Discovering India Anew reconstructs the history of Indian peoples, taking off from where the history of Indians really begins: Africa. Exploring their earliest journey out of Africa through the colonisation of South Asia by different genetic groups to the end of South Asia’s first urban civilisation, Harappa, and the arrival of the Indo-Aryans, the author asks a fundamental question: Who are we Indians?
The book draws on fields as diverse as archaeology, archaeobotany, palaeoanthropology, genetics, climatology, historical linguistics and literary sources to study the evolution of Homo sapiens and their dispersal across the globe, against the backdrop of global climate changes. It discusses the forager-farmer conflict and maps out a linguistic history of India. And much more.
Through an anecdotal narrative style, the author artfully opens new windows into our past, and highlights how the narrative told by myth and bias contrasts with the alternate history revealed by modern scientific investigations.
This astonishing story of human grit will fascinate scholars and researchers of history as well as the historically inclined, curious reader.
Alan Machado (Prabhu), having graduated from the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, worked in the engineering industry in various capacities and countries, including Australia and Europe. His previously published books include Sarasvati’s Children (1999), Shades within Shadows (2012), Slaves of Sultans (2015) and Goa’s Inquisition (2022).
List of Tables and Figures List of Abbreviations Glossary Timeline A Few Words Before We Begin
1. India’s First Humans 2. Climate Change – Shaping Hominid Evolution 3. Populating the Earth – The Story Told by Bones and Stones 4. Populating the Earth – The Genetic Story 5. South Asia – The Genetic Story 6. Tales Languages Tell 7. Foraging to Farming 8. Foragers – The Retreat 9. Discovering a Buried Past 10. Timelines and the Elam Connection 11. Harappa – An Overview 12. The Beginnings 13. The Maturing 14. The Mechanisms of Control 15. The Decline and Dispersal 16. Bronze Age Eurasia 17. Expansion of Indo-European Speakers 18. The Indo-Iranian Speakers 19. The Early Arya in South Asia 20. Fashioning a New Order 21. A Forgotten History and a Lost River Notes Bibliography Index
This is a fine book … it should interest non-Indians as much as Indians, for the material not just fills in some large blanks in world history but is fascinating on its own … Peter Gordon, editor of the Asian Review of Books.