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Bryn Mawr Classical

Review 2007.12.39

 

 

 

Ranajit Pal, Non-Jonesian Indology and Alexander. New

Delhi: Minerva Press, 2002. Pp. 254. ISBN 81-7662-032-7.

£21,50.

 

 

 

 

Reviewed by Monique Cardell, Université Aix-Marseille I

(mlcardell)

Word count: 1791 words

There is a dearth of new ideas in Alexander studies, and Ranajit Pal proposes

to fill the gap with data from the Pali and Sanskrit texts. This is the

most stimulating recent work on Indo-Iran and Alexander and not only

challenges the prevailing linear perceptions but also offers new solutions.

Pal sees Alexander from an eastern perspective and his method is not a

cut-and-paste one. His canvas is wide -- in fact there is so much that only

a brief outline of the major points can be given here. To start with, the

term 'Non-Jonesian' is a new coinage with radical overtones. This invites

the reader and the scholar to reconsider the geography of India as it is so

closely linked to history.

During the troubled days of the French revolution, Sir William Jones

startled the world by his so-called discovery of Palibothra, described by Megasthenes.

Jones equated Palibothra to Patna in Eastern India. This hypothesis,

together with the identification of Sandrocottus of the classical writers

with Chandragupta of the Indian texts, constitutes the very basis of

Indology and also has a bearing on world history. According to Pal this

'discovery' has no archaeological basis and is the fountain-head of

discrepancies in Indology, as pointed out by scholars like R. S. Tripathi,

A. L. Basham, D. D. Kosambi and most notably B. M. Barua.1

While most historians mention the inconsistencies yet continue with them,2

Pal advocates scrapping the mammoth Jonesian edifice altogether. If Moeris

was the same as Chandragupta Maurya and Orontobates, as Pal suggests, the

history of Alexander in Indo-Iran has to be rewritten.

Pal's central thesis is geographical. For him, the fact that Alexander

celebrated his victory at Kohnouj in southeast Iran clearly proves that

Kohnouj was Palibothra. Jones' idea has been accepted using Chinese texts

but according to Pal these are not valid sources as they were written a

thousand years later. Not a single archeological relic corroborates Jones'

idea. Yet the standard works on Mauryan history remain silent on the fact

that no relic of any Nanda or Maurya King, including Asoka, is known from

Patna.3

Pal starts the book with the assertion that Kahnuj (or Kohnouj) where

Alexander celebrated his victory was the chief city of the Indians,

Palibothra. He points out that Vincent Smith held that Kanauj in Eastern

India is not an ancient city. Moreover he writes that Moeris was

Chandragupta Maurya and Pattala could have been another Mauryan capital.

This agrees with the reports of Plutarch and Appian that Androcottus, king

of the Indians, dwelt near the Indus. Another bold suggestion is that the

highly respected Indian sage Calanus (Sphines, according to Plutarch) was

in fact Aspines or Asvaghosa. 'Asva' in Sanskrit means 'horse', and Calanus

was specially known for his horse which is mentioned in the sources. There

were probably many Asvaghosas, but Pal points to Gotama's biographer who

was also a philosopher and a playwright. According to him Asvaghosa's

association with Alexander indicates that the latter was not quite the

brute painted by E. Badian and P. Green. Nothing engages Alexander scholars

more than the question whether Alexander did in fact speak about the

Brotherhood of Man. Pal holds that he did and criticizes E. Badian for

ignoring the Sanskrit and Pali accounts and confusing 'truth' with the

Greco-Roman accounts.

Of all the tantalizing assertions in the book, the most mind-boggling is

that Diodotus I, well-known for his superb coins, was the great Asoka. This

far-reaching idea was first articulated at the All-India Oriental

Conference at Pune in 1993.4

Pal writes that the bilingual Kandahar Edict shows Asoka as the master of

Arachosia and that the coins point to Diodotus as the ruler. He boldly

states that the names Diodotus and Devanam (piya) are synonymous (p. 74).

Significantly, while Diodotus has only coins but no inscriptions, his

contemporary Asoka has many inscriptions but no coins, which shows that

they complement each other.5

Asoka never refers to his neighbor Diodotus because he was Diodotus

himself. Both were fierce warriors in their youth but later became saviors,

sôtêr. Tarn wrote that most of the Bactrian Greeks became Buddhists. Pal

holds that this was because of Alexander and Diodotus, due to whom

momentous events took place in the Orient that altered human destiny. It

was here that Hellenistic culture and religion were born.6

In the second chapter Pal explores the motives behind Alexander's most

disastrous campaign, the Gedrosian march, and his final victory

celebrations at Kohnouj, which he identifies as Palibothra. The expedition

was a near-disaster and Alexander himself narrowly escaped death. As there

were safer routes, most writers have ascribed the campaign to the king's

growing megalomania bordering on insanity and his desire to surpass

Dionysius and Semiramis. Pal discards all this as hearsay and holds that

Alexander and Nearchus were in fact pursuing a dangerous military objective

-- to defeat the mighty Prasii. His argument that Moeris was in fact

Chandragupta Maurya of Prasii (p. 90) appears to be sound. Both were active

in Bactria; their chronologies match exactly; and 'Sashi' and 'Chandra' are

the words for the 'moon' in Sanskrit. Pal laments that this was suggested

by H. C. Seth but he was shouted down. The identification of Moeris as

Chandragupta radically alters the history of Alexander. On this campaign,

the navy, commanded by Nearchus, is usually said to have been engaged in a

reconnaissance mission. The army, led by Alexander himself, moved in

tandem, and its task, supposedly, was to ensure the safety of the fleet.

Pal disagrees and writes that the reverse was true. According to him the

Gedrosian voyage was a two-pronged military initiative. The army was

engaged in a crucial battle against the Prasii and its allies and, apart

from fact finding, the navy was carrying horses, troops and provisions to

support the army. Pal provides support for Justin's statement that

Alexander had defeated the Prasii at Palibothra (p. 91) although this is

not mentioned by Arrian, Plutarch or Curtius. This is a very drastic

reassessment of Alexander's motives and contradicts the imputations of

scholars like E. Badian and P. Green on Alexander's character. When

Alexander reached Pattala, Moeris and the populace had fled. Unaware of the

true background, Badian ascribed this to Alexander's unmitigated brutality

and compared him with Chenghis Khan. Pal, however, considers this claim to

be unwarranted. As the leader of the army, Alexander can hardly be blamed

for arranging provisions for it and had probably imposed a grain levy which

made the people flee. There is clear evidence of a plot to deny his army

the provisions he had so carefully planned. The four-month stock at Pattala

somehow vanished and his men became so short of food that the guards

themselves broke the royal seal and distributed the provisions. According

to Pal this was the handiwork of traitors in Alexander's own camp, including

Bagoas the younger, who was a spy of Moeris or Sashigupta. After returning

to Susa, Alexander started punishing the guilty with utmost severity.

Again, while E. Badian squarely reproached Alexander for excesses, Pal

blames the Harvard professor for badly misjudging the scenario (p. 103).

Pal's assertion that the Mudrarakshasa, an ancient Sanskrit drama of

royal intrigue, is relevant to Alexander's history is very significant. He

writes that the drama, which belongs to world literature, has been badly

misinterpreted due to Jonesian delusions. He points out that the locale of

the play is the North-West, not Patna. The Sanskrit scholar A. B. Keith

dated the drama to the 9th century AD, but his proposal has been doubted.

According to Pal, the drama has a core that is very ancient. The main

stratagem of the drama is the theft of a signet-ring, which, according to

him, is linked to the mysterious manner in which Perdikkas produced

Alexander's signet-ring. Crashing gates, poisoning cups, poison-maidens and

forged letters feature prominently in the drama, and the same devices also

appear in Alexander's history. Pal writes that Bhagurayana of the drama was

Bagoas the younger (p. 99). If Pal's idea that Diodotus of Erythrae, the

mysterious editor of Alexander's diary, was Chandragupta is indeed true,

then there is ample ground to suspect that Alexander was poisoned. In many

manuscripts Chandragupta is not mentioned, but his place is taken by

Rantivarma. From this Pal concludes that Rantivarma was another name of

Chandragupta and identifies him with Orontobates, the Carian satrap who

fought against Alexander. Another striking discovery of Pal appears to be

the identification of Andragoras as Chandragupta. This is quite plausible

as the coins of Andragoras are dated to the fourth-century BC by many

scholar, and both Plutarch and Appian use a similar name, Androcottus, for

Chandragupta. Pal holds that the Gedrosian expedition was partly successful

and ends the chapter with generous praise for Alexander (p. 106).

Pal's work is strongly influenced by the approach of D. D. Kosambi and

is also a continuation of the ideas of Dr. Spooner and the great Buddhist

scholar B. M. Barua.7

Pal suggests a relocation of Palibothra in the North-West which is widely

considered to be the seat of ancient Indian civilization. However, even if

one agrees with Pal that Palibothra was not Patna, the real Palibothra may

still be another nearby location. Only new finds of relics of the Nandas,

Chandragupta or Asoka in the North-West can finally settle the true

location of Palibothra. This is an exciting work which puts in another

perspective Alexander's expedition, his goals, his knowledge of the people

he was conquering, and the space where he was evolving. It sheds a new

light on him and his supposed cruelty or whims. The text also highlights

how Indology could help in the study of the history of the Hellenistic

period. However, the absence of an index is an irritant. Also, credit for

the pictures and maps is not given. A bibliography would have greatly

enhanced the value of the book. Finally, for Western readers whose

familiarity with the Indian texts is inadequate, a prosopography or an

index of kings and generals named differently in the Graeco-Latin and in

the Indian sources would have been very useful. Although the maps in the

book are illuminating, a more comprehensive map of Indo-Iran is lacking.

The narrative is at times uneven, which is probably not unexpected given

the broad scope of the work.

Hopefully, with the possible shrinking of borders in the subcontinent

and the emergence of a South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, as

envisioned by thinkers like the Nobel Laureate Mohammed Yunus, Pal's ideas

may find greater acceptance. Pal ends the preface of the book with a

poignant note, "The author fervently hopes that the book may not only

throw new light on the lost Brotherhood of Man but also contribute towards

an eventual redemption."

 

 

 

Notes:

 

1.

Doubts about the basis of Indology have also been expressed by G. Fussman, Southern

Bactria & Northern India before Islam. See also, I. Mabbett,

'Dhanyakataka', in South Asia 16.2 (1993), p. 21.

2.

For example, R. Thapar, a staunch supporter of British Indology, wonders

why there are no edicts of Asoka at Patna which is alleged to be his

capital. R. Thapar, Ashoka and the Decline of the Mauryas (Oxford,

1961), p. 230.

3.

Pal notes that the Cambridge archaeologist D. K. Chakrabarti in The

Archaeology of Early Historic South Asia edited by F. R. Allchin

(Cambridge, 1995) p. 295 refers to many 2nd century B.C. texts but does not

explain why there are none belonging to Chandragupta. In contrast, the

veteran archaeologist A. Ghosh (The City in Early Historical India

Simla, 1972, p.15) warned that 'The facts about Pataliputra are known

mainly from texts.'

4.

Studies by F.L. Holt (Thundering Zeus, Hellenistic Culture and Society,

Berkeley, 1999; Alexander the Great and Bactria, Leiden 1988) and

others do not address the problem of the absence of inscriptions or other

material evidence. Similar deficiencies characterize the studies on the

Aramaic inscriptions from Bactria by S. Shaked and others. (See for

example, S. Shaked, Three Aramaic Seals, Royal Asiatic Society of

Great Britain and Ireland, London, 1986.) Even the great Sir W. W. Tarn was

puzzled by the wide scattering of Diodotus' coins. (W.W. Tarn, The

Greeks in Bactria and India, 3rd edition, Chicago 1997, p. 216).

5.

H. P. Ray's satisfaction with Asoka's coins is bizarre: Ancient India

(N. Delhi, 2001), p. 55.

6.

Alexander gave a call for homonoia that was followed up by Asoka

with great zeal. If the present reviewer has understood the text correctly,

Pal's Diodotus was some kind of a Parsi who later adopted Buddhism. Pal

ends the first chapter with "A Call to Archaeologists" in which

he calls for more excavations in the Carman area. This was written in 2001

and in a way Pal anticipated the splendid Bronze Age finds at Jiroft by

Madjidzadeh and others. In his later writings Pal has maintained that

Jiroft or Djiroft was the early Kamboja of the Indian texts. His thesis has

great depth and mainstream scholars have a duty to either accept or disprove

it.

7.

D.B.Spooner, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1915, pp. 68-89, pp.

405-455; B. M. Barua, History of Pre-Buddhistic Indian Philosophy, passim.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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<kishorepatnaik09 wrote:

 

 

[bryn Mawr Classical Review]

 

 

 

Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2007.12.39

Ranajit Pal, Non-Jonesian Indology and Alexander. New Delhi:

Minerva Press, 2002. Pp. 254. ISBN 81-7662-032-7. £21,50.

 

Reviewed by Monique Cardell, Université Aix-Marseille I

(mlcardell)

Word count: 1791 words

 

There is a dearth of new ideas in Alexander studies, and Ranajit Pal

proposes to fill the gap with data from the Pali and Sanskrit texts.

This is the most stimulating recent work on Indo-Iran and Alexander

and not only challenges the prevailing linear perceptions but also

offers new solutions. Pal sees Alexander from an eastern perspective

and his method is not a cut-and-paste one. His canvas is wide -- in

fact there is so much that only a brief outline of the major points

can be given here. To start with, the term 'Non-Jonesian' is a new

coinage with radical overtones. This invites the reader and the

scholar to reconsider the geography of India as it is so closely

linked to history.

 

During the troubled days of the French revolution, Sir William Jones

startled the world by his so-called discovery of Palibothra, described

by Megasthenes. Jones equated Palibothra to Patna in Eastern India.

This hypothesis, together with the identification of Sandrocottus of

the classical writers with Chandragupta of the Indian texts,

constitutes the very basis of Indology and also has a bearing on

world history. According to Pal this 'discovery' has no

archaeological basis and is the fountain-head of discrepancies in

Indology, as pointed out by scholars like R. S. Tripathi, A. L.

Basham, D. D. Kosambi and most notably B. M. Barua.1

<http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#n1> While most

historians mention the inconsistencies yet continue with them,2

<http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#n2> Pal

advocates scrapping the mammoth Jonesian edifice altogether. If Moeris

was the same as Chandragupta Maurya and Orontobates, as Pal suggests,

the history of Alexander in Indo-Iran has to be rewritten.

 

Pal's central thesis is geographical. For him, the fact that Alexander

celebrated his victory at Kohnouj in southeast Iran clearly proves that

Kohnouj was Palibothra. Jones' idea has been accepted using Chinese

texts but according to Pal these are not valid sources as they were

written a thousand years later. Not a single archeological relic

corroborates Jones' idea. Yet the standard works on Mauryan history

remain silent on the fact that no relic of any Nanda or Maurya King,

including Asoka, is known from Patna.3

<http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#n3>

 

Pal starts the book with the assertion that Kahnuj (or Kohnouj) where

Alexander celebrated his victory was the chief city of the Indians,

Palibothra. He points out that Vincent Smith held that Kanauj in Eastern

India is not an ancient city. Moreover he writes that Moeris was

Chandragupta Maurya and Pattala could have been another Mauryan capital.

This agrees with the reports of Plutarch and Appian that Androcottus,

king of the Indians, dwelt near the Indus. Another bold suggestion

is that the highly respected Indian sage Calanus (Sphines, according

to Plutarch) was in fact Aspines or Asvaghosa. 'Asva' in Sanskrit

means 'horse', and Calanus was specially known for his horse which

is mentioned in the sources. There were probably many Asvaghosas,

but Pal points to Gotama's biographer who was also a philosopher and

a playwright. According to him Asvaghosa's association with

Alexander indicates that the latter was not quite the brute painted

by E. Badian and P. Green. Nothing engages Alexander scholars more

than the question whether Alexander did in fact speak about the

Brotherhood of Man. Pal holds that he did and criticizes E. Badian for

ignoring the Sanskrit and Pali accounts and confusing 'truth' with the

Greco-Roman accounts.

 

Of all the tantalizing assertions in the book, the most mind-boggling is

that Diodotus I, well-known for his superb coins, was the great Asoka.

This far-reaching idea was first articulated at the All-India

Oriental Conference at Pune in 1993.4

<http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#n4> Pal writes

that the bilingual Kandahar Edict shows Asoka as the master of

Arachosia and that the coins point to Diodotus as the ruler. He boldly

states that the names Diodotus and Devanam (piya) are synonymous (p.

74). Significantly, while Diodotus has only coins but no

inscriptions, his contemporary Asoka has many inscriptions but no

coins, which shows that they complement each other.5

<http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#n5> Asoka

never refers to his neighbor Diodotus because he was Diodotus

himself. Both were fierce warriors in their youth but later became

saviors, sôtêr. Tarn wrote that most of the Bactrian Greeks

became Buddhists. Pal holds that this was because of Alexander and

Diodotus, due to whom momentous events took place in the Orient that

altered human destiny. It was here that Hellenistic culture and

religion were born.6

<http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#n6>

 

In the second chapter Pal explores the motives behind Alexander's most

disastrous campaign, the Gedrosian march, and his final victory

celebrations at Kohnouj, which he identifies as Palibothra. The

expedition was a near-disaster and Alexander himself narrowly

escaped death. As there were safer routes, most writers have

ascribed the campaign to the king's growing megalomania bordering on

insanity and his desire to surpass Dionysius and Semiramis. Pal

discards all this as hearsay and holds that Alexander and Nearchus

were in fact pursuing a dangerous military objective -- to defeat

the mighty Prasii. His argument that Moeris was in fact Chandragupta

Maurya of Prasii (p. 90) appears to be sound. Both were active in

Bactria; their chronologies match exactly; and 'Sashi' and 'Chandra' are

the words for the 'moon' in Sanskrit. Pal laments that this was

suggested by H. C. Seth but he was shouted down. The identification

of Moeris as Chandragupta radically alters the history of Alexander.

On this campaign, the navy, commanded by Nearchus, is usually said

to have been engaged in a reconnaissance mission. The army, led by

Alexander himself, moved in tandem, and its task, supposedly, was to

ensure the safety of the fleet. Pal disagrees and writes that the

reverse was true. According to him the Gedrosian voyage was a

two-pronged military initiative. The army was engaged in a crucial

battle against the Prasii and its allies and, apart from fact

finding, the navy was carrying horses, troops and provisions to

support the army. Pal provides support for Justin's statement that

Alexander had defeated the Prasii at Palibothra (p. 91) although this is

not mentioned by Arrian, Plutarch or Curtius. This is a very drastic

reassessment of Alexander's motives and contradicts the imputations of

scholars like E. Badian and P. Green on Alexander's character. When

Alexander reached Pattala, Moeris and the populace had fled. Unaware of

the true background, Badian ascribed this to Alexander's unmitigated

brutality and compared him with Chenghis Khan. Pal, however,

considers this claim to be unwarranted. As the leader of the army,

Alexander can hardly be blamed for arranging provisions for it and

had probably imposed a grain levy which made the people flee. There

is clear evidence of a plot to deny his army the provisions he had

so carefully planned. The four-month stock at Pattala somehow

vanished and his men became so short of food that the guards

themselves broke the royal seal and distributed the provisions.

According to Pal this was the handiwork of traitors in Alexander's

own camp, including Bagoas the younger, who was a spy of Moeris or

Sashigupta. After returning to Susa, Alexander started punishing the

guilty with utmost severity. Again, while E. Badian squarely

reproached Alexander for excesses, Pal blames the Harvard professor

for badly misjudging the scenario (p. 103).

 

Pal's assertion that the Mudrarakshasa, an ancient Sanskrit drama of

royal intrigue, is relevant to Alexander's history is very significant.

He writes that the drama, which belongs to world literature, has

been badly misinterpreted due to Jonesian delusions. He points out

that the locale of the play is the North-West, not Patna. The

Sanskrit scholar A. B. Keith dated the drama to the 9th century AD,

but his proposal has been doubted. According to Pal, the drama has a

core that is very ancient. The main stratagem of the drama is the

theft of a signet-ring, which, according to him, is linked to the

mysterious manner in which Perdikkas produced Alexander's

signet-ring. Crashing gates, poisoning cups, poison-maidens and

forged letters feature prominently in the drama, and the same devices

also appear in Alexander's history. Pal writes that Bhagurayana of

the drama was Bagoas the younger (p. 99). If Pal's idea that

Diodotus of Erythrae, the mysterious editor of Alexander's diary,

was Chandragupta is indeed true, then there is ample ground to

suspect that Alexander was poisoned. In many manuscripts

Chandragupta is not mentioned, but his place is taken by Rantivarma.

From this Pal concludes that Rantivarma was another name of

Chandragupta and identifies him with Orontobates, the Carian satrap who

fought against Alexander. Another striking discovery of Pal appears to

be the identification of Andragoras as Chandragupta. This is quite

plausible as the coins of Andragoras are dated to the fourth-century

BC by many scholar, and both Plutarch and Appian use a similar name,

Androcottus, for Chandragupta. Pal holds that the Gedrosian

expedition was partly successful and ends the chapter with generous

praise for Alexander (p. 106).

 

Pal's work is strongly influenced by the approach of D. D. Kosambi and

is also a continuation of the ideas of Dr. Spooner and the great

Buddhist scholar B. M. Barua.7

<http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#n7> Pal

suggests a relocation of Palibothra in the North-West which is widely

considered to be the seat of ancient Indian civilization. However, even

if one agrees with Pal that Palibothra was not Patna, the real

Palibothra may still be another nearby location. Only new finds of

relics of the Nandas, Chandragupta or Asoka in the North-West can

finally settle the true location of Palibothra. This is an exciting

work which puts in another perspective Alexander's expedition, his

goals, his knowledge of the people he was conquering, and the space

where he was evolving. It sheds a new light on him and his supposed

cruelty or whims. The text also highlights how Indology could help

in the study of the history of the Hellenistic period. However, the

absence of an index is an irritant. Also, credit for the pictures

and maps is not given. A bibliography would have greatly enhanced

the value of the book. Finally, for Western readers whose

familiarity with the Indian texts is inadequate, a prosopography or an

index of kings and generals named differently in the Graeco-Latin and in

the Indian sources would have been very useful. Although the maps in the

book are illuminating, a more comprehensive map of Indo-Iran is lacking.

The narrative is at times uneven, which is probably not unexpected given

the broad scope of the work.

 

Hopefully, with the possible shrinking of borders in the subcontinent

and the emergence of a South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation,

as envisioned by thinkers like the Nobel Laureate Mohammed Yunus,

Pal's ideas may find greater acceptance. Pal ends the preface of the

book with a poignant note, " The author fervently hopes that the book

may not only throw new light on the lost Brotherhood of Man but also

contribute towards an eventual redemption. "

 

Notes:

 

 

1. <http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#t1>

Doubts about the basis of Indology have also been expressed by G.

Fussman, Southern Bactria & Northern India before Islam

<http://www.cais-soas.com/CAIS/Archaeology/Greater-Iran/southern_bactria\

..htm> . See also, I. Mabbett, 'Dhanyakataka', in South Asia 16.2

(1993), p. 21.

2. <http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#t2> For

example, R. Thapar, a staunch supporter of British Indology, wonders

why there are no edicts of Asoka at Patna which is alleged to be his

capital. R. Thapar, Ashoka and the Decline of the Mauryas (Oxford,

1961), p. 230.

3. <http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#t3> Pal

notes that the Cambridge archaeologist D. K. Chakrabarti in The

Archaeology of Early Historic South Asia edited by F. R. Allchin

(Cambridge, 1995) p. 295 refers to many 2nd century B.C. texts but does

not explain why there are none belonging to Chandragupta. In

contrast, the veteran archaeologist A. Ghosh (The City in Early

Historical India Simla, 1972, p.15) warned that 'The facts about

Pataliputra are known mainly from texts.'

4. <http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#t4>

Studies by F.L. Holt (Thundering Zeus, Hellenistic Culture and Society,

Berkeley, 1999; Alexander the Great and Bactria, Leiden 1988) and

others do not address the problem of the absence of inscriptions or

other material evidence. Similar deficiencies characterize the

studies on the Aramaic inscriptions from Bactria by S. Shaked and

others. (See for example, S. Shaked, Three Aramaic Seals, Royal

Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, London, 1986.) Even

the great Sir W. W. Tarn was puzzled by the wide scattering of

Diodotus' coins. (W.W. Tarn, The Greeks in Bactria and India, 3rd

edition, Chicago 1997, p. 216).

5. <http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#t5> H. P.

Ray's satisfaction with Asoka's coins is bizarre: Ancient India (N.

Delhi, 2001), p. 55.

6. <http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#t6>

Alexander gave a call for homonoia that was followed up by Asoka

with great zeal. If the present reviewer has understood the text

correctly, Pal's Diodotus was some kind of a Parsi who later adopted

Buddhism. Pal ends the first chapter with " A Call to Archaeologists "

in which he calls for more excavations in the Carman area. This was

written in 2001 and in a way Pal anticipated the splendid Bronze Age

finds at Jiroft by Madjidzadeh and others. In his later writings Pal

has maintained that Jiroft or Djiroft was the early Kamboja of the

Indian texts. His thesis has great depth and mainstream scholars

have a duty to either accept or disprove it.

7. <http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2007/2007-12-39.html#t7>

D.B.Spooner, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1915, pp. 68-89, pp.

405-455; B. M. Barua, History of Pre-Buddhistic Indian Philosophy,

passim.

 

 

 

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HTML generated at 11:25:05, Monday, 24 December 2007

 

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--- End forwarded message ---

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