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The Harappan Civilization and Myth of
Aryan "Invasion"
From,
The Hindustan Times
By
Dr. N.S. Rajaram
Until
quite recently, the famous Harappan
civilization of the Indus valley has
been an enigma. Many questions still
remain about the identity of the people
who created this great ancient civilization.
Stretching over a million and a half
square kilometers, from the borders
of Iran to east UP and with some sites
as far south as the Godavari valley,
it was larger than ancient Egypt and
Mesopotamia combined.
 
The satellite image on the left is drawn
in the map on the right, showing the
Indus River
in blue, the dry Sarasvati River basin
in green and archaeological sites as
black dots.
What
is perhaps most puzzling about it is
the fact that all major sites spread
over this immense belt went into sudden
decline and disappeared more or less
simultaneously. The renowned archeologist,
S.R. Rao, probably the foremost authority
on Harappan archeology recently wrote:
  "In
circa 1900 B.C., most of the mature Harappan
sites were wiped out forcing the inhabitants
to seek new lands for settlement. They
seem to have left in a great hurry and
in small groups, seeking shelter initially
on the eastern flank of the Ghaggar and
gradually moving towards the Yamuna. The
refugees from Mohen-jo-daro and southern
sites in Sind fled to Saurashtra and later
occupied the interior of the peninsula."
From
this it is apparent that the Harappans,
though inhabiting a vast area, fell
victim to a sudden calamity which forced
them to seek shelter in other parts
of ancient India. The usual explanation
found in history books is that the inhabitants
of the Harappan cities were driven out
by the invading Aryans. However it is
now recognized by scholars that the
Aryan invasion theory of India is a
myth that owes more to European politics
than anything in Indian records or archaeology.
(The
politics of History, The Hindustan
Times, Nov. 28 1993).
The
evidence against any such invasion is
now far too strong to be taken seriously.
To begin with, sites spread over such
a vast stretch, measuring well over
a thousand miles across would not have
been all abandoned simultaneously due
to the incursion of nomadic bands at
one extremity. Further, there is profuse
archaeological evidence including the
presence of sacrificial altars that
go to show that the Harappans were part
of the Vedic aryan fold. As a result,
it can safely by said that the Vedic
age also ended with the Harappan civilization.
From
all this it is clear that the loss of
these sites must have been associated
with some natural catastrophe. A few
scholars have pointed to evidence of
frequent floods to account for the abandonement.
But, floods are invariably local in
nature and do not cause the collapse
of a civilization over a vast belt.
People adapt. Floods bring death but
they also sustain life. Some of the
most flood prone areas of the world
- like the Nile valley, Bengal and the
Yangtse valley, in China - area also
among the most densely populated. It
is the loss of water or dessication
that causes massive disruptions on the
scale witnessed at the end of the Harappan
civilization. Thanks to the latest data
from two major archaeological and satellite
based studies, we now know that this
is exactly what happened. It was ecological
change that ended the great civilization
not only in India but over a vast belt
that included Mesopotamia, Egypt, and
the Aegean.
On
the basis of extensive explorations
carried out in Northern Mesopotamia,
a joint French-American team led by
H. Weiss of Yale University has determined
that most of the old world civilization
were severely affected by a prolonged
drought that began about 2200 B.C. and
persisted for about 300 years. The most
drastically hit region seems to have
been the Akkadian civilization neighbouring
India. The drought may have been triggered
by massive volcanic eruptions. According
to the findings of this historic study
concluded only recently:
"At
approximately 2,200 B.C., occupations
of Tell Leilan and Tell Brak (in Northern
Mesopotamia) were suddenly abandoned...a
marked increase in aridity and wind
circulation, subsequent to a volcanic
eruption, induced considerable degradation
in land use conditions.... this abrupt
climatic change caused abandonement
of Tell Leilan, regional desertion,
and collapse of the Akkadian empire
based in southern Mesopotamia. Synchronous
collapse in adjacent regions suggests
the impact of abrupt climatic change
was excessive."
An
end uncannily like that of the Harappans.
The authors of this momentous study
note that the collapse of the Akkdians
more or less coincided with similar
climate change, land degradation and
collapse noted in the Aegean, Palestine,
Egypt, and India. The date of 1900 BCE
given by S.R. Rao for the collapse of
the Harappans should be seen as approximate.
More accurate methods are now available
that show this date to have been sometime
before 2000 BCE, and they are well within
the calibration error of radiocation
and other scientific dating techniques.
The
basic point is: as a result of several
independent explorations conducted over
a vast belt from southern Europe to
India, it is now clear that civilizations
over a large part of the ancient world
were brought to a calamitous end by
an abrupt climate change on a global
scale. To attribute a global calamity
of such colossal magnitude to nomadic
'Aryan' tribes is simplistic in the
extreme.
These
discoveries should help put an end to
all speculation regarding the Aryan
invasion as the cause of breakup of
the Harappan civilization. On the other
hand we now know that the Vedic civilization
far from coming into existence after
the Harappan, in fact ended with it;
the mature Harappan civilization was
the last glow of the Vedic age. This
recognition has brought about a fundamental
change in perpective in the history
and chronology of not only ancient India,
but also nearly all ancient civilizations.
It helps answer several fundamental
questions about the source of the Harappans
- they should now be called the Vedic
Harappans - and the age of the Rig Veda.
Thanks to recent discoveries about the
mathematics
and geography of Vedic India, we are
now in a position to answer both questions.
 This
shift in perspective, that the Harappan
civilization came at the end of the
Vedic age also helps explain a major
puzzle; the technological basis for
this great civilization. Even a superficial
study of Harappan sites suggests that
its builders were extremely capable
town planners and engineers. And this
requires a sophisticated knowledge of
mathematics, especially geometry. Elaborate
structures like the Great Bath of Mohen-jo-daro,
the Lothal harbor or the citadel at
Harappa are inconcievable without a
detailed knowledge of geometry.

The
world had to wait 2000 years more, till
the rise of the Roman civilization for
sanitation and town planning to reach
a comparable level. The question is:
where did the Harappans get the necessary
mathematical and engineering knowledge?
History books tell us that Indians borrowed
their geometry from the Greeks. This
is absurd. The Harappans must have had
the neccessary technical knowledge at
least 2,000 years before the Greeks.
Without it the civilization would never
have seen the light of day. It is as
simple as that.
But
once we recognise that Harappan archaeology
belongs to the closing centuries of
the Vedic age, the mystery vanishes.
The late Vedic literature includes mathematical
texts known as the Sulba-sutras which
contain detailed instruction for the
building of sacrificial altars. After
a monumental study spanning more than
20 years, the distinguished American
mathematician and historian of science,
Abraham Seidenberg showed that the Sulba-sutras
are the source of both Egyptian and
old Babylonian mathematics. The Egyptian
texts based on the Sulba-sutras go back
to before 2,000 BCE. This provides independent
comfirmation that Indian mathematical
knowledge existed long before that date,
ie, during the height of the Harappan
era. For further mathematical evidence
and quotations please see: Scientific
Verification of Vedic Knowledge.
The
sulba-sutras are part of the vedic
religious literature known as the Kalpasutras.
They were created originally to serve
as technical manuals for the design
and construction of Vedic altars. As
previously noted, Harappan sites contain
many such altars, a fact that supplies
a link between Vedic literature and
Harappan archaeology. It serves also
to show that the vedic literature could
not have been brought in by any invaders
- they were needed for building the
altars that are very much part of the
Harappan archaeology! The sulba-sutra
are the oldest mathematical texts known.
A careful comparison of the sulba-sutras
with the mathematics of Egypt and old
Babylonia led Abraham Seidenberg to
conclude:
"...
the elements of ancient geometry found
in Egypt and old Babylonia stem from
a ritual system of the kind found in
the Sulba-sutras."
What
is interesting is that the origins of
ancient mathematics are to be found
in religion and ritual. So the great
engineering feats of the Harappans can
be seen as secular off-shoots of the
religious mathemtics found in vedic
literature. This can in a way be compared
to the history of books and publishing,
The first books printed were Bibles,
like the Gutenberg bible; but the technique
of printing soon transcended its original
niche and led to an explosion of knowledge
that made possible the European renaissance.
Similarly, the 'ritual mathematics'
in the Sulba-sutras led eventually
to the purely secular achievements of
the Harappans like city planning and
the design of harbours.
So
the vedic civilisaion ended well before
2,000 BCE, with the ending of the Harappans
following the Great Drought. The next
question is, when did it actually begin.
Here we cannot be certain, although
some experts on Vedic astronomy claim
to be able to find statements in the
Rig Veda that point to dates
like 6,500 BCE and beyond. I feel it
safer at this time to be conservative
and stick to reliable archaeological
evidence. Although some sites dating
to almost 7,000 BCE have been found,
I believe that a lot more supporting
data must be found before such dates
can be accepted. But thanks to new data
made available by the French SPOT satellite
and the Indo-French field study, we
can definitely conclude that the Rig-Veda
describes the geography of North India
as it was long before 3,000 BCE. The
clinching evidence is provided by the
fate of the Saraswati river.
It
is well known that in the Rig Veda,
the greatest and the holiest of rivers
was not the Ganga, but the now dry Saraswati.
The Ganga is mentioned only once while
the Saraswati is mentioned some 50 tomes.
There is a whole hymn devoted to her.
Extensive research by the late Dr. Wakankar
has shown that the Saraswati changed
her course several times, going completely
dry around 1900 BCE. This date may now
have to be moved back by a few centuries
in light of what we now know about the
disappearence of the neighbouring Akkadians.
In any event we know now that which
Dr. Wakankar did not, that the Saraswati
described in the Rig Veda belongs to
a date long before 3,000 BCE. The Rig
Veda calls the Saraswati the greatest
of rivers (Naditame) that flowed from
"the mountain to the sea".
The latest satellite data combined with
field archaeological studies have shown
that the Rig Vedic Saraswati had stopped
being a perrenial river long before
3,000 BCE.
As
Paul-Henri Francfort of CNRS, Paris
recently observed,
"...we
now know, thanks to the field work of
the Indo-French expedition that when
the protohistoric people settled in
this area, no large river had flowed
there for a long time."
The
protohistoric people he refers to are
the early Harappans of 3,000 BCE. But
satellite 'photos show that a great
prehistoric river that was over 7 kilometers
wide did indeed flow through the area
at one time. This was the Saraswati
described in the Rig Veda. Numerous
archaeological sites have also been
located along the course of this great
prehistoric river thereby confirming
Vedic accounts. The great Saraswati
that flowed "from the mountain
to the sea" is now seen to belong
to a date long anterior to 3,000 BCE.
This means that the Rig Veda describes
the geography of North India long before
3,000 BCE. This is further supported
by the fact that the Drishadvati river,
also described in the Rig Veda, had
itself gone dry long before 3,000 BCE.
All this shows that the Rig Veda must
have been in existence no later than
3,500 BCE. There is other evidence from
metallurgy and astronomy that lend further
support for this date.
 What
does this all mean? In our book, Vedic
Aryans and the Origins of Civilisation,
David Frawley and I have shown that
the Rig Veda belongs to an earlier layer
of civilization before the rise of the
civilization of Egypt, Mesopotamia,
and the Indus Valley (Harappa). This
calls for a fundamental change in our
idea of Mesopotamia as the cradle of
civilization. In the same book, on the
basis of ecology and ancient literature,
it is also suggested that the Rig Vedic
aryans were the beneficiary of an age
of abundance in north India, brought
about by the melting of the ice caps
at the end of the last Ice Age. The
last Ice age ended in about 8,000 BCE.
For the next several thousand years,
many areas that are now arid, like Rajasthan,
Sind, Baluchistan - were fertile and
supported agriculture. This of course
was due to the discharge of waters in
the form of numerous streams from melting
ice caps. This is apparent from the
French satellite study. In the course
of time, the ice caps accumulated during
the long ice age came to be depleted
and aridity began to spread across the
sub continent. This of course culminated
in the great drought of 2,200 BCE that
wrought havoc with the civilizations
of the ancient world.
In
summary, all this new evidence, when
examined in the light of science, gives
a totally different picture of the ancient
world. The rise and fall of the Vedic
civilization of which the Harappan was
a part can be seen to have resulted
from the vagaries of nature, inseparably
bound to the boom and bust ecological
cycle that followed the last ice age.
The vedic age and more specifically
the Rig Veda were the beneficiaries
of nature's bounties - a unique age
in water abundance in the wake of the
last ice age. Its end was also brought
about by nature in the form of a killing
drought. The Harappan civilization was
its twilight. And this is the verdict
of science - what nature giveth, nature
also taketh away.
This Article Reprinted With Permission of Author
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