this thread is there to make the search easier, though not the study of it!

Let me also derail the discussion just once, few pages back murugan ji and others talked about the possible indic origins for "Mayan" civilization. And the orientation of Tanjore temple and Mayan temple being the same.shiv wrote:The translations of the Old Persian text in the Behistun inscriptions commissioned by Darius read "Aham Daravayus" - "I am Darius"dharmaraj wrote:Not to derail the discussion but few pages earlier there was a discussion about possible sanskrit name for Darius. How about "DharYash" (one who holds yash)? Cyrus might be "Suyash"/"Suryash", Xerses is difficult.
Just my two cowries only.
Arjun wrote:
Archeo-astronomy: Nilesh Oak, TRS Prasanna
IVC Climatology/Geology: KS Vaidya, Michel Danino, S Kalyanaraman
Epigraphy: Natwar Jha, I Mahadevan, S Kalyanaraman
Archeogenetics (S AsiA): Premendra Priyadarshi, Lalji & team + Reich
Historiography: Koenrad Elst, NS Rajaram, David Frawley, Subhash Kak
'Big Picture' OIT: Srikanth Taligeri, Premendra Priyadarshi
Arjun. I am not trying to make excuses for Indians, and will be the first to point out that linguistics is not a field that any young Indian enters because such courses are fundamentally unavailable in India.Arjun wrote:
What is the situation on the linguistics side in India? There used to be a Lachmi Dhar in the 1930s who argued for an Out-of-India hypothesis - are there any non-Marxists left today among Indian linguists who may be working on possible OIT models? Or are the bulk of them sepoys of the type we're familiar with?
That is certainly one reason. There were also a few others that I would mention-shiv wrote:But it is not possible to find proto European without linking with Sanskrit. For an Indian,it is perfectly possible to find proto-Indian right here in India with no need to look for any link with any European language. The Indian perspective is different
2. Indians in general have preferred (and quite rightly so) the physical sciences, medicine and engineering over the last several decades to education in the social sciences. Those opting for social science majors in India have not necessarily been the brightestBased in Dallas, S.I.L. (which stands for Summer Institute of Linguistics) trains missionaries to be linguists, sending them to learn local languages, design alphabets for unwritten languages and introduce literacy.
That is a hasty and harsh statement in my view. Those languages that you name have some common words. That means possible common origin for those common words. But for words that they do not have in common, there is no common origin. But those non common words too have a source which no one seems to be interested in, until recently.Arjun wrote:
It is very clear now that Sanskrit, Persian / Avestan, Hittite / Anatolian & Greek have a common origin, if not the other Indo-European languages. If Indians are not interested in delving into the mysteries of the common linguistic and mythological origins of all these civilizations - when they have enough evidence of the antiquity of their own, they must be the most unscientific people on this planet.
The search should be for all cultures and peoples that may have been part of the 'greater' Indic civilization at some point.shiv wrote:From an Indian viewpoint what exactly do you feel the search should be for?
Your focus is on proving linguistics as an illegitimate science. I agree with the problem areas you point out - but I am also looking at the larger goal of using legitimate linguistic arguments in a case for OIT. And unless Indians become interested enough to delve into this field of study - we are not going to make much headway.shiv wrote:So I think I would disagree with you in your contention that Indians too should join the current bandwagon for a search for a common origin language. That very search has ended up with the mess we have now after 200 years of searching.
Nilesh ji, Thanks for the inputs.Nilesh Oak wrote:In Archeo-astronomy
I would add 'Anil Narayanan' (Paper.. I will send it to Rajesh ji and he can link it here) that talks of timing of data that was used in revisign Suryasiddhanta going back to 5000-7000 BC.
Also P V Vartak (Mahabharata, Ramayana, Rigveda, Puranas, Samhita)
In Epigraphy
Sue Sullivan (Indus Script Dictionary)
Wim Borsboom (Reengineering of Western Alphabets, also "Ancient Indian god in IVC'
If indeed those were ancient indo iranians and a big if then isn it Russia shud vacate the lands to indo-iranian entity...Every year, thousands of people make the pilgrimage to Arkaim, a place that presents strong evidence that “Russia is the Motherland of the Elephant” and that Aryans, the architects of the ancient cultures of India and Iran, built fortresses on Russian territory and roamed the land in their chariots thousands of years before the birth of Christ.
In 1987, the Arkaim Valley was destined to become a giant reservoir. A dam had already been built, and archeologists were busy wrapping up exploratory works, the kind that are always performed ahead of such operations. It was at this point that a group of young hunters found something strange in the steppe.
After following up on the hunters’ lead, the archaeologists immediately knew they had stumbled upon something big the moment they had an aerial view of a giant figure made up of nested circles with lines radiating from the centre. The figure looked like an Indian Mandala (a sacred symbol of the realm of gods in the Buddhist and Hindu religious traditions), or a wheel with spokes. Incidentally, the military had known about Arkaim since the 1950s, but never told scientists, for some strange reason.
This is actually a very old discovery, and all aspects have been discussed threadbare. It can just as well be used in favour of an Out of India hypothesis, as this paper details: Death of AIT
Assuming this refers to Aryan presence (and/or Indic languages, Rigveda burials.. whatever!), It would indeed be OIT. The timing alluded to this place (whatever the validity and rigor of investigation) refers to 500 years before Torjan war... so we are talking 1200 BC - 1700 BC. Indian civilization has solid grounded refernces going back to 3000 BC (Brahmanas.. work on S B Dixit), 5561 BC (Mahabharata, my work ), IVC civilization 4000 BC-2000 BC) and many many more. It is OIT.Arjun wrote:This is actually a very old discovery, and all aspects have been discussed threadbare. It can just as well be used in favour of an Out of India hypothesis, as this paper details: Death of AIT
Arjun ji,Arjun wrote:So, Shiv - the problem is fundamentally with reconstruction of dead or proto-languges and in deriving definitive conclusions about the proto-language as representing the historical truth. The better way to present it would be as an elucidation of the process in which language may have evolved - and only in conjunction with other 'harder' set of evidence.
I do think, though, that linguistics can provide some perspective on whether two languages are related. Even for you to state, as you have done, that Avestan and Sanskrit are the same - you will have to fall back on linguistic arguments. So, one cannot dismiss the field wholesale. Especially when it can be of use in proving an Out of India relationship with Avestan, Persian & Greek.
Agree with you...I would take a 'hard' science over linguistics any day. For refuting AIT- archeoastronomy, epigraphy, genetics can play critical roles.Nilesh Oak wrote:Linguistics is hardly a tool to falsify some proposition, however it is capable of corroborating a theory validated by other stronger evidence.
RamaY garu,RamaY wrote:^ RajeshAji
In your graphic in previous page...
IMHO the link from Mecca to North India is the creation of AIT vadis. I seriously wonder if the stream that came to GV valley after crossing Sindhi, Saraswati etc couldn't and didn't go up to north India.
What is that attractive for this stream to come to Bharat-varsha but not explore north India until their estranged brotheren from Europe come down?
Thirdly that would make the Bharatiyas the Ancestors of chinis and Russian civilizations.
Can someone change the graphic to depict
- only one stream that comes to Bharat.
- in Bharat it splits into two groups.
- one goes to east to china and Russia etc
- another goes west to turkey and up north
- the east stream splits once in North-east India down to south east asia
- the east stream splits again in Russia to go east to American continents and one goes to west
Then see if the DNA evidence can be interpreted to support this?
Always a possibility. Probability anywhere from, say, 0-100%RamaY wrote:So what is the possibility of some west-Asians an europeans coming to Bharat after they were disgusted and harassed by the first Abrahamic faith, Judaism, as settlers during 1-2 millennia BC. After all Old testament is filled with such stories where jealous Jews cause mayhem in west-Asia.
Since the pre-Abrahamic west Asia and Europe are nothing but streams of Indics, they might have returned to their roots, sometimes bringing their own life stories, enriching already existing Vedic knowledge.
"AntuBarwa"
RamaY wrote:Wow! Looks like I am getting mantRa-siddhi (vagdevi)... Pointer to Atriji
Note to self and like minded...
On Naradas instigation first and second 1000s of Dakshas sons moved all over the world and never returned back.
There is story of Daksha prajapati and Aasivaki giving birth to 5000 children then a brahmachari named Naarada appears and counsels them about economy. This discourse of Narada found in Harivamsha is first of its kind in human history which talks about economics and necessity to keep numbers less and spread across different regions for efficient utilization of resources without burdening the earth.
Those 5000 sons agreed with Narada and scattered in all directions and settled in distant lands, never to return. Seeing that children are gone, Prajapati and aasivaki gave birth to 1000 more kids who also spread in all directions like their predecessors. This not only shows expansion of aryans all over earth from here, but also shows how certain individuals by sacrificing their primal drives earned knowledge and respect from rest. Thus this prajapati system resulted in 3 important changes in humans and dharmiks.
1. Emergence of Gotras
2. Tendency to spread out and colonize other lands
3. Tendency of few to indulge in Brahmacharya willingly.
Would somebody like to comment on this!Recent discussion of the prehistoric spreading of the Indo-European language group has generally concentrated on two alternative hypotheses: so-called “Kurgan Culture” hypothesis, which places the homeland of proto-Indo-Europeans to the Steppe of Eastern Europe, and alternative hypothesis of the spread of farmers from the Near East (Anatolia) to Europe in the Neolithic times. Y-chromosomal haplogroup R1a1, lineage is thought to have originated in the Eurasian Steppes north of the Black and Caspian Seas, seems to be associated with the Kurgan culture. Three geographic areas with the highest frequency of R1a1 haplogroup were revealed: Eastern Europe; Southern Siberia and Hindustan where the highest diversity of microsatellite haplotypes was observed. Phylogenetic analysis of microsatellite haplotypes demonstrates the presence of three corresponding major clusters with the age of the generation of haplotytic diversity of 7.2-12.5 ky. The highest diversity in Hindustani is related to the presence of haplotypes of Indo-Pakistani and Southern Siberian clusters in the population from India and Pakistan, probably due to relatively recent migrations from Central Asia. The age of the cluster admittedly brought to Hindustan from Central Asia / Southern Siberia is 3,9 +/- 1,3 ky. Probably, the primary center of the generation of diversity and expansion of R1a1a was the territory of the Eastern European Steppe. With the spread of of R1a1 carriers, secondary centers of genetic diversity and population expansions were formed in the Southern Siberia and Hindustan.
Abstract: Many major rival models of the origin of the Hindu caste system co-exist despite extensive studies, each with associated genetic evidences. One of the major factors that has still kept the origin of the Indian caste system obscure is the unresolved question of the origin of Y-haplogroup R1a1*, at times associated with a male-mediated major genetic influx from Central Asia or Eurasia, which has contributed to the higher castes in India. Y-haplogroup R1a1* has a widespread distribution and high frequency across Eurasia, Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent, with scanty reports of its ancestral (R*, R1* and R1a*) and derived lineages (R1a1a, R1a1b and R1a1c). To resolve these issues, we screened 621 Y-chromosomes (of Brahmins occupying the upper-most caste position and schedule castes/tribals occupying the lower-most positions) with 55 Y-chromosomal binary markers and seven Y-microsatellite markers and compiled an extensive dataset of 2809 Y-chromosomes (681 Brahmins, and 2128 tribals and schedule castes) for conclusions. A peculiar observation of the highest frequency (up to 72.22%) of Y-haplogroup R1a1* in Brahmins hinted at its presence as a founder lineage for this caste group. Further, observation of R1a1* in different tribal population groups, existence of Y-haplogroup R1a* in ancestors and extended phylogenetic analyses of the pooled dataset of 530 Indians, 224 Pakistanis and 276 Central Asians and Eurasians bearing the R1a1* haplogroup supported the autochthonous origin of R1a1 lineage in India and a tribal link to Indian Brahmins. However, it is important to discover novel Y-chromosomal binary marker(s) for a higher resolution of R1a1* and confirm the present conclusions.
What is that attractive for this stream to come to Bharat-varsha but not explore north India until their estranged brotheren from Europe come down?RamaY wrote:^ RajeshAji
In your graphic in previous page...
IMHO the link from Mecca to North India is the creation of AIT vadis. I seriously wonder if the stream that came to GV valley after crossing Sindhi, Saraswati etc couldn't and didn't go up to north India.
Yes, we can now call them 'beta'!RamaY wrote:Thirdly that would make the Bharatiyas the Ancestors of chinis and Russian civilizations.
There is no necessity for that, and that would in fact weaken the OIT position.RamaY wrote:Can someone change the graphic to depict
- only one stream that comes to Bharat.
- in Bharat it splits into two groups.
- one goes to east to china and Russia etc
- another goes west to turkey and up north
- the east stream splits once in North-east India down to south east asia
- the east stream splits again in Russia to go east to American continents and one goes to west
Then see if the DNA evidence can be interpreted to support this?
Arjun wrote:So, Shiv - the problem is fundamentally with reconstruction of dead or proto-languges and in deriving definitive conclusions about the proto-language as representing the historical truth. The better way to present it would be as an elucidation of the process in which language may have evolved - and only in conjunction with other 'harder' set of evidence.
I do think, though, that linguistics can provide some perspective on whether two languages are related. Even for you to state, as you have done, that Avestan and Sanskrit are the same - you will have to fall back on linguistic arguments. So, one cannot dismiss the field wholesale. Especially when it can be of use in proving an Out of India relationship with Avestan, Persian & Greek.
Bhagwan Gidwani wrote a book called "Return of the Aryans" on the same theme.RamaY wrote:So what is the possibility of some west-Asians an europeans coming to Bharat after they were disgusted and harassed by the first Abrahamic faith, Judaism, as settlers during 1-2 millennia BC. After all Old testament is filled with such stories where jealous Jews cause mayhem in west-Asia.
Since the pre-Abrahamic west Asia and Europe are nothing but streams of Indics, they might have returned to their roots, sometimes bringing their own life stories, enriching already existing Vedic knowledge.
One of the things that I stress to patients who come to me with some problem, carrying with them several repeat scans of the same part of the body and no relief or cure is that if they find a pen missing after visiting my consulting room and they return four or five times to look for it there and do not find it, the likely reason is that the pen was not lost in my consulting room. They need to search for it elsewhere and stop repeating the same negative tests.RajeshA wrote:From Journal of Human Genetics 54, 47-55 (January 2009)
Authors: Swarkar Sharma, Ekta Rai, Prithviraj Sharma, Mamata Jena, Shweta Singh, Katayoon Darvishi, Audesh K Bhat, A J S Bhanwer, Pramod Kumar Tiwari and Rameshwar N K Bamezai
National Centre of Applied Human Genetics: School of Life Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University
The Indian origin of paternal haplogroup R1a1* substantiates the autochthonous origin of Brahmins and the caste system
Abstract: One of the major factors that has still kept the origin of the Indian caste system obscure is the unresolved question of the origin of Y-haplogroup R1a1*, at times associated with a male-mediated major genetic influx from Central Asia or Eurasia, which has contributed to the higher castes in India.
Agreed. Given the enormity of social problems caused by Western linguists; the sheer weight of evidence of incompetence, racism and Christian evangelical motives - over-reaction may be justifiable and perhaps even necessary. Paraphrasing Wheeler ('Indra stands accused of the destruction of the Harappan civilization'), Western linguists stand accused of the destruction of Panini's contribution to world science.shiv wrote: I am not dissing linguistics as a field, but it has moved in directions that I believe call for course correction.
Not interested in a link to Germanic and other branches (that would make me a distant relative of Witzel?My only quibble was with the idea that the suggested goal for Indian linguistics would be to search for a connecting link to all IE.
The word "moorkhta" has been shown to be derived from PIE "*blithering *idiocy".
Well if that is the case, what is the need of calling them "Aryans"? If you are not willing to pin the migration down to eitherdmrsekhar wrote:Aryans are not one race they came from different regions with different genetic composition at different times.