For the first time in India buried chariots along
with wooden coffins dated at 2000-1800 BCE have been excavated. The eight
burial sites found in Sinauli village in Bhagpat which is 60 KM from Delhi have
raised speculation on whether these findings are related to Mahabharata and
would re-define the date of Mahabharata. The link with Indus-Saraswathi
civilization is also being discussed by some.
Looking into these questions, certain observations
pertaining to the period and nature of civilization of that period is being
discussed here to decide whether these findings belong to these periods.
Further discussion is on what is being known from the burials.
First of all we must accept the traditional date of Mahabharata
in as much we accept the fact of archaeological discovery of Indus- Saraswathi
civilization. The overlap in terms of time period and also the geographic expanse
of both – Mahabharata and Indus-Saraswathi civilization is something that
cannot be brushed aside.
While scientific dating methods define the date of
Indus- Saraswathi civilization, the robustness of the date of Mahabharata is
also scientifically strong. Let us see how.
Uncompromising nature of Kali Yuga date.
According to tradition and literary sources, Kali
Yuga started 36 years after the end of Mahabharata war when Krishna left his
mortal coils. The date of Kali Yuga is crucial as that forms the basis for all
the ‘saGkalpa’( religious vows) of every kind done by millions of Hindus
everyday till today. Unless the date is well laid out right from the beginning,
it could not have happened.
Another feature pertains to the very fact of the
existence of our calendar (time computation) of day –star –tithi – yoga –
karana, popularly known as Panchanga. This (Panchanga) is part of the ‘Ashtanga’ system that has 3 other higher
units of time, namely month (solar), year (Saka year) and Yuga (Kali). All
these are intertwined with each other such that if one is wrong others cannot fall
in line (can’t be the same). For example, the lowest unit Karana is related to
tithi. Tithi and yoga are two different yardsticks of the space-time gap
between the two time keepers, namely Sun and the Moon. The alignment of these
three (Karana, tithi and yoga) with a star cannot happen on any day, for the
day has a certain progression linked with the solar year. For example, if a
solar year (marked by the entry of sun into Mesha rasi) starts on a Saturday
(as in 2018), it will start on the next day, i.e., Friday in the next year (in
2019) and it continues so forever.
Thus the week day that is in vogue today is very
well fixated in the solar month. In which year, a month is fixated comes under
the remaining 3 features of the Ashtanga system. The month along with the five (Panchanga)
features is fixated in Saka year. The Saka year is related to the first year of
Kali Yuga. There are formulae in Tamil to arrive at the month and day of any random
date just by knowing the Saka year. There is also a formula to arrive at the
number of days elapsed right from the beginning of Kali Yuga till the required
date. The date of Parthivadekarapura inscription
by Kokkaru Nanthadakkan given in number of days
elapsed from the first day of Kali Yuga is on the basis of this formula only.
Most inscriptions of Tamil Nadu contain a reference to Saka year of Kaliyuga.
Therefore
the date of first year of Kali Yuga is not a concocted one. Our present
day-month system would collapse if the Kali Yuga date is changed. In other
words, you change the Kali yuga start date, then your current day in the
current month will be different. The current day and month cannot be different
as the month is computed from the sun’s location in the zodiac (rasi) – which is
unalterable.
Therefore it is sheer ignorance if one says that the
start of Kali Yuga can be on any date other than the ‘traditional’ date (3102
BCE). From this date the Mahabharata war year is deduced, as it happened 36
years prior to that.
Chariot burials
With the idea of the firmness of the Kali Yuga date,
we are looking at the date given for the Sinauli-discovery. It is dated at
2000-1800 BCE which is almost a millennium posterior to Mahabharata date. So it
could not have been part of the Mahabharata war.
It could not have been part of Indus-Saraswathi
civilization (which is in fact post Mahabharata civilization, due to concurrence
with date and the presence of numerous seals bearing the image of Varaha, which
was the state emblem of Jayadratha, the ruler of Indus region), going by the
fact that the until now excavated burial pits of the Indus-Saraswathi civilization
have no parallel to the Sinauli burial.
The negligible number of burials excavated so far in
the Indus or any region is India can be attributed to the simple fact that
burial is not common in Vedic society. None of the Mahabharata warriors were
buried, but were only cremated. The number of burials in the Indus- Saraswathi
sites is also very negligible compared to the size of the sites.
There are references to burials in Tamil Sangam texts
but they are death-specific. For example, the excavated burial pots were
popularly known as ‘Mudhu makkal Thaazhi’ – referring to the burial of very old
people. Those with birth defects and who died soon after birth were buried – an
information from Sangam texts. Burial and cremation had existed side by side,
but certain clauses determined the decision to bury or dead - which is not very
clear from the Sangam texts.
But the underlying feature for cremation can be
known from the way Narada described in Mahabharata the death of Dritharashtra,
Gandhari and Kunti in a forest fire. Those who lived by the sacrificial fire
would die by sacrificial fire. In the Vedic society, everyone was engaged in
growing the sacrificial fire, whatever their Varna may be. This concept follows
in death also. It is only from the sacrificial fire (in death ceremony) the
dead person is cremated.
This logic conveys that if a burial is found, then a
major cause can be that the dead person was not connected with Vedic sacrificial
fire (we should not forget the exceptional cases as known from Sangam texts).
We can test this hypothesis on the numerous burials
in Farmana of the Indus –Saraswathi period. The dental examination of the
Farmana corpses showed that they were all outsiders having come from faraway
places, presumably for work in the Indus sites. While the Indus people had cremated
their dead, they could not afford to do the same for the ‘foreigners’ who had
come to their cities and died. In the absence of the nearest kith and kin of
the dead, the local people had to dispose the dead. The best way is to bury
them as no one had the ‘right’ to do Vedic rites for the dead, unless initiated
by someone close to the dead.
Based on the rationale so far discussed, the dead in
the Sinauli burials could have been non-Vedic or outsiders.
The way they have been buried in perfectly made
coffins shows that though they were outsiders to Vedic life, they were not
outsiders. They must have had some roots in the place. The elaborate coffin
design presupposes the presence of someone related to dead, to be connected
with the place.
The burial of chariots is another odd feature as
there is no reference in any literature, in Ithihasa or Sangam texts, of
burying the vehicles used by the dead. This also secludes them from Vedic life.
Probing the nature of these people, there is a
parallel to this kind of burial in Hubei in China discovered in 2015. Elaborate
tombs were found out surrounded by separate burial pits for chariots and horses
were found. In all 28 chariots and 98 horses were found and dated at sometime
in 770-476 BCE. The nature of dead horses showed that they were killed and
buried. It appears that they dead were massacred in an enmity.
One of the buried chariots in China
In Sinauli burials, no animals were seen. Only
chariots were buried. The absence of animals showed that the animals that
pulled the chariots were not killed – as was the case in the burial in China.
This contrasting feature shows that those buried in China were enemies of the
people who made the burial, whereas those buried in Sinauli were buried by
their own people. The dead were buried along with their carriers. This is probable
in a situation where death happened in action in a battle.
Buried chariot in Sinauli
So this boils down to a situation where a community,
which was necessarily not Vedic had lived in the location 1000 years after
Mahabharata war. In a local enmity or military raids, people had laid down
their lives. The community had given them a burial fitting to their status.
Many tribes or communities of non-vedic nature had
lived in Mahaharata times. One such community had lived in Sinauli is what is deduced
from these burials. Newer information from this site could exactly determine
who they were.
After the demise of those who took the "kaashaayam", the "Yatis" are not cremated. Only buried.
ReplyDeleteSince they had abandoned the 'fire'.
These 'Yatis' are Vedic People only.