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B.B. Lal - A Juggernaut of Indian Archaelogy

A Very Brief History of Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) ASI was created in 1861, an agency created during the days of British Colonialism for archaeological excavation and conservation of India monuments. Interestingly the Survey was briefly suspended from 1865 to 1871, which is the most hypocritical joke of history in my view.  1865 was the time when the British government passed the Indian Forest Act that extended British Colonial claims over the forests of India. And due to the onset of the confederacy movement in the United States ' The eyes of a desperate Britain fell on India, and as “King Cotton” destroyed one country, it gave birth to another." (Ref:  https://www.english.uga.edu/sites/default/files/2009-2010_Barnett_Mays_John.pdf )  But they didn't have money for conserving their prized possession, the country of India. A Prolific Writer - Prof. B.B. Lal I'm digressing away from the topic of this post, Professor Brij Basi Lal, the juggernaut ...

Book Recommendation: The Ocean of Churn by Sanjeev Sanyal

India as an ancient maritime power is a theme I was not aware of until I read the book 'The Ocean of Churn' by Sanjeev Sanyal. India has over 7000 kilometers of the maritime border that it shares with Bangladesh, Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and the Maldives. If you look at these countries at the history of these modern countries you can see the impact of inter-trade of Southeast Asia that was connected through trade routes. The Ocean of Churn The book brings to light the history of India that's largely ignored by norther Indian readers. And it's not because of a made-up Aryan-Dravidian divide (by the way the whole Aryan Invasion/Migration or origination of pastoral activities from Steppes have been proven incorrect in 2019!) but because our history books never talked about Nandivarman, Kharavela, Kaundinya and others who ruled over various parts of India during different time periods and also confronted the foreign invaders from the w...

Book Recommendation: Shadow of the Great Game

As a kid, I was fascinated by the section on Indus Valley Civilization in my history book at school. To imagine an ancient India where the cities were laid out in a Manhattan-like grid, with an upper and a lower city, an advanced drainage system, and ports from where traders traveled as far as ancient Sumeria or Egypt. It's just a captivating part of our country's ancient history. I let my imagination run far with some help from the pictures of Mohenjo-daro, Harappa or Dholavira but I'm unable to relate to these ancient ancestors that traversed the same land where I was born thousands of millennia later. Seal from Indus Valley Civilization Living Modern History And then I have the modern history of India when the entire concept of India was formed from scratch. It was in the time of Dadabhai Naoroji, Gopal Krishna Gokhale,  Lala Lajpat Rai, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Motilal Nehru, Mahatama Gandhi and other leaders of modern India spent decades of their lives to build th...