Aryan invasion theory
The Aryan invasion theory is a historical theory first put forth by German Indologist Friedrich Max Müller and others in the mid 19th century to explain certain aspects of history in the Indian subcontinent. The theory itself has a complex history - initial acceptance, subsequent modifications, and currently new challenges in terms of counter theories. However, no single conclusive theory now prevails, rather combinations of theories are generally accepted.
According to the theory, a Caucasian race of nomadic warriors known as the Aryans, originating in the Caucasus mountains in Central Asia, invaded Northern India and Iran, somewhere between 1800 and 1500 BC. The Invaders entered the Indian sub-continent from the mountain passes of the Hindu Kush mountains possibly on horseback, bringing with them the domesticated horse into the sub-continent. The theory further proposes that this race displaced the indigenous Dravidian people and their Indus Valley Culture, and that the bulk of the indigenous people moved to the Southern reaches of the subcontinent. The Aryans brought with them their own Vedic religion, which was codified in the Vedas around the 1500 to 1200 BC. Upon arrival in India, the Aryans abandoned their nomadic lifestyle and intermixed with the Dravidians remaining in the north of India. The victory of the Aryans over the Indus Valley Civilization was quick and complete, resulting in the complete domination of Aryan culture and language over the northern part of the subcontinent and considerable influence on parts of the south.
The theory was first proposed in the nineteenth century as a purely linguistic theory. Given that Europe had Indo-European speaking people, it was proposed that (possibly) light skinned people invaded the subcontinent and subdued the aboriginal people and then mixed with them. The theory seemed reasonable, given the contemporary history of European colonization. The aboriginal occupants of India were assumed to be primitive and the achievements of ancient India were credited to the invading Aryans. During the 1920s, the Indus Valley civilization was discovered which was obviously extremely advanced for its time with planned cities, a standardized system of weights and bricks, etc. The theory was modified to say that the nomadic Aryans had overthrown an advanced urban civilization.
The association of Aryans with a race also has been slowly dropped. Max Müller clarified late in his career that by Aryan, he only meant a group of languages and not a race. Romila Thapar also maintains that Aryan never meant race in the Rig Veda and that the Proto-Indo European speaking people were already a mixed bunch and not any "pure" Caucasian race.
Accepted generally when it was first propounded, this theory has since been questioned on two fundamental grounds: firstly whether the Aryans came through invasions or incursions/ migrations, and secondly, whether the Aryans came from outside the Indian subcontinent at all. The issues raised by these lines of questioning are discussed in the subsequent paragraphs.
The first responses to the Aryan invasion theory accept the basic premise that the Aryans came from outside India but speculate and differ on the nature of their ingress. The proponents of this camp are of the opinion that there is very little archaeological evidence for an invasion. For the invasion theory to be viable, the Aryans would have had to discover mountain passes among the treacherous Hindu-Kush mountains, most of which are snow free only three months a year. The Aryan invaders, being a nomadic people would be far smaller in number to the Indus Valley civilization, which was spread over an area greater than 1.8 million square kilometers with an estimated population greater than the combined populations of all the other river civilizations at that time except ancient China. They would then have to quickly and completely rout an advanced civilization living in fortified cities over a large geographic area and impose their culture, language, cosmology and religion on the local population without leaving any physical traces of themselves.
In addition, there are practically no archaeological signs of an invasion, nor oral or written legends of an invasion. It seems much more likely that Aryan migrants found mountain passes and entered the sub-continent during the snow free months and settled within or close to the Indus Valley civilization. Multiple waves of migration are possible, causing intermingling of the immigrant and local populations. There may have been significant exchange and assimilation of culture and language on both sides. The immigrants may have travelled back and forth to their original lands taking language and culture to other Indo-European peoples, especially Ancient Persia. Human skeletal remains excavated from sites of the Indus Valley civilization show a mixed ethnic composition similar to the present, showing support for migration rather than an invasion. Thus the idea of "invasion by barbarian Aryan hordes" has been replaced by "immigration and acculturation by a small group of linguistically Indo-European people".
Currently, there is a general acceptance of this theory of migration or gradual incursion.
However, in recent times a new viewpoint has emerged, that no such migration or invasion occurred, and that the Indus Valley civilization was the civilization described in the Vedas and the Aryans originated in India.
More recent scholarship claims that on the basis of archeology, linguistics, and study of available literature from that period, the Aryan culture was in fact an indigenous culture which had enjoyed continuous development in the Indian subcontinent for thousands of years. Recent discoveries of what appear to be Vedic elements in the Harappa and Mohenjodaro, as well as newly excavated cities in Gujarat and off the coastlines of Eastern and Western India seem to give the lie, according to some historians, to the Aryan Migration Theory. It supposes that in fact the great Vedic Saraswati River is the dry river bed that has been identified in North-Western India and that the white Aryan race is in fact nothing more than indigenous Indian tribes considered 'noble' for adherence to Vedic principles, not for their racial characteristics or lineage. This theory of the Aryan culture being indigenous establishes Vedic Indian culture to have come into being as early as 5000 BC, slowly developing over time till around the time of the dissolution of the Harappa and Mohenjodaro cultures, whose disappearance is now linked to the drying of the Saraswati River.
Researchers remain divided on this topic with the majority sticking to the old concepts.
Over two thousand Indus Valley sites have been unearthed but only five percent of them have been excavated. The investigation of the Aryan question involves:
The opponents of continuity primarily focus on showing that the Rig-Vedic culture is pastoral, external to the Indian sub-continent and that a chronological gap exists between the Indus Valley and the Rig Vedic cultures.
Proponents of continuity focus on stressing that the Rig-Vedic culture is native to the sub-continent, urban in nature, makes constant references to bodies of water (Central Asian nomads would not have been exposed to seas) and a chronological peer of the Harappan culture, and that perhaps they are the same culture.
The individual arguments may focus on linguistics, use of metals, domestication of horses or differences in described geography, but the basic focus is to identify the Rig-Vedic culture with or against the Indus Valley civilization.
Only five percent of the known Indus Valley sites have been excavated, so one could expect a constant stream of archaeological evidence to be unearthed in the future. Unlike linguistic and hermeneutic evidence, there are very few issues with archaeological evidence, primarily due to the reliability of Carbon-14 and Thermo-luminescence dating.
Right from the very first Harrappan excavation, Archaeology has rarely been kind to the Aryan Invasion Theory. The discovery of the Harappa Mohenjadaro sites changed the theory from an invasion of implicitly advanced Aryan people on an aboriginal population to an invasion of nomadic barbarians on an advanced urban civilization. The absence of any archaeological signs of any invasion changed the theory from an invasion to a migration. The recent DNA evidence showing the change in the ethnic makeup of the people in the subcontinent once between 6000BC and 4500 BC and then again between 800 and 200BC caused Romila Tapar to state that the Aryans were already a mixed bunch when they arrived in India. The total absence of any Aryan relics is still a major negative evidence against the Aryan migration theory.
An important piece of archaeological evidence mentioned in support of the invasion theory was the absence of horses in the Indus Valley civilization, while the Vedas make frequent mention of the horse. (The earliest domestication of the horse and the first use of horses in South Asia is a topic of great dispute.) However, terra-cotta figurines and faunal remains of the horse were excavated from the sites at Lothal, Surkotda and Kalibangan.
Similar weight has been placed on differences in the types of metals used in either civilization; the importance of the bull to the Indus Valley civilization as evidenced by imagery in seals and pottery in contrast to the Vedic cow-worship; the importance of the tiger in the Indus Valley civilization and its absence in the Vedic texts; the absence of the six spoked Aryan wheel and the heavy consumption of fish by the Indus Valley dwellers in contrast to the virtual absence of fish in the Vedas.
Proponents of a continuous civilisation point out that the bull is mentioned numerous times in the vedas (next only to the horse), for example verses comparing Soma to the bull [Rig Veda 1:32, 9:92] and Exploits of Indra [Rig Veda 1:33, 7:24, 10:86]. Cow worship is not vedic, it originated in later Hinduism during the time of Krishna the cowherd. There are no verses in the vedas that speak about cow-worship. Verses mentioning fish do exist in the Rig Veda [7:18, 10:68] and the tiger is mentioned in the Yajur Veda [4:4, 5:3, 6:2, 7:7]. Terra-cotta figurines excavated show chariots with spokes painted (at KaliBangan) or shown in relief (at Banawali).
Recently, the excavation of Dholavira in the Gujarath province of India is claimed by the same camp to show a city that is consistent with vedic principles of city planning: arameshthina, madhyamesthina and avameshtina or upper, middle and lower cities [1].
The linguistic evidence is one of the most contentious issues regarding the controversy. Usually, most of the controversy lies with the conclusions reached using the presented evidence rather than with the evidence itself. Although occasionally new facts are presented that call for refining the conclusions or explaining an anomaly.
North Indian languages related to Sanskrit are part of the Indo-European family of languages; the languages of south India belong to a different linguistic family, the Dravidian languages, with Tamil, a very distinct language in its own right (with literature and tradition from at least 300 BC, and disjoint from the Vedic), as the probable root of linguistic evolution. While Dravidian languages are primarily confined to the south of India, there is a striking exception: the Brahui, which is spoken in the Indus Valley area, indicating that Dravidian languages were formerly much more widespread and were supplanted by the incoming Indo-European languages such as Sanskrit.
This piece of evidence is the hardest to counter satisfactorily. The most reasonable counter-argument is that the presence of two language families does not automatically imply a migration at 1500 BC from the North-West. Any migration could have occurred much earlier and may not have resulted in any conflict.
Other linguistic evidence offered are the presence of retroflex L in Vedic Sanskrit, occurrence of Dravidian sub-stratum words in Sanskrit, words describing temperate climate in Proto-Indo-European, centum/satem divide, etc.
The retroflex L was countered by pointing its existence in Swedish and Norwegian (a recent development, which coexists with non-retroflexive combinations); the sub-stratem words were dismissed since some of them had Aryan etymologies and the rest were claimed to be ad-stratem. The climatic argument was countered by noting that the Himalyan foothills have a temperate climate and the centum/satem divide by pointing out a centum language, Bangani spoken in western Himalayas.
Proponents of continuity claim that Sanskrit names of purely Indian animals all have IE etymologies: mayUra for peacock”; vyAghra for tiger; mahiSa for buffalo; pRshatI for spotted deer; iBha and hasthi for elephant.
Linguistics is seen by many to favor Migration Theories, due to linked roots with non-Indian peoples. 'Continuists' claim that the assumption of linguistic similarities move into the Indian subcontinent is fundamentally biased and does not provide for the equally plausible possibility of movement out from India.
A major hurdle with the hermenutics of the Vedic age is the complexity of the scripture and the Vedic language itself. At the least, a passing knowledge of Vedic Sanskrit is required and scholars who rely solely on translations inherit mistranslations and any prejudices that may be present in the translator's commentaries. Fortunately, the Rig Veda is easy to understand with some knowledge of classical Sanskrit.
A major argument offered against identifying the Indus Valley civilization with a continuous, indigenous Vedic civilization is that the society described in the Vedas is primarily a pastoral one, whereas the Indus Valley civilization was heavily urbanized. And that few of the elements of such an urban civilization (e.g., temple structures, sewage systems) are described in the Vedas.
However, as a counter, the Rig Veda does contain the phrases: city's lord [Rig Veda 1:173], shrine [Rig Veda 9:113], ship with a hundred oars [Rig Veda 1:116] and iron forts [10:101]. Frequent references to the ocean and large tracts of water are also sources for the idea of continuity, since posits for ingress rely on largely nomadic travelers from the steppes of Russia who would not have been exposed to such scenes. Also, husbandry does not negate urbanisation since the Vedic books clearly show progression of thought over many years.
Proponents of continuity state that evidence in the Vedas points to a considerably earlier dating of the text. As an example, they argue that the positions of stars described in the Vedas occurred in 3500 to 4000 BC and point out that there is no account in the text of an invasion, of a great migration, or of an ancestral homeland in Central Asia.
There is, as well, considerable description of a river Saraswati. Recent geological evidence (taken from satellite photographs) has uncovered the existence of a dry riverbed -- the Hakra River -- going through the Punjab area in the Indian subcontinent.
A few historians believe this river is the Saraswati described in the Vedas. Many of the archaeological Indus Valley sites lie along the remains of this riverbed, suggesting that the Indus Valley civilization may have flourished between these two rivers. Around 1900 BC, however, the Hakra river appears to have dried up (due to earthquakes and the shifting of the path of the tributary Yamuna river, which turned from feeding the Hakra to feeding the Ganges), causing the decline of the Indus Valley civilization.
Opponents of continuity argue that the identification of the Saraswati with the Hakra would lead to inconsistencies, and that the Saraswati is very probably a particular river in Afghanistan, that is known to have had a similar name. They also point to the linguistic and religious similarities between the Vedas and early Iranian sacred literature such as the Avesta. The languages and the names of gods are very similar and both involve the ritual drinking of Soma. The problem with this identification is that, as before, it ignores the possibility that Indian people moved out of India, interacting with Zoroastrian peoples, and that the departure was from India, rather than to India.
The issue might be settled definitively by the deciphering of the many seals found at Indus Valley sites, which are written with an unknown script. If it were a Dravidian script this would confirm the theory that an indigenous culture was supplanted by an outside one. If it were Indo-Aryan it would support the alternative claims. More importantly, what the script says would be of utmost significance, since a proto-Sanskrit language in Dravidian script would shed new light on possible movements within the Indian subcontinent. However, the script remains undeciphered. Attempts to translate the script into some form of Sanskrit have failed thus far.
Like much of history, this question is immensely politically charged with ulterior motives being ascribed to proponents of both camps.
Supporters of the migration theory are faced with several accusations. The most major one is that the British Raj and European Indologists from the 19th century to the present day forwarded an Aryan Invasion (and now Migration) in support of Euro-centric notions of white supremacy. Current assertions that the highly advanced proto-Hindu Vedic culture could not have had its roots in India are seen as attempts to bolster European ideas of dominance. Also, there are many South Indians who have adopted the 'Dravidian' identity as a matter of ethnic pride. Many opponents of the Aryan-Vedic continuity in India, like Romila Thapar, are seen as Leftist/ Marxist.
The proponents of a continuous, ancient, and sophisticated Vedic civilization are seen by some as Hindu nationalists who wish to dispense with the foreign origins of the Aryan for the sake of national pride. Another motivation is seen as arising from the need to negate the Indian caste system; the hypothesis that it may originally have been a means of social engineering by the Aryans to establish and maintain a superior position compared to the Dravidians in Indian society may be a source of discomfort.
The dominance in post-independence India of socialist accounts of history in Indian universities is a fact. And so is the recent emergence of Hindutva as a significant force in Indian politics. Until legitimate and widely corroborated archeological evidence for either side of the argument emerges, ulterior motive rather than genuine scholarship will be seen as underpinning their respective theories.
Overview
Questioning the theory
Alternative theory- Migration rather than invasion
New viewpoint regarding origins of Aryans
The Aryan Question -- a complex problem
It is hard to be an expert in all the above disciplines over such a large area and over such a long time period, so observations or claims made by any person may show accuracy and thoroughness in one area but faulty analysis or oversight in another.Archaeology
Linguistics
Hermeneutics
Influence of politics
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