Indo Western Contact
Indo Western Contact
Indo Western Contact
Cultural Contacts
D. N. TRIPATHI
four Vedic deities, viz., Indra, Mitra, Varona and the Nasatyas are
mentioned. Other Mitanni kings, namely, Dushratta, Artama, and
Shattruhana are also briefly referred to in these books. Again, a casual
reference to the discovery in Boghaz Koi (Turkey) of an Indo-Aryan
text on horse-training pertaining to the same period (i.e. second
millennium BC) finds place in these books. From the Boghaz Koi
site have also been discovered the massive stone images of the wind
god and his consort, and 'thus the Vedic Marut or Vayu was also
represented in the Aryan Hittite Pantheon'. (Nag 1954: 49). However,
these two original documents, and hundreds of other Indo-Aryan
and Semitic documents unearthed in Egypt, Turkey, Iraq, Syria and
Israel have altogether been ignored by the Indian scholars. A close
study of these documents will undoubtedly prove to be rewarding.
Lack of opportunities to study the cuneiform alphabet and the
Akkadian, Hurrian, Kassite and Hitti languages in which these
documents are written has hampered research into this phase of
ancient history. Whatever we know is because of the efforts of the
western scholars such as Waddell, Gbtze (1933), Sayee (1933) and
others who were well versed in both the Sanskrit and the Semitic
languages and have tried to project an unbiased view that the western
Asian civilization owe to the great Indian tradition.
Nag (1954: 107-108) may be nearer to the truth when he says
that 'with the Kassittes with Aryan names, definite Indo-Aryan races
were' marching from East to West in the early seventeenth century
BC and they must have swept through Palestine into Egypt in their
swift chariots'. This has been clearly brought out by the Palestinologist
Albright (1949). Many cuneiform tablets of the 15-14th century BC
have been discovered in Palestine; and, after carefully analysing the
personal names, the experts discovered that:
... about one-third (of these names) can be identified without hesitation as
Indo-Aryan. These Indo-Aryans (of Palestine were part of the great southward
migration, which brought the Vedic Aryans ... southwest into northern
Mesopotamia, the precursors of the Mitannis; many personal names
belonging to them have been found in cuneiform tablets from Mesopotamia,
Asia Minor, Syria and Palestine-all dating between BC 1600 and 1250. As
P.E. Dument has shown, perhaps "a fourth of these names like Indaruta
(Amarna Tablets) are identical with names in the Vedas and other early
Sanskrit literature".
These names provide evidence that Indie deities such as lndra (the
storm god), Yamin and Surya were once worshipped. in Palestine. A
Indian and Western Asian Cultural Contacts 3
the ancient world. Greece, Persia, Egypt and China went to sit at the
feet of those serene dreamers on the banks of the Indus and the
Ganges under the shade of the banyan trees; and there they marvelled .
at the power of philosophy and to achieve way to ideal virtue. And
what treasures of European fable, legend and mythic lore further
testify to the indebtedness of Europe to India, is the sphere of
imagination and fancy; the Magic Mirror, the Golden Egg, the Purse
of Fortunatus, the Cape of Invisibility! Ex Oriente Lux !
The purpose of the present paper is to bring to light the various
individual Western Asian Indo-Aryan rulers mentioned in Indian
texts (Vedic hymns, the great epics-Ramayana and Mahabharata,
and Puranas). This paper is also meant to highlight the fact that the
ancient Oriental world, i.e. Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Arabia, Anatolia,
Mesopotamia and Iran owes much to India in order to understand
their own ancient history and civilization.
The famous correspondence between the Egyptian government
and its officials on the one hand and sister governments in Asia on
the other, which was discovered at Tel el-Amarna, made us
acquainted with the Mesopotamian kingdom of Mitanni and many
of its rulers. Among the letters was one from a king Dusratta which
was written in the native language of the country. Nearly twenty
years later, the discovery of the cuneiform tablets preserved in the
libraries of the Hittite capital at Boghaz Koi in Cappadocia brought
to light fresh information concerning Mitanni. Not only did we
acquire a large amount of additional knowledge as regards its history
and princes, but we also learned that Mitanni was not homogeneous
in either population or speech. Along with the deities of Mitanni and
Babylonia certain deities with Indian names are invoked in its
records. Next to Mitanni, another name is employed which could be
read as 'Kharri' or 'Kharriyan' and in which Dr Winckler proposed
to see the name of the Aryans.
Meanwhile, attempts had been made to explain some of the names
of the Egyptian officials in Syria mentioned in the Tel el-Amarna
tablets as of Iranian origin. The tablets had already informed us that
Artatama was the grandfather of Dusratta, while Artassumara was
his brother. Also, a Mitannian is mentioned who bore the name of
Artessupa. "It was easy to see in them the Iranian arta. The fact that
Mitra is stated to be a name of the Sun god in one of the tablets from
the library of Assur-bani-pal was quoted as a proof that ~ill Iranian
language was once spoken in the immediate neighbourhood of
Assyria.
Indian and Western Asian Cultural Contacts 5
in the Near East in the fifteenth century before our era, and that a
Proto-Indian people were once included within the limits of the Hittite
Empire. (Sayee: 1933).
For a long time, it has been known that in the Amarna age, i.e. in
and around 1400 BC, there were many Indo-Iranian rulers in the
Syrian and Mesopotamian kingdoms. In particular was the dynasty
of the Churri and Mitannian Empire-which represent a highly
significant phase in the period we are concerned with-that belongs
to the constituent part of the population of the ancient Near East
(Meyer, ed. Geschichte des Altertums, i, 2 & 455, 265). Having
reached the culmination of its influence, the Mitannian king~om
extended to the coast of the Mediterranean (Gotze 1928:22). We
are, therefore, not surprised to meet lndo-Iranians also in the
adjoining parts of Syria and even Palestine. Their names have already
been collected and interpreted by several scholars: Hommel (1898),
Scheftelowitz (1902), Bloomfield (1908) and Friedrich (1929). To
their list might be added the name of Sunassura which occurs in
Hittite cuneiform documents (see especially the treaty of a Hittite
king with Sunassura of Kizwatna published in Keilschrifttexte aus
Boghazkoi, I, 5, and translated by D.O. Luckenbill (1921).
Beyond any doubt, Sunassura is a name of the same type as
Artatama, Artamanya, Sutarna, Mattiwaza, Aitaggama, & c. If we
look for an Indo-Iranian interpretation, we can easily recognize at
the end of the compound the Indian sura and A vestan sura, 'strong,
brave, hero'. Here, the Ind. s is replaced by sin cuneiform writing in
the same manner as, for instance, in the name Pirida'j_wa, which
certainly contains the Indian word asva and probably means one
'who posseses a war horse (Porzig 1927:267). It is more difficult to
recognize the Indian and A vestan word which we suppose was
equivalent to the first part of Sunassura. The .~ of cuneiform writing
suits Ind. s as well as Ind. The first equation is shown above. The
other we have, for instance, in Suwardatta, i.e. 'given by the sun
god (svar) ', or in Subandhu, i.e. one 'who has noble relatives', & c.
So, it is possible to suppose suna- or suna- as the relevant word. But
only the former gives a satisfactory meaning: sunam often occurs as
an adverb denoting 'prosperity, with success' (Petersburger
Worterbuch, vii, col. 257). It occurs in the compound suna-hotra, a
Vedic proper name (ibid.), which implies the name of a family of
Indian and Western Asian Cultural Contacts 9
Outside the Indian subcontinent, Indus seals have been found in Ur,
Kish, Brak, Agade, Susa, Nippur, Bahrain and Failaka. A sealing circular
in plan and bearing impressions of swastika produced by drawing
parallel lines in cardinal directions must have been used for sealin~ a
jar retrieved from Brak in the Euphratus-Tigris Valley where Indus
seals and weights are found and a seal of similar motif also occurs.
None of the original seals affixed on the terracotta and faience sealings
has been found at Lothal, nor are sealings of Lothal seal.s _found at the
site. The fact that the seal owners of Lothal sealings residing elsewhere
exported and imported goods to and from Lothal is also true (Rao,
1991: 194). .
14 D.N. TRIPATHI
Sculpture
Burials
Weights
Pottery
found in Sumer during the Uruk period but also in the lower levels
at Carchemish far up the Euphrates. Similarly the comparison of the
polychrome pottery of the Indus Valley with various types of painted
pottery from Baluchistan raises one of the knottiest problems of
archaeology and chronology.'
Rao (1961 :47) is of the opinion that 'many of the objects of non-
Harappan origin found at Lothal, Harappa and Mohenjo-daro clearly
indicate close trade relations between the Indus valley and Saurashtra
on the one hand and the Persian Gulf islands and Mesopotamia on
the other, especially in the Sargonid Period'. The most convincing
proof is a circular seal of ivory from Lothal assignable to the Kassite
period. It bears close resemblance to the Bahrain seals. Some of the
Bahrain seals bear Indus animal motifs. The occurrence of several
Indus type seals at Ur, Kish, Susa and Lagash is also a well-known
fact. The terracotta seatings from Lothal bearing impressions of
packing material on their back clearly suggest a commercial use.
Among them is one bearing the impression of a stamp seal similar to
the one found at Brak. It is, therefore, evident that Lothal had trade
contacts with Bahrain islands and Sumerian cities.
Other evidences from Lothal, which suggest contact with West
Asia, consist of: bun-ingots of bronze which are almost identical
with those from Susa, the painted potsherds with a technical similarity
to the reserved slip ware from the Sargonid levels of Brak and Ur,
bronze amulets of couchant bull comparable with those from Ur
and Susa, and bronze pins with bird-head similar to those found in
Hissar III B and Hittite levels of Alishar Huyuk. The spacer-beads
of gold from Lothal are comparable with those from the Royal
Cemetery at Ur. The cubical chert weights from Kish, gold-bordered
agate beads with lenticular section from the Mycenaean tombs and
the thin disc-beads of gold from Hissar III B are also comparable
with similar objects from Lothal. 'These evidences are impressive
enough to conclude that Lothal had trade relations with West Asia.
Ivory, chank-shell, beads of gemstones and cotton or cotton goods
were probably exported from Lothal, and imports consisted of chert
and steatite for making blades and beads respectively, and bronze
ingots for making implements. In this connection, the clay tablets of
Ur throw some light. They mention the goods imported from
Meluhha, Makkan and Telmun or Dilmun' (Rao 196: 48).
Indian and Western Asian Cultural Contacts 17
During the reign of Saragon of Agade in Mesopotamia (Iraq), the
Semites carried on brisk trade with the Harappans who had
established overseas settlements in Ur, Kish, Brak, Failaka and Oman
and further north also, which were mostly merchant colonies
(Rao1991: 300). Dilmun tablets give a list of 22 articles of trade.
This list includes ivory, gold, gemstone, beads, wool, etc. Further,
the Indus weight system was in vogue in Bahrain in 2000 BC. During
the Late Harappan period, there was a decline in trade for a short
while, but it picked up quickly with the participation of the
Phoenicians who were identified with the Pal)is mentioned in the
f!.gveda 'as a trading community which does not make any offerings'
(R.N.Dandekar 1979: 98,108, 170-71, 197). Donald Harden (The
Canaanites (Penguin) remarks, 'The Phoenicians as a people cannot
be differentiated from the general mass of Canaanites until
somewhere during the later half of the second millennium BC', and
adds, 'The Canaanites were certainly autochthonous, and the date
of their coming into the country has been disputed. It is usually
recognized that there were several waves of migrating Semites
coming, it is thought, from Arabia or the Persian Gulf. Many now
equate the first main northward migration with the movement which
brought the Akkadian overlordship to Mesopotamia about 2350 NC,
the second with the influx of Amorites towards the end of the third
millennium and the third with that of the Aramanes at the end of the
Bronze Age' (Rao 1991: 220). Besides, the Harappan trade contacts
with West Asia via Bahrain and Ur, the Late Harappans too continued
to have trade and cultural contacts with Bahrain, Cyprus and Syria,
as is indicated by the seal, inscribed jar and stone anchors of Dwarka-
Bet Dwarka (Rao 1991: 281).
Indus pottery, weights and seals have been found in Afghanistan,
Iran, Tajikistan, Bahrain and Failaka. Tepe Yahya, a Proto Elamite
site in Iran excavated by Lamberg Karlovsky (1973: 1-43) in 1967-
69, has yielded a pot stamped with Indus seal. Altin Depe in
Turkmenia was also a Harappan outpost where Indus pottery, seal
and weights are found (Masson and Srianidi 1972). Balakot, an
ancient port situated near the Makran Coast, has yielded interesting
evidence of Indo-Sumerian trade (Rao 1991: 60). The trade contact
which Lothal had with Bahrain, Failaka, Oman and the
Mesopotamian and Elamite cities including Brak, Ur and Susa is
suggested by the assorted relics of foreign origin such as Reserved
Slip Ware, terracotta sealings and gold beads with axial tube, bull-
amulet of bronze and Bahrain type seal found at Lothal. Imports
18 D.N. TRIPATHI
Terracotta Figurines
Terracotta male figures are rare at the Harappan sites of the Indus
valley and Gujarat. The best specimen comes from Lothal. With
Sumerian features, these have bald head, square-cut beard, pointed
nose and slit eyes. The eye-sockets are indicated by depressions.
The pointed nose and long square-cut beard are the features alien to
Indus art. 'The curious style of hairdressing as seen in Eshunna statues
suggests indebtedness to Indian fashion' (Sinha 1961: 58).
One of the tombs has yielded a statue of a squatting monkey
precisely similar to one found at Mohenjo-daro. The monkey is not
native to Iraq; so this must be set down to an Indian influence (Sinha
1961: 58).
A faience bead from Lothal, lenticular in section and with gold
border, is reminiscent of a similar jasper bead from Minoan II. A
bun-shaped copper ingot from Lothal may be compared with
Sumerian ingots. The same site has yielded a copper amulet with a
bull figure similar to one found in Susa during the second millennium
BC. The movement of peoples from Iran and perhaps even from the
Caucasus region into India is evidenced by the stray finds of copper
and bronze items. A Copper Hoard from Khirdi in Nagpur district
includes a fine bowl with a long protruding channel spout, with
analogues in pottery and metal at Giyan I, Sialk, etc., and another
simple bowl of copper reminiscent of examples from Sialk. Among
the Copper Hoards from Fatehgarh and Bithur in the Ganga valley
and Kallur in the Deccan are swords or discs of copper with midribs
from the Kohan culture of the Caucasus (c.1200-1 000 BC). A copper
spearhead from Chandoli and a fragmentary one from Navdatoli are
similar to the spearheads found in the graves at Geyer in Palestine,
Indian and Western Asian Cultural Contacts 19
Harappan Chronology
in the streams of the Punjab and, on the Ocean (cf. Voyage of Prince
Bhujya) and trade only existed in barter. And it is narrated there that
the two Asvins (who represent morning and evening twilight) brought
back Prince Bhujya, who sailed in a hundred-oared ship (sataritram
navam) and went to sea and was nearly drowned, 'in vessels of their
own along the bed of the Ocean'. Thus:
Safe comes the ship to haven,
Through billows and through gales;
If once the great Twin brethren
Sit shining on the sails
But the first trade between the West and India of which we have any
definite know ledge was that carried on by the Phoenician and Hebrew
mariners from Ezion-Geber on the Red Sea; and an account we have
of this trade implies the role of the Phoenicians in it, the Phoenicians
who first made their appearance on the Erythrean or Red Sea. By
Red Sea here we must imply the entire Indian Ocean between Africa
and the Malaya Peninsula; and curiously the Purii~ws represent it in
that manner when they describe the waters of the Arunodadhi, as
reddened by the reflection of the solar rays from the southern side
of the Mount Sumeru, which abounds with red rubies. Of the fact
that a trade existed between Western Asia and Babylonia on the one
hand and Hindusthan on the other, there cannot be any doubt. M.
D' Anville suggests three routes for this intercourse with the western
world. The first route climbs up the precipitous and zigzag passes of
the Zagros Range, which the Greeks called the "Ladders", into the
treeless regions of Persia. This route was barred for centuries by the
inveterate hostility of the mountaineers and did not become
practicable until "the Great King Darius" reduced the Kurdish
highlanders to a condition of vassalage. The second route traverses
the mountains of Armenia to the Caspian Sea and Oxus and descends
into India by the passes of the Hindukush. Articles of commerce
doubtless passed along this way from early times, but the trade was
of little importance, fitful, intermittent and passed through many
intermediate hands, until the Parthian domination obliged more
merchants to take this route. Lastly, there is the sea, and this alone
affords a direct and constant intercourse.
Now we come to the important question: when and in which period
indeed did a regular maritime intercourse first arise between India
and Western Asia? From the history of Chinese coinage, it is quite
certain that an active sea-borne commerce sprang about 700 BC
between Babylon and Farther East with India having an active share
Indian and Western Asian Cultural Contacts 23
in it. From the time of Darius Hystaspes (c. 500 BC), the Babylonians
lost their monopoly in it and it passed largely into the hands of the
Arabs, whom the Greeks found controlling and in possession. Ample
evidence is forthcoming that maritime intercourse existed between
India and Babylon in the seventh century BC. The relevant evidence
is adduced below.
Firstly: Shalmaneser IV of Assyria (727 -722 BC) received presents
from Bactria and India, especially Bactrian camels and Indian
elephants. (Winckler). Secondly: H. Rassam found a beam of Indian
cedar in the palace of Nebuchadrezzar III of the Neo-Babylonian
Empire (c. 580 BC) at Birs Nimrud, part of which is now exhibited
in the British Museum. Thirdly: The Baveru Jataka relates the
adventures of certain Indian merchants, who took the first peacock
by sea to Babylon. The Jataka itself may go back to 400 BC, but the
folk tales on which it is founded must be much older. Prof. Minayeff
saw in the Baveru Jataka the oldest trace in India of Phoenician-
Babylonian intercourse. Fourthly: Certain Indian commodities were
imported into Babylon even in the days of Solomon c. 900 BC.
These products were known to the Greeks and others under their
Indian names. Rice, for instance, had always been a principal article
of export from India (vide the Periplus of the Erythrean sea) and it
was a common article of food in the time of Sophocles (Gk. Oryza is
identical with the Tamil, arisi for rice). Again, Aristophanes
repeatedly mentions peacock and assumes that it was as well known
to his audience as the common fowl with which he contrasts it.
Peacocks, rice and Indian sandalwoods were known in Palestine
under their Tamil names in the days of Hebrew chroniclers of Kings
and Genesis. Fifthly: Baudhayana's condemnation of the northern
Aryans, who took part in the sea trade, proves that they were not the
chief agents, though they had a considerable share in it (J. Kennedy
1898: J.R.A.S.).
These evidences then warrant us in the belief that maritime commerce
between India and Babylon flourished at least in the seventh and sixth
centuries BC. 'Crowds of strangers lived in Babylon,' says Berossus
(c. 850 BC). But the seventh and the sixth centuries are the culminating
period of Babylonian greatness and developed into the greatest
commercial entrepot of the world. With Nebuchadrezzar Babylon
became the wonder of the world where the merchants of all countries
used to throng. The secret of her greatness lay in her monopoly of the
treasures of the east, in the shouting of the Chaldeans in their ships and
in the swarthy Orientals who frequented her bazaars.
24 D.N. TRIPATHI
Of all parts of the mighty oceans that- encircle the earth, none
(except the Mediterranean) seems by its position and shape more
adapted to play a part in the history of the world than the Indian
Ocean. From the historical standpoint, the Indian Ocean takes a
very high place. This Ocean-lying as it does on the southern
edge of the old world, penetrating at so many points the lands of
ancient history and offering such facilities for international
intercourse-has been the theatre of events, which are not wanting
in grandeur and are sometimes eminently suggestive. In reality,
it discloses prospects of remarkable depth and reveals glimpses
of the rise and fall of nations. From the earliest times, it has been
a great link of communication between the East and the West.
The commerce of the Indian Ocean goes back far into remote
antiquity. The ancient Egyptians and Phoenicians were certainly
the earliest authenticated navigators of the Indian Ocean and its
adjoining parts. Although the Egyptians relished spices and were
always in search of direct communication with the countries
producing spices, we get the reference of the first attempts at a
direct maritime communication with India from the west by the
Phoenicians in the second millennium BC. Even at the time of
the expedition sent by Hiram of Tyre and Solomon, the
magnificent and wise king of the Hebrews, to Ophir from Ezion-
geber and Elath, the route to that mysterious land of gold was
well known and regularly frequented. The magnet, however,
which chiefly attracted navigators into this ocean was the
peninsula of India. The fact that the Vedic hymns and Man's
Code mention Aryan voyages, which extended even to the
ancient island of Diascorides (Socotra) is again and again brought
forward as a proof that trade and communications existed between
India and the west. The Indian Aryans never made a permanent
habit of navigation. India never felt the need of seeking the
outside world, but it was always destined to be the goal for other
nations, by land as well as by sea. From its vast treasures it has
given to the world more than any country on the earth.
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