luni, 14 august 2023

Ch 1.H. O. Vedic Aryans & Sourashtras since the earliest times

Ch 1.H. O. Vedic Aryans & Sourashtras since the earliest times

Introduction: The Historical Geography of Ancient India and Western India

2 (…) According to Strabo (BK. XI, Section XI.I; H&F.  Vol. II Pp 252-253) the conquests of the Bactrian Greeks was partly by Menander and partly by Euthydemos. They gained possession not only of Patalene but also the kin Saraostos (Surastra) and Sigerdir. Ptolemy refers to a country called SYRASTRENE which must be identical with Surastra (modern Surat on the Gulf of Cutch). Syrastrene which extended from the mouth of the Indus to the gulf of Cutch was one of the three divisions of India- Schythia in Ptolemy’s time. Syrastrene is also mentioned in the Perplus of the Erythraenean Sea as the sea-board of Aberia which is identified with the region east of the Indus above the insular portion formed by its bifurcation of. (…)

 

Lata - its geography and the commercial importance:

4 (…) Ptolemy (A.D. 150) uses the term „Larica” apparently from the Sanskrit Lataka. (…)

 

Location and extent/ area of Lata or Lar-desh

(…) Ptolemy (2nd century A.D.) describes it as „Larika”. (…)

 

Larice and Lariaca

5 (…) As to the identification of Lar des or ‘Country of the Lar’, James Tod writes (pp 186-7) “By these extracts from Charita, we are enabled also at once to clear up two long disputed points regarding the countries of LARICE AND LARIACA, which Ptolemy makes contiguous to each other. According to him it appears to have been an important division of the Syrastrene or peninsula of the Suaras. (…)”

 

 

Persian and Greek invasion

19 (…) In 334. B.C., Alexander the Great conquered Asia Minor and the Achaemenid Empire reaching the North West frontiers of the Indian subcontinent. There, he defeated king Puru in the Battle of Hydaspes (near modern day Jhelum, Pakistan) and conquered much of the Punjab; however, Alexander’s troops refused to go beyond the Hydespes (Beas) river near modern day Jalandar, Punjab. Alexander left many Macedonian veterans in the conquest regions; he himself turned back and turned his army southwest.

The Greek-Persian invasions had many important repercussions on Indian civilization. (L52/WA.335)

20 (…) According to Bongard Levin, Chandragupta due to his alliance with Selucus, could receive opportunity of paying stern attention to the domestic affairs and his conquests in other parts of India. (…) Plutarch only remarks that with an army comprising six hundred thousand, Chandragupta overran and subdued the whole India

 

22 THE INDO-GREEKS:

            The Indo-Greek kingdom (or sometimes Graeco Indian kingdom) covered various parts of the north-west and northern Indian subcontinent during the last two centuries BCE and was ruled by more than 30 Hellenistic kings.

            During the two centuries of their rule, the Indo Greek kings joined the Greeks continued the Greek and Indian LANGUAGES and symbols… and blended ancient Greek, Hindu and Buddhist religious practices….

            The Indo-Greeks ultimately disappeared as a political entity around 10 A.D. following the invasion of the Indo- Scythians, although the pockets of Greek populations probably remained for several centuries longer under the subsequent rule of the Indo-Parthians and Kushans.

THE YAVANAS:

            The Yavanas were described as living beyond Gandhara. There was another country mentioned in the epic as Parama Yona, in the far west of Yavana. This could be the Ionia of Greece, somewhat related to Indo-Ionians or Yavanas. The name Yavana could be the sanskritized form of the name Ionia.

23 (…) THE KUSHANS:                                                                                                                                                                        The Kushan Empire (c 1st -3rd Centuries) of Bacteria expanded its territory to include the Punjab and much of the Ganges basin. The Kushan warriors were assimilate into Indian society as KSHTRIYAS. The Kushans conquered the central section of the main SILK ROUTES and, therefore, had control of the overland trade between India, Persia, China, and the Roman Empire.

27 (…) ECONOMIC LIFE: The economic prosperity of the Satavahana period was secured by profitable agriculture and industries and lucrative commerce. The maritime activities of the period are indicated by the ship-type coins of Pulamavi and Sriyajna Satakarni. Ptolemy and the author of the Periplus of the Erythrean Sea mention some of the ports and cities of the period. The important ports were Broach, Sopara and Kalyana; some of the well-known market towns of the interior were Paithan, Tagara, Junnar, Nasik, Vaijayanthi and Dhanyakataka. The empire had commercial contacts with the Roman Empire, as indicated by the discovery of a large number of Roman coins at several places on the coast.     

28 (…) The Periplus of the Erytherean Sea mentions both Tagara and Prathisthan as important trading centres in the south. (…)


Alexandru Madgearu, Românii în opera Notarului Anonim (ȚIPLIC 2002)

Ioan Țiplic, Alexandru Madgearu, Românii în opera Notarului Anonim, Cluj-Napoca, 2001, 259 p. + 5 h. în „Acta Terrae Septemcastrensis”, ...