6). - e) After this, except for the Sarasvati-centered
book 2, all the subsequent books of the Rigveda
(5,1,8,9,10) show increasing familiarity with the
Indus and areas to its immediate west. - Conclusion
- The geographical data and the actual historical
events show that the movement of the Vedic Aryans
through the Punjab was from east to west.
26The Textual Arguments - SUMMARY
- To sum up
- 1) The Rigveda has absolutely no memories of any
external homeland, of any migration into India,
or indeed even of any acquaintance with places or
areas outside India. Nor does it give even the
faintest indirect indication of any of the above. - 2) The Rigveda does not refer to a single person,
friend or enemy, who can be identified on
linguistic grounds (and after all, the whole
Aryan issue is a purely linguistic one) as
Austric or Dravidian or as being the speaker of
any other non-IE language known or recorded
anywhere in the world. - 3) The pattern of distribution of the
geographical data in the Rigveda, as well as the
historical narrative in the text, give
irrefutable evidence to the fact that the Vedic
Aryans in the oldest part of the Rigvedic period
were inhabitants of areas in the interior of
India to the east of the Sarasvati with no prior
acquaintance with the areas to the west, with
which they became acquainted only in the later
parts of the Rigvedic period.
27The Archaeological Evidence
- What Archaeology can not tell us
- Archaeology is the scientific study of the
material culture found in excavated
archaeological sites. But this material culture
in itself simply can not tell us about the
language spoken by the inhabitants, unless there
is concrete evidence, either direct (readable
inscriptions or other records in the site itself)
or indirect (references to the language of the
inhabitants of these sites in the records of
other contemporary cultures). - The same material culture can be found in sites
representing different linguistic groups, and
different material cultures can be found in sites
representing the same or similar linguistic
groups. - To this day, no evidence, direct or indirect, has
been found to identify any excavated site
linguistically as either proto-Indo-European
(anywhere in the world ), proto-Indo-Iranian (on
the way eastwards to Central Asia), Indo-Iranian
(in or around Central Asia), or even Vedic
Indo-Aryan (inside India). - Therefore, strictly speaking, the identification
of archaeological cultures as proto-Indo-European
or Indo-Iranian or Indo-Aryan, or non-Indo-Aryan,
without linguistic evidence to that effect, has
absolutely no archaeological basis.
28The Archaeological Evidence
- Flaws in AIT arguments based on Archaeology
- Yet, in the motivated search for archaeological
evidence for the proto-Indo-European homeland and
for the postulated Indo-Iranian migrations,
identifying archaeological remains of
Indo-European populations in Central Asia has
been one of the main questions that has occupied
a number of linguists and historians for many
years (Francfort). Different sites, from South
Russia to Anatolia and Central Asia, are
identified as proto-IE or Indo-Iranian, in the
total absence of any linguistic evidence about
the language spoken at the sites. At the same
time, the Indus sites are identified as
non-Aryan, again in the total absence of any
linguistic evidence to that effect. - The identification in every case is a
predetermined one based on the simple
linguistic space-time argument for locating the
speakers, in which case a study of the
archaeological record is useless since anything
goes there is no factual evidence apart from the
linguistically reconstructed time-space
predictions (Francfort). - That is, archaeological remains which fit in with
the time-space expectations of the linguists and
historians, as to where the IEs or Indo-Iranians
must have been at a particular period of time,
are identified as IE or Indo-Iranian.
29The Archaeological Evidence
- It simply does not matter what is found on the
sites the identification of any site as IE or
Indo-Iranian (or of the Indus sites as non-IE) is
not based on what is found on the sites it is
based only on the time and location of the
remains. - When aspects of the material culture are
necessarily cited to prove their IE or
Indo-Iranian nature, these aspects are so general
that they could be used to identify the Arab,
the Turk and the Iranian, three completely
distinct types (Lamberg-Karlovsky) or to
conclude that the Bronze Age Chinese were
Indo-Europeans (Francfort). - Likewise, when passages from the Rigveda or
Avesta are cited to identify aspects from the
sites , they are of a most general nature and do
not convince They are sufficiently general to
permit the Plains Indians of North America an
Indo-Iranian identity (Lamberg-Karlovsky). - All this basically amounts to a contempt for
objectivity in the analysis of archaeological
data what is the relevance of archaeological
material if any sort of assemblage present at the
expected or supposed time/space spot can function
as the tag of a linguistic group? (Francfort).
30The Archaeological Evidence
- Contrarily, when genuinely peculiar Indo-Iranian
aspects such as fire-altars are found in the
Indus sites, alternate explanations are given,
only because the Indus sites do not fit in with
the time-space expectations of the linguists. - Therefore, it is clear that archaeology has no
role whatsoever to play in identifying any
archaeological remains or sites as either IE or
non-IE in the absence of concrete linguistic
evidence. - What Archaeology can tell us
- Archaeology can not identify linguistic remains
at any site as IE or non-IE. But it can identify
ethnic-cultural changes in any area, and
migrations of ethnic-cultural groups or material
culture from one area to another. - Even here, it can not identify, in the absence of
concrete linguistic evidence, whether either the
original or the new or the migrating
ethnic-cultural groups are IE or non-IE, but it
can identify whether or not ethnic-cultural
changes and migrations have taken place at all.
31The Archaeological Evidence
- Facts
- The fact is that no such changes have taken place
at all in India. This is the strongest possible
archaeological evidence against the AIT and for
the Indian homeland the overwhelming majority of
archaeologists testify categorically that no
ethnic-cultural changes in, or notable migrations
into, the Vedic/Indus area have taken place
between 5000 BCE and 600 BCE. - A major western academic volume edited by two
proponents of the AIT, Erdosy and Witzel,
contains the papers of eminent western linguists
and archaeologists on the subject of The
Indo-Aryans of ancient South Asia language,
material culture and ethnicity. In the preface,
Erdosy tells us that the idea of an Aryan
invasion of India in the second millennium BCE
has recently been challenged by archaeologists
that the perspective of achaeology, that of
material culture is in direct conflict with the
findings of the other discipline claiming a key
to the solution of the Aryan problem,
linguistics and that there is a disciplinary
divide between the disciplines of archaeology
and linguistics.
32The Archaeological Evidence
- In his paper in this volume, K A R Kennedy
details the findings of physical anthropology and
archaeology that while discontinuities in
physical types have certainly been found in South
Asia, they are dated to the 5th/4th, and to the
1st millennium B.C. respectively, too early and
too late to have any connection with Aryans. - D A Lichtensteins paper describes and stresses
the indigenous development of South Asian
civilization from the Neolithic onward. - J M Kenoyers paper finds that the cultural
history of South Asia in the 2nd millennium B.C.
may be explained without reference to external
agents. - J G Shaffer, elsewhere, writes The diffusion or
migration of a culturally complex Indo-Aryan
people into South Asia is not described by the
archaeological record. - Witzel, who is the linguist pitted against the
archaeologists in this volume, also admits So
far, clear archaeological evidence has just not
been found.
33The Archaeological Evidence
- Even archaeologists, linguists and historians who
identify Indo-Iranians in archaeological sites
and remains from South Russia to Central Asia can
not find any archaeological trail leading from
Central Asia into India. But, there are
archaeological trails leading into almost all the
other historical IE areas. Thus a common
European horizon developed after 3000 BC, at
about the time of the Pit Grave expansion (Kurgan
Wave 3) usually known as the Corded Ware
Horizon the territory inhabited by the Corded
Ware/Battle Axe culture, after its expansions,
geographically qualifies it to be the ancestor of
the Western or European language branches
Germanic, Baltic, Slavic, Celtic and Italic
(Winn). Similar trails have been identified for
the IE language entries into Anatolia, Greece and
Iran (from the east). The trail for Tocharian
(in Chinese Turkestan to the north of Tibet) does
not go further west than Central Asia. - Conclusion
- Archaeology categorically negates any Aryan
migration into India in 1500 BCE. But it does not
negate, and in fact it corroborates, IE
migrations into other historical IE areas.
34 In Conclusion
- We have examined all the arguments in each of the
three disciplines involved in the IE debate, and
this examination only disproves the AIT and
confirms India as the IE homeland. - It is time to take note of the facts and
evidence, and to change the history books and
text books accordingly. - The main reason why this is not happening is
because the AIT is a subject evoking strong
passions and involving powerful vested interests,
particularly in India. A number of entrenched
political ideologies have been formulated and are
still flourishing on the basis of this theory. - Even otherwise, the AIT is a theory based on
assumptions long taken for granted and
buttressed by the accumulated weight of two
centuries of scholarship (Erdosy). This
accumulated weight of two centuries of world
scholarship is not easy to dislodge. The
entrenched scholars today have also contributed
to that weight, and will not accept anything
which will render their own writings on this
subject obsolete. - But the truth, if it is really the truth, will
ultimately have to be accepted, at least by the
academic world, however long it may take. - But for this, the truth must be intelligently
formulated and presented. After that it is only a
matter of time.
35A GLIPMPSE of the oit
- This presentation basically involved only an
examination of the AIT arguments. The examination
shows that the AIT is based only on baseless
subjective and circular arguments in all the
three disciplines involved in this matter
(linguistics, textual analysis and archaeology).
And this examination actually uncovers objective,
concrete and conclusive evidence in support of an
Indian homeland. - A more direct and detailed presentation of the
OIT, or Out-of-India theory, which will follow,
will show conclusively and finally that - 1. There is datable inscriptional evidence
outside India proving that the Indus civilization
was Indo-Iranian. - 2. The OIT is not just a theory, it is recorded
history. - 3. The OIT answers every single linguistic
problem associated with the IE homeland question.