Geographical knowledge of the vedic period.
The geographical
evidence as to be found in the hymns of Vedas thros some light on the course of
Indo-Aryan migration and the origin of Hinduism. Whether the Indo-Aryans came
from Central Asia or not depends largely on the interpretation of the
geographical allusions in the Rig and Yajur Vedas. The hymns in praise of
rivers in the 10th blcok are interesting. The author while singing the
greatness of the Sindhu enumerates at least 19 rivers including the Ganges. The
fifth Stanza gives a list of 10 streams, small and great-Ganges, Yamuna,
Saraswati, Satluj, Ravi, Chenab, Jhelum, Maruwardwan (in J&K), Sushoma
(Rowalpindi District) and probably Kanshi in the same district. This system of
rivers did not remain the Saraswati. The existing delta of the Indus has been
formed since the time of Alexander the Great.
The Vedic hymns reveal
the initial Aryan settlements in India : western tributaries of the Indus, the
Gomti (modern Gomal) the Krumu (modern Kurram) and the Kubha (modern Kabul).
The one river mentioned in the North of Kabul is Suvastu (modern swat).
But the main focus of
the Rig Vedic settlements was in the Punjab and the Delhi region. When the
Rig-Vedic hymns were compiled the focus of Aryan settlement was the region
between the Yamuna and the Sutlaj, south of modern Ambala and laong the upper
course of river Saraswati. The most frequently mentioned rivers are the Sindhu
(Indus), the Sarasvati (modern Sarsuti), the Drishadvati (modern Chitang), and
the five streams of the Punjab.
Regarding the other
geographical features, the Vedic poets knew the Himalayas but not the land
south of Yamuna, since they did not mention the Vindhayas, In the east also the
Aryans did not expand beyond Yamuna; for the river Ganga is mentioned only once
in one late hymn.
And possibly, the
Aryans had no knowledge of the oceans since the word 'samudra' in the Vedic
period meant a pool of water. But the later Vedic knowledge shows that the
Aryans knew the two seas, the Himalayas and the Vindhyan mountainas and
generally the entire Indo-Gangetic plain.
The Aryans used
various kinds of pottery and the sites where the painted grey were are found,
confirm the Aryan settlements. The Vedic texts show that the Aryans expanded
from the Punjab over the whole of western Uttar Pradesh covered by the
Ganga-Yamuna Doab. The Bharatas and Purus known as Kuru people first lived
between Sarasvati and Drishadvati just on the fringe of the Doab. Soon the
Kurus occupied Delhi and the Upper portion of the doab, that is the area called
Kurukshetra, After this event, the Kurus joined with the people called
Panchalas who occupied the middle portion of the Doab or the moder districts of
bareilly Dadaun and Farrukabad. It was the Kuru-Panchalas who had set up their capital
at Hastinapur situated in the district of Meerut. Later the Kauravas and the
Pandavas belonging to the same Kuru clan fougth out a battle which led to the
extinction of the Kuru clan.
And by 600 B.C. the
Aryans spread from the Doab further east to Kosala in Eastern U.P. and Vedeha
in north Bihar. The former town is associated with the story of Ramchandra, but
it is not mentioned in Vedic literature.
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