From Devanagari to Mohenjo-daro: Scripts Bridging Bharat’s Millennia-old Heritage
Explore the fascinating journey of Bharat’s ancient scripts — from the spiritual elegance of Devanagari, to the lesser-known Sindhi (Khudabadi) script, and further back into the cryptic Indus Valley inscriptions of Mohenjo-daro.
This video dives into:
The evolution and spread of writing systems across Bharat
The legacy of Hindi Diwas and how Devanagari became India's official script
The enduring cultural relevance of Sindhi amidst centuries of invasions
The mysteries of the undeciphered Indus Script
How these scripts form a bridge across time, preserving the unbroken cultural thread of Sanatan Dharma
// we have Yajnadevam's ( Bharath Rao) paper on decoding Indus script, which is sanskrit. PGurus takes a journey on other scripts including brahmi, sindhi lipi (closely related to Santali) and devanagari. Devanagari has 48 primary characters (14 vowels and 34 consonants). Inscriptions are available 1-4 centuries CE in Gujarat, 11th century in Udayagiri MP. By 1000 CE manuscripts in devanagari appeared. 120 languages including Sanskrit, Marathi, Nepali, Konkani, Maithili, Bodo, Dogri, etc. The sindhi lipi is more closer to harappan symbols. Devanagari is an abugida script, ensures accurate representation of spoken sounds.
Kharosthi - right to left. Indus is also right to left. Sanskrit has शब्दमञ्जरी Sabda Manjari or declensions (case in english). Sanskrit has singular, dual and plural. Latin also has dual. Prakrit was used prior to Sanskrit. During the Ashoka phase brahmi was used extensively. From Brahmi devanagari evolved.
Know Your India
Re: Know Your India
https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dl ... 3/mode/2up
PP 365-369
(PP 365 is page # 373 in a PDF viewer)





PP 365-369
(PP 365 is page # 373 in a PDF viewer)
Re: Know Your India
India's Stitched Ship: Built Without Nails. Sails Across Oceans | Sanjeev Sanyal | Vishnu Som
Economist Sanjeev Sanyal leads ground-breaking reconstruction of 5th century Indian stitched ship INSV Kaundinya, revealing India's forgotten maritime dominance. Based on Ajanta cave paintings and ancient texts, this authentic vessel demonstrates sophisticated shipbuilding techniques that enabled Indian Ocean trade networks spanning till Rome. The project preserves vanishing traditional craftsmanship while showcasing India's advanced maritime heritage predating European naval technology.
About the Speakers:
Sanjeev Sanyal is a leading Indian economist, historian, and member of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council. A Rhodes Scholar and former Global Strategist at Deutsche Bank, he now shapes India’s economic policy and global financial engagement. He was named Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in 2010. He is also a well-known environmentalist and urban theorist. He has been a Visiting Scholar at Oxford University, an Adjunct Fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies, Singapore and a Senior Fellow of the Worldwide Fund for Nature. He is an accomplished writer of many critically acclaimed books.
Vishnu Som is Group Executive Editor at NDTV and anchor of the flagship show Left, Right and Centre. An award-winning television journalist with nearly three decades of experience, he has reported from major conflict zones. Vishnu has interviewed world leaders from Vladimir Putin and Shinzo Abe to Bill Gates and John Kerry, anchored global sessions at the World Economic Forum, and produced over 50 acclaimed documentaries.
Topics Covered:
00:00 Introduction - India's Peninsular Identity Crisis and Maritime Heritage Gap
01:24 INSV Kaundinya Project - From Vision to Construction
08:55 Sanjeev Sanyal’s Vision of Ancient Shipbuilding Renaissance
10:38 Kaundinya's Epic Love Story - First Indian Mariner
13:15 Design of the Stitched Ships of Ancient India
19:24 Sailing Challenges - Square Sails, Steering Oars, and Ancient Navigation
22:23 Indian Ocean Trade Dominance - Merchant Guilds and Naval Power
24:20 Support and Backing for the Stitched Ship Project
27:01 Harappan Anchor - Stone Technology Spanning Millennia
Economist Sanjeev Sanyal leads ground-breaking reconstruction of 5th century Indian stitched ship INSV Kaundinya, revealing India's forgotten maritime dominance. Based on Ajanta cave paintings and ancient texts, this authentic vessel demonstrates sophisticated shipbuilding techniques that enabled Indian Ocean trade networks spanning till Rome. The project preserves vanishing traditional craftsmanship while showcasing India's advanced maritime heritage predating European naval technology.
About the Speakers:
Sanjeev Sanyal is a leading Indian economist, historian, and member of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council. A Rhodes Scholar and former Global Strategist at Deutsche Bank, he now shapes India’s economic policy and global financial engagement. He was named Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in 2010. He is also a well-known environmentalist and urban theorist. He has been a Visiting Scholar at Oxford University, an Adjunct Fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies, Singapore and a Senior Fellow of the Worldwide Fund for Nature. He is an accomplished writer of many critically acclaimed books.
Vishnu Som is Group Executive Editor at NDTV and anchor of the flagship show Left, Right and Centre. An award-winning television journalist with nearly three decades of experience, he has reported from major conflict zones. Vishnu has interviewed world leaders from Vladimir Putin and Shinzo Abe to Bill Gates and John Kerry, anchored global sessions at the World Economic Forum, and produced over 50 acclaimed documentaries.
Topics Covered:
00:00 Introduction - India's Peninsular Identity Crisis and Maritime Heritage Gap
01:24 INSV Kaundinya Project - From Vision to Construction
08:55 Sanjeev Sanyal’s Vision of Ancient Shipbuilding Renaissance
10:38 Kaundinya's Epic Love Story - First Indian Mariner
13:15 Design of the Stitched Ships of Ancient India
19:24 Sailing Challenges - Square Sails, Steering Oars, and Ancient Navigation
22:23 Indian Ocean Trade Dominance - Merchant Guilds and Naval Power
24:20 Support and Backing for the Stitched Ship Project
27:01 Harappan Anchor - Stone Technology Spanning Millennia