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Culture

'Indo-European' - Beyond The Homeland Question

  • What are the implications of linguistic and genetic discoveries for India’s ancient past?

Aravindan NeelakandanAug 07, 2023, 02:08 PM | Updated 02:12 PM IST

AI impression of Vedic sacrifice in Mohenjodaro.


Twenty years ago, in 2003, a study in Nature that analysed ‘a matrix of 87 languages with 2,449 lexical items’ came to the conclusion that the Indo-European languages ‘expanded with the spread of agriculture from Anatolia around 8,000–9,500 years Before Present (BP)’.

The study used the model to evaluate two dominant hypotheses – Steppe expansion through horse riding pastoralists and Anatolia expansion through farming.

The results favoured the latter.

Kurgan expansion is the famous Steppe expansion hypothesis which in many ways can morph into a typical Aryan Invasion/migration model’ that Indians are familiar with.

At the same time, the study also told this:

Then, in 2015, another paper through ‘a phylogenetic analysis in which ancestry constraints permit more accurate inference of rates of change’ claimed ‘that the result strongly supports the steppe hypothesis.’

Inside the paper, although, one found interesting data.

The model had assumed the age of Vedic Sanskrit as 1500-1000 BCE which corresponds to 3250 BP. (Chang et al , Ancestry-constrained phylogenetic analysis supports the Indo-European steppe hypothesis, Language 91(1), 2015,pp-194–244)

The same year another paper in Nature concluded a ‘massive migration from the steppe’ as ‘the source of Indo-European languages in Europe.’ (Haak, W., Lazaridis, I., Patterson, N. et al. Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo-European languages in EuropeNature , 207–211, 2015)

In 2018, another paper published in Royal Society Open Science, based on ‘a Bayesian phylogenetic study of the Dravidian language family’ calculated ‘a median root age for the Dravidian language family’ as around 4000–4500 years BP' while not excluding ‘the possibility that the root of the Dravidian language family is 6000 or 6500 years old.’ (Vishnupriya Kolipakam et al, A Bayesian phylogenetic study of the Dravidian language family, 2018: https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.171504)

In 2019 a paper by an international team was published in Science.

Titled ‘The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia’, the paper also supported Steppe pastoralists expansion as the vehicle for bringing Indo-European languages into South Asia (larger Indian landmass).

Based on ‘the genome-wide ancient DNA data from 523 individuals spanning the last 8000 years, mostly from Central Asia and northernmost South Asia’, the study concluded that the ‘Steppe ancestry in modern South Asians was primarily from males and disproportionately high in Brahmin and Bhumihar groups’ and that this provided ‘an independent line of evidence for a Steppe origin for South Asia’s Indo-European languages.’ (Vagheesh M. Narasimhan et al, Science, September 2019)

It is in this context that one has to study the paper ‘Language trees with sampled ancestors support a hybrid model for the origin of Indo-European languages’ (Paul Heggarty et al, Science, 28 July 2023).

After identifying the ‘flaws and inconsistencies’ in the previous datasets used, the team created ‘an entirely new database of Indo-European cognate relationships, named IE-CoR’.

Coded by more than 80 specialists of IE languages, the IE-CoR covers 161 languages of which 109 are modern IR languages and 52 are 'time-calibrated historical Indo-European languages'. This robust database has been then subjected to Baynesian phylogenetic analysis.

The results have elements that are quite crucial to ancient Indian history.

The study posits 'south of the Caucasus' as the origin-spot based on the available ancient DNA evidence. It however rejects the Steppes as the origin.

The study favours, as its title says, a hybrid model between Anatolian farming spread and Steppe horse-backed pastoralist expansion because their ‘results are not entirely consistent with either the Steppe hypothesis or the farming hypothesis’.

The article summary also says that ‘Indo-Iranic has no close relationship with Balto-Slavic, weakening the case for it having spread via the steppe.’ To this we will come later.

The paper constructs the timeline for the major branching out of the IE languages:

In the Steppe origin-horse-based-pastoral expansion hypothesis the Indo-European languages are brought into Indian region around 3500 BP (1500-1200 BCE).

The paper says this about the incompatibility of Steppe hypothesis with the available data:

The Indo-Iranic branching from Indo-European was previously believed to have occurred around 4300 BP (approximately 2300 BCE). Additionally, Indo-Iranic has been linked to the Balto-Slavic branching from Indo-European, which is a significant aspect of the Steppe Hypothesis. However, the present paper provides evidence that this association is incorrect:

This throws new light on data of another very important paper on the ancient Harappan genome ‘An Ancient Harappan Genome Lacks Ancestry from Steppe Pastoralists or Iranian Farmers’ (Cell 179, 729–735 October 17, 2019).

This paper clearly identified Iranian component in the lone Harappan aDNA. But it also rejected any possibility of Indo-Iranian linguistic component being in Indus Valley.

The present paper (2023) suggests exactly that possibility:

So what does all these suggest?

Each time when there is fresh data of small quantity the natural tendency of the researchers seems to be to fit that data into Yamnaya/Steppe expansion hypothesis.

The timeline for this is around 1500-1200 BCE.

Riding on horses they brought here Indo-European languages. This scenario is also set either against backdrop of the demise of Harappan civilization or considered as the cause of its demise. This is the resurrection of the classical Aryan invasion/migration theory.

But each time with more data and more rigorous scientific methodologies, this fitting of data into such a simplistic model fails again and again.

Indian historians and archaeologists have often questioned this simplistic scenario.

They frequently advocate for a civilizational continuity, although they have been accused of considering Aryans as indigenous and claiming Harappan as a 'pure' Aryan race and Vedic civilization.

However, this portrayal is more of a caricature than a fact.

Indian historians have often highlighted the continuities and similarities between Harappan and present-day Hindu civilization. They have demonstrated certain parallels between what is mentioned in the Vedic literature and Harappan civilization.

Instead of supporting a sudden apocalyptic demise, they propose a gradual transition.

In fact, they even question the term "Aryan" as an ethnic label and argue that there is no distinct race as Aryan.

What we see emerging is a multi-lingual, non-monocultural Harappan civilization — a picture of which one sees in the following Vedic line:

People of different ethnicities (yathaukasam bahudha janam), people of different languages (vivachasam), people of diverse religious traditions (nanadharmanam) — the earth supports them all.

The complex scenario that various research projects unveil, shows the spirit of unity in diversity as being present right from Harappan times in this land.

In that sense Harappan civilization was definitely Vedic.

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