While I have read multiple books on Vedic history before, I recently picked up a book called
'Discovering the Vedas' by Frits Staal. There are several important things to note about this book:
- It was completed recently, in 2007 so it is contemporary and brings out the most recent reserach and findings around Vedic history
- It is written by a great scholar with over 40 years of reserach in this area. He lived in India, learnt sanskrit and then went on to build his scholarship at Berkeley, MIT and so on
- No BS look at core research
I have not finished reading the book but want to open a thread where I can start noting all the important discoveries/ conjectures so that I don't forget any of them. @vstol Jockey @Levina this stuff might be of interest to you
Notable:
a) The river Sarswati is most probably river Helmand in Afghanistan
b) Indus Valley Script is probably not a 'script' (this is author analysis) Probably icon/seal of families and officials
c) Aryan invasion theory almost certainly debunked - genetic contribution from non Indic people is insignificant
d) What has happened - specifically in the case of use of horses- is the transference of ideas over the mountains rather than the influx of people as such
e) Right now I'm reading through sections where the 'Soma' is being discussed. The mountain where 'Soma' is supposed to exist is actually the Pamir mountains. I'm hoping to he reveals what plant 'Soma' actually in in coming pages.
'Discovering the Vedas' by Frits Staal. There are several important things to note about this book:
- It was completed recently, in 2007 so it is contemporary and brings out the most recent reserach and findings around Vedic history
- It is written by a great scholar with over 40 years of reserach in this area. He lived in India, learnt sanskrit and then went on to build his scholarship at Berkeley, MIT and so on
- No BS look at core research
I have not finished reading the book but want to open a thread where I can start noting all the important discoveries/ conjectures so that I don't forget any of them. @vstol Jockey @Levina this stuff might be of interest to you
Notable:
a) The river Sarswati is most probably river Helmand in Afghanistan
b) Indus Valley Script is probably not a 'script' (this is author analysis) Probably icon/seal of families and officials
c) Aryan invasion theory almost certainly debunked - genetic contribution from non Indic people is insignificant
d) What has happened - specifically in the case of use of horses- is the transference of ideas over the mountains rather than the influx of people as such
e) Right now I'm reading through sections where the 'Soma' is being discussed. The mountain where 'Soma' is supposed to exist is actually the Pamir mountains. I'm hoping to he reveals what plant 'Soma' actually in in coming pages.



