THE
INDO-IRANIAN HOMELAND
Chapter
6
The
Indo-Iranian Homeland
So
far, we have examined the history of the Vedic Aryans on the basis
of the Rig Ved.
This
history is important in a wider context: the context of the history
of the Indo-Iranians, and, further, the history of the Indo-Europeans.
According
to the scholars, the Vedic Aryans had three historical and prehistorical
habitats :
1.
An early Indo-aryan (i.e. Vedic Aryan) habitat in the Punjab.
2.
An earlier Indo-Iranian habitat in Central Asia (shared by the Vedic
Aryans with the Iranians).
3.
An even earlier Indo-European habitat in and around South Russia
(shared by both the Vedic Aryans and the Iranians with the other
Indo-European groups).
There
were therefore two basic migrations according to this theory. The
Indo-aryans migrated first (alongwith the Iranians) from South Russia
to Central Asia; and later (separating from the Iranians) from Central
Asia to the Punjab through the northwest.
The
concepts of a common Indo-Iranian habitat and a common Indo-European
habitat are based on the fact that the Vedic Aryans share a common
linguistic ancestry and cultural heritage with the other Indo-European
groups in general and the Iranians in particular.
But
the identification of Central Asia as the location of this common
Indo-Iranian habitat and of South Russia as the location of this
common Indo-European habitat are purely arbitrary hypotheses with
absolutely no basis in archaeology or in written records.
As
we have seen, the Vedic Aryans, far from migrating into the Punjab
from the northwest, actually advanced into the Punjab from the east,
and later advanced further into the northwest. This certainly goes
against the accepted ideas of the geographical locations of their
earlier habitats.
So
what is the geographical location of the Indo-Iranian homeland (the
subject of this chapter) which, in effect, means the area where
the Vedic Aryans and the Iranians developed common linguistic and
cultural elements which distinguish them from other Indo-Europeans.
We
will examine this question under the following heads :
I.
The Angirases and Bhrgus.
II. The Avestan Evidence as per Western Scholars.
III. The Historical Identity of the Iranians.
IV. The Iranian Migrations.
I THE ANGIRASES AND BHRGUS
One
very important feature which must be examined, in order to get a
proper perspective on Indo-Iranian history, is the special position
of, and the symbiotic relationship between, two of the ten families
of Rishis in the Rig Ved: the Angirases and the Bhrgus.
While
all the other families of Rishis came into existence at various
points of time during the course of composition of the Rig Ved,
these two families alone represent the pre-Rigvedic past: they go
so far back into the past that not only the eponymous founders of
these families (Angiras and Bhrgu respectively) but even certain
other ancient Rishis belonging to these families (Brhaspati, Atharvan,
Usana) are already remote mythical persons in the Rig Ved; and the
names of the two families are already names for mythical and ritual
classes: the Angirases are deified as a race of higher beings between
Gods and men (as Griffith puts it in his footnote to I.1.6), and
the Bhrgus or Atharvns are synonymous with fire-priests in general.
What
is more, the names of these two families are also found in the Iranian
and Greek texts, and they have the same role as in the Rig Ved:
the Iranian angra and Greek angelos are names for classes of celestial
beings (although malignant ones in the Iranian veRishion) and the
Iranian Athravan and Greek phleguai are names for fire-priests.
But
an examination of the Rig Ved shows a striking difference in the
positions of these two families :
a.
The Angirases are the dominant protagonist priests of the Rig Ved.
b.
The Bhrgus are more or less outside the Vedic pale through most
of the course of the Rig Ved, and gain increasing acceptance into
the Vedic mainstream only towards the end of the Rig Ved.
The
situation is particularly ironic since not only are both the families
equally old and hoary, but it is the Bhrgus, and not the Angirases,
who are the real initiators of the two main ritual systems which
dominate the Rig Ved: the fire ritual and the Soma ritual.
The
situation may be examined under the following heads :
A.
The Angirases and Bhrgus as Composers.
B. The Angirases and Bhrgus in References.
C. The Post-Rigvedic Situation.
D. Vedic Aryans and Iranians.
I.A.
The Angirases and Bhrgus as Composers
There
is a sea of difference in the relative positions of the Angirases
and Bhrgus as composers in the Rig Ved.
The
Angirases have two whole Mandalas (IV and VI) exclusively to themselves
(no other family has a Mandala exclusively to itself, and the Bhrgus
do not have a Family Mandala at all), and are the dominant family
in two of the four non-family Mandalas (I and X) and second in importance
in the two others (VIII and IX). They are also present as composers
in all the other Family Mandalas (except in Mandala II, but there
we have the Grtsamadas whom we shall refer to presently).
In
respect of the Bhrgus, we may go into more details :
|
No.
of Hymns |
No.
of Verses |
EARLY PERIOD
MIDDLE PERIOD
Mandala VIII
Mandala
Mandala
|
[1 joint]
4
4
14
24 |
[3 joint]
31
46
140
256 |
It
is clear from the above details that the Bhrgus are increasingly
accepted into the Vedic mainstream only in the Late Period of the
Rig Ved.
This
is confirmed also by the fact that the Bhrgu hymns in Mandalas VIII
and IX are all old hymns (with the exception of IX.62, 65, which
are composed by late descendants of Jamadagni), the overwhelming
majority of them even attributed to pre-Rigvedic Bhrgu Rishis, all
of which were kept outside the Vedic corpus and included in it Only
in the Late Period.
A
more detailed examination of the hymns by the Bhrgus brings to light
the following facts :
1.
The few hymns or verses by Bhrgus in the Mandalas of the Early and
Middle Periods are not there on their own strength, but on the strength
of the close relations of their composers with the families of the
Mandalas concerned :
a.
In the Early Period, we find only 3 verses (III.62.16-18) by a Bhrgu
(Jamadagni), all of which are jointly composed with Visvamitra,
the eponymous Rishi of the Mandala. Jamadagni, by all traditional
accounts, is the nephew of Visvamitra, his mother being Visvamitras
sister.
b.
In the Middle Period, we find only 4 hymns (II.4-7) by a Bhrgu (Somahuti),
and it is clear in this case also that the composer is closely associated
with the family of Mandala II: in the very first of these hymns,
he identifies himself with the Grtsamadas (II.4.9).
2.
The hymns in the Late Period are also clearly composed by a section
of Bhrgus who have become close to the Angirases, and who, moreover,
find it necessary or expedient to make this point clear in their
hymns :
a.
In Mandala VIII, hymn 102 is composed by a Bhrgu jointly with an
Angiras Rishi; and the hymn to Agni refers to that God as Angiras.
b.
In Mandala IX, a Bhrgu, descendant of Jamadagni, identifies himself
with the Angirases (IX.62.9). In his footnote, Griffith notes Ludwigs
puzzled comment that the Jamadagnis were not members of that family.
c.
In Mandala X, a Bhrgu composer refers to both the Bhrgus and the
Angirases as his ancestors (X.14.3-6).
Incidentally,
the Grtsamadas of Mandala II are classified as Keval-Bhrgus and
have a separate AprI-sukta from both the Angirases and the Bhrgus.
It is, however, clear that they are actually full-fledged Angirases
who adopted some specifically Bhrgu practices and hence formed a
separate family :
The
Anukramanis classify the Grtsamadas as Saunahotra Angiras pascat
Saunak Bhargav: i.e. Angirases of the Saunahotra branch who later
joined the Saunak branch of the Bhrgus. However, the hymns clearly
show that the Grtsamadas identify themselves only as Saunahotras
(II.18.6; 41.14, 17) and never as Saunaks. They refer only to Angirases
(II.11.20; 15.8; 17.1; 20.5; 23.18) and never to Bhrgus. They refer
only to the ancestral Angiras Rishi Brhaspati (who is deified in
four whole hymns, II.23-26, as well as in II.1.3; 30.4, 9) and never
to the ancestral Bhrgu Rishis Arthvan, Dadhyanc or Usana.
All
in all, it is clear that while the Bhrgus are historically at least
as ancient a family as the Angirases and, in respect of the origin
of Vedic rituals, even more important than the Angirases, nevertheless,
in the Rig Ved, they are a family outside the pale who find a place
in the Vedic mainstream only in the Late Period.
And
all the Bhrgus of the Rig Ved (excluding, of course, the pre-Rigvedic
Bhrgus whose hymns are accepted into the corpus in the Late Period)
and of later Indian tradition are clearly members of one single
branch descended from Jamadagni, or of groups later adopted into
this branch.
Significantly,
Jamadagni is half a PUru: his mother is the sister of Visvamitra
who belongs to a branch of Purus who also call themselves Bharatas.
This
probably explains the gradual separation of the Jamadagni branch
from the other Bhrgus and their subsequent close association with
the Vedic Aryans (the Purus) and their priests, the Angirases.
I.B.
The Angirases and Bhrgus in References :
In
the case of references to Angirases and Bhrgus within the hymns,
also, the same case prevails: we see a sharp difference in the number
and nature of references to the two families as a whole as well
as to the individual mythical ancestral Rishis belonging to the
two families. And there is a difference between the nature of references
to them in the earlier parts of the Rig Ved and those in its later
parts :
1.
To begin with, the Angirases are referred to in at least 76 hymns
(97 verses), while the Bhrgus are referred to in 21 hymns (24 verses).
The
difference in the references to the Angirases and Bhrgus in the
first seven Mandalas of the Rig Ved may be noted :
The
Angirases are clearly the heroes and protagonist Rishis of these
Mandalas :
a.
Even the Gods are referred to as Angirases: Agni (I.1.6; 31.1, 2,
17; 74.5; 75.2; 127.2; IV.3.15; 9.7; V.8.4; 10.7; 11.6; 21.1; VI.2.10;
11.3; 16.11), Indra (I.100.4; 130.3), the Asvins (1.112.8) and USas
(VII.75.1; 79.3).
b.
The ancient Angirases as a class are deified as a semi-divine race
participating in Indras celestial activities (I.62.1-3, 5; 83.4;
II.11.20; 15.8; 17.1; 20.5; 23.18; IV.3.11; 16.8; V.45.7, 8; VI.17.6;
65.5).
In
a corollary to this, special classes of semi-divine Angirases, called
Navagvas and Dasagvas are also described as sharing in Indras battles
(Griffiths footnote to I.33.6). They are referred to in 8 hymns
and verses (I.33.6; 62.4; II.34.12; III.39.5; IV.51.4; V.29.12;
45.7; VI.6.3).
c.
Angirases are invoked as a class of Gods themselves, in the company
of other classes of Gods like the Adityas, Maruts and Vasus (III.53.7;
VII.44.4) or as representatives of brahmans as a whole (VII.42.1).
d.
The eponymous Angiras (I.45.3; 78.3; 139.9; III.31.7, 19; IV.40.1;
VI.49.11; 73.1) or the Angirases as a whole (I.51.3; 132.4; 139.7;
VII.52.3) are referred to as the recepients of the special favours
of the Gods.
And
finally, many verses, by composers belonging to the Angiras family,
refer to themselves by the name (I.71.2; 107.2; 121.1, 3; IV.2.15;
VI.18.5; 35.5).
In
sharp contrast, there are only twelve references to the Bhrgus in
these seven Mandalas. Eleven of them (I.58.6; 60.1; 127.7; 143.4;
II.4.2; III.2.4; 5.10; IV.7.1,4; 16.20; VI.15.2) are in hymns to
Agni, and they merely acknowledge the important historical fact
that the fire-ritual was introduced by the ancient Bhrgus.
And,
in VII.18.6, the only contemporary reference to the Bhrgus in the
first seven Mandalas of the Rig Ved, the Bhrgus figure as enemies.
Again,
while the pattern of references to the Angirases in the last three
Mandalas of the Rig Ved is exactly the same as in the first seven
Mandalas, the pattern of references to the Bhrgus changes.
The
Bhrgus are referred to in ten hymns (12 verses) in Mandalas VIII,
IX and X; and now the references to them are analogous to the references
to the Angirases :
a.
In some references, the Bhrgus and the Angirases are specifically
classed together (VIII.6.18; 43.14; as well as in X.14.6 below).
b.
The ancient Bhrgus are deified as a semi-divine race participating
in the celestial activities of the Gods (VIII.3.16; IX.101.13).
c.
Bhrgus are specifically referred to as Gods (X.92.10) and named
alongwith other classes of Gods such as the Maruts (VIII.35.3; X.122.5).
The
eponymous Bhrgu (VIII.3.9) is referred to as a recepient of the
special favours of the Gods.
There
are also, of course, references which refer to the introduction
of the fire ritual by the Bhrgus (X.39.14; 46.2, 9; as well as X.122.5
above); and in one reference, a Bhrgu composer refers to his ancestors
(X.14.6).
2.
In respect of individual pre-Rigvedic Rishis who have already acquired
a mythical status in the earliest parts of the Rig Ved, we have
Brhaspati and the Rbhus among the Angirases, and Arthvan, Dadhyanc
and Usana Kavya among the Bhrgus.
The
difference in treatment of these Rishis is also sharp :
a.
Brhaspati is completely deified, and, by a play on sounds, identified
also as Brahmanaspati, the Lord of prayer, worship and brahmanhood
itself; he is the deity of thirteen whole hymns (I.18, 40, 191;
II.23-26; VI.73; VII.97; X.67-68, 182), and the joint deity with
Indra in one more (IV.49).
He
is, in addition, lauded or invoked as a deity in 69 other verses,
distributed throughout the Rig Ved :
I.
14.3; 38.13; 62.3; 89.6; 90.9; 105.17; 106.5; 139.10; 161.6;
II. 1.3; 30.4, 9;
III. 20.5; 26.2; 62.4-6;
IV. 40.1;
V. 42.7, 8; 43.12; 46.3, 5; 51.12;
VI. 47.20; 75.17;
VII. 10.4; 41.4; 44.1;
VIII. 10.2; 27.1; 96.15;
IX. 5.11; 80.1; 81.4; 83.1; 85.6;
X. 13.4; 14.3; 17.13; 35.11; 42.11; 43.11; 44.11; 53.9; 64.4, 15;
65.1, 10; 92.10; 97.15, 19; 98.1, 3, 7; 100.5; 103.4; 108.6, 11;
109.5; 130.4; 141.2-5; 167.3; 173.3, 5; 174.1.
b.
Likewise, the Rbhus, a group of three pre-Rigvedic Angirases, three
brothers named Rbhu, Vaja and Vibhvan, are also completely deified.
They are collectively known as Rbhus, but, rarely, also as Vajas.
They are the deities of eleven whole hymns (I.20, 110-111, 161;
III.60; IV.33-37; VII.48).
They
are, in addition, lauded or invoked in 30 other verses distributed
throughout the Rig Ved :
I.
51.2; 63.3;
III. 52.6; 54.12, 17;
IV. 51.6;
V. 42.5; 46.4; 51.3;
VI. 50.12;
VII. 35.12; 37.1, 2, 4; 51.3;
VIII. 3.7; 9.12; 35.15; 77.8; 93.34;
X. 39.12; 64.10; 65.10; 66.10; 76.5; 80.7; 92.11; 93.7; 106.7; 176.1.
In
addition, Agni is called a Rbhu in II.1.10, and Indra in X.23.2.
The name Rbhuksan, an alternative name for Rbhu, is also applied
to other Gods: Indra (I.162.1; 167.10; 186.10; II.31.6; V.41.2;
VIII.45.29; X.74.5) and the Maruts (VIII.7.9, 12; 20.2).
c.
On the other hand, the praise of the ancient pre-Rigvedic Bhrgu
Rishis is meagre and subdued.
The three Rishis (Arthvan, Dadhyanc and Usana KAvya)
are together referred to in a total of only 39 verses throughout
the Rig Ved :
I.
51.10, 11; 80.16; 83.5; 84.13; 116.12; 117.12, 22; 119.9; 121.12;
139.9;
IV. 16.2; 26.1;
V. 29.9; 31.8; 34.2;
VI. 15.17; 16.13, 14; 20.11; 47.24;
VIII. 9.7; 23.17;
IX. 11.2; 87.3; 97.7; 108.4;
X. 14.3, 6; 15.19; 21.5; 22.6; 40.7; 48.2; 49.3; 87.12; 92.10; 99.9;
120.9.
Although
these references are laudatory ones, these Rishis are definitely
not treated as deities in the Rig Ved. And it is clear that the
praise accorded to them, in these references, is primarily on account
of the historical role played by them in introducing the ritual
of fire-worship among the Vedic Aryans.
This
role is hinted at in a number of ways :
Some of the references refer directly or indirectly to the introduction
of fire-worship by these Rishis (I.80.16; 83.5; VI.15.17; 16.13,
14; VIII.23.17). But many refer to this symbolically by connecting
these Rishis in a mythical way with Indras thunderbolt (the Bhrgus
are mythically identified with lightning since it also plays the
role of bringing down fire from the heavens to the earth): this
thunderbolt is said to be made out of the bones of Dadhyanc (I.84.13),
and Usana is said to have manufactured this bolt for Indra (I.51.10,
11; 121.12; V.34.2). In this connection, Usana is often closely
associated with the mythical Kutsa (the personified form of the
thunderbolt) and Indra (IV.26.1; V.29.9; 31.8; X.49.3; 99.9), in
some cases both Usana and this mythical Kutsa being mentioned in
different verses in the same hymn (IV.16; VI.20).
The
references to the three Rishis fall into clear chronological categories
:
a.
The oldest references, in the Mandalas of the Early and Middle Periods
(i.e. Mandalas VI, III, VII, IV, II, and the early and middle up-Mandalas)
are only by Angirases, and they refer only to the introduction of
fire-worship by the Bhrgus (in the different ways already described).
b.
The next batch of references, in the Mandalas of the relatively
earlier parts of the Late Mandalas (Mandalas V, VIII, and most of
the late Up-Mandalas) are now by Rishis belonging to different families
(Angirases, Visvamitras, Vashishth, Atris, and Kanvas), but they
still refer only to the introduction of fire-worship by the Bhrgus.
c.
The latest references (in Mandalas IX and X, and in the latest hymns
of Mandala I, the hymns of Parucchepa and the ASvin hymns of the
KakSIvAns) also refer to the introduction of fire-worship by the
Bhrgus (I.121.12; X.49.3; 99.9), but now there are other kinds of
references :
Some
verses refer to the introduction of Soma (I.116.12; 117.12, 22;
119.9; IX.87.3; 108.4). In some, Bhrgu composers refer to their
ancestors (X.14.3, 6; 15.9), and in one, the Bhrgu composer calls
himself an Arthvan (X.120.9). In the other references, these Rishis
are mentioned as the favoured of the Gods, either alone (I.117.12;
IX.97.7; X.22.6) or in the company of other Rishis (I.139.9; X.40.7;
48.2; 87.12).
The
picture is clear: the Angirases were the dominant priests of the
Vedic Aryans, and the Bhrgus were outside the Vedic pale. They were
only referred to, in early parts of the Rig Ved, in deference to
the fact that it was they who introduced the ritual of fire-worship
among the Angirases.
It
is only in the Late Period of the Rig Ved that the Bhrgus were increasingly
accepted into the Vedic mainstream.
I.C.
The Post-Rigvedic Situation :
The
Bhrgus, outside the Vedic pale for most of the period of the Rig
Ved, were accepted into the Vedic mainstream only towards the end
of the Rigvedic period.
However,
in the post-Rigvedic period, there is a sudden miraculous transformation
in their status and position.
The
Bhrgus were clearly a very enterprising and dynamic family (if their
ancient role in the introduction of fundamental rituals is a pointer),
and, once they were accepted into the Vedic mainstream, they rapidly
became an integral part of this mainstream. In fact, before long
they took charge of the whole Vedic tradition, and became the most
important of all the families of Vedic Rishis.
The
extent of their domination is almost incredible, and it starts with
a near monopoly over the Vedic literature itself: the only recession
of the Rig Ved that is extant today is a Bhrgu recession (Sakal);
one (and the more important one) of the two extant recessions of
the Atharv Ved is a Bhrgu recession (Saunak); one (and the most
important one) of the three extant recessions of the Sam Ved is
a Bhrgu recession (Jaiminiya); and one (and the most important one
among the four Krishna or Black recessions) of the six extant recessions
of the Yajur Ved is a Bhrgu recession (Taittiriya).
The
Bhrgus are the only family to have extant recessions of all the
four Vedas (next come the Vashishth with extant recessions of two;
other families have either one extant recession or none).
Not
only is the only extant recession of the Rig Ved a Bhrgu recession,
but nearly every single primary text on the Rig Ved, and on its
subsidiary aspects, is by a Bhrgu.
a.
The Padapatha (Sakalya).
b. The all-important Anukramanis or Indices (Saunak).
c. The Brhaddevta or Compendium of Vedic Myths (Saunak).
d. The Rgvidhana (Saunak).
e. The Astadhyayi or Compendium of Grammar (Panini).
f. The Nirukta or Compendium of Etymology (Yaska).
Later
on in time, the founder of the one system (among the six systems
of Hindu philosophy), the Purva Mimamsa, which lays stress on Vedic
ritual, is also a Bhrgu (Jaimini).
The
dominance of the Bhrgus continues in the Epic-Puranic period: the
author of the Ramayan is a Bhrgu (Vaimiki).
The
author of the Mahabharat, Vyas, is not a Bhrgu (he is a Vasishth),
but his primary disciple Vaisampayan, to whom Vyas recounts the
entire epic, and who is then said to have related it at Janamejays
sacrifice, whence it was recorded for posterity, is a Bhrgu. Moreover,
as Sukhtankar has conclusively proved (The Bhrgus and the Bharat,
Annals of the Bhandarkar Research Institute, Pune, XVIII, p.1-76),
the Bhrgus were responsible for the final development and shaping
of the Mahabharat as we know it today.
In
the Purans, the only Rishi to be accorded the highest dignity that
Hindu mythology can give any person - the status of being recognised
as an avatara of Vishnu - is a Bhrgu (Parashu-Ram, son of Jamadagni).
The
Bhrgus are accorded the primary position in all traditional lists
of pravaras and gotras; and in the Bhagavadgita, Krishna proclaims:
Among the Great Rishis, I am Bhrgu; and among words I am the sacred
syllable OM (Bhagavadgita, X.25).
In
fact, down the ages, it is persons from Bhrgu gotras who appear
to have given shape to the most distinctive and prominent positions
of Hindu thought on all aspects of life: Kaam, Arth, Dharma and
Moksh; from Vatsyayan to Kautilya to Adi Sankaracharya.
I.D.
Vedic Aryans and Iranians :
The
Bhrgus clearly occupy a very peculiar position in Indian tradition
and history.
An
American scholar, Robert P. Goldman, in a detailed study of the
history of the Bhrgus as it appears from the myths in the Mahabharat,
makes some significant observations. According to him :
1.
The mythology clearly sets the Bhrgus apart from the other brahmanical
clans. The myths unequivocally mark the Bhrgus as a group set apart
from their fellow brahmans.
The
characteristic feature which sets the Bhrgus apart is open hostility
to the gods themselves. One of the greatest of the Bhrgus is everywhere
said to have served as the priest and chaplain of the asurs, the
demon enemies of heaven and of order (dharma).
After
analysing various myths involving the most prominent Bhrgu Rishis,
Goldman again reiterates his point that hostility emerges as the
more characteristic phenomenon, and the one that most clearly sets
the group apart from the other famous sages and priestly families
of Indian myth the motifs of hostility, violence and curses between
gods and sages are virtually definitive of the Bhargav cycle.
And
the association of the sage Shukra with the asurs is one of the
strangest peculiarities of the Bhargav corpus.
At
the same time, the traditions record certain ambiguous moments in
this hostility where it appears that the Bhargav seems unable to
decide between the asurs and their foes on any consistent basis.
There
is, for example, a myth that is anomalous at the request of Shiv,
Ram, although he was unskilled at arms, undertakes to do battle
against the asurs He does so, and, having slain all the asurs, he
receives the divine weapons that he wishes. Here, it must be noted,
Ram (Parshu-Ram) is actually said to associate with the gods, and,
especially, to fight their battles with the asurs.
And
even in the long and complex saga of Sukra and the asurs, Sukra
is twice said to have abandoned the, demons to their fate, and even
to have cursed them the first time he appears to have been motivated
simply by a desire to join the gods and assist at their sacrifice.
Goldman,
therefore, arrives at two conclusions :
1.
The identification of Sukra as the purohita and protector of the
asurs may shed some light on some of the most basic problems of
early Indian and even early Indo-Iranian religion. If, as has been
suggested on the basis of the Iranian evidence, the asurs were the
divinities of Aryans for whom, perhaps, the Devs were demons, then
Shukra and perhaps the Bhargavs were originally their priests.
2.
The repeated theme of Sukra and his disciples ultimate disillusionment
with the demons and their going over to the side of the gods may
also be viewed as suggestive of a process of absorption of this
branch of the Bhrgus into the ranks of the orthodox brahmins.
Goldmans
conclusions fully agree with our analysis of the position of the
Bhrgus in the Rig Ved: in short, the traditional Indian myths about
the Bhrgus, as recorded in the Epics and Purans, conjure up a historical
picture which tallies closely with the historical picture which
emerges from any logical analysis of the information in the hymns
of the Rig Ved.
What
is particularly worthy of note is that these myths, and these hymns,
have been faithfully preserved for posterity by a priesthood dominated
by none other than the Bhrgus themselves - i.e. the Bhrgus of the
post-Rigvedic era.
And
it is clear that these later Bhrgus, even as they faithfully recorded
and maintained hymns and myths which showed their ancestors in a
peculiar or questionable light, were puzzled about the whole situation.
As
Goldman puts it: That one of the greatest Bhargav sages should regularly
champion the asurs, the forces of chaos and evil - in short, of
adharma - against the divine personifications of dharma is perplexing
and has no non-Bhargav parallel in the literature. The origin of
the relationship was evidently puzzling to the epic redactors themselves,
for the question is raised at least twice in the Mahabharat. In
neither case is the answer given wholly satisfactory.
We
have one advantage over the redactors of the Mahabharat - we have
the evidence of the Avesta before us :
1.
The Avesta clearly represents the opposite side in the conflict
:
a.
In the Avesta, the asurs (Ahura) are the Gods, and Devs (Daev) are
the demons.
b.
Here also the Bhrgus or Arthvans (Athravan) are associated with
the asurs (Ahura), and the Angirases (Angra) with the Devs (Daev).
2.
The Avesta also shows the movement of a group from among the Bhrgus
towards the side of the Dev-worshippers: there are two groups of
Athravan priests in the Avesta, the Kavis and the Spitamas, and
it is clear that the Kavis had moved over to the enemies.
The
pre-Avestan (and pre-Rigvedic) Kavi Usan (Kavi Usana or Usana Kavya)
is lauded in the Bahram Yasht (Yt.14.39) and Aban Yasht (Yt.5.45).
Also, a dynasty (the most important dynasty in Avestan and Zoroastrian
history) of kings from among the Kavis is twice lauded in the Avesta,
in the FarvardIn Yasht (Yt.13.121) and the Zamyad Yasht (Yt.19.71).
The kings of this dynasty, named in these Yashts, include Kavi Kavata
(Kaikobad of later times) and Kavi Usadhan (Kaikaus of later times,
who is regularly confused, in later traditions, with the above Kavi
Usan).
However,
the Kavis as a class are regularly condemned throughout the Avesta,
right from the Gathas of Zarathustra onwards, and it is clear that
they are regarded as a race of priests who have joined the ranks
of the enemies even before the period of Zarathustra himself.
Hence,
it is not the Bhrgus or Arthvans as a whole who are the protagonist
priests of the Avesta, it is only the Spitama branch of the Athravans.
Hence, also, the name of the Good Spirit, opposed to the Bad Spirit
Angra Mainyu (a name clearly derived from the name of the Angirases),
is Spenta Mainyu (a name clearly derived from the name of the Spitamas).
The
picture that emerges from this whole discussion is clear :
a.
The Angirases were the priests of the Vedic Aryans, and the Bhrgus
were the priests of the Iranians.
b.
There was a period of acute hostility between the Vedic Aryans and
the Iranians, which left its mark on the myths and traditions of
both the peoples.
Now
the crucial question on which hinges the history of the Indo-Iranians,
and the problem of the Indo-Iranian homeland, is: where and when
did this hostility take place.
According
to the scholars, this hostility took place in the Indo-Iranian homeland,
which they locate in Central Asia; and this hostility preceded,
and was the reason behind, the Indo-aryans and Iranians splitting
from each other and going their own separate ways into India and
Iran respectively.
This
scenario, however, lies only in the field of hypothesis, and is
totally unsupported by the facts as testified by the joint evidence
of the Rig Ved and the Avesta.
To
arrive at the true picture, therefore, we must now turn to the evidence
of the Avesta.
II
THE AVESTAN EVIDENCE AS PER WESTERN SCHOLARS
The
official theory about the Indo-Iranians is that they migrated into
Central Asia from the West (from an original Indo-European homeland
in South Russia) and then they split into two: the Iranians moving
southwestwards into Iran, and the Indo-aryans moving southeastwards
into India.
According
to another verishion, now generally discarded by the scholars, but
which still forms the basis for off-hand remarks and assumptions,
the Indo-Iranians first migrated into the Caucasus region, from
where they moved southwards into western Iran. From there, they
moved eastwards, with the Indo-aryans separating from the Iranians
somewhere in eastern Iran and continuing eastwards into India.
It
will therefore be necessary to examine what exactly are the facts,
and the evidence, about the early history of the Indo-Iranians,
as per the general consensus among the Western scholars.
This
is very important because an examination shows that there is a sharp
contradiction between the facts of the case as presented, or admitted
to, by the scholars, and the conclusions reached by themselves on
the basis of these facts.
The
Iranians are historically known in three contiguous areas: Central
Asia, Iran and Afghanistan. The basic question which arises, therefore,
is: which of these areas was historically the earliest one.
Michael
Witzel, a western scholar whose writings we will be dealing with
in greater detail in an appendix to this book, refers dismissively
to the theory outlined by us in our earlier book that India was
the original Indo-European homeland, as the contrary view that stresses
the Indian home of the Indo-Aryans. Even Indo-Iranians, not to mention
all Indo-Europeans (!) are increasingly located in South Asia whence
they are held to have migrated westwards, a clearly erroneous view.
However,
Witzel is compelled to admit that it is not entirely clear where
the combined Indo-Iranians lived together before they left for Iran
and India, when they went on their separate ways, by what routes,
and in what order.
As
we can see, in spite of admitting that the evidence does not tell
him where the combined Indo-Iranians lived together, he goes on
with before they left for Iran and India. That they did not live
together in either Iran or India is to him a foregone conclusion
which requires no evidence.
There
is thus a natural inbuilt bias in the minds of most scholars towards
a conclusion favouring a movement into Iran and India from Central
Asia, which is not based on evidence but on a theory which locates
the original Indo-European homeland in South Russia, making Central
Asia a convenient stopping point on the way to Iran and India.
However,
another scholar, P. Oktor Skjærvø, in his paper published
in the same volume as Witzels papers, gives us a summary of whatever
evidence does exist on the subject. According to him: Evidence either
for the history of the Iranian tribes or their languages from the
period following the separation of the Indian and Iranian tribes
down to the early 1st millennium BC is sadly lacking. There are
no written sources, and archaeologists are still working to fill
out the picture.
Thus,
there is neither literary evidence nor archaeological evidence for
Iranians before the early first millennium BC.
When
literary evidence does turn up, what does it indicate.
The
earliest mention of Iranians in historical sources is, paradoxically,
of those settled on the Iranian plateau, not those still in Central
Asia, their ancestral homeland. Persians are first mentioned in
the 9th century BC Assyrian annals: on one campaign, in 835 BC,
Shalmaneser (858-824 BC) is said to have received tributes from
27 kings of Parsuwas; the Medes are mentioned under Tiglath-Pileser
III (744-727 BC); at the battle of Halulê on the Tigris in
691 BC, the Assyrian king Sennacherib (704-681 BC) faced an army
of troops from Elam, ParsumaS, Anzan, and others; and in the Vassal
Treaties of Esarhaddon (680-669 BC) and elsewhere numerous kings
of the Medes are mentioned (see also, for example, Boyce 1975-82:
5-13). There are no literary sources for Iranians in Central Asia
before the Old Perishian inscriptions (Dariuss Bisotun inscription,
521-519 BC, ed. Schmitt) and Herodotus Histories (ca. 470 BC). These
show that by the mid-Ist millennium BC tribes called Sakas by the
Persians and Scythians by the Greeks were spread throughout Central
Asia, from the westernmost edges (north and northwest of the Black
Sea) to its easternmost borders.
Thus,
while Witzel indicates his bias towards Central Asia as the earliest
habitat of the Iranians while admitting to absence of specific data
to that effect, Skjærvø indicates the same bias while
admitting to specific data to the opposite effect.
The
sum of the specifically datable inscriptional evidence for the presence
of Iranians is therefore 835 BC in the case of Iran and 521 BC in
the case of Central Asia. This may not be clinching evidence (indicating
that Iranians were not present in these areas before these dates),
but, such as it is, this is the evidence.
There
is, however, an older source of evidence: the Avesta.
As
Skjærvø puts it, the only sources for the early (pre-Achaemenid)
history of the eastern Iranian peoples are the Avesta, the Old Perishian
inscriptions, and Herodotus. In view of the dearth of historical
sources it is of paramount importance that one should evalute the
evidence of the Avesta, the holy book of the Zoroastrians, parts
at least of which antedate the Old Perishian inscriptions by several
centuries.
The
Avesta is the oldest valid source for the earliest history and geography
of the Iranians, and Skjærvø therefore examines the
internal evidence of the Avestan texts in respect of geographical
names.
About
the earliest geographical names, he tells us: A very few geographical
names appear to be inherited from Indo-Iranian times. For instance,
OPers. Haraiva-, Av. (acc.) Haroiium, and Opers. Harauvati, Av.
Haraxvaiti-, both of which in historical times are located in the
area of southern Afghanistan (Herat and Kandahar), correspond to
the two Vedic rivers Sarayu and Sarasvati. These correspondences
are interesting, but tell us nothing about the early geography of
the Indo-Iranian tribes.
Here
again we see the sharp contradiction between the facts and the conclusion:
the earliest geographical names inherited from Indo-Iranian times
indicate an area in southern Afghanistan, as per Skjærvøs
own admission. However, this evidence does not accord with the Theory.
Hence Skjærvø concludes that while this information
is interesting (whatever that means), it tells us nothing about
the early geography of the Indo-Iranian tribes!
The
geography of the Avesta is also equally interesting: Two Young Avestan
texts contain lists of countries known to their authors, Yasht 10
and Videvdad, Chapter 1. The two lists differ considerably in terms
of composition and are therefore most probably independent of one
another. Both lists contain only countries in northeastern Iran.
Skjærvø clarifies on the same page that when he says
northeastern Iran, he means Central Asia, Afghanistan and northeastern
modem Iran. All these places are located to the east of the Caspian
Ocean, with the possible exception of Raga. But, again, he clarifies
later that this is only if Raga is identified with Median Raga modem
Ray south of Tehran. In the Videvdad, however, it is listed between
the Helmand river and Caxra (assumed to be modern Carx near Ghazna
in southeast Afghanistan) and is therefore most probably different
from Median Raga and modern Ray.
While
Skjærvø accepts that western Iran was unknown to the
early Iranians, he is deliberately silent on a crucial part of the
Avestan evidence.
He
deliberately omits to mention in his list of names inherited from
Indo-Iranian times (i.e. common to the Rig Ved and the Avesta) as
well as in his description of the areas covered in Yasht 10 and
Videvdad, Chapter 1, the name of a crucial area known to the Avesta:
the Hapta-Handu or the Punjab!
Skjærvø
does mention the Hapta-Handu when he details the list of names given
in the Videvdad; but he merely translates it as the Seven Rivers,
pointedly avoids mentioning anywhere that this refers to the Punjab,
and generally treats it as just another piece of information which
is interesting but tells us nothing about anything, since it runs
counter to the Theory.
But
whatever the conclusions of the scholars, the facts of the case,
as indicated by themselves, give us the following picture of Iranian
geography :
1.
Pre-Avestan Period: Punjab, southern Afghanistan.
2.
Early and Late Avestan Periods: Punjab, Afghanistan, Central Asia,
northeastern Iran.
3.
Post-Avestan Period: Afghanistan, Central Asia, Iran.
To
deviate slightly from the evidence of the Western scholars, we may
compare this with the following picture of Rigvedic geography derived
by us in this book on the basis of the evidence in the Rig Ved :
1.
Pre-Rigvedic Period: Haryana and areas cast.
2. Early Rigvedic Period: Haryana and areas east, eastern and central
Punjab.
3.
Middle Rigvedic Period: Haryana and areas east, Punjab.
4.
Late Rigvedic Period: Haryana and areas east, Punjab, southern Afghanistan.
The
direction of origin and movement is clear :
1.
Originally, the Vedic Aryans were in Haryana and areas to the east,
while the Iranians were in Punjab and southern Afghanistan.
2.
Towards the end of the Early Period of the Rig Ved, the Vedic Aryans
had started moving westwards and penetrating into the Punjab, entering
into direct conflict with the Iranians.
3.
In the Middle and Late Periods of the Rig Ved, the Vedic Aryans
were now together with the Iranians in the Punjab and southern Afghanistan,
and the Iranians had also spread out further northwards and westwards.
To
return to the Western scholars P. Oktor Skjærvø and
Michael Witzel, it is not only the facts about the Avesta (as detailed
by Skjærvø) which clearly indicate a movement from
east to west; even the relative chronology suggested by the two
scholars, extremely late though it is, and coloured as it is by
their staunch belief in the Theory, clearly shows a movement from
India to the west :
Skjærvø
admits that the earliest evidence for the Iranians is 835 BC in
the case of Iran, and 521 BC in the case of Central Asia.
In
respect of the Avesta, which is the earliest source for the Iranians
(and whose earliest geographical names pertain to southern Afghanistan
and the Punjab), Skjærvø notes that the most common
estimates range between 10,00-600 BC. However, he opines that the
early date for the older Avesta would be the 14th-11th centuries
BC, close to the middle of the second millennium the extreme late
date - 8th-7th centuries BC.
In
respect of the Rig Ved, Witzel himself goes far beyond these dates.
As he puts it: Since the Sarasvati, which dries up progressively
after the mid 2nd millennium BC (Erdosy 1989) is still described
as a mighty river in the Rig Ved, the earliest hymns in the latter
must have been composed by C.1500 BC.
He
repeats this point in respect of a specific historical incident:
the Sarasvati is prominent in Book 7: it flows from the mountains
to the sea (7.95.2) - which would put the battle of 10 kings prior
to 1500 BC or so due to the now well-documented dessication of the
Sarasvati (Yash Pal et al, 1984).
Witzel
states that the earliest hymns in the Rig Ved must have been composed
by 1500 BC. But the specific incident he quotes suggests that, by
his reckoning, even very late hymns were already in existence by
1500 BC: the hymn he quotes is VII.95. According to him elsewhere,
Mandala VII is the latest of the family books even within this Mandala,
hymn 95 must, by his reckoning, be a comparatively late hymn, which
is how he describes hymn 96 which is a companion hymn to hymn 95.
The
historical incident he refers to, which he places far earlier than
Skjærvøs earliest dating for the earliest parts of
the Avesta (whose earliest references are to areas in southern Afghanistan
and the Punjab), is Sudas battle of the ten kings, fought on the
Parusni central Punjab.
This
battle was, moreover, preceded by other battles fought by Sudas.
Sudas's priest in the battle of ten kings was Vashishth. Vashishths
predecessor was Visvamitra, and under his priesthood Sudas had fought
a battle, considerably to the east of the Punjab, with the Kikatas
of Bihar.
Witzel,
of course, refuses to accept the location of Mata in Bihar. But,
even so, he places Kikata at least as far east of the Punjab as
the area to the south of Kurukshetra, in eastern Rajasthan or western
Madhya Pradesh.
In
sum, the facts and the evidence of the Indo-Iranian case, as detailed
by the Western scholars (and inspite of the contrary conclusions
reached by them), show beyond any doubt that the only area of Indo-Iranian
contact was in the Punjab-Haryana region and southern and eastern
Afghanistan.
To
get a final and complete perspective on the geography of the Avesta,
let us examine what perhaps the most eminent Western scholar on
the subject, Gherardo Gnoli, has to say. Gnoli is not a scholar
who is out to challenge the standard verishion of an Indo-Iranian
movement from Central Asia into Iran and India, and, indeed, he
probably does not even doubt that verishion.
But
the geographical facts of the Avesta, as set out by Gnoli in great
detail in his book Zoroasters Time and Homeland, show very clearly
that the oldest regions known to the Iranians were Afghanistan and
areas to its east. They also show (and he says so specifically in
no uncertain terms) that areas to the west, and also to the north,
were either totally unknown to the Iranians, or else they were areas
newly known to them and which did not form a part of their traditional
ethos. Any references to migrations, in his analysis, are always
to migrations from east to west or from south to north.
The
Avesta, incidentally, contains five groups of texts :
1.
The Yasna (Y), containing 72 chapters divided into two groups :
a. The Gathas of Zarathustra (Y.28-34, 43-51, 53).
b. The Yasna (proper) (Y.1-27, 35-42, 52, 54-72).
2. The Yashts (Yt.), 24 in number.
3.
The Videvdat or Vendidad (Vd), containing 22 chapters.
4. The Visprat or Vispered.
5.
The Khordah Avesta or the Lesser Avesta, containing the Sirozas,
Nyayis, Afrin, etc
.
Only
the first three, because of their size, antiquity and nature, are
of importance in any historical study: of these, the Gathas and
some of the Yashts form the chronologically oldest portions. In
terms of language, the dialect of the Gathas and some of the other
chapters of the Yasna, i.e. Y.19-21, 27, 3541, 54, called Gathic,
is older than the Zend dialect of the rest of the Avesta.
We
will examine the geography of the Avesta, as detailed by Gnoli as
follows :
A.
The West and the East.
B. The North and the South.
C. The Punjab.
II.
A. The West and the East
Gnoli
repeatedly stresses the fact that Avestan geography, particularly
the list in Vd. I, is confined to the east, and points out that
this list is remarkably important in reconstructing the early history
of Zoroastrianism.
Elsewhere,
he again refers to the entirely eastern character of the countries
listed in the first chapter of the Vendidad, including Zoroastrian
Raya, and the historical and geographical importance of that list.
The
horizon of the Avesta, Gnoli notes, is according to Burrow, wholly
eastern and therefore certainly earlier than the westward migrations
of the Iranian tribes.
In
great detail, he rejects theories which seek to connect up some
of the places named in the Avesta (such as Airyana Vaejah and Raya)
with areas in the west, and concludes that this attempt to transpose
the geography of the Avesta from Afghanistan to western Iran was
doubtless due to different attempts made by the most powerful religious
centres of western Iran and the influential order of the Magi to
appropriate the traditions of Zoroastrianism that had flourished
in the eastern territories of the plateau in far-off times. Without
a doubt, the identification of Raya with Adurbadagan, more or less
parallel with its identification with Ray, should be fitted into
the vaster picture of the late location of Airyana Vaejah in Adarbayjan.
The
crucial geographical list of sixteen Iranian lands, in the first
chapter of the Vendidad, is fully identified: From the second to
the sixteenth country, we have quite a compact and consistent picture.
The order goes roughly from north to south and then towards the
east: Sogdiana (Gava), Margiana (Mourv), Bactria (Baxi, Nisaya between
Margiana and Bactria, Areia (Haroiva), Kabulistan (Vaekarata), the
GaznI region (Urva), Xnanta, Arachosia (Haraxvaiti), Drangiana (Haetumant),
a territory between Zamin-davar and Qalat-i-Gilzay (Raya), the Lugar
valley (Caxra), Buner (Varana), Pañjab (Hapta Handu), Ranha
between the Kabul and the Kurram, in the region where it seems likely
the Vedic river RasA flowed.
Gnoli
notes that India is very much a part of the geographical picture:
With Varana and Ranha, as of course with Hapta Handu, which comes
between them in the Vd. I list, we find ourselves straight away
in Indian territory, or, at any rate, in territory that, from the
very earliest times, was certainly deeply permeated by Indo-Aryans
or Proto-Indo-aryans.
Although
the scholars are careful to include northeastern modem Iran in their
descriptions, the areas covered by the Vendidad list only touch
the easternmost borders of Iran: but they cover the whole of Afghanistan,
the northern half of present-day Pakistan (NWFP, Punjab), and the
southern parts of Central Asia to the north of Afghanistan, and,
again, in the east, they enter the northwestern borders of present-day
(post-1947) India.
Gnoli
identifies fifteen of the sixteen Iranian lands named in the Vendidad
list. But he feels that the first of the countries created by Ahura
Mazda, Airyana Vaejah, should be left out of the discussion, since
this country is characterized, in the Vd. I context, by an advanced
state of mythicization.
While
this (i.e. that Airyana Vaejah is a mythical land, a purely imaginary
Paradise) is a possibility, there is another alternate possibility:
the other fifteen lands, from Gava (Sogdiana) to Ranha (the region
between the Kabul and Kurrum rivers in the NWFP) are clearly named
in geographical order proceeding from north to south, turning east,
and again proceeding northwards.
That
the list of names leads back to the starting point is clear also
from the fact that the accompanying list of the evil counter-creations
of Angra Mainyu, in the sixteen lands created by Ahura Mazda, starts
with severe winter in the first land, Airyana Vaejah, moves through
a variety of other evils (including various sinful proclivities,
obnoxious insects, evil spirits and physical ailments), and comes
back again to severe winter in the sixteenth land, Ranha.
A
logical conclusion would be that the first land, Airyana Vaejah,
lies close to the sixteenth land (Ranha). The lands to the north
(Varana), west (Vaekarata, Caxra, Urva), and south (Hapta-Handu)
of Ranha are named, so Airyana Vaejah must be in Kashmir to the
east of Ranha. Ranha itself leads Gnoli to think of an eastern mountainous
area, Indian or Indo-Iranian, hit by intense cold in winter.
In
sum, the geography of the Avesta almost totally excludes present-day
Iran and areas to its north and west, and consists exclusively of
Afghanistan and areas to its north and east, including parts of
Rigvedic India (see map opposite p.120).
II.
B. The North and the South
The
geographical horizon of the Avesta (excluding for the moment the
Punjab in the east) extends from Central Asia in the north to the
borders of Baluchistan in the south.
This
region, from north to south, can be divided as follows :
1.
Northern Central Asia (XvAirizam).
2.
Southern Central Asia (Gava, Mourv, Baxi, Nisaya), including the
northern parts of Afghanistan to the north of the Hindu Kush.
3.
Central Afghanistan (Haroiva, Vaekarata, Urva, Xnanta, Caxra) to
the south of the Hindu Kush
4.
Southern Afghanistan (Haraxvaiti, Haetumant, Raya) to the borders
of Baluchistan in the south.
Let
us examine the position of each of these four areas in the geography
of the Avesta :
1.
The Avesta does not know any area to the north, or west, of the
Aral Sea. The northernmost area, the only place in northern Central
Asia, named in the Avesta is Chorasmia or Khwarizm, to the south
of the Aral Sea.
The
compulsion to demonstrate an Iranian (and consequently Indo-Iranian)
migration from the north into Afghanistan has led many scholars
to identify Chorasmia with Airyana Vaejah, and to trace the origins
of both Zoro-astrianism as well as the (Indo-)Iranians to this area.
However,
Gnoli points out that Chorasmia is mentioned only once in the whole
of the Avesta. Moreover, it is not mentioned among the sixteen lands
created by Ahura Mazda listed in the first chapter of the Vendidad.
It is mentioned among the lands named in the Mihr Yasht (Yt.10.14)
in a description of the God Mithra standing on the mountains and
surveying the lands to his south and north.
Gnoli
emphasizes the significance of this distinction: the countries in
Vd.I and Yt.X are of a quite different nature: the aim of the first
list is evidently to give a fairly complete description of the space
occupied by the Aryan tribes in a remote period in their history.
Clearly, Chorasmia is not part of this space.
As
a matter of fact, Chorasmia is named as practically the very furthest
horizon reached by Mithras gaze and Gnoli suggests that the inclusion
of the name of Chorasmia in this Yasht could in fact be a mention
or an interpolation whose purpose, whether conscious or unconscious,
was rather meant to continue in a south-north direction the list
of lands over which Mithras gaze passed by indicating a country
on the outskirts such as Chorasmia (which must have been very little
known at the time the Yasht was composed).
The
suggestion that the inclusion of Chorasmia in the Yasht is an interpolation
is based on a solid linguistic fact: the name, Xvairizam, as it
occurs in the reference, is in a late, clearly Middle Persian nominal
form.
Hence
Gnoli rejects as groundless any theory which attempts to show that
airyanAm Vaejo in the Vendidad is equivalent to Xvairizam in the
Mihr Yasht, and which tries to reconstruct from a comparison of
the geographical data in the Mihr Yasht and the Zamyad Yasht the
route followed by the Iranian tribes in their migration southwards,
or the expansion in the same direction of the Zoroastrian community.
As
a matter of fact, even though it contradicts the Theory, there have
been a great many scholars who have claimed a movement in the opposite
direction in the case of Chorasmia: It has been said that the Chorasmians
moved from the south (from the territory immediately to the east
of the Parthians and the Hyrcanians) towards the north (to Xwarizm).
The
scholars who make this claim suggest that the probable ancient seat
of the Chorasmians was a country with both mountainous areas and
plains, much further south than Xiva, whereas the oasis of Xiva
was a more recent seat which they may have moved to precisely in
consequence of the growing power of the Achaemenians by which, as
Herodotus says, they were deprived of a considerable part of their
land.
While
Gnoli does not agree with the late chronology suggested for this
south-to-north movement, and gives evidence to show that Chorasmia
corresponded more or less to historical Xwarizm even before Darius
reign (521-486 BC), he nevertheless agrees with the suggested direction
of migration, which is, moreover, backed by the opinion of archaeologists
:
As
a matter of fact, we are able to reconstruct a south-north migration
of the Chorasmians on a smaller scale only, as it is a well known
fact that the delta of the Oxus moved in the same direction between
the end of the second millennium and the 6th century BC and ended
up flowing into the Aral Sea. Therefore, we cannot rule out the
possibility that the Chorasmians, as pointed out, moved in this
same direction and that at the beginning of the Achaemenian empire
there were still settlements of them further south. At all events,
this is the explanation that archaeologists give for the proto-historic
settlement of Chorasmia, without taking into account precise ethnic
identifications.
In
short, far from being the early homeland from which the (Indo-)Iranians
migrated southwards, Xwarizm appears upon an unprejudiced examination,
as a remote, outlying province which never played a really central
part in the political and cultural history of Iran before the Middle
Ages. And the region was so unknown that there was, among the Iranians,
absence of any sure knowledge of the very existence of the Aral
Sea as a separate body of water with a name of its own, even as
late as the time of Alexander.
2.
The countries in southern Central Asia and northern Afghanistan
(Sogdiana, Margiana and Bactria), particularly southern Bactria
or Balkh which falls in northern Afghanistan, are very much a part
of Iranian territory as per the evidence of the Avesta.
However,
this evidence also makes it clear that these territories were, in
the words of Gnoli, peripheral, and the traditions to this effect
peRishisted as late as the period of the Macedonian conquest of
these areas.
As
Gnoli puts it: in the denomination of Ariana, which became known
to the Greeks after the Macedonian conquest of the eastern territories
of the old Persian empire, there was obviously reflected a tradition
that located the Aryan region in the central-southern part of eastern
Iran, roughly from the Hindu Kush southwards, and that considered
some of the Medes and the Persians in the west and some of the Bactrians
and Sogdians in the north as further extensions of those people
who were henceforth known by the name of Ariani. And this, to tell
the truth, fits nicely into the picture we have been trying to piece
so far. Here too, as in the passages of the Avesta we have studied
from the Mihr Yasht and the Zamyad Yasht, the geographical horizon
is central-eastern and southeastern; the northern lands are also
completely peripheral, and Chorasmia, which is present only in the
very peculiar position of which we have spoken in the Mihr Yasht,
is not included. (Note: by eastern Iran, Gnoli refers to Afghanistan,
which forms the eastern part of the Iranian plateau.)
Balkh
or southern Bactria does play a prominent role in later Iranian
and Zoroastrian tradition which would have Vistasp linked with Balx
and Sistan (i.e. with both the northernmost and southernmost parts
of Afghanistan).
However,
referring to the tradition that links Kavi Vistasp with Bactria,
Gnoli notes that the explanation of Vistasp being Bactrian and not
Drangian is a feeble one. He attributes the tradition to the period
of Bactrian hegemony which Djakonov dates between 650 and 540 BC,
during which the old tradition of Kavi Vistasp, who was originally
linked with Drangiana, could have taken on, so to speak, a new,
Bactrian guise.
The
Avesta itself is clear in identifying Vistasp with the southern
regions only.
In
sum, the more northern regions of Sogdiana and Margiana were completely
peripheral, and, in the words of Gnoli, we may consider that the
northernmost regions where Zoroaster carried out his work were Bactria
and Areia.
3.
When we come to the areas to the south of the Hindu Kush, we are
clearly in the mainland of the Avestan territory.
Gnoli
repeatedly stresses throughout his book that the airyo-Sayana or
Land of the Aryans described in the Avesta refers to the vast region
that stretches southward from the Hindu Kush that is, from the southern
slopes of the great mountain chains towards the valleys of the rivers
that flow south, like the Hilmand. In this respect he notes that
there is a substantial uniformity in the geographical horizon between
Yt.XIX and Yt.X ... and the same can be said for Vd.I these Avestan
texts which contain in different forms, and for different purposes,
items of information that are useful for historical geography give
a fairly uniform picture: eastern Iran, with a certain prevalence
of the countries reaching upto the southern slopes of the Hindu
Kush.
Likewise,
in later Greek tradition, Ariane is the Greek name which doubtless
reflects an older Iranian tradition that designated with an equivalent
form the regions of eastern Iran lying mostly south, and not north,
of the Hindu Kush. It is clear how important this information is
in our research as a whole.
Again,
it must be noted that Gnoli uses the term eastern Iran to designate
Afghanistan, which forms the eastern part of the Iranian plateau.
4.
But it is the southern part of this vast region that stretches southward
from the Hindu Kush, which clearly constitutes the very core and
heart of the Avesta: Sistan or Drangiana, the region of Haetumant
(Hilmand) and the HAmun-i Hilmand basin which forms its western
boundary (separating Afghanistan from present-day Iran).
Gnoli
notes that the Hilmand region and the Hamun-i Hilmand are beyond
all doubt the most minutely described countries in Avestan geography.
The Zamyad Yasht, as we have seen, names the Kasaoya, i.e. the Hamun-i
Hilmand, Usiam mountain, the Kuh-i Xwaja, the Haetumant, the Hilmand,
and the rivers Xvastra, Hvaspa, Frada, Xvaranahvaiti, Ustavaiti,
Urvaa, Razi, Zaranumaiti, which have a number of parallels both
in the Pahlavi texts, and especially in the list in the Tarix-i
Sistan. Elsewhere, in the Aban Yasht, there is mention of Lake Frazdanu,
the Gawd-i Zira.
He
notes the significance of the identification of the Vourukasa in
Yt.XIX with the Hamun-i Hilmand of the Naydag with the Sila, the
branch connecting the Hamun to the Gawd-i Zira, of the Frazdanu
with the Gawd-i Zira and above all, the peculiar relationship pointed
out by Markwart, between Vabuhi Daitya and the Haetumant.
Gnoli
points out that a large part of the mythical and legendary heritage
can be easily located in the land watered by the great Sistanic
river and especially in the Hamun, including the important place
that Yima/ Jamsid, too, has in the Sistanic traditions in the guise
of the beneficient author of a great land reclamation in the Hilmand
delta.
Vistasp
is identified with Drangiana, Zarathustra with Raya to its northeast.
But, the part played by the Hilmand delta region in Zoroastrian
eschatology ... (is) important not only and not so much for the
location of a number of figures and events of the traditional inheritance
- we can also call to mind Dast-i Hamon, the scene of the struggle
between Wistasp and Arjasp - as for the eschatology itself. The
natural seat of the Xvaranah - of the Kavis and of the Xvaranah
that is called Axvarata - and of the glory of the Aryan peoples,
past, present and future, the waters of the Kasaoya also receive
the implantation of the seed of Zarathustra, giving birth to the
three saosyant- fraso Caratar.
This
region is subject to a process of spiritualization of Avestan geography
in the famous celebration of the Hilmand in the Zamyad Yasht, and
this pre-eminent position of Sistan in Iranian religious history
and especially in the Zoroastrian tradition is a very archaic one
that most likely marks the first stages of the new religion the
sacredness of the Hamun-i Hilmand goes back to pre-Zoroastrian times.
Clearly,
the position of the four areas, from north to south, into which
the geographical horizon of the Avesta can be divided, shows the
older and more important regions to be the more southern ones; and
any movement indicated is from the south to the north.
Before
turning to the Punjab, one more crucial aspect of Avestan geography
must be noted.
According
to Gnoli: the importance of cattle in various aspects of the Gathic
doctrine can be taken as certain. This importance can be explained
as a reflection in religious practice and myth of a socioeconomic
set-up in which cattle-raising was a basic factor.
Therefore,
in identifying the original milieu of the Iranians, since none of
the countries belonging to present-day Iran or Afghanistan was recognised
as being a land where men could live by cattle-raising, the conclusion
was reached once again that the land must be Chorasmia, and Oxus
the river of Airyana Vaejah.
However,
this conclusion was reached on the basis of evidence that turned
out to be unreliable, perhaps because it was supplied too hastily.
As a matter of fact, a recent study and, in general, the results
obtained by the Italian Archaeological Mission in Sistan, with regard
to the protohistoric period as well, have given ample proof that
Sistan, especially the Hamun-i Hilmand region, is a land where cattle-raising
was widely practised. And it still is today, though a mere shadow
of what it once was, by that part of the population settled in the
swampy areas, that are called by the very name of Gawdar. From the
bronze age to the Achaemenian period, from Sahr-i Suxta to Dahana-i-Gulaman,
the archaeological evidence of cattle-raising speaks for itself:
a study of zoomorphic sculpture in protohistoric Sistan, documented
by about 1500 figurines that can be dated between 3200 and 2000
BC leads us to attribute a special ideological importance to cattle
in the Sahr-i Suxta culture, and this is fully justified by the
place this animal has in the settlements economy and food supply
throughout the time of its existence.
We
may now turn to the Punjab, an area in which there can be no doubt
whatsoever about cattle-raising always having been an important
occupation.
II.C.
The Punjab :
The
easternmost regions named in the Avesta cover a large part of present-day
Pakistan, and include western Kashmir and the Indian Punjab: Varana,
Ranha and Hapta-Handu, and, as we have suggested, Airyana Vaejah
itself.
Gnolis
descriptions of Avestan geography, whether or not such is his intention,
indicate that the Iranians ultimately originated either in southern
Afghanistan itself or in areas further east. Neither of these possibilities
is suggested, or even hinted at, by Gnoli, since, as we have pointed
out, Gnoli is not out to challenge the standard verishion of Indo-European
history, nor perhaps does he even doubt that verishion.
However,
his analysis and description of Avestan geography clearly suggest
that the antecedents of the Iranians lie further east :
1.
Gnoli repeatedly stresses the fact that the evidence of the Avesta
must be understood in the background of a close presence of Indo-aryans
(or Proto-Indo-aryans, as he prefers to call them) in the areas
to the east of the Iranian area: With Varana and Ranha, as of course
with Hapta-Handu, which comes between them in the Vd.I list, we
find ourselves straightaway in Indian territory or, at any rate,
in territory that, from the very earliest times, was certainly deeply
permeated by Indo-Aryans or Proto-Indo-aryans.
In
the Avestan descriptions of Varana (in the Vendidad), Gnoli sees
a country, where the Airyas (Iranians) were not rulers and where
there was probably a hegemony of Indo-Aryan or proto-Indoaryan peoples.
Gnoli
is also clear about the broader aspects of a historico-geographical
study of the Avesta: This research will in fact help to reconstruct,
in all its manifold parts, an historical situation in which Iranian
elements exist side by side with others that are not necessarily
non-Aryan (i.e. not necessarily non-Indo-European) but also, which
is more probable, Aryan or Proto-Indoaryan.
The
point of all this is as follows: Gnolis analysis, alongwith specific
statements made by him in his conclusions with regard to the evidence,
makes it clear that the areas to the west (i.e. Iran) were as yet
totally unknown to the Avesta; and areas to the north, beyond the
completely peripheral areas of Margiana and Sogdiana, were also
(apart from an interpolated reference to Chorasmia in the Mihr Yasht)
totally unknown.
On
the other hand, the areas to the east were certainly occupied by
the Indo-aryans: the eastern areas known to the Avesta were already
areas in which Iranians existed side by side with Indo-aryans, and
where there was probably a hegemony of Indo-aryans. Logically, therefore,
areas even further east must have been full-fledged Indoaryan areas.
The
earlier, or Indo-Iranian, ethos of the Iranians cannot therefore,
at any rate on the evidence of the Avesta, be located towards the
west or the north, but must be located towards the east.
2.
Gnoli, as we saw, describes the eastern areas as Indian territory,
which is quite correct.
However,
he goes on to modify this description as at any rate ... territory
that, from the very earliest times was certainly deeply permeated
by Indo-Aryans or Proto-Indo-aryans.
Here
Gnoli falls into an error into which all analysts of Iranian or
Vedic geography inevitably fall: he blindly assumes (as we have
also done in our earlier book) that the Saptasindhu or Punjab is
the home of the Vedic Aryans.
This
assumption, however, is supported neither by the evidence of the
Rig Ved nor by the evidence of the Avesta :
The
evidence of the Rig Ved shows that the home of the Vedic Aryans
lay to the east of the Punjab, and the Saptasindhu became familiar
to them only after the period of Sudas conquests westwards.
The
evidence of the Avesta shows that the home of the Iranians at least
included the Punjab, long before most of the present-day land known
as Iran became even known to them.
The
point of all this is as follows: Gnolis analysis shows that most
of the historical Iranian areas (even present-day Iran and northern
Central Asia, let alone the distant areas to the west of the Caspian
Sea) were not part of the Iranian homeland in Avestan times.
On
the other hand, an area which has not been an Iranian area in any
known historical period, the Punjab, was a part of the Iranian homeland
in Avestan times.
So
any comparison of Avestan geography with latter-day and present
Iranian geography shows Iranian migration only in the northward
and westward directions from points as far east as the Punjab.
The
Avesta can give us no further information on this subject.
But,
as Gnoli himself puts it, Vedic-Avestan comparison is of considerable
importance for the reconstruction of the Proto-Indo-aryan and early
Iranian historical and geographical milieu.
Hence,
we must now turn once again to the Rig Ved.
III
THE HISTORICAL IDENTITY OF THE IRANIANS
Gnoli
points out that the Avesta reflects an historical situation in which
Iranian elements exist side by side with Aryan or Proto-Indoaryan
(elements).
Turning
to the Rig Ved, it is natural to expect to find the same situation
reflected there as well. And if that is so, it must also be likely
that the Iranians have a specific historical identity in Vedic terms.
The
historical identity of the Vedic Aryans themselves, as we have seen,
is quite specific: this identity does not embrace all the tribes
and peoples named in the Rig Ved, but is confined to the Purus (and
particularly the Bharats among them) who are alone called Aryas
in the Rig Ved.
All
the other people, i.e. all non-Purus, are called Das's in the Rig
Ved. While it is natural to infer that the term Das was a general
term for all non-Purus as well as a specific term for the particular
non-Purus who existed side by side with the Purus (i.e. for the
Iranians), there must also have been a specific tribal name for
these particular non-Purus.
The
Rig Ved (in agreement with the Purans) classifies the Purus as one
of the five tribes: namely, the Yadus, Turvasas, Druhyus, Anus,
Purus (I.108.8). Prima facie, the Iranians must be identifiable
with one of the remaining four.
Of
the four, all sources locate the Yadus and Turvasas together in
the interior of India, and the Druhyus are located outside the frontiers
of India. The most likely candidates are therefore the Anus who
are located side by side with the Purus in all geographical descriptions
(and, incidentally, even in the enumeration of the names of the
five tribes in I.108.8).
And
an examination of the evidence demonstrates beyond the shadow of
any doubt that the ancient Indian tribes of the Anus are identical
with the ancient Iranians :
1.
As we have already seen, the Indoaryan-Iranian conflict very definitely
had an Angiras-Bhrgu dimension to it, with the Angirases being the
priests of the Indo-aryans and the Bhrgus being the priests of the
Iranians: a situation reflected in the traditions of both the peoples.
This
situation is also reflected in the Rig Ved where the dominant priests
of the text, and the particular or exclusive priests of the Bharatas
(the Vedic Aryans), are the Angirases: all the generations before
Sudas have Bharadwajs as their priests (which, perhaps, explains
the etymology of the name Bharad-vAja); Sudas himself has the Kutsas
also as his priests (besides the new families of priests: the Visvamitras
and the Vashishth); and Sudas's descendants Sahdev and Somaka have
the Kutsas and the VAmaDevs as their priests.
The
Bhrgus are clearly not the priests of the Bharatas, and, equally
clearly, they are associated with a particular other tribe: the
Anus.
The
names Anu and Bhrgu are used interchangeably: compare V.31.4 with
IV.16.20, and VII.18.14 with VII.18.6.
Griffith
also recognizes the connection in his footnote to V.31.4, when he
notes: Anus: probably meaning Bhrgus who belonged to that tribe.
2.
The Rig Ved and the Avesta, as we saw, are united in testifying
to the fact that the Punjab (Saptasindhu or Hapta-HAndu) was not
a homeland of the Vedic Aryans, but was a homeland of the Iranians.
The
Purans as well as the Rig Ved testify to the fact that the Punjab
was a homeland of the Anus :
Pargiter
notes the Puranic description of the spread of the Anus from the
east and their occupation of the whole of the Punjab: One branch
headed by Usinar established separate kingdoms on the eastern border
of the Punjab, namely those of the Yaudheyas, Ambasthas, Navarastra
and the city Krmila; and his famous son Sivi originated the Sivis
[footnote: called Sivas in Rig Ved VII.18.7] in Sivapura, and extending
his conquests westwards, founded through his four sons the kingdoms
of the Vrsadarbhas, Madras (or Madrakas), Kekayas (or Kaikeyas),
and SuvIras (or Sauviras), thus occupying the whole of the Punjab
except the north-west corner.
In
the Rig Ved, the Anus are repeatedly identified with the ParuSNI
river, the central river of the Punjab, as the Purus are identified
with the Sarasvati: in the Dasrajna battle, the Anus are clearly
the people of the Parusni area and beyond. Likewise, another hymn
which refers to the ParuSNI (VIII.74.15) also refers to the Anus
(VIII.74.4).
Michael
Witzel notes about the locations of the Yadu-Turvasa and the Anu-Druhyu,
that the Anu may be tied to the Parusnsi, the Druhyu to the northwest
and the Yadu with the Yamuna.
3.
The name Anu or Anava for the Iranians appears to have survived
even in later times: the country and the people in the very heart
of Avestan land, to the immediate north of the HAmUn-i Hilmand,
were known, as late as Greek times (cf. Stathmoi Parthikoi, 16,
of Isidore of Charax), as the Anauon or Anauoi.
4.
The names of Anu tribes in the Rig Ved and the Purans can be clearly
identified with the names of the most prominent tribes among latter-day
Iranians.
The
Dasrajna battle (described in three hymns in the Rig Ved, VII.18,
33, 83) was between Sudas on the one hand, and a confederation of
ten tribes from among the Anus and Druhyus on the other, which took
place on the Parusni (i.e. in Anu territory, hence, logically, most
of the tribes were Anus).
Of
these ten tribes, the following six, named in just two verses, may
be noted :
a. PRthus or PArthavas (VII.83.1): Parthians.
b. ParSus or ParSavas (VII .83.1): Persians.
c. Pakthas (VII.18.7): Pakhtoons.
d. BhalAnas (VII.18.7): Baluchis.
e. Sivas (VII.18.7): Khivas.
f. ViSANins (VII.18.7): Pishachas (Dards).
Three
more tribes, named in adjacent verses, must be noted separately
(as we will have to refer to them again in the next chapter) :
a.
Bhrgus (VII.18.6): Phrygians.
b.
Simyus (VII. 18.5): Sarmatians (Avesta = Sairimas).
c. Alinas (VII.18.7): Alans.
A
major Iranian tribe which is not named in the Rig Ved, but appears
as a prominent Anu tribe in the Purans and epics is the Madras:
Medes (Madai).
Significantly,
the Anu king who leads the confederation of Anu tribes against Sudas
(and who is named in VII.18.12) has a name which to this day is
common among Zoroastrians: Kavasa.
Furthermore,
this king is also called Kavi CAYamna four verses earlier (in VII.18.8).
This is significant because an ancestor of this king, AbhyAvartin
CAYamna, is identified in VI.27.8 as a PArthava (Parthian). At the
same time, Kavi is the title of the kings of the most important
dynasty in Avestan and Zoroastrian history, the KavyAn or Kayanian
dynasty. In later times, it is the Parthian kings who were the loudest
and most peRishistent in their claims to being descendants of the
Kayanians.
If
the full name of this king is interpreted as Kavi KavaSa of the
line of CAYamnas, he can be identified with Kavi Kavata, the founder
of the pre-Avestan dynasty of KavyAn or Kayanian kings, whose most
prominent descendant was Kavi Vistasp.
Incidentally,
other descendants of Kavi KavaSa may be the Kekayas or Kaikayas,
one of the two most prominent Anu tribes of the Purans and later
Indian tradition (the other being the Madras), who are located in
western Punjab, and whose name bears such a close resemblance to
the names of the Kayanian kings.
5.
The DAsas of the Rig Ved are opposed to the Aryas: since the word
Arya refers to Purus in general and the Bharatas in particular,
the word DAsa should logically refer to non-Purus in general and
the Anus (or Iranians) in particular.
The
word DAsa is found in 54 hymns (63 verses) and in an overwhelming
majority of these references, it refers either to human enemies
of the Vedic Aryans, or to atmospheric demons killed by Indra: in
most of the cases, it is difficult to know which of the two is being
referred to, and in some of them perhaps both are being simultaneously
referred to. In any case, since these references are usually non-specific,
it makes no material difference to our historical analysis.
There
are eight verses which refer to both Arya and Dasa enemies; and
in this case it is certain that human enemies are being referred
to. As we have already seen in an earlier chapter, these verses
(VI.22.10; 33.3; 60.6; VII.83.1; X.38.3; 69.6; 83.1; 102.3) help
us to confirm the identity of the Aryas of the Rig Ved. However,
they give us no help in respect of the Dasas.
But
finally, there are three verses which stand out from the rest: they
contain references which are friendly towards the Dasas:
a.
In VIII.5.31, the ASvins are depicted as accepting the offerings
of the Dasas.
b.
In VIII.46.32, the patrons are referred to as Dasas.
c.
In VIII.51.9, Indra is described as belonging to both Aryas and
Dasas.
Given
the nature (and, as we shall see later, the period) of Mandala VIII,
and the fact that all these three hymns are dAnastutis (hymns in
praise of donors), it is clear that the friendly references have
to do with the identity of the patrons in these hymns.
A
special feature of these dAnastutis is that, while everywhere else
in the Rig Ved we find patrons gifting cattle, horses and buffaloes,
these particular patrons gift camels (uSTra): at least, the first
two do so (VIII.5.37; 46.22, 31), and it is very likely that the
third one does so too (this dAnastuti does not mention the specific
gifts received, and merely calls upon Indra to shower wealth on
the patron).
In
any case, there is a fourth patron in another dAnastuti in the same
Mandala (VIII.6.48) who also gifts camels.
Outside
of these three hymns, the camel is referred to only once in the
Rig Ved, in a late upa-Mandala of Mandala I (I.138.2), where it
is mentioned in a simile.
Now,
as to the identity of the patrons in these four hymns :
a.
In VIII.5, the patron is Kasu.
b. In VIII.6, the patrons include Tirindira Parsava.
c. In VIII.46, the patrons include PRthuSravas son of Kanita.
d.
In VIII.51, the patron (whose gifts are not specified) is Rusama
Paviru.
In
two of these cases, as we can see, the identity is self-evident:
one patron is called a ParSava (PeRishian) and another has PRthu
(Parthian) in his name.
But,
here is what the Western scholars themselves have to say: according
to Michael Witzel, there are, in the opinion of some scholars (Hoffman,
1975) some Iranian names in Rigved (Kasu, Kanita, etc.). More specifically:
An Iranian connection is also clear when camels appear (8.5. 37-39)
together with the Iranian name Kasu small (Hoffman 1975) or with
the suspicious name Tirindira and the ParSu (8.6.46).
Griffith
also notes the Iranian connection in his footnote to VIII.6.46:
From Parsu, from Tirindira: from Tirindira the son of Parsu - Wilson.
Both names are Iranian (cf. Tiridates, Persia). See Webers Episches
in Vedischen Ritual, pp.36-38, (Sitzungsberichte der K.P. Akademie
der Wissenschaften, 1891, XXXVIII).
The
only patron whose identity is not specifically named as Iranian
by the scholars is Rusama PavIru. However, the RuSamas are identified
by M.L. Bhargav81 as a tribe of the extreme northwest, from the
Soma lands of SuSomA and Arjikiya. This clearly places them in the
territory of the Iranians.
In
sum, the Iranians are fully identifiable with the Anus, the particular
Dasas (non-Purus) of the Rig Ved.
IV
THE IRANIAN MIGRATIONS
The
evidence of the Rig Ved and the Avesta makes it clear that the Iranians,
in the earliest period, were restricted to a small area in the east,
and the vast area which they occupied in later historical times
was the result of a series of migrations and expansions.
The
early migrations of the Iranians follow a clear trail: from Kashmir
to the Punjab; from the Punjab to southern and eastern Afghanistan;
from southern and eastern Afghanistan to the whole of Afghanistan
and southern Central Asia; and finally, in later times, over a vast
area spread out at least as far west as western Iran and as far
north as northern Central Asia and the northern Caucasus.
The
early history of the Iranians may be divided into the following
periods (see chart on next page).
The
details may be examined under the following heads :
A.
The Pre-Rigvedic Period.
B. The Early Period of the Rig Ved.
C. The Middle period of the Rig Ved.
D. The Late Period of the Rig Ved.
IV.A.
The Pre-Rigvedic Period :
In
the pre-Rigvedic period, the Iranians were inhabitants of Kashmir.
Period
|
Rig
Ved |
Avesta
|
Iranian
Geographical Area |
1 |
Pre-Rigvedic
Period |
--- |
Kashmir |
2 |
Early
Period of the Rig Ved |
Pre-Avestan
Period |
Punjab |
3 |
Middle
Period of the Rig Ved |
Period
of Gathas and early Yashts |
Punjab,
southern and eastern Afghanistan |
4 |
Late
Period of the Rig Ved |
Proper
Avestan Period |
Punjab,
Afghanistan, southern Central Asia |
In the Avesta, this period is remembered as a remote period of prehistory,
enshrined in the myth of Airyana Vaejah, the land of severe winters.
This
period is not remembered at all in the Rig Ved, since the Rig Ved
is a PUru book and is not concerned with the prehistory of the Anus.
Hence, in the case of this period at least, one must turn to the
Purans, which have a broader perspective.
In
the Purans, this period is remembered in the description of the
original geographical distribution of the five AiLa or Lunar tribes.
According to this description, the Purus were located in the centre
(i.e. Haryana-Uttar Pradesh) and the other four tribes, in relation
to them, were located as follows: the Anus to their north (i.e.
Kashmir), the Druhyus to their west (i.e. Punjab), the Yadus to
their south-west (i.e. Rajasthan and western Madhya Pradesh, perhaps
extending as far south as Gujarat and Maharashtra) and the Turvasas
to their south-east (to the east of the Yadus). To the northeast
of the Purus were the tribes of the IkSvAku or Solar race.
The
Purans also relate a series of historical events which changed the
original geographic locations of at least two of the five tribes
:
The
Druhyus, inhabitants of the Punjab, started conquering eastwards
and southwards, and their conquests seem to have brought them into
conflict with all the other tribes and peoples: the Anus, Purus,
Yadus, Turvasas, and even the IkSvAkus.
The
result was a more or less concerted attempt by the different tribes,
which led to the Druhyus being driven out not only from the eastern
areas occupied by them, but even from the Punjab, and into the northwest
and beyond. The place vacated by them was occupied by the Anus.
This
is important here only because it accounts for the fact that the
Anus came to occupy the area to the west of the Purus (i.e. the
Punjab), while the Druhyus were pushed further off into the northwest
beyond the Anus.
IV.B.
The Early Period of the Rig Ved
In
the Early Period of the Rig Ved, the Iranians were inhabitants of
the Punjab.
In
the Avesta, this period is remembered as a period of prehistory,
enshrined in the myth of the Vara or enclosure which Ahura Mazda
asks Yim, the king of Airyana Vaejah, to build as a defence against
the severe winters about to befall the land: clearly a mythicization
of a migration from a severely cold land to a more congenial one.
The
Vara would appear to be a mythicization of the areas in eastern
Punjab occupied by the Iranians after their migration southwards
from Kashmir: these areas would have been bordered on the east by
the Kurukshetra region, which is referred to in the Rig Ved as Vara
A Prithvi (the best place on earth) or Nabh Prithvi (the navel or
centre of the earth). The Avestan Vara (later taken to mean enclosure,
but originally merely the first word of the phrase Vara A Prithvi)
is also thought of as a kind of Paradise occupying a central position
on earth (and was, on this basis, identified by Tilak with the North
Polar region).
The
Avestan concept of a six-month long day and a six-month long night
in the Vara is probably an indication of the special and sacred
position of the Vara in Avestan mythology: in later Indian tradition,
a six-month long period each represents the day and night of the
Gods; and the KurukSetra region is known as Brahmavart (the land
of BrahmA or the Land of the Gods) as distinct from Aryavart (the
Land of the Aryas) to its east.
The
KurukSetra region was thus the common sacred land of the Iranians
to its west (the Anus in the Punjab) and the Vedic Aryans to its
east (the Purus in Uttar Pradesh).
The
hostilities and conflicts which led to the migrations of the Iranians
from this land may be symbolises in the excessive heat created by
Angra Mainyu to drive them out of Hapta-Handu: in the Rig Ved (VII.6.3)
the Dasyus were chased westwards by Agni.
The
memories of the eastern land in the Avesta are not, however, restricted
only to the myth of the Vara: we find a very significant reference
in the very first verse of the ZamyAd Yasht (Yt.19.1), the most
geographically descriptive Yasht in the Avesta.
Darmetester
translates the verse as follows: The first mountain that rose up
out of the earth, O Spitama Zarathustra! was the Haraiti Barez.
That mountain stretches all along the shores of the land washed
by waters towards the east. The second mountain was Mount Zeredho
outside Mount Manusha; this mountain too stretches all along the
shores of the land washed by waters towards the east. In his footnote
to the word outside which precedes Mount Manusha in his translation,
he notes that the phrase pArentarem aredhO which he translates as
outside is of doubtful meaning and probably means beyond.
The
Manusha of Yt.19.1 (which no one has been able to identify to this
day) is certainly the Manusha of the Rig Ved :
a.
The Avestan description specifically states that Manusha is located
in the east.
b.
The name is identified, even by the Western scholars, as a name
alien to the Iranian ethos and connected with the Indoaryan ethos:
The Cambridge History of Iran, in its reference to the word Manusha
as it occurs in the name of an Avestan hero Manuscithra (whom we
will refer to again shortly) points out that it means from the race
of Manu, and refers to the ancient mythical figure, Manu, son of
Vivasvant, who was regarded in India as the first man and father
of the human race. He has no place in Iranian tradition, where his
role is played by Yim, and later GayOmard. It appears, though, that
we have a derivative of his name in Manusha (Yasht 19.1), the name
of a mountain.
c.
The scholars translate the Avestan reference as Mount Manusha.
However,
the reference not only does not call Manusha a mountain, but the
context makes it clear that it is definitely not one: the verse
clearly states that it is referring to only two mountains, Haraiti
Barez and Zeredho, and Manusha is named only in order to point out
the direction of Mount Zeredho. Haraiti Barez and Zeredho are the
first two in a list of mountains named in the following verses of
the Yasht, and if Manusha had also been the name of a mountain,
it would have figured in the list as such in its own right. The
words parentarem aredho precede the word Manusha; and while pArentarem
means beyond, the word aredho (whose meaning is not known) probably
refers to a river or body of water: a similar word occurs in the
name of the Avestan goddess of waters: aredvi- sura anahita.
And
the name Manusa as the name of a place associated with a body of
water occurs in the Rig Ved, as we have already seen: III.23.4 specifically
describes this place as being located between the Sarasvati and
DrsadvatI rivers in the Vara A Prithvi (i.e. Kurukshetra), which
is literally a land washed by waters towards the east of the Iranian
area.
The
Manusha in the Avestan reference (Yt.19.1) clearly represents a
residual memory of the earlier eastern homeland.
Information
in the Rig Ved about the events in the Early Period is more specific,
since this period represents contemporary events in the Early Mandalas
while it represents prehistory in the Avesta.
In
the earlier part of the Early Period, there appears to have been
some degree of bonhomie between the Purus (Vedic Aryans) and Anus
(Iranians) when they shared a common religious heritage in the region
stretching out on both sides of KurukSetra.
Mandala
VI, in fact, records an alliance between the Bharatas (led by SRnjaya)
and the Anus (led by AbhyAvartin CAYamna) against the Yadus and
Turvasas who were attacking KurukSetra (HariyUpIyA = DRSadvatI)
from the south (VI.27).
However,
in the course of time, relations deteriorated, and Mandala VI itself
later identifies the Anus as droghas (enemies or fiends) in VI.62.9.
The hostilities reached a climax during the time of Sudas, in the
Dasrajna battle.
This
battle is crucial to an understanding of early Indo-Iranian history
:
1.
The evidence of the hymns shows that in this period all the major
Iranian groups were settled in the Punjab, including all those found,
in later times, in the geographically furthest areas from the Punjab:
the Phrygians (later in Turkey), the Alans (later in the northern
Caucasus), and the Khivas (later in Chorasmia), not to mention the
major peoples of latter-day Afghanistan (Pakhtoons) and Iran (Persians,
Parthians, Medes).
2.
The hymns clearly record that this battle saw the defeat of the
Anus, the conquest of their territories by Sudas (VII.18.13), and
the commencement of their migration westwards.
It
may also be noted that the Spitama line of priests also appears
to be referred to in the Dasrajna hymns in the form of a special
figure of speech which has not been understood by the scholars so
far :
In
VII.33.9, 12, Vashishth is referred to as wearing the vestments
spun by Yam and brought to him by Apsaras.
Yam,
as we have seen, is identified with the Bhrgus and the Iranians;
and the Apsaras are mythical beings closely identified with the
Gandharvas who represent the western region of GandhArI or southeastern
Afghanistan.
The
references in VII.33.9, 12 are the only references to Yam or to
the Apsaras in the whole of the Early and Middle Mandalas and Up-Mandalas
(i.e. in Mandalas VI, III, VII, IV, II, and the early and middle
Up-Mandalas of Mandala I) except for one other reference to Yam
in I.83.5, which also emphasises his Bhrgu identity by naming him
with other ancient Bhrgus like Arthvan and Usana.
Vashishth
wearing the vestments spun by Yam, who represents the Bhrgus who
are his enemies in the battle, can be understood only in the sense
of a figure of speech indicating victory over his enemies.
Therefore,
this must also be the meaning of the only other references, in these
hymns, to the vestments of the Vashishth or the Trtsus: they are
twice referred to as wearing what Griffith translates as white robes
(VII.33.1; 83.8).
The
word Svityanca, which occurs only in these two verses in the whole
of the, Rig Ved, clearly has some unique connotation different from
the commonplace meaning of white.
On
the lines of the references to the vestments spun by Yam, it is
clear that the word Svityanca refers to the identity of the enemies:
to the Spitamas, the particular priests of the enemies of Sudas
and Vashishth.
To
sum up: in the Early Period of the Rig Ved, the Iranians were inhabitants
of the Punjab, and it is only towards the end of this period, in
the time of Sudas, that they started on their migration westwards.
IV.C.
The Middle Period of the Rig Ved
IV.C.
The Middle Period of the Rig Ved
In
the Middle Period of the Rig Ved, the Iranians were settled in Afghanistan.
From
the viewpoint of Indo-Iranian relations, this period can be divided
into two parts :
The
earlier part of this period (Mandala IV and the middle Up-Mandalas)
represents a continuation and culmination of the Indo-Iranian hostilities
which commenced in the Early Period. Unlike the Early Period, however,
this period is contemporaneous with the period of composition of
the earliest parts of the Avesta (the GAthAs and the earliest core
of the Yashts) and hence the events of this period are contemporary
events for the composers of the Early Avesta, and have a central
place in the text. To the Rig Ved, however, these events are more
peripheral, unlike the earlier events in the Punjab at the time
of Sudas.
The
later part of this period (Mandala II) is a period of peace in which
the two peoples (the Vedic Aryans in the east and the Iranians in
Afghanistan) developed their religions, and the hostilities slowly
cooled down and became mythical and terminological memories.
The
major historical event of this period is the great battle which
took place in Afghanistan between a section of Vedic Aryans (led
by RjrASva and the descendants of Sudas) on the one hand, and the
Iranians (led by Zarathustra and Vistasp) on the other.
In
the Rig Ved, the correspondences with the early Avestan period of
Zarathustra are all found in the hymns of the early part of the
Middle Period :
1.
The leader of the Iranians in the battle was Kavi Vistasp, the patron
of Zarathustra (mentioned by Zarathustra in his GAthAs: Y.28.7;
46.16; 51.16; 53.2).
In
the Rig Ved, IStASva (Vistasp) is mentioned in I.122.13, attributed
to KakSIvAn Dairghatamas AuSija: kimiStASva iSTaraSmireta ISAnAsastaruSa
Rnjate nRn.
Griffith
translates the above vaguely as What can he do whose steeds and
reins are choicest These, the all potent, urge brave men to conquest.
And, in his footnotes, he opines that the whole hymn, as Wilson
observes, is very elliptical and obscure and much of it is at present
unintelligible.
But
S.K. Hodiwala84 points out that SAyaNa translates it as follows:
What can Istasva, Istarasmi, or any other princes do against those
who enjoy the protection (of Mitra and Varun), and Wilson, while
following this translation, notes that the construction is obscure
and the names, which are said to be those of Rajas, are new and
unusual.
A
second Avestan hero, whose name may be noted here, is ThraEtaona.
In
the Rig Ved, Traitana (ThraEtaona) is referred to as being killed
by (the grace of) Indra in I.158.5, attributed to Dirghtamas, the
father of Kakshivan.
2.
The Varshgira battle (referred to in hymn I.100) is identified by
many Zoroastrian scholars as a battle between the Iranians and Indo-aryans
at the time of Zarathustra. The hymn (in I.100.17) names five persons
as being the main protagonists in the battle :
a.
The leader of the Varshgiras is Rjrasva. He is identified by most
scholars with the Arejataspa or Arjaspa who is referred to in the
Avesta as the main enemy of Vistasp and his brothers (Aban Yasht,
Yt.5.109, 113; and GOs Yasht, Yt.9.30). Later Iranian tradition
(as in the ShAhname) goes so far as to hold Zarathustra himself
to have been killed by Arjapa.
b.
Sahdev is one of the four companions of Rjrasva in the battle. He
is correctly identified by S.K. Hodiwala with the Hushdiv remembered
in the Shahname (Chapter 462) as one of the main enemies of Vistasp
in the battle, who led Arjaspas troops from the rear. Although not
mentioned in the Avesta, Hushdiv is a natural development of Hazadaeva,
which would be the exact Avestan equivalent of the Vedic name Sahdev.
c.
The other three companions of Rjrasva in the battle are Ambarisa,
Bhayamna and Suradhas.
S.K.
Hodiwala points out that in the Cama Memorial Volume, E. Sheheriarji
quotes RV I.100.17 (and) tries to identify the other persons mentioned
in the said Rigvedic verse by showing that the names of certain
persons known to be connected with Arjaspa in the Avesta bear the
same meanings as the names of the persons in the said verse. Thus
he says that Ambarisa is identical with Bidarfsha (= Av. Vidarafshnik)
brother of Arjaspa, since both the names mean one with beautiful
garments. Similarly, Bhayamna = Vandaremaini, father of Arjaspa,
both meaning the fearless one; also SurAdhas = Humayaka, brother
of Arjaspa, as both the words mean one with much wealth.
Hodiwala,
of course, discounts the above identifications by conceding that
the identification of persons in two different languages from the
meanings of their names, which are quite different in sound, can
have but little weight.
However,
Hodiwala correctly identifies Humayaka, Arjaspas comrade in the
Avesta (Absn Yasht, Yt.5.113) with Somak, the son of Sahdev (IV.15.7-10).
S.K.
Hodiwala thus identifies Humayaka of the Avesta with the Rigvedic
Somaka (IV.15.7-10) while E. Sheheriarji identifies him with the
Rigvedic Suradhas (I.100.17).
Incidentally,
there is a strong likelihood that the SurAdhas of I.100.17 is the
same as the Somaka of IV.15.7-10.
The
distribution of the word Suradhas in the Rig Ved (everywhere else,
outside I.100.17, the word is an epithet meaning bountiful) suggests
that the word may have originally been coined by Visvamitra as an
epithet for his patron Sudas, perhaps on the basis of the similarity
in sound between the two words, Sudas and Suradhas, and later the
word was also applied to his descendants :
The
word Suradhas is found only twice in the Early Mandalas and Up-Mandalas,
in III.33.12; 53.12, and these are the only two hymns in Mandala
III which deal with Visvamitras relationship with Sudas.
In
the Middle Mandalas and Up-Mandalas, the word is found in I.100.17
as the name of a companion of Rjrasva and Sahdev; and elsewhere
it is found in IV.2.4; 5.4; 17.8 (all three in Mandala IV, which
is connected with Somak).
It
is found many times in the Late Mandalas and Up-Mandalas as a general
term meaning bountiful: I.23.6; VIII.14.12; 46.24; 49.1; 50.1; 65.12;
68.6; X.143.4.
In
I.100.17, therefore, it is probably an epithet, rather than the
name, of one of Rjrasvas companions; and as Sahdev is already named
separately as one of the companions, the epithet must be used here
for his son Somak, another participant in the battle.
3.
The Varshgir battle clearly has historical links with the earlier
Dasrajna battle :
a.
The protagonists in the battle include Sahdev and (as we have seen)
his son Somaka, both descendants of Sudas, the protagonist in the
Dasrajna battle.
b.
This battle hymn contains the only reference (in I.100.18) in the
whole of the Rig Ved outside the Dasrajna hymns (VII.18.5) to the
Simyus, who figure as the enemies in both the references.
c.
The word Svitnyebhi occurs in this hymn (I.100.18) in reference
to the protagonists of the hymns, in the same sense as the word
Svityanca occurs in the Dasrajna hymns (VII.33.1; 83.8). (Incidentally,
the only other occurence of the word Svitnya in the whole of the
Rig Ved is. in VIII.46.31, in reference to the cows gifted by the
camel-donor, Prthusravas Kanita, identified by the scholars, as
we have seen, as an Iranian.)
And
it is clear that this battle is between the Vedic Aryans and the
Iranians :
a.
As we have seen, it has historical links with the earlier Dasrajna
battle, which was between these two peoples.
b.
As we have also seen, the main protagonists on both sides, in the
battle, are found referred to in both the Rig Ved and the Avesta.
c.
The geography of the river-names in the Rig Ved shows a westward
thrust from the time of Sudas, which culminates beyond the Indus
in the middle Up-Mandalas and Mandala IV.
d.
The battle in the Avesta took place in southern Afghanistan: Gnoli
points out that the Hilmand delta region is the scene of the struggle
between Wistasp and Arjasp.
In
the Rig Ved, the battle is referred to as taking place beyond the
Sarayu (Siritoi) (IV.30.18), placing it squarely in southern Afghanistan.
4.
The reference to the battle beyond the Sarayu in IV.30.18 refers
to Arna and Citraratha, both Aryas, who were killed in the battle
by (the grace of) Indra.
There
are eight other verses in the Rig Ved (VI.22.10; 33.3; 60.6; VII.83.1;
X.38.3; 69.6; 83.1; 102.3) which refer to Arya enemies; but in all
those cases, the references are general references to both Arya
and Das enemies, and no specific persons identifiable as Aryas are
named as such. In this unique reference (IV.30.18), however, we
find two specific individuals named as Arya enemies.
By
the logic of the situation, these two persons should then be two
prominent Vedic Aryans (Purus) who had aligned with the enemy Iranians
(Anus) in this battle.
That
the followers of Zarathustra must have included some Vedic Aryans
is accepted by the scholars: Gnoli points out that there is no evidence
for thinking that the Zoroastrian message was meant for the Iranians
alone. On the-contrary, history suggests that the exact opposite
is likely, and there are also indisputable facts which show clearly
that Zoroasters teaching was addressed, earlier on at least to all
men ... whether they were Iranians or not, Proto-Indo-aryans or
otherwise.
The
Cambridge History of Iran, as we have seen, refers to Manuscithra
(later Manuchihr or Minocher, the common Parsee name popularly shortened
to Minoo), and notes that his name means from the race of Manu,
and refers to the ancient mythical figure, Manu, son of Vivasvant,
who was regarded in India as the first man and founder of the human
race. He has no place in Iranian tradition, where his role is played
by Yim and later Gayomard.
The
reference goes on to add that the word Manusha is found in only
one other place in the Avesta: in Yasht 19.1 as the name of a mountain.
In
later Pahlavi texts, the word is found only in two contexts: firstly
in the genealogies of Manuchihr and Luhrasp, and secondly in the
identification of the Manusha of Yt.19.1 as the birthplace of Manuchihr.
Manuscithra
was therefore clearly a Vedic Aryan born in the Kurksherta region.
And the reason he is held high in Zoroastrian tradition is also
clear: as The Cambridge History of Iran notes: In the Avesta, Manuchihr
is called Airyana, helper of the Aryans.
In
short, Manuscithra was a Vedic Aryan who aligned with the Iranians
in the great battle; and if Manus is his epithet (indicating his
Indoaryan identity) and Cithra is his name, he is clearly the Citraratha
of IV.30.18.
5.
The main priestly enemies of the Iranians are the Angras (Angirases)
who are condemned throughout the Avesta right down from the Gathas
of Zarathustra.
Significantly,
the Avesta does not refer to any of the other Rigvedic families:
neither the Visvamitras and Vashishth of the Early Period, nor the
Grtsamadas and KaSyapas of the later Middle Period, nor the Atris,
Kanvas and Bharatas of the Late Period, nor the Agastyas.
And,
of the three branches of Angirases, it does not refer even once
to the Bharadwajs. The Avesta, however, does refer to the two other
branches of Angirases, the Usijs (Ausijas) and Gaotemas (Gautamas),
both of which originated in and dominated the early Middle Period,
and in whose hymns alone we find references to the conflict with
the Zoroastrians :
a.
The Usijs (Ausijas) are mentioned by Zarathustra himself in the
Gathas (Y. 44.20) where they are identified with the Karapans (a
derogatory word used in the Gathas in reference to enemy priests).
b.
Nadhyaongha Gaotema (Nodhas Gautam) is mentioned in the early Yashts
(FarvardIn Yasht, Yt.13.16) as a priest defeated by Zarathustra
in debate. While many scholars ignore or reject the identification
of the word Nadhyaongha with Nodhas, the identity of the second
word as the name of an enemy priest, (a) Gaotema, is not disputed
by anyone.
In
sum: any analysis of the Rig Ved and Avesta will make it clear that
the main enemies of the Iranians in the Avesta, at least at the
time of Zarathustra, were the Indo-aryans: i.e. the Vedic Aryans
or Purus.
In
later Indian tradition, the Iranians became the asurs or demons
of Indian mythology, who ceased to bear even the faintest resemblance
to the original Iranian prototypes. Likewise, the angras and other
enemies of the time of Zarathustra were so mythologized in later
Iranian traditions (in the Pahlavi texts, and in the very much later
Shahname; and even in later parts of the Avesta itself) that they
ceased to be identifiable with the original Indoaryan prototypes.
Hence, later interpretations of the Avestan words (e.g. the identification
of the Tuiryas or Turanians with latter-day peoples like the Turks,
etc.) are untenable in any study of the Zoroastrian period.
The
Avesta does not appear to refer to the Purus or Bharatas by those
names, but then it is not necessary that they do so: the Rig Ved
refers to the Iranians as the Anus (a term which does not appear
in the Avesta); and although Sudas and his descendants are Bharatas,
the Dasrajna hymns refer to them as Trtsus, and the Varshgir hymn
refers to them as Varshgirs. The Iranians must have had their own
names for the Indo-aryans in the Avesta. And it is not necessary
that the names or epithets used by the Iranians for the Indo-aryans
should be located in the Rig Ved.
However,
we can speculate as follows :
a.
The word Turvayana occurs four times in the Rig Ved, and in two
of the verses it refers to the person for whom Indra conquered all
the tribes from east to west (i.e. Kutsa-Ayu-Atithigva). About Turvayana,
Griffith notes in his footnote to VI.18.13: According to Sayan,
Turvayana, quickly going is an epithet of Divodas.
If
this is correct, then it is possible that this may have been a general
epithet of the Bharata kings, descendants of Divodas, particularly
in conflict situations; and the Avestan word Tuirya for the enemies
of the Iranians may be derived from this word as a contrast to the
word airya. It may be noted that according to Skjærvø.
the evidence is too tenuous to allow any conclusions as to who the
Turas were or at what time the conflict took place.
b.
Zarathustra, in his Gathas (Y.32.12-14) refers to the grahma as
the most powerful and peRishistent of his enemies.
A
similar, though not exactly cognate, word gram, in the Rig Ved,
refers to the warrior troops of the Bharatas in III.33.11 (where
it refers to these troops, under Sudas and Visvamitra. crossing
the SutudrI and VipaS in their expedition westwards), and in I.100.10
(where it refers to the troops of the Varshgiras). These are the
only two occurences of this word in the Mandalas and Up-Mandalas
of the Early Period and the early part of the Middle Period.
The
word gram occurs once in the hymns of the later Middle Period, in
II.12.7, in its new and subsequent meaning of village. It occurs
many times in the Late Mandalas and Up-Mandalas (I.44.10; 114.1;
V.54.8; X.27.19; 62.11; 90.8; 107.5; 127.5, 146.10 149.4) always
meaning village (except in I. 44.10, where it means battle, like
the later word saMgram).
While
the early part of the Middle Period of the Rig Ved represents a
continuation and culmination of the Indo-Iranian conflicts of the
Early Period, the later part (Mandala II and corresponding parts
of the Up-Mandalas) is a period of peace in which the two people
develop their religions and cultures in their respective areas.
Mandala II does not refer to any river other than the sacred Sarasvati.
The
first signs of a thaw taking place in Indo-Iranian relations, in
this period, are the appearance in the Rig Ved of an Avestan personality
Thrita, who is counted among the important persons (Yt.13.113),
and is primarily associated with the Haoma (Soma) ritual (Y.9.10)
and with medicines (Vd.20).
Thrita
(Rigvedic Trita) is a post-Zoroastrian figure: he is not mentioned
in the Gathas, nor is he mentioned even once in the Mandalas and
Up-Mandalas of the Early Period and early Middle Period (Mandalas
VI, III, VII, IV, and the early and middle Up-Mandalas).
He
first appears in the hymns of the later Middle Period, i.e. in Mandala
II (II.11.19, 20; 31.6; 34.10, 14), and he is clearly a contemporary
figure here: II.11.19, even in the context of a hostile reference
to Dasyus (i.e. enemy priests, as we shall see in the next chapter)
in general, asks Indra to ensure the friendship of Trita (Griffith
translates the verse as a reference to Trita of our party), and
the next verse refers to Trita offering libations of Soma.
Trita
appears in all the Mandalas of the Late Period as a mythical personality.
The
later part of the Middle Period is thus a transitional period between
the earlier period of Indo-Iranian conflicts, and the later period
of general peace and religious development.
IV.D.
The Late Period of the Rig Ved :
In
the Late Period of the Rig Ved, the Iranians were now spread out
over the whole of Afghanistan and southern Central Asia, and were
still present in northwestern Punjab. The late VendidAd, as we have
already seen, delineates this area in its description of the sixteen
Iranian lands.
This
period represents a new era in Indo-Iranian relations, where the
Vedic Aryans and the Iranians, in their respective areas, developed
their religions independently of each other and yet influencing
each other, the hostilities of the past rapidly turning into mythical
and terminological memories :
1.
The Bhrgus, as we have seen, are now completely accepted into the
Vedic mainstream in Mandala VIII, with their old hymns being included
in the Mandala and the references to them acquiring a friendly,
respectful, and contemporary air.
2.
Iranian kings of the northwestern Punjab (Kasu, Prthusravas Kanita,
Tirindira Parsava, Rusama), as we have also seen, now become patrons
of Vedic Rishis.
3.
Geographical names of the northwest now start appearing in the Rig
Ved, as we have already seen, and most of these are names which
are also found in the Avesta.
a.
Susoma/Susoma, Arjika/Arjikiya, Saryanavat and Mujavat, the four
northwestern areas associated with Soma (I.84.14 in the middle Up-Mandalas;
all the rest in the hymns of the Late Period: VIII.6.39; 7.29; 64.11;
IX.65.22, 23; 113.1, 2; X.34.1; 75.5). Of these Mujavat is found
in the Avesta: Muza, Yt.8.125.
b.
Gandhari and the Gandharvas (III.38.6, a late interpolated hymn,
as we have already seen; all the rest in the hymns of the Late Period:
1.22.14; 126.7; 163.2; VIII.1.11; 77.5; IX.83.4; 85.12; 86.36; 113.3;
X.10.4; 11.2; 80.6. 85.40, 41; 123.4, 7-8;. 136.6; 139.4-6; 177.2).
Gandarewa is found in the Avesta: Yt.5.38.
c.
Rasa (IV.43.6 in the Middle Period at the westernmost point of the
westward thrust; all the rest in the hymns of the Late Period: I.112.12;
V.41.15; 53.9; VIII.72.13; IX.41.6; X.75.6; 108.1, 2; 121.4). Ranha
is found in the Avesta: Vd.1.19.
d.
Sapta Sindhu (Sapta SindhUn in the Middle Period: II.12.3, 12; IV.28.1;
and later as well: I.32.12; 35.8; X.67.12; crystallizing into Sapta
Sindhava only in the Late Period: VIII.54.4; 69.12; 96.1; IX.66.6;
X.43.3). Hapta Handu is found in the Avesta: Vd.1.18.
4.
Certain animals and persons common to the Rig Ved and the Avesta
appear, or become common, only in the hymns of the Late Period :
a.
The camel ustra (Avestan uStra, found in the name of Zarathustra
himself) appears only in 1.138.2; VIII.5.37; 6.48; 46.22, 31.
b.
The word varaha as a name for the boar (Avestan varaza) appears
only in I.61.7; 88.5; 114.5; 121.11; VIII.77.10; IX.97.7; X.28.4;
67.7; 86.4; 99.6.
c.
Yim (Vedic Yam), first man of the Avesta, is accepted into the Rig
Ved only in the latest period (although he is mentioned once, in
special circumstances, in VII.33.9, 12; and once, alongwith other
ancient Bhrgus like Arthvan and Usana Kavya, in I.83.5), when the
Bhrgus gain in importance :
I.
38.5; 116.2; 163.2;
X. 10.7, 9, 13; 12.6; 13.4; 14.1-5, 7-15; 15.8; 16.9; 17.1; 21.5;
51.3; 53.2; 58.1; 60.10; 64.3; 92.11; 97.16; 123.6; 135.1, 7; 154.4,
5; 165.4.
d.
The Avestan hero associated with Soma and medicines, Thrita (Vedic
Trita) becomes a popular mythical figure in the Rig Ved in the Late
Period. After his first appearance in the Rig Ved in Mandala II
(II.11.19, 20; 31.6; 34.10, 14), he now appears frequently in the
Late Mandalas and Up-Mandalas :
I.
52.5; 105.9, 17; 163.2, 3; 187.1;
V. 9.5; 41.4, 10; 54.2; 86.1;
VIII. 7.24; 12.16; 41.6; 47.13-16; 52.1;
IX. 32.2; 34.4; 37.4; 38.2; 86.20; 95.4; 102.2, 3;
X. 8.7, 8; 46.3, 6; 48.2; 64.3; 99.6; 115.4.
Thraetaona
(Faridun of later texts) is an earlier Avestan hero associated with
the Indo-Iranian conflicts, and hence he has already been demonised
in the Rig Ved (I.158.5). Hence, features associated with him in
the Avesta are transferred to Trita in the Rig Ved: Thraetaonas
father Athwya is transformed in the Rig Ved into Aptya, a patronymic
of Trita (I.105.9; V.41.1; VIII.12.16; 15.17; 47.13, 14; X.8.8;
120.6).
Thraetaona,
in Avestan mythology, is mainly associated with the killing of the
three-headed dragon, Azhi Dahaka; just as Indra, in Rigvedic mythology,
is mainly associated with the killing of the dragon Ahi Vrtra (hence
his common epithet Vrtrahan, found in every single Mandala of the
Rig Ved, which also becomes Vrtraghna in the khila-suktas and later
Samhitas).
The
Late Period sees a partial exchange of dragon-killers between the
Vedic Aryans and the Iranians: while Thraetaona is demonised in
the Rig Ved, his dragon-killing feat is transferred to Trita (X.87.8,
where Trita kills the three-headed dragon TriSiras), who consequently
also appears as a partner of Indra in the killing of Vrtra (VIII.7.24)
or even as a killer of Vrtra in his own right (I.187.1).
Likewise,
while Indra is demonised in the Avesta, his epithet is adopted in
the late Avestan texts as the name of a special God of Victory,
Verethraghna (Yt.1.27; 2.5, 10; 10.70, 80; 14 whole; Vd.19.125;
and in the Vispered and Khordah Avesta. Verethraghna is the BehrAm
of later texts).
Scholars
examining the Rig Ved and the Avesta cannot help noticing that the
late parts of the Rig Ved represent a period of increasing contact
and mutual influence between the Vedic Aryans and Iranians.
Michael
Witzel, as we have already seen, clearly sees Mandala VIII as representing
a period when the Vedic Aryans seem to be entering into a new environment,
the environment of the northwest: Book 8 concentrates on the whole
of the west: cf. camels, mathra horses, wool, sheep. It frequently
mentions the Sindhu, but also the Seven Streams, mountains and snow.
This Mandala lists numerous tribes that are unknown to other books.
In this Mandala, camels appear (8.5.37-39) together with the Iranian
name Kasu, small (Hoffman 1975) or with the suspicious name Tirindra
and the Parsu (8.6.46). The combination of camels (8.46.21, 31),
Mathra horses (8.46.23) and wool, sheep and dogs (8.56.3) is also
suggestive: the borderlands (including Gandhara) have been famous
for wool and sheep, while dogs are treated well in Zoroastrian Iran
but not in South Asia.
In
fact, the period of Mandala VIII is the period of composition of
the major part of the Avesta. That is, to the original Gathas and
the core of the early Yashts, which belong to the Middle Period
of the Rig Ved, were now added the rest of the Yasna (other than
the Gathas) and Yashts (late Yashts, as well as post-Zoroastrian
additions to the early Yashts), and the Vendidad.
A
very eminent Zoroastrian scholar, J.C. Tavadia, had noted as long
ago as in 1950: Not only in grammatical structure and vocabulary,
but also in literary form, in certain metres like the Tristubh and
in a way Gayatri, there is resemblance between the Avesta and the
Rigved. The fact is usually mentioned in good manuals. But there
is a peculiarity about these points of resemblance which is not
so commonly known: It is the eighth Mandala which bears the most
striking similarity to the Avesta. There and there only (and of
course partly in the related first Mandala) do some common words
like ustra and the strophic structure called pragAtha occur. Further
research in this direction is sure to be fruitful.
That
this correlation between the Avesta as a whole and Mandala VIII,
is really a correlation between the period of the Avesta proper
and the period of the later parts of the Rig Ved, is not acknowledged
by either Witzel or Tavadia, since neither of them admits that Mandala
VIII is chronologically a late part of the Rig Ved.
But
the following conclusions of another eminent, and recent, scholar
may be noted. According to Helmut Humbach: It must be emphasised
that the process of polarisation of relations between the Ahuras
and the Devs is already complete in the Gathas, whereas, in the
Rig Ved, the reverse process of polarisation between the Devs and
the asurs, which does not begin before the later parts of the Rig
Ved, develops as it were before our very eyes, and is not completed
until the later Vedic period. Thus, it is not at all likely that
the origins of the polarisation are to be sought in the prehistorical,
the Proto-Aryan period. More likely, Zarathustras reform was the
result of interdependent developments, when Irano-Indian contacts
still perishisted at the dawn of history. With their Ahura-Daeva
ideology, the Mazdayasnians, guided by their prophet, deliberately
dissociated themselves from the Dev-Asur concept which was being
developed, or had been developed, in India, and probably also in
the adjacent Iranian-speaking countries. All this suggests a synchrony
between the later Vedic period and Zarathustras reform in Iran.
Thus,
it is clear that the bulk of the Avesta is contemporaneous with
the Late Period of the Rig Ved, while the earliest part of the Avesta
(consisting of the Gathas and the core of the early Yashts) is contemporaneous
with the Middle Period.
In
sum, the cold, hard facts lead inescapably to only one logical conclusion
about the location of the Indo-Iranian homeland :
1.
The concept of a common Indo-Iranian habitat is based solely on
the fact of a common Indo-Iranian culture reconstructed from linguistic,
religious and cultural elements common to the Rig Ved and the Avesta.
2.
The period of development of this common Indo-Iranian culture is
not, as Humbach aptly puts it, the prehistorical, the Proto-Aryan
period, but the later Vedic period.
3.
The location of this common Indo-Iranian habitat must therefore
be traced from the records of the later Vedic period available jointly
within the hymns of the Rig Ved and the Avesta.
4.
The records of the later Vedic period show that the Vedic Aryans
and the Iranians were located in an area stretching from (and including)
Uttar Pradesh in the east to (and including) southern and eastern
Afghanistan in the west.
This
is the area which represents the common Indo-Iranian homeland.
The
scholars, however, are not accustomed to deriving conclusions from
facts; it is their practice to arrive at conclusions beforehand
(the conclusion, in this particular case, being based on an extraneous,
and highly debatable, linguistic theory about the location of the
original Indo-European homeland), and to twist or ignore all facts
which fail to lead to this predetermined conclusion.
The
three scholars in question, Witzel, Tavadia and Humbach, to different
degrees and in different ways, note the facts as they are; but they
do not take these facts to their logical conclusion about Indo-Iranian
geography and prehistory: all three scholars firmly believe in the
theory that, in the prehistorical, the Proto-Aryan period, the Indo-Iranians
were settled in Central Asia whence they migrated to Iran and India.
This
can lead to a ludicrously topsy-turvy perspective, as will be evident,
for example, from the following observations by Humbach on the subject
:
Humbach
clearly states that the facts suggest a synchrony between the later
Vedic period and Zarathustras reform, and that the Gathas of Zarathustra
were therefore composed at a time when the Dev-Asur concept was
being developed, or had been developed, in India. In short, Humbach
concludes that the Gathas, one of the oldest parts of the Avesta,
were composed at a point of time when the Indo-aryans were settled,
and had already been settled for some time, in India.
But,
when identifying the Hapta Handu in the list of sixteen Iranian
lands named in the Vendidad list, he chooses to identify it with
the upper course of the Oxus River. Now there is no earthly reason
why Hapta Handu should be identified with the upper course of the
Oxus rather than with the plains of the Punjab (as very correctly
done, for example, by Darmetester, Gnoli, etc.), and this identification
was mooted by scholars who sought to identify the sixteen lands
on the basis of the theory that the lands named in the list refer
to a period when the (Indo-)Iranians were still in Central Asia,
and the Indo-aryans had not yet migrated southeastwards as far as
the Punjab. In short, Humbach concludes that the Vendidad, a late
part of the Avesta, was composed at a point of time when the Indo-aryans
had not yet reached the Punjab in their journey into India.
The
incongruity between the two conclusions is striking.
Clearly,
the theory, that the Indo-Iranians were in Central Asia in any prehistorical,
Proto-Aryan period, is not conducive to any logical understanding
of the Rig Ved or the Avesta, or of Indo-Iranian history.
The
facts show a different picture from the one assumed by these scholars
:
1.
The development of the common Indo-Iranian culture, reconstructed
from linguistic, religious, and cultural elements in the Rig Ved
and the Avesta, took place in the later Vedic period.
2.
Therefore, details about the geographical situation in the prehistorical,
the Proto-Aryan period must be looked for in the earlier Vedic period,
i.e. in the hymns of the Early Period of the Rig Ved.
3.
The evidence of the hymns of the Early Period of the Rig Ved, as
we have already seen, locates the Indo-Iranians further east: i.e.
in the area from (and including) Uttar Pradesh in the east to (and
including) the Punjab in the west.
It
is not, therefore, Central Asia, but India, which is the original
area from which the Iranians migrated to their later historical
habitats.
Footnotes
:
1 GPW, p.4.
2 ibid., p.5.
3
ibid., pp.114-15.
4
ibid., p.120.
5
ibid., p.127.
6
ibid., pp.122-23.
7
ibid., p.123.
8
ibid., p.126.
9
ibid, p.146.
10
ibid.
11
ibid.,p.125.
12
IASA, p.116.
13
ibid., p.110.
14
ibid., p.155.
15
ibid., p.156.
16
ibid., p.157-58.
17
ibid., p.163.
18
ibid., p.164.
19
ibid.
20
ibid.
21
ibid., p.165.
22
ibid., p.164.
23
ibid., p.160.
24
ibid., pp.166-67.
25
ibid., p.98.
26
ibid., p.335, fn.82.
27
ibid., p.324.
28
ibid., p.331.
29
ibid., p.333, fn.75
30
ZTH, p.45.
31
ibid.
32
ibid., p.59.
33
ibid., p.161.
34
ibid., pp.25-26.
35
ibid., pp.63-64.
36
ibid., p.47.
37
ibid., p.63.
38
ibid., p.53.
39
ibid., p.110.
40
ibid., pp.84-85.
41
ibid., p.110.
42
ibid., p.89.
43
ibid., p.110.
44
ibid., p.88.
45
ibid..
46
ibid., p.102.
47
ibid., p.105.
48
ibid.
49
ibid.
50
ibid., pp.107-08.
51
ibid., p.111.
52
ibid., p.240.
53
ibid., p.141.
54
ibid., p.17.
55
ibid.
56
ibid.
57
ibid., p.227.
58
ibid., p.88.
59
ibid., p.87.
60
ibid., p.88.
61
ibid., p.7.
62
ibid., p.131.
63
ibid., p.133.
64
ibid., p.131.
65
ibid., p.132.
66
ibid., pp.134-35.
67
ibid., p.14.
68
ibid., p.135.
69
ibid., p.153.
70
ibid.
71
ibid., pp.153-54.
72
ibid., p.47.
73
ibid, p.50.
74
ibid, p.69.
75
ibid, p.47.
76
ibid, p.56.
77
AIHT, p.264.
78
IASA, pp.338-39.
79
IASA, p.110.
80
ibid., p.322.
81
GORI, p.26.
82
SBE, p.287.
83
CHI, p.433.
84
ZCR, pp.11-12.
85
ZCR, pp.12, 16.
86
ZCR, p.12-13.
87
ibid, p.13.
88
ibid, p.16.
89
ZTH, p.134.
90
ibid., pp.74-75.
91
CHI, P.433.
92
ibid.
93
IASA, p.171.
94
IASA, p.317.
95
ibid, p.319.
96
ibid., p.322.
97
IIS, pp.3-4.
98
GZ, p.23.
99
ibid.
100
ibid, p.34.