The Myth of Bharat

by Subbiah Alagumalaiyan

In modern times, bigoted Brahmins have projected Bharatavarsha as the
ancient Sanskrit name for the whole of India. This, however, has no
historical foundation. Bharatavarsha did not include the whole of
India and never did, but only denoted the kingdom of the Aryan invader
Bharata, who was a chieftain of one of the Aryan tribes that invaded
India. This small region comprised only a small part of the upper
Ganges valley.

Epigraphic Evidence

The epigraphic evidence confirms that Bharata originally did not mean
the whole of India. but only a small part of North India. Kharavela
who lived c.63 BC - c.23 BC ( C.R.Mishra, p.114 ), was one of the most
famous kings of the Kolarian-Dravidian kingdom of Kalinga. His
conquests ranged far and wide. They are celebrated in the Hathigumpha
inscription. The nineth and tenth lines of this inscription clearly
mention that he invaded Bharata from Kalingam thereby implying that
Bharata at that time did not include the whole of India -
Line 9-10 : "And, in the nineth year, (His Majesty) [ Kharavela ]
caused to be built the great victory place - royal residence at the
cost of thirty eight hundred thousand (coins).
" Then, in the 10th year (His Majesty) who embodied the principles of
politics, diplomacy and peace, caused (the army) to march towards
Bharatavarsha for conquest ."
-- ( C.R.Mishra, p.128 )

Prof. C.R.Mishra notes that Bharata did not originally denote
India : " Bharatavarsha, here is used in a general sense denoting the
regions of northern India " (C.R.Mishra, p.121). Elaborating this, he
states that Bharata is mentioned for the first time in the Hatigumpha
inscription and that it denoted only a part of North India -
" In the epigraphic records of ancient India, the name `Bharatavarsha'
is mentioned for the first time in the Hatigumpha inscription. But the
name denoted North India at that time."
-- ( C.R.Mishra, p.130, n.79 )

A.L. Basham states that Bharatas was one of the invading Aryan tribes
which settled in the region between the Satlaj and Jamna, which later
became known as Brahmavarta (Basham, The Wonder that was India, p.30).

Thus, the first time that we have undisputed usage of the word
Bharatavarsha, it denoted only North India. There is no evidence of
Bharata's kingdom extending beyond Northern India.

Historical Evidence

Historical evidence refutes the Brahmanist claim that Bharata
conquered the whole of India. Bharata's ancestors lived in the region
of the Caspian sea in Central Asia; they were nomadic tribesmen of
Aryan stock. Bharata's legendary capital lay in the Kabul valley, ie.
Yusufzai territory of modern Afghanistan:
" According to local tradition, the original seat of the empire of
Bharata was much further to the morth-west, namely, at the site now
occupied by the ruins of Takh-i-Bahi, in the country of the Yusufzais
to the northward of Peshawur."
-- ( Wheeler, p.48n.2 )

From this base he descended with his hordes of Aryan horsemen
onto the plains of India. There he defeated Indra ( Wheeler, p.45 ),
a descendant of the first Aryan invader Indra, earning himself the title
"most renowned of the Lunar race" ( Wheller, p.47 ). He then conquered
the Upper Ganges valley, exceeding Indra's dominion.

After the wars of annexation, the Raj of Bharata extended over the
enitre doab between the rivers Ganges and the Jumna right up to the
junction of these 2 rivers ( Wheeler, p.44 ). It is thus obvious that
Bharata's empire, Bharatavarsha, only included a few provinces in the
Ganges Valley.

His son Hastin founded Hastinapur further down the Ganges valley,
after this second wave of Aryans had pushed on from the neighbourhood
of Peshawar up to the banks of the Ganges ( Wheeler, p.48.n2 ). It is
thus evident that even the lower Ganges valley was beyond Bharata's
control. Hence, the Brahminist concept of `One Ancient Bharata' under
perpetual dominion of the Brahmin Aryans is a fallacy. In the words
of Winston Churchill, `India is as much a nation as the equator' .


References

( C.R.Mishra ), `Kharavela and His Times' , in ` Comprehensive Hisotry
and Culture of Orissa' , ed. P.K.Mishra, Kaveri Books, New Delhi 1997,
Vol.I part I, p.108-131.

( J. T. Wheeler ), `India of the Vedic Age with Reference to the
Mahabharata', J. Talboys Wheeler, Vol. I of `The History of India',
1973 reprint Cosmo Publns. Delhi 1973



Back to Main Page