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Sarasvati River

The Sarasvati River (IAST: Sárasvatī-nadī́) is a deified mythological river first mentioned in the Rigveda[1] and later in Vedic and post-Vedic texts. It played an important role in the Vedic religion, appearing in all but the fourth book of the Rigveda.

Vedic and present-day Gagghar-Hakra river-course, with Aryavarta/Kuru Kingdom, and (pre-)Harappan Hakkra/Sutlej-Yamuna paleochannels as proposed by Clift et al. (2012) and Khonde et al. (2017).[a] See also this satellite image.
1 = ancient river
2 = today's river
3 = today's Thar desert
4 = ancient shore
5 = today's shore
6 = today's town
7 = dried-up Harappan Hakkra course, and pre-Harappan Sutlej paleochannels (Clift et al. (2012)).
Cemetery H, Late Harappan, OCP, Copper Hoard and Painted Grey ware sites

As a physical river, in the oldest texts of the Rigveda it is described as a "great and holy river in north-western India,"[2] but in the middle and late Rigvedic books it is described as a small river ending in "a terminal lake (samudra)."[3][b] As the goddess Sarasvati, the other referent for the term "Sarasvati" which developed into an independent identity in post-Vedic times,[4] the river is also described as a powerful river and mighty flood.[5] The Sarasvati is also considered by Hindus to exist in a metaphysical form, in which it formed a confluence with the sacred rivers Ganges and Yamuna, at the Triveni Sangam.[6] According to Michael Witzel, superimposed on the Vedic Sarasvati river is the "heavenly river": the Milky Way, which is seen as "a road to immortality and heavenly after-life."[7]

Rigvedic and later Vedic texts have been used to propose identification with present-day rivers, or ancient riverbeds. The Nadistuti hymn in the Rigveda (10.75) mentions the Sarasvati between the Yamuna in the east and the Sutlej in the west, while RV 7.95.1-2, describes the Sarasvati as flowing to the samudra, a word now usually translated as 'ocean',[c] but which could also mean "lake."[3][8][9][10][d] Later Vedic texts such as the Tandya Brahmana and the Jaiminiya Brahmana, as well as the Mahabharata, mention that the Sarasvati dried up in a desert.

Since the late 19th century, numerous scholars have proposed to identify the Sarasvati with the Ghaggar-Hakra River system, which flows through modern-day northwestern-India and eastern-Pakistan, between the Yamuna and the Sutlej, and ends in the Thar desert. Recent geophysical research shows that the supposed downstream Ghaggar-Hakra paleochannel is actually a paleochannel of the Sutlej, which flowed into the Nara river, a delta channel of the Indus River. 10,000-8,000 years ago this channel was abandoned when the Sutlej diverted its course, leaving the Ghaggar-Hakra as a system of monsoon-fed rivers which did not reach the sea.[11][12][13][14]

The Indus Valley Civilisation prospered when the monsoons that fed the rivers diminished around 5,000 years ago,[11][13][14][e] and ISRO has observed that major Indus Valley civilization sites at Kalibangan (Rajasthan), Banawali and Rakhigarhi (Haryana), Dholavira and Lothal (Gujarat) lay along this course.[15][web 1] When the monsoons that fed the rivers further diminished, the Hakra dried-up some 4,000 years ago, becoming an intermittent river, and the urban Harappan civilisation declined, becoming localized in smaller agricultural communities.[11][f][13][12][14]

Identification of a mighty physical Rigvedic Sarasvati with the Ghaggar-Hakra system is therefore problematic, since the Gagghar-Hakra had dried up well before the time of the composition of the Rigveda.[16][17][f][13][12][14] In the words of Wilke and Moebus, the Sarasvati had been reduced to a "small, sorry trickle in the desert" by the time that the Vedic people migrated into north-west India.[18] Rigvedic references to a physical river also indicate that the Sarasvati "had already lost its main source of water supply and must have ended in a terminal lake (samudra) approximately 3000 years ago,"[3][b] "depicting the present-day situation, with the Sarasvatī having lost most of its water."[19][b][20] Also, Rigvedic descriptions of the Sarasvati do not fit the actual course of the Gagghar-Hakra.[21][22]

"Sarasvati" has also been identified with the Helmand in ancient Arachosia, or Harauvatiš (Old Persian: 𐏃𐎼𐎢𐎺𐎫𐎡𐏁), in present day southern Afghanistan,[23] the name of which may have been reused from the more ancient Sanskrit name of the Ghaggar-Hakra river, after the Vedic tribes moved to the Punjab.[23][21][g] The Sarasvati of the Rigveda may also refer to two distinct rivers, with the family books referring to the Helmand River, and the more recent 10th mandala referring to the Ghaggar-Hakra.[23]

The identification with the Ghaggar-Hakra system took on new significance in the early 21st century,[24] with some Hindutva apologists suggesting an earlier dating of the Rigveda; renaming the Indus Valley Civilisation as the "Sarasvati culture", the "Sarasvati Civilization", the "Indus-Sarasvati Civilization" or the "Sindhu-Sarasvati Civilization,"[25][26][27] suggesting that the Indus Valley and Vedic cultures can be equated;[28] and rejecting the Indo-Aryan migrations theory, which postulates an extended period of migrations of Indo-European speaking people into the Indian subcontinent between ca. 1900 BCE and 1400 BCE.[h][i]

Etymology edit

Sárasvatī is the feminine nominative singular form of the adjective sárasvat (which occurs in the Rigveda[29] as the name of the keeper of the celestial waters), derived from ‘sáras’ + ‘vat’, meaning ‘having sáras-’. Sanskrit sáras- means ‘lake, pond’ (cf. the derivative sārasa- ‘lake bird = Sarus crane’). Mayrhofer considers unlikely a connection with the root *sar- ‘run, flow’ but does agree that it could have been a river that connected many lakes due to its abundant volumes of water-flow.[30]

Sarasvatī may be a cognate of Avestan Haraxvatī, perhaps.[31] In the younger Avesta, Haraxvatī is Arachosia, a region described to be rich in rivers, and its Old Persian cognate Harauvati.

Importance in Hinduism edit

The Saraswati river was revered and considered important for Hindus because it is said that it was on this river's banks, along with its tributary Drishadwati, in the Vedic state of Brahmavarta, that Vedic Sanskrit had its genesis,[32] and important Vedic scriptures like initial part of Rigveda and several Upanishads were supposed to have been composed by Vedic seers. In the Manusmriti, Brahmavarta is portrayed as the "pure" centre of Vedic culture. Bridget and Raymond Allchin in The Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan took the view that "The earliest Aryan homeland in India-Pakistan (Aryavarta or Brahmavarta) was in the Punjab and in the valleys of the Sarasvati and Drishadvati rivers in the time of the Rigveda."[33]

Rigveda edit

 
Map of northern India in the late Vedic period

As a river edit

The Sarasvati River is mentioned in all but the fourth book of the Vedas Macdonell and Keith provided a comprehensive survey of Vedic references to the Sarasvati River in their Vedic Index.[34][j] In the late book 10, only two references are unambiguously to the river: 10.64.9, calling for the aid of three "great rivers", Sindhu, Sarasvati and Sarayu; and 10.75.5, the geographical list of the Nadistuti Sukta. In this hymn, the Sarasvati River is placed between the Yamuna and the Sutlej.

In the oldest texts of the Rigveda she is described as a "great and holy river in north-western India,"[2] but Michael Witzel notes that the Rigveda indicates that the Sarswati "had already lost its main source of water supply and must have ended in a terminal lake (samudra) approximately 3000 years ago."[3] The middle books 3 and 7 and the late books 10 "depict the present-day situation, with the Sarasvatī having lost most of its water."[19][b] The Sarasvati acquired an extalted status in the mythology of the Kuru Kingdom,[36] where the Rigveda was compiled.[37]

As a goddess edit

 
Painting of Goddess Saraswati by Raja Ravi Varma

Sarasvati is mentioned some fifty times in the hymns of the Rigveda.[38] It is mentioned in thirteen hymns of the late books (1 and 10) of the Rigveda.[39]

The most important hymns related to Sarasvati goddess are RV 6.61, RV 7.95 and RV 7.96.[40] As a river goddess, she is described as a mighty flood, and is clearly not an earthly river.[5] According to Michael Witzel, superimposed on the Vedic Sarasvati river is the heavenly river Milky Way, which is seen as "a road to immortality and heavenly after-life."[7][41][k] The description of the Sarasvati as the river of heavens, is interpreted to suggest its mythical nature.[42]

In 10.30.12, her origin as a river goddess may explain her invocation as a protective deity in a hymn to the celestial waters. In 10.135.5, as Indra drinks Soma he is described as refreshed by Sarasvati. The invocations in 10.17 address Sarasvati as a goddess of the forefathers as well as of the present generation. In 1.13, 1.89, 10.85, 10.66 and 10.141, she is listed with other gods and goddesses, not with rivers. In 10.65, she is invoked together with "holy thoughts" (dhī) and "munificence" (puraṃdhi), consistent with her role as a goddess of both knowledge and fertility.[citation needed]

Though Sarasvati initially emerged as a river goddess in the Vedic scriptures, in later Hinduism of the Puranas, she was rarely associated with the river. Instead, she emerged as an independent goddess of knowledge, learning, wisdom, music and the arts. The evolution of the river goddess into the goddess of knowledge started with later Brahmanas, which identified her as Vāgdevī, the goddess of speech, perhaps due to the centrality of speech in the Vedic cult and the development of the cult on the banks of the river.[43] It is also possible to postulate two originally independent goddesses that were fused into one in later Vedic times.[4] Aurobindo has proposed, on the other hand, that "the symbolism of the Veda betrays itself to the greatest clearness in the figure of the goddess Sarasvati ... She is, plainly and clearly, the goddess of the World, the goddess of a divine inspiration ...".[44]

Other Vedic texts edit

In post-Rigvedic literature, the disappearance of the Sarasvati is mentioned. Also the origin of the Sarasvati is identified as Plaksa Prasravana (Peepal tree or Ashwattha tree as known in India and Nepal).[45][46]

In a supplementary chapter of the Vajasaneyi-Samhita of the Yajurveda (34.11), Sarasvati is mentioned in a context apparently meaning the Sindhu: "Five rivers flowing on their way speed onward to Sarasvati, but then become Sarasvati a fivefold river in the land."[47] According to the medieval commentator Uvata, the five tributaries of the Sarasvati were the Punjab rivers Drishadvati, Satudri (Sutlej), Chandrabhaga (Chenab), Vipasa (Beas) and the Iravati (Ravi).

The first reference to the disappearance of the lower course of the Sarasvati is from the Brahmanas, texts that are composed in Vedic Sanskrit, but dating to a later date than the Veda Samhitas. The Jaiminiya Brahmana (2.297) speaks of the 'diving under (upamajjana) of the Sarasvati', and the Tandya Brahmana (or Pancavimsa Br.) calls this the 'disappearance' (vinasana). The same text (25.10.11-16) records that the Sarasvati is 'so to say meandering' (kubjimati) as it could not sustain heaven which it had propped up.[48][l]

The Plaksa Prasravana (place of appearance/source of the river) may refer to a spring in the Sivalik hills. The distance between the source and the Vinasana (place of disappearance of the river) is said to be 44 Ashwin (between several hundred and 1,600 miles) (Tandya Br. 25.10.16; cf. Av. 6.131.3; Pancavimsa Br.).[49]

In the Latyayana Srautasutra (10.15-19) the Sarasvati seems to be a perennial river up to the Vinasana, which is west of its confluence with the Drshadvati (Chautang). The Drshadvati is described as a seasonal stream (10.17), meaning it was not from Himalayas. Bhargava[50] has identified Drashadwati river as present-day Sahibi river originating from Jaipur hills in Rajasthan. The Asvalayana Srautasutra and Sankhayana Srautasutra contain verses that are similar to the Latyayana Srautasutra.

Post-Vedic texts edit

Wilke and Moebus note that the "historical river" Sarasvati was a "topographically tangible mythogeme", which was already reduced to a "small, sorry trickle in the desert", by the time of composition of the Hindu epics. These post-Vedic texts regularly talk about drying up of the river, and start associating the goddess Sarasvati with language, rather than the river.[18]

Mahabharata edit

According to the Mahabharata (3rd c. BCE - 3rd c. CE) the Sarasvati River dried up to a desert (at a place named Vinasana or Adarsana)[51][52] and joins the sea "impetuously".[53] MB.3.81.115 locates the state of Kurupradesh or Kuru Kingdom to the south of the Sarasvati and north of the Drishadvati. The dried-up, seasonal Ghaggar River in Rajasthan and Haryana reflects the same geographical view described in the Mahabharata.

According to Hindu scriptures, a journey was made during the Mahabharata by Balrama along the banks of the Saraswati from Dwarka to Mathura. There were ancient kingdoms too (the era of the Mahajanapads) that lay in parts of north Rajasthan and that were named on the Sarasvati River.[54][55][56]

Puranas edit

Several Puranas describe the Sarasvati River, and also record that the river separated into a number of lakes (saras).[57]

In the Skanda Purana, the Sarasvati originates from the water pot of Brahma and flows from Plaksa on the Himalayas. It then turns west at Kedara and also flows underground. Five distributaries of the Sarasvati are mentioned.[58] The text regards Sarasvati as a form of Brahma's consort Brahmi.[59] According to the Vamana Purana 32.1-4, the Sarasvati rose from the Plaksa tree (Pipal tree).[57]

The Padma Purana proclaims:

One who bathes and drinks there where the Gangā, Yamunā and Sarasvati join enjoys liberation. Of this there is no doubt."[60]

Smritis edit

  • In the Manu Smriti, the sage Manu, escaping from a flood, founded the Vedic culture between the Sarasvati and Drishadvati rivers. The Sarasvati River was thus the western boundary of Brahmavarta: "the land between the Sarasvati and Drishadvati is created by God; this land is Brahmavarta."[61]
  • Similarly, the Vasistha Dharma Sutra I.8-9 and 12-13 locates Aryavarta to the east of the disappearance of the Sarasvati in the desert, to the west of Kalakavana, to the north of the mountains of Pariyatra and Vindhya and to the south of the Himalaya. Patanjali's Mahābhāṣya defines Aryavarta like the Vasistha Dharma Sutra.
  • The Baudhayana Dharmasutra gives similar definitions, declaring that Aryavarta is the land that lies west of Kalakavana, east of Adarsana (where the Sarasvati disappears in the desert), south of the Himalayas and north of the Vindhyas.

Contemporary religious significance edit

 
Triveni Sangam, Allahabad – the confluence of Ganga, Yamuna and the "unseen" Sarasvati.

Diana Eck notes that the power and significance of the Sarasvati for present-day India is in the persistent symbolic presence at the confluence of rivers all over India.[62] Although "materially missing",[63] she is the third river, which emerges to join in the meeting of rivers, thereby making the waters thrice holy.[63]

After the Vedic Sarasvati dried, new myths about the rivers arose. Sarasvati is described to flow in the underworld and rise to the surface at some places.[18] For centuries, the Sarasvati river existed in a "subtle or mythic" form, since it corresponds with none of the major rivers of present-day South Asia.[6] The confluence (sangam) or joining of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers at Triveni Sangam, Allahabad, is believed to also converge with the unseen Sarasvati river, which is believed to flow underground. This is despite Allahabad being at a considerable distance from the possible historic routes of an actual Sarasvati river.

At the Kumbh Mela, a mass bathing festival is held at Triveni Sangam, literally "confluence of the three rivers", every 12 years.[6][64][65] The belief of Sarasvati joining at the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna originates from the Puranic scriptures and denotes the "powerful legacy" the Vedic river left after her disappearance. The belief is interpreted as "symbolic".[66] The three rivers Sarasvati, Yamuna, Ganga are considered consorts of the Hindu Trinity (Trimurti) Brahma, Vishnu (as Krishna) and Shiva respectively.[59]

In lesser known configuration, Sarasvati is said to form the Triveni confluence with rivers Hiranya and Kapila at Somnath. There are several other Trivenis in India where two physical rivers are joined by the "unseen" Sarasvati, which adds to the sanctity of the confluence.[67]

Romila Thapar notes that "once the river had been mythologized through invoking the memory of the earlier river, its name - Sarasvati - could be applied to many rivers, which is what happened in various parts of the [Indian] subcontinent."[21]

Several present-day rivers are also named Sarasvati, after the Vedic Sarasvati:

Identification theories edit

Already since the 19th century, attempts have been made to identify the mythical Sarasvati of the Vedas with physical rivers.[11] Many think that the Vedic Sarasvati river once flowed east of the Indus (Sindhu) river.[66] Scientists, geologists as well as scholars have identified the Sarasvati with many present-day or now-defunct rivers.

Two theories are popular in the attempts to identify the Sarasvati. Several scholars have identified the river with the present-day Ghaggar-Hakra River or dried up part of it, which is located in Northwestern India and Pakistan.[68][42][25][26] A second popular theory associates the river with the Helmand river or an ancient river in the present Helmand Valley in Afghanistan.[23][69]

Others consider Sarasvati a mythical river, an allegory not a "thing".[70]

The identification with the Ghaggar-Hakra system took on new significance in the early 21st century,[24] suggesting an earlier dating of the Rigveda, and renaming the Indus Valley Civilisation as the "Sarasvati culture", the "Sarasvati Civilization", the "Indus-Sarasvati Civilization" or the "Sindhu-Sarasvati Civilization,"[25][26][27] suggesting that the Indus Valley and Vedic cultures can be equated.[28]

Rigvedic course edit

 
Vedic rivers

The Rigveda contains several hymns which give an indication of the flow of the geography of the river, and an identification of the Sarasvati as described in the later books of the Rigveda with the Ghaggra-Hakra:

  • RV 3.23.4 mentions the Sarasvati River together with the Drsadvati River and the Āpayā River.[b]
  • RV 6.52.6 describes the Sarasvati as swollen (pinvamānā) by the rivers (sindhubhih).
  • RV 7.36.6, "sárasvatī saptáthī síndhumātā" can be translated as "Sarasvati the Seventh, Mother of Floods,"[71] but also as "whose mother is the Sindhu", which would indicate that the Sarasvati is here a tributary of the Indus.[m][b]
  • RV 7.95.1-2, describes the Sarasvati as flowing to the samudra, a word now usually translated as "ocean,"[c] but which could also mean "lake."[3][8][9][10][d][b]
  • RV 10.75.5, the late Rigvedic Nadistuti sukta, enumerates all important rivers from the Ganges in the east up to the Indus in the west in a clear geographical order. The sequence "Ganges, Yamuna, Sarasvati, Shutudri" places the Sarasvati between the Yamuna and the Sutlej, which is consistent with the Ghaggar identification.[b]

Yet, the Rigveda also contains clues for an identification with the Helmand river in Afghanistan:

  • The Sarasvati River is perceived to be a great river with perennial water, which does not apply to the Hakra and Ghaggar.[72]
  • The Rigveda seems to contain descriptions of several Sarasvatis. The earliest Sararvati is said to be similar to the Helmand in Afghanistan which is called the Harakhwati in the Āvestā.[72]
  • Verses in RV 6.61 indicate that the Sarasvati river originated in the hills or mountains (giri), where she "burst with her strong waves the ridges of the hills (giri)". It is a matter of interpretation whether this refers only to the Himalayan foothills, where the present-day Sarasvati (Sarsuti) river flows, or to higher mountains.

The Rigveda was composed during the latter part of the late Harappan period, and according to Shaffer, the reason for the predominance of the Sarasvati in the Rigveda is the late Harappan (1900-1300 BCE) population shift eastwards to Haryana.[35]

Ghaggar-Hakra River edit

The present Ghaggar-Hakra River is a seasonal river in India and Pakistan that flows only during the monsoon season, but satellite images in possession of the ISRO and ONGC have confirmed that the major course of a river ran through the present-day Ghaggar River.[73] The supposed paleochannel of the Hakra is actually a paleochannel of the Sutlej, flowing into the Nara river bed,[13] presently a delta channel c.q. paleochannel of the Indus River.[74][75][76] At least 10,000 years ago, well before the rise of the Harappan civilization, the sutlej diverted its course, leaving the Ghaggar-Hakra as a monsoon-fed river.[13][14][77] Early in the 2nd millennium BCE the monsoons diminished and the Ghaggar-Hakra fluvial system dried up, which affected the Harappan civilisation.[11]

Paleochannels and ancient course edit

 
Vedic and present-day Gagghar-Hakra river-course, with Aryavarta/Kuru Kingdom, and (pre-)Harappan Hakra/Sutlej-Yamuna paleochannels, as proposed by Clift et al. (2012) and Khonde et al. (2017).[n] See also this satellite image.
1 = ancient river
2 = today's river
3 = today's Thar desert
4 = ancient shore
5 = today's shore
6 = today's town
7 = dried-up Harappan Hakkra course, and pre-Harappan Sutlej paleochannels (Clift et al. (2012))

While there is general agreement that the river courses in the Indus Basin have frequently changed course, the exact sequence of these changes and their dating have been problematic.[78]

Pre-Holocene diversion of the Sutlej and Yamuna edit

Older publications have suggested that the Sutlej and the Yamuna drained into the Hakra well into Mature Harappan times, providing ample volume to the supply provided by the monsoon-fed Ghaggar. The Sutlej and Yamuna then changed course between 2500 BCE and 1900 BCE, due to either tectonic events or "slightly altered gradients on the extremely flat plains," resulting in the drying-up of the Hakra in the Thar Desert.[79][80][o][p][q] More recent publications have shown that the Sutlej and the Yamuna shifted course well before Harappan times,[13][14][87] leaving the monsoon-fed Ghaggar-Hakra which dried-up during late Harappan times.[11]

Clift et al. (2012), using dating of zircon sand grains, have shown that subsurface river channels near the Indus Valley civilisation sites in Cholistan immediately below the presumed Ghaggar-Hakra channel show sediment affinity not with the Ghagger-Hakra, but instead with the Beas River in the western sites and the Sutlej and the Yamuna in the eastern ones. This suggests that the Yamuna itself, or a channel of the Yamuna, along with a channel of the Sutlej may have flowed west some time between 47,000 BCE and 10,000 BCE. The drainage from the Yamuna may have been lost from the Ghaggar-Hakra well before the beginnings of Indus civilisation.[13]

Ajit Singh et al. (2017) show that the paleochannel of the Ghaggar-Hakra is a former course of the Sutlej, which diverted to its present course between 15,000 and 8,000 years ago, well before the development of the Harappan Civilisation. Ajit Singh et al. conclude that the urban populations settled not along a perennial river, but a monsoon-fed seasonal river that was not subject to devastating floods.[14][77]

Khonde et al. (2017) confirm that the Great Rann of Kutch received sediments from a different source than the Indus, but this source stopped supplying sediments after ca. 10,000 years ago.[87] Likewise, Dave et al. (2019) state that "[o]ur results disprove the proposed link between ancient settlements and large rivers from the Himalayas and indicate that the major palaeo-fluvial system traversing through this region ceased long before the establishment of the Harappan civilisation."[88]

According to Chaudhri et al. (2021) "the Saraswati River used to flow from the glaciated peaks of the Himalaya to the Arabian sea," and an "enormous amount of water was flowing through this channel network until BC 11,147."[89]

IVC and diminishing of the monsoons edit
 
Outline of the Indus Civilization, with concentration of settlements along the Ghaggar-Hakra, which had dried-up by the time of the Indo-Aryan migrations. See Sameer et al. (2018) for a more detailed map.

Many Indus Valley civilisation (Harrapan Civilisation) sites are found on the banks of and in the proximity of the Ghaggar-Hakra fluvial system, due to the "high monsoon rainfall" which fed the Ghaggar-Hakra in Mature Harappan Times.[90][91]

Giosan et al., in their study Fluvial landscapes of the Harappan civilisation, make clear that the Ghaggar-Hakra fluvial system was not a large glacier-fed Himalayan river, but a monsoonal-fed river.[11] They concluded that the Indus Valley Civilisation prospered when the monsoons that fed the rivers diminished around 5,000 years ago. When the monsoons, which fed the rivers that supported the civilisation, further diminished and the rivers dried out as a result, the IVC declined some 4000 years ago.[11] This in particular effected the Ghaggar-Hakra system, which became an intermittent river and was largely abandoned.[92] Localized Late IVC-settlements are found eastwards, toward the more humid regions of the Indo-Gangetic Plain, where the decentralised late Harappan phase took place.[92][f][r]

The same widespread aridification in the third millennium BCE also led to water shortages and ecological changes in the Eurasian steppes,[web 2][95] leading to a change of vegetation, triggering "higher mobility and transition to nomadic cattle breeding,"[95][s][96][t] These migrations eventually resulted in the Indo-Aryan migrations into South Asia.[97][web 2]

Identification with the Sarasvati edit

A number of archaeologists and geologists have identified the Sarasvati river with the present-day Ghaggar-Hakra River, or the dried up part of it,[42][25][26][98][99][100][101][102] despite the fact that it had already dried-up and become a small seasonal river before Vedic times.[11]

In the 19th and early 20th century a number of scholars, archaeologists and geologists have identified the Vedic Sarasvati River with the Ghaggar-Hakra River, such as Christian Lassen (1800-1876),[103] Max Müller (1823-1900),[104] Marc Aurel Stein (1862-1943),[93] C.F. Oldham[105] and Jane Macintosh.[106] Danino notes that "the 1500 km-long bed of the Sarasvati" was "rediscovered" in the 19th century.[107] According to Danino, "most Indologists" were convinced in the 19th century that "the bed of the Ghaggar-Hakra was the relic of the Sarasvati."[107]

Recent archaeologists and geologists, such as Philip and Virdi (2006), K.S. Valdiya (2013) have identified the Sarasvati with Ghaggar.[108] According to Gregory Possehl, "Linguistic, archaeological, and historical data show that the Sarasvati of the Vedas is the modern Ghaggar or Hakra."[84]

According to R.U.S. Prasad, "we [...] find a considerable body of opinions [sic] among the scholars, archaeologists and geologists, who hold that the Sarasvati originated in the Shivalik hills [...] and descended through Adi Badri, situated in the foothills of the Shivaliks, to the plains [...] and finally debouched herself into the Arabian sea at the Rann of Kutch."[109] According to Valdiya, "it is plausible to conclude that once upon a time the Ghagghar was known as "Sarsutī"," which is "a corruption of "Sarasvati"," because "at Sirsā on the bank of the Ghagghar stands a fortress called "Sarsutī". Now in derelict condition, this fortress of antiquity celebrates and honours the river Sarsutī."[110]

Textual and historical objections edit

Ashoke Mukherjee (2001), is critical of the attempts to identify the Rigvedic Sarasvati. Mukherjee notes that many historians and archaeologists, both Indian and foreign, concluded that the word "Sarasvati" (literally "being full of water") is not a noun, a specific "thing". However, Mukherjee believes that "Sarasvati" is initially used by the Rigvedic people as an adjective to the Indus as a large river and later evolved into a "noun". Mukherjee concludes that the Vedic poets had not seen the palaeo-Sarasvati, and that what they described in the Vedic verses refers to something else. He also suggests that in the post-Vedic and Puranic tradition the "disappearance" of Sarasvati, which to refers to "[going] under [the] ground in the sands", was created as a complementary myth to explain the visible non-existence of the river.[70]

Romila Thapar terms the identification controversial and dismisses it, noticing that the descriptions of Sarasvati flowing through the high mountains does not tally with Ghaggar's course and suggests that Sarasvati is Haraxvati of Afghanistan.[21] Wilke and Moebus suggest that the identification is problematic since the Ghaggar-Hakra river was already dried up at the time of the composition of the Vedas,[18] let alone the migration of the Vedic people into northern India.[3][20]

Rajesh Kocchar further notes that, even if the Sutlej and the Yamuna had drained into the Ghaggar during Rigvedic, it still would not fit the Rigvedic descriptions because "the snow-fed Satluj and Yamuna would strengthen lower Ghaggar. Upper Ghaggar would still be as puny as it is today."[22]

Helmand river edit

 
The Helmand River, Afghanistan, known in ancient Iranian Avestan as Harahvaiti, is identified by some as the ancient Sarasvati river.[111]
 
Helmund river basin with tributary Arghandab River originates in Hindu Kush mountain in north Afghanistan and falls in to Hamun Lake in southern Afghanistan at the border of Iran.

An alternative suggestion for the identity of the early Rigvedic Sarasvati River is the Helmand River and its tributary Arghandab[111] in the Arachosia region in Afghanistan, separated from the watershed of the Indus by the Sanglakh Range. The Helmand historically besides Avestan Haetumant bore the name Haraxvaiti, which is the Avestan form cognate to Sanskrit Sarasvati. The Avesta extols the Helmand in similar terms to those used in the Rigveda with respect to the Sarasvati: "The bountiful, glorious Haetumant swelling its white waves rolling down its copious flood".[112] However unlike the Rigvedic Sarasvati, Helmand river never attained the status of a deity despite the praises in the Avesta.[113] The identification of the Sarasvati river with the Helmand river was first proposed by Thomas (1886), followed by Alfred Hillebrandt a couple of years thereafter.[111]

According to Konrad Klaus (1989), the geographic situation of the Sarasvati and the Helmand rivers are similar. Both flow into terminal lakes: The Helmand flows into a swamp on the Iranian plateau (the extended wetland and lake system of Hamun-i-Helmand). This matches the Rigvedic description of the Sarasvati flowing to the samudra, which according to him at that time meant 'confluence', 'lake', 'heavenly lake', 'ocean'; the current meaning of 'terrestrial ocean' was not even felt in the Pali Canon.[8][9]

Rajesh Kocchar, after a detailed analysis of the Vedic texts and geological environments of the rivers, concludes that there are two Sarasvati rivers mentioned in the Rigveda. The early Rigvedic Sarasvati, which he calls Naditama Sarasvati, is described in suktas 2.41, 7.36, etc. of the family books of the Rigveda, and drains into a samudra. The description of the Naditama Sarasvati in the Rigveda matches the physical features of the Helmand River in Afghanistan, more precisely its tributary the Harut River (Heu Rúd or Sabzawar River). Rajesh Kocchar, however, believes that the name 'Harut' is traced to 'Harauvaiti' (the name for the region of Arachosia, not a river) and Harut is not actually a part of Arachosia but of Dragiana. The later Rigvedic Sarasvati, which he calls Vinasana Sarasvati, is described in the Rigvedic Nadistuti sukta (10.75), which was composed centuries later, after an eastward migration of the bearers of the Rigvedic culture to the western Gangetic plain some 600 km to the east. The Sarasvati by this time had become a mythical "disappeared" river, and the name was transferred to the Ghaggar which disappeared in the desert.[23] The later Rigvedic Sarasvati is only in the post-Rigvedic Brahmanas said to disappear in the sands. According to Kocchar the Ganga and Yamuna were small streams in the vicinity of the Harut River. When the Vedic people moved east into Punjab, they named the new rivers they encountered after the old rivers they knew from Helmand, and the Vinasana Sarasvati may correspond with the Ghaggar-Hakra river.[114][22]

Romila Thapar (2004) declares the identification of the Ghaggar with the Sarasvati controversial. Furthermore, the early references to the Sarasvati could be the Haraxvati plain in Afghanistan. The identification with the Ghaggar is problematic, as the Sarasvati is said to cut its way through high mountains, which is not the landscape of the Ghaggar.[21]

Contemporary politico-religious meaning edit

Drying-up and dating of the Vedas edit

The Vedic description of the goddess Sarasvati as a mighty river, and the Vedic and Puranic statements about the drying-up and diving-under of the Sarasvati, have been used by some as a reference point for a revised dating of the Vedic culture.[6] Some see these descriptions as a mighty river as evidence for an earlier dating of the Rigveda, identifying the Vedic culture with the Harappan culture, which flourished at the time that the Gaggar-Hakra had not dried up, and rejecting the Indo-Aryan migrations theory, which postulates a migration at 1500 BCE.[h][i]

Michel Danino places the composition of the Vedas therefore in the third millennium BCE, a millennium earlier than the conventional dates.[119] Danino notes that accepting the Rigveda accounts as a mighty river as factual descriptions, and dating the drying up late in the third millennium, are incompatible.[119] According to Danino, this suggests that the Vedic people were present in northern India in the third millennium BCE,[120] a conclusion which is controversial amongst professional archaeologists.[119][u] Danino states that there is an absence of "any intrusive material culture in the Northwest during the second millennium BCE,"[119][v] a biological continuity in the skeletal remains,[119][i] and a cultural continuity. Danino then states that if the "testimony of the Sarasvati is added to this, the simplest and most natural conclusion is that the Vedic culture was present in the region in the third millennium."[28]

Danino acknowledges that this asks for "studying its tentacular ramifications into linguistics, archaeoastronomy, anthropology and genetics, besides a few other fields".[28]

Identification with the Indus Valley Civilisation edit

The Indus Valley Civilisation is sometimes called the "Sarasvati culture", "Sarasvati Civilization", "Indus Ghaggar-Hakra civilisation," "Indus-Sarasvati Civilization," or "Sindhu-Sarasvati Civilization" by Hindutva revisionists,[125][126] referring to the Sarasvati river mentioned in the Vedas, and equating the Vedic culture with the Indus Valley Civilisation. In this view, the Harappan civilisation flourished predominantly on the banks of the Ghaggar-Hakra, not the Indus.[25][26][27] For example, Danino notes that his proposed dating of the Vedas to the third millennium BCE coincides with the mature phase of the Indus Valley civilisation,[119] and that it is "tempting" to equate the Indus Valley and Vedic cultures.[28]

Romila Thapar points out that an alleged equation of the Indus Valley civilization and the carriers of Vedic culture stays in stark contrast to not only linguistic, but also archeological evidence. She notes that the essential characteristics of Indus valley urbanism, such as planned cities, complex fortifications, elaborate drainage systems, the use of mud and fire bricks, monumental buildings, extensive craft activity, are completely absent in the Rigveda. Similarly the Rigveda lacks a conceptual familiarity with key aspects of organized urban life (e.g. non-kin labour, facets or items of an exchange system or complex weights and measures) and doesn't mention objects found in great numbers at Indus Valley civilization sites like terracotta figurines, sculptural representation of human bodies or seals.[127]

Hetalben Sindhav notes that claims of a large number of Ghaggar-Hakra sites are politically motivated and exaggerated. While the Indus remained an active river, the Ghaggar-Hakra dried-up, leaving many sites undisturbed.[126] Sidhav further notes that the Ghaggar-Hakra was a tributary of the Indus, so the proposed Sarasvati nomenclatura is redundant.[126] According to archaeologist Shereen Ratnagar, many Ghaggar-Hakra sites in India are actually those of local cultures; some sites display contact with Harappan civilization, but only a few are fully developed Harappan ones.[128] Moreover, around 90% of the Indus script seals and inscribed objects discovered were found at sites in Pakistan along the Indus river, while other places accounting only for the remaining 10%.[w][129][130]

Revival edit

In 2015, Reuters reported that "members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh believe that proof of the physical existence of the Vedic river would bolster their concept of a golden age of Hindu India, before invasions by Muslims and Christians." The Bharatiya Janata Party Government had therefore ordered archaeologists to search for the river.[131]

According to the government of Indian state of Haryana, research and satellite imagery of the region has confirmed to have found the lost river when water was detected during digging of the dry river bed at Yamunanagar.[132] Surveys and satellite photographs confirm that there was once a great river that rose in the Himalayas, entered the plains of Haryana, flowed through the Thar-Cholistan desert of Rajasthan and eastern Sindh (running roughly parallel to the Indus) and then reached the sea in the Rann of Kutchh in Gujarat. The strange marshy landscape of the Rann of Kutchh is partly due to the fact that it was once the estuary of a great river.[133]

The government constituted Saraswati Heritage Development Board (SHDB) had conducted a trial run on 30 July 2016 filling the river bed with 100 cusecs of water which was pumped into a dug-up channel from tubewells at Uncha Chandna village in Yamunanagar. The water is expected to fill the channel until Kurukshetra, a distance of 40 kilometres. Once confirmed that there is no obstructions in the flow of the water, the government proposes to flow in another 100 cusecs after a fortnight. At that time, there were also plans to build three dams on the river route to keep it flowing perennially.[134]

In 2021, the Chief Minister of the State of Haryana stated that over 70 organizations were involved with researching the Saraswati River's heritage, and that the river "is still flowing underground from Adi Badri and up to Kutch in Gujarat."[135]

The Saraswati revival project seeks to build channels and dams along the route of the lost river, and develop it as a tourist and pilgrimage circuit.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ See Clift et al. (2012) map and Honde te al. (2017) map.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Witzel (2001, p. 81): "The autochthonous theory overlooks that RV 3.33206 already speaks of a necessarily smaller Sarasvatī: the Sudås hymn 3.33 refers to the confluence of the Beas and Sutlej (Vipåś, Śutudrī). This means that the Beas had already captured the Sutlej away from the Sarasvatī, dwarfing its water supply. While the Sutlej is fed by Himalayan glaciers, the Sarsuti is but a small local river depending on rain water.
    In sum, the middle and later RV (books 3, 7 and the late book, 10.75) already depict the present-day situation, with the Sarasvatī having lost most of its water to the Sutlej (and even earlier, much of it also to the Yamunå). It was no longer the large river it might have been before the early Rgvedic period."
  3. ^ a b RV 7.95.1-2:
    "This stream Sarasvati with fostering current comes forth, our sure defence, our fort of iron.
    As on a chariot, the flood flows on, surpassing in majesty and might all other waters.
    Pure in her course from mountains to the ocean, alone of streams Sarasvati hath listened.
    Thinking of wealth and the great world of creatures, she poured for Nahusa her milk and fatness."
  4. ^ a b According to Bhargava (1964) "samudra" stands for a huge inland lake, of which there were four or seven in Rigvedic sources. He translates sagara as "ocean". In this view the "lowlands" of Kashmir and Kuruksetra were samudra, but the sea in which the Ganga fell is a sagara.[10] See also Talageri, The Proto-Indo-European Word for "Sea/Ocean". Talageri notes that "Pāṇini gives the meaning of mīra as samudra (Uṇādi-Sutra ii, 28)," and notes that, according to Mallory, IE meer, mīra, originally referred to "lake," and not to "sea."
  5. ^ In contrast to the mainstream view, Chatterjee et al. (2019) suggest that the river remained perennial till 4,500 years ago.
  6. ^ a b c Giosan et al. (2012):
    • "Contrary to earlier assumptions that a large glacier-fed Himalayan river, identified by some with the mythical Sarasvati, watered the Harappan heartland on the interfluve between the Indus and Ganges basins, we show that only monsoonal-fed rivers were active there during the Holocene."
    • "Numerous speculations have advanced the idea that the Ghaggar-Hakra fluvial system, at times identified with the lost mythical river of Sarasvati (e.g., 4, 5, 7, 19), was a large glacier fed Himalayan river. Potential sources for this river include the Yamuna River, the Sutlej River, or both rivers. However, the lack of large-scale incision on the interfluve demonstrates that large, glacier-fed rivers did not flow across the Ghaggar-Hakra region during the Holocene
    • "The present Ghaggar-Hakra valley and its tributary rivers are currently dry or have seasonal flows. Yet rivers were undoubtedly active in this region during the Urban Harappan Phase. We recovered sandy fluvial deposits approximately 5;400 y old at Fort Abbas in Pakistan (SI Text), and recent work (33) on the upper Ghaggar-Hakra interfluve in India also documented Holocene channel sands that are approximately 4;300 y old. On the upper interfluve, fine-grained floodplain deposition continued until the end of the Late Harappan Phase, as recent as 2,900 y ago (33) (Fig. 2B). This widespread fluvial redistribution of sediment suggests that reliable monsoon rains were able to sustain perennial rivers earlier during the Holocene and explains why Harappan settlements flourished along the entire Ghaggar-Hakra system without access to a glacier-fed river."
    Valdiya (2013) dispute this, arguing that it was a large perennial river draining the high mountains as late as 3700–2500 years ago. Giosan et al. (2013) have responded to, and rejected, Valdiya's arguments.
  7. ^ The Helmand river historically, besides Avestan Haetumant, bore the name Haraxvaiti, which is the Avestan form cognate to Sanskrit Sarasvati.
  8. ^ a b According to David Anthony, the Yamna culture was the "Urheimat" of the Indo-Europeans at the Pontic steppes.[97] From this area, which already included various subcultures, Indo-European languages spread west, south and east starting around 4,000 BCE.[115] These languages may have been carried by small groups of males, with patron-client systems which allowed for the inclusion of other groups into their cultural system.[97] Eastward emerged the Sintashta culture (2100–1800 BCE), from which developed the Andronovo culture (1800–1400 BCE). This culture interacted with the BMAC (2300–1700 BCE); out of this interaction developed the Indo-Iranians, which split around 1800 BCE into the Indo-Aryans and the Iranians.[116] The Indo-Aryans migrated to the Levant, northern India, and possibly south Asia.[117]
  9. ^ a b c The migration into northern India was not a large-scale immigration, but may have consisted of small groups,[118] which were genetically diverse. Their culture and language spread by the same mechanisms of acculturalisation, and the absorption of other groups into their patron-client system.[97]
  10. ^ According to Shaffer, the reason for the predominance of the Sarasvati in the Rigveda is the late Harappan (1900-1300 BCE) population shift eastwards to Haryana.[35]
  11. ^ Wilke & Moebus (2011, p. 310, note 574): "Witzel suggests that Sarasvatī is not an earthly river, but the Milky Way that is seen as a road to immortality and heavenly after-life. In `mythical logic,' as outlined above, the two interpretations are not however mutually exclusive. There are passages which clearly suggest a river."
  12. ^ See Witzel (1984)[48] for discussion; for maps (1984) of the area, p. 42 sqq.
  13. ^ While the first translation takes a tatpurusha interpretation of síndhumātā, the word is actually a bahuvrihi. Hans Hock (1999) translates síndhumātā as a bahuvrihi, giving the second translation. A translation as a tatpurusha ("mother of rivers", with sindhu still with its generic meaning) would be less common in RV speech.
  14. ^ See Clift et al. (2012) map and Honde te al. (2017) map.
  15. ^ The suggestion of a change of river courses during Mature Harappan times due to tectonic activity has been used by Indigenists to argue for the identification of the Ghaggar-Hakra with the Vedic Sarasvati. Gupta (1995), The lost Saraswati and the Indus Civilization, makes ample reference to such suggestions:
    • According to Misra, as cited in Gupta (1995, pp. 149–50), there are several dried out river beds (paleochannels) between the Sutlej and the Yamuna, some of them two to ten kilometres wide. They are not always visible on the ground because of excessive silting and encroachment by sand of the dried out river channels.
    • Raikes (1968) and Suraj Bhan (1972, 1973, 1975, 1977), as cited in Gupta (1995, p. 149), have argued, based on archaeological, geomorphic and sedimentological research, that the Yamuna may have flowed into the Sarasvati during Harappan times.
    • According to Misra, as cited in Gupta (1995, p. 153), the Yamuna may have flowed into the Sarasvati river through the Chautang or the Drishadvati channel, since many Harappan sites have been discovered on these dried-out river beds. There are no Harappan sites on the present Yamuna river, but there are, however, Painted Gray Ware (1000 - 600 BC) sites along the Yamuna channel, showing that the river must then have flowed in the present channel.
    Other Indigenist Aryanism-cloroued publications include:
    • According to Gupta (1999), there are no Harappan sites on the Sutlej in its present lower course, only in its upper course near the Siwaliks, and along the dried up channel of the ancient Sutlej.
    • According to Pal (1984, p. 494), also cited in Bryant (2001), the course of the Sutlej suggests that "the Satluj periodically was the main tributary of the Ghaggar and that subsequently the tectonic movements may have forced the Satluj westward and the Ghaggar dried." At Ropar the Sutlej river suddenly turns sharply away from the Ghaggar. The narrow Ghaggar river bed itself is becoming suddenly wider at the conjunction where the Sutlej should have met the Ghaggar river. There also is a major paleochannel between the turning point of the Sutlej and where the Ghaggar river bed widens.
    • According to Lal (2002, p. 24), who supports the Indigenous Aryans theory, the disappearance of the river may additionally have been caused by earthquakes which may have led to the redirection of its tributaries.
    • Mitra & Bhadu (2012), referring to three other publications, state that active faults are present in the region, and lateral and vertical tectonic movements have frequently diverted streams in the past. The Ghaggar-Hakra may have migrated westward due to such uplift of the Aravallis.
    • Puri & Verma (1998) argue that the present-day Tons River was the ancient upper-part of the Ghaggar-Hakra river, identified with the Sarasvati river by them. The Ghaggar-Haggar would then had been fed with Himalayan glaciers, which would make it the mighty river described in the Vedas. The terrain of this river contains pebbles of quartzite and metamorphic rocks, while the lower terraces in these valleys do not contain such rocks. A major seismic activity in the Himalayan region caused the rising of the Bata-Markanda Divide. This resulted in the blockage of the westward flow of Ghaggar-Hakra forcing the water back. Since the Yamunā Tear opening was not far off, the blocked water exited from the opening into the Yamunā system.
  16. ^ Anthropologists Gregory Possehl (1942–2011) and J. M. Kenoyer, writing in the 1990s, have suggested that many religious and literary invocations to Sarasvati in the Rig Veda were to a real Himalayan river, whose waters, on account of seismic events, were diverted, leaving only a seasonal river, the Ghaggar-Hakra, in the original river bed.[81][82] Archaeologists Gregory Possehl and Jane McIntosh refer to the Ghaggar-Hakra river as "Sarasvati" throughout their respective 2002 and 2008 books on the Indus Civilisation,[83][84] supposing that the Sutlej and Yamuna diverged their courses during late Harappan times.[74]
  17. ^ Chatterjee et al. (2019) identify the Sarasvati with the Ghaggar, arguing that during "9-4.5 ka the river was perennial and was receiving sediments from the Higher and Lesser Himalayas" by distributaries of the Sutlej, which "likely facilitated development of the early Harappan settlements along its banks."[85] In response, Sinha et al. (2020) state that "most workers have documented the cessation of large scale fluvial activity in NW India in early Holocene, thereby refuting the sustenance of the Harappan civilization by a large river."[86]
  18. ^ Painted Grey Ware sites (ca. 1000 BCE) have been found in the bed and not on the banks of the Ghaggar-Hakra river, suggesting that the river had dried up before this period.[93][94]
  19. ^ Demkina et al. (2017): "In the second millennium BC, humidification of the climate led to the divergence of the soil cover with secondary formation of the complexes of chestnut soils and solonetzes. This paleoecological crisis had a significant effect on the economy of the tribes in the Late Catacomb and Post-Catacomb time stipulating their higher mobility and transition to the nomadic cattle breeding."[95]
  20. ^ See also Eurogenes Blogspot, The crisis.
  21. ^ Witzel: "If the RV is to be located in the Panjab, and supposedly to be dated well before the supposed 1900 BCE drying up of the Sarasvatī, at 4000-5000 BCE (Kak 1994, Misra 1992), the text should not contain evidence of the domesticated horse (not found in the subcontinent before c. 1700 BCE, see Meadow 1997,1998, Anreiter 1998: 675 sqq.), of the horse-drawn chariot (developed only about 2000 BCE in S. Russia, Anthony and Vinogradov 1995, or Mesopotamia), of well developed copper/bronze technology, etc."[121]
  22. ^ Michael Witzel points out that this is to expected from a mobile society, but that the Gandhara grave culture is a clear indication of new cultural elements.[122] Michaels points out that there are linguistic and archaeological data that shows a cultural change after 1750 BCE,[123] and Flood notices that the linguistic and religious data clearly show links with Indo-European languages and religion.[124]
  23. ^ Number of Indus script inscribed objects and seals obtained from various Harappan sites: Mohanjodaro (1540), Harappa (985), Chanhudaro (66), Lothal (165), Kalibangan (99), Banawali (7), Ur, Iraq (6), Surkotada(5) Chandigarh (4)

References edit

  1. ^ Kinsley 1998, p. 11, 13.
  2. ^ a b Wilke & Moebus 2011, p. 310.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Witzel 2001, p. 93.
  4. ^ a b Kinsley 1998, p. 10, 55-57.
  5. ^ a b Ludvík 2007, p. 11-13.
  6. ^ a b c d "Sarasvati | Hindu deity". Encyclopedia Britannica. 2 May 2023.
  7. ^ a b Witzel (2012, pp. 74, 125, 133): "It can easily be understood, as the Sarasvatī, the river on earth and in the nighttime sky, emerges, just as in Germanic myth, from the roots of the world tree. In the Middle Vedic texts, this is acted out in the Yātsattra... along the Rivers Sarasvatī and Dṛṣadvatī (northwest of Delhi)..."
  8. ^ a b c Klaus, K. Die altindische Kosmologie, nach den Brāhmaṇas dargestellt. Bonn 1986
  9. ^ a b c Samudra, XXIII Deutscher Orientalistentag Würzburg, ZDMG Suppl. Volume VII, Stuttgart 1989, 367–371
  10. ^ a b c Bhargava, M.L. (1964). The Geography of Rigvedic India. Lucknow. p. 5.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i Giosan et al. 2012.
  12. ^ a b c Maemoku et al. 2013.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Clift et al. 2012.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Singh et al. 2017.
  15. ^ Sankaran 1999.
  16. ^ Wilke & Moebus 2011.
  17. ^ Giosan et al. 2012, p. 1688-1689.
  18. ^ a b c d Wilke & Moebus 2011, pp. 310–311.
  19. ^ a b Witzel 2001, p. 81.
  20. ^ a b Mukherjee 2001, p. 2, 8-9.
  21. ^ a b c d e Romila Thapar (2004). Early India: From the Origins to AD 1300. University of California Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-520-24225-8.
  22. ^ a b c Kocchar, Rajesh. "The rivers Sarasvati: Reconciling the sacred texts". RajeshKochhar.com (blog post); based on The Vedic People: Their history and geography.
  23. ^ a b c d e Kochhar, Rajesh (1999), "On the identity and chronology of the Ṛgvedic river Sarasvatī", in Roger Blench; Matthew Spriggs (eds.), Archaeology and Language III; Artefacts, languages and texts, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-10054-0
  24. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica, Sarasvati
  25. ^ a b c d e Upinder Singh (2008). A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century. Pearson Education India. pp. 137–8. ISBN 978-81-317-1677-9.
  26. ^ a b c d e Charles Keith Maisels (16 December 2003). "The Indus/'Harappan'/Sarasvati Civilization". Early Civilizations of the Old World: The Formative Histories of Egypt, The Levant, Mesopotamia, India and China. Routledge. p. 184. ISBN 978-1-134-83731-1.
  27. ^ a b c Denise Cush; Catherine A. Robinson; Michael York (2008). Encyclopedia of Hinduism. Psychology Press. p. 766. ISBN 978-0-7007-1267-0.
  28. ^ a b c d e Danino 2010, p. 258.
  29. ^ e.g. 7.96.4, 10.66.5
  30. ^ Mayrhofer, EWAia, s.v. Saraswatī as a common noun in Classical Sanskrit means a region abounding in pools and lakes, the river of that name, or any river, especially a holy one. Like its cognates Welsh hêl, heledd ‘river meadow’ and Greek ἕλος (hélos) ‘swamp’; the root is otherwise often connected with rivers (also in river names, such as Sarayu or Susartu); the suggestion has been revived in the connection of an "out of India" argument, N. Kazanas, "Rig-Veda is pre-Harappan", p. 9.
  31. ^ by Lommel (1927); Lommel, Herman (1927), Die Yašts des Awesta, Göttingen-Leipzig: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht/JC Hinrichs
  32. ^ Manu (2004). Olivelle, Patrick, ed. The Law Code of Manu. Oxford University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-19280-271-2.
  33. ^ Bridget Allchin, Raymond Allchin, The Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan, Cambridge University Press, 1982, P.358.
  34. ^ Macdonell, Arthur Anthony; Keith, Arthur Berriedale (1912). Vedic Index of names and subjects. Vol. 2. London: Murray. p. 434. OCLC 1014995385.
  35. ^ a b J. Shaffer, in: J. Bronkhorst & M. Deshpande (eds.), Aryans and Non-Non-Aryans, Evidence, Interpretation and Ideology. Cambridge (Harvard Oriental Series, Opera Minora 3) 1999
  36. ^ Ludvík 2007, p. 84-85.
  37. ^ Ludvík 2007, p. 4-5.
  38. ^ Prasad 2017, Chapter-2.
  39. ^ 1.3, 13, 89, 164; 10.17, 30, 64, 65, 66, 75, 110, 131, 141
  40. ^ Ludvík 2007, p. 11.
  41. ^ Ludvík (2007, p. 85): "The Sarasvatī river, which, according to Witzel,... personifies the Milky Way, falls down to this world at Plakṣa Prāsarvaṇa, "the world tree at the center of heaven and earth," and flows through the land of the Kurus, the center of this world."
  42. ^ a b c Pushpendra K. Agarwal; Vijay P. Singh (16 May 2007). Hydrology and Water Resources of India. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 311–2. ISBN 978-1-4020-5180-7.
  43. ^ Prasad 2017, Chapter-3.
  44. ^ K.R. Jayaswal, Hindu Polity, pp. 12-13
  45. ^ Pancavimsa Brahmana, Jaiminiya Upanisad Brahmana, Katyayana Srauta Sutra, Latyayana Srauta; Macdonell and Keith 1912
  46. ^ Asvalayana Srauta Sutra, Sankhayana Srauta Sutra; Macdonell and Keith 1912, II: 55
  47. ^ Griffith, p.492
  48. ^ a b Witzel 1984.
  49. ^ D.S. Chauhan in Radhakrishna, B.P. and Merh, S.S. (editors): Vedic Saraswati 1999. According to this reference, 44 asvins may be over 2,600 km
  50. ^ Bhargava, Sudhir (20–22 November 2009). Location of Brahmavarta and Drishadwati river is important to find earliest alignment of Saraswati river. Saraswati river – a perspective. organised by: Saraswati Nadi Shodh Sansthan, Haryana. Kurukshetra: Kurukshetra University. pp. 114–117.
  51. ^ Mhb. 3.82.111; 3.130.3; 6.7.47; 6.37.1-4., 9.34.81; 9.37.1-2
  52. ^ Mbh. 3.80.118
  53. ^ Mbh. 3.88.2
  54. ^ Haigh, Martin (2011). "Interpreting the Sarasvati Tirthayatra of Shri Balarāma". Research Journal of Akhil Bhartiya Itihas Sankalan Yojana, ABISY (New Delhi). 16 (2): 179–193. ISSN 0974-3065 – via www.academia.edu.
  55. ^ org, Richard MAHONEY - r dot mahoney at indica-et-buddhica dot. "INDOLOGY - Sarasvati-Sindhu civilization (c. 3000 B.C.)". indology.info.
  56. ^ Studies in Proto-Indo-Mediterranean culture, Volume 2, page 398
  57. ^ a b D.S. Chauhan in Radhakrishna, B.P. and Merh, S.S. (editors): Vedic Saraswati, 1999, p.35-44
  58. ^ compare also with Yajurveda 34.11, D.S. Chauhan in Radhakrishna, B.P. and Merh, S.S. (editors): Vedic Saraswati, 1999, p.35-44
  59. ^ a b Eck p. 149
  60. ^ Eck 2012, p. 147.
  61. ^ Manusmriti 2.17-18
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  115. ^ Beckwith 2009, p. 29.
  116. ^ Anthony 2007, p. 408.
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  129. ^ Iravatham Mahadevan, 1977, The Indus Script: Text, Concordance and Tables, pp. 6-7
  130. ^ Upinder Singh, 2008, A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century, p. 169
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  133. ^ Bhadra, B. K.; Gupta, A. K.; Sharma, J. R. (February 2009). "Saraswati Nadi in Haryana and its linkage with the Vedic Saraswati River — Integrated study based on satellite images and ground based information". Journal of the Geological Society of India. 73 (2): 273–288. doi:10.1007/s12594-009-0084-y. ISSN 0016-7622. S2CID 140635500.
  134. ^ Zee Media Bureau (6 August 2016). "'Lost' Saraswati river brought 'back to life'". Zee Media. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  135. ^ "Haryana to launch revival of Saraswati river, to construct dam, barrage & reservoir at Adi Badri". [IE]. 15 February 2021.

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  1. ^ Mythical Saraswati River, Press Information Bureau, Government of India, 20 March 2013. 9 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b Rajesh Kochhar (2017), "The Aryan chromosome", The Indian Express

Further reading edit

  • Chakrabarti, D. K., & Saini, S. (2009). The problem of the Sarasvati River and notes on the archaeological geography of Haryana and Indian Panjab. New Delhi: Aryan Books International.
  • An archaeological tour along the Ghaggar-Hakra River by Aurel Stein

External links edit

  • Is River Ghaggar, Saraswati? by Tripathi, Bock, Rajamani, Eir
  • Saraswati – the ancient river lost in the desert by A. V. Sankaran
  • Sarasvati research and Education Trust
  • C.P. Rajendran (2019), Saraswati: The River That Never Was, Flowing Always in the People's Hearts, The Wire
  • Map "પ્રદેશ નદીનો તટપ્રદેશ (બેઝીન) સરસ્વતી (Regional River Basin: Saraswati Basin)". Narmada, Water Resources, Water Supply and Kalpsar Department.

sarasvati, river, other, rivers, same, name, saraswati, river, disambiguation, iast, sárasvatī, nadī, deified, mythological, river, first, mentioned, rigveda, later, vedic, post, vedic, texts, played, important, role, vedic, religion, appearing, fourth, book, . For other rivers of the same name see Saraswati River disambiguation The Sarasvati River IAST Sarasvati nadi is a deified mythological river first mentioned in the Rigveda 1 and later in Vedic and post Vedic texts It played an important role in the Vedic religion appearing in all but the fourth book of the Rigveda Vedic and present day Gagghar Hakra river course with Aryavarta Kuru Kingdom and pre Harappan Hakkra Sutlej Yamuna paleochannels as proposed by Clift et al 2012 and Khonde et al 2017 a See also this satellite image 1 ancient river 2 today s river 3 today s Thar desert 4 ancient shore 5 today s shore 6 today s town 7 dried up Harappan Hakkra course and pre Harappan Sutlej paleochannels Clift et al 2012 Cemetery H Late Harappan OCP Copper Hoard and Painted Grey ware sitesAs a physical river in the oldest texts of the Rigveda it is described as a great and holy river in north western India 2 but in the middle and late Rigvedic books it is described as a small river ending in a terminal lake samudra 3 b As the goddess Sarasvati the other referent for the term Sarasvati which developed into an independent identity in post Vedic times 4 the river is also described as a powerful river and mighty flood 5 The Sarasvati is also considered by Hindus to exist in a metaphysical form in which it formed a confluence with the sacred rivers Ganges and Yamuna at the Triveni Sangam 6 According to Michael Witzel superimposed on the Vedic Sarasvati river is the heavenly river the Milky Way which is seen as a road to immortality and heavenly after life 7 Rigvedic and later Vedic texts have been used to propose identification with present day rivers or ancient riverbeds The Nadistuti hymn in the Rigveda 10 75 mentions the Sarasvati between the Yamuna in the east and the Sutlej in the west while RV 7 95 1 2 describes the Sarasvati as flowing to the samudra a word now usually translated as ocean c but which could also mean lake 3 8 9 10 d Later Vedic texts such as the Tandya Brahmana and the Jaiminiya Brahmana as well as the Mahabharata mention that the Sarasvati dried up in a desert Since the late 19th century numerous scholars have proposed to identify the Sarasvati with the Ghaggar Hakra River system which flows through modern day northwestern India and eastern Pakistan between the Yamuna and the Sutlej and ends in the Thar desert Recent geophysical research shows that the supposed downstream Ghaggar Hakra paleochannel is actually a paleochannel of the Sutlej which flowed into the Nara river a delta channel of the Indus River 10 000 8 000 years ago this channel was abandoned when the Sutlej diverted its course leaving the Ghaggar Hakra as a system of monsoon fed rivers which did not reach the sea 11 12 13 14 The Indus Valley Civilisation prospered when the monsoons that fed the rivers diminished around 5 000 years ago 11 13 14 e and ISRO has observed that major Indus Valley civilization sites at Kalibangan Rajasthan Banawali and Rakhigarhi Haryana Dholavira and Lothal Gujarat lay along this course 15 web 1 When the monsoons that fed the rivers further diminished the Hakra dried up some 4 000 years ago becoming an intermittent river and the urban Harappan civilisation declined becoming localized in smaller agricultural communities 11 f 13 12 14 Identification of a mighty physical Rigvedic Sarasvati with the Ghaggar Hakra system is therefore problematic since the Gagghar Hakra had dried up well before the time of the composition of the Rigveda 16 17 f 13 12 14 In the words of Wilke and Moebus the Sarasvati had been reduced to a small sorry trickle in the desert by the time that the Vedic people migrated into north west India 18 Rigvedic references to a physical river also indicate that the Sarasvati had already lost its main source of water supply and must have ended in a terminal lake samudra approximately 3000 years ago 3 b depicting the present day situation with the Sarasvati having lost most of its water 19 b 20 Also Rigvedic descriptions of the Sarasvati do not fit the actual course of the Gagghar Hakra 21 22 Sarasvati has also been identified with the Helmand in ancient Arachosia or Harauvatis Old Persian 𐏃𐎼𐎢𐎺𐎫𐎡𐏁 in present day southern Afghanistan 23 the name of which may have been reused from the more ancient Sanskrit name of the Ghaggar Hakra river after the Vedic tribes moved to the Punjab 23 21 g The Sarasvati of the Rigveda may also refer to two distinct rivers with the family books referring to the Helmand River and the more recent 10th mandala referring to the Ghaggar Hakra 23 The identification with the Ghaggar Hakra system took on new significance in the early 21st century 24 with some Hindutva apologists suggesting an earlier dating of the Rigveda renaming the Indus Valley Civilisation as the Sarasvati culture the Sarasvati Civilization the Indus Sarasvati Civilization or the Sindhu Sarasvati Civilization 25 26 27 suggesting that the Indus Valley and Vedic cultures can be equated 28 and rejecting the Indo Aryan migrations theory which postulates an extended period of migrations of Indo European speaking people into the Indian subcontinent between ca 1900 BCE and 1400 BCE h i Contents 1 Etymology 2 Importance in Hinduism 2 1 Rigveda 2 1 1 As a river 2 1 2 As a goddess 2 2 Other Vedic texts 2 3 Post Vedic texts 2 3 1 Mahabharata 2 3 2 Puranas 2 3 3 Smritis 2 4 Contemporary religious significance 3 Identification theories 3 1 Rigvedic course 3 2 Ghaggar Hakra River 3 2 1 Paleochannels and ancient course 3 2 1 1 Pre Holocene diversion of the Sutlej and Yamuna 3 2 1 2 IVC and diminishing of the monsoons 3 2 2 Identification with the Sarasvati 3 2 3 Textual and historical objections 3 3 Helmand river 3 4 Contemporary politico religious meaning 3 4 1 Drying up and dating of the Vedas 3 4 2 Identification with the Indus Valley Civilisation 3 4 3 Revival 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology editSarasvati is the feminine nominative singular form of the adjective sarasvat which occurs in the Rigveda 29 as the name of the keeper of the celestial waters derived from saras vat meaning having saras Sanskrit saras means lake pond cf the derivative sarasa lake bird Sarus crane Mayrhofer considers unlikely a connection with the root sar run flow but does agree that it could have been a river that connected many lakes due to its abundant volumes of water flow 30 Sarasvati may be a cognate of Avestan Haraxvati perhaps 31 In the younger Avesta Haraxvati is Arachosia a region described to be rich in rivers and its Old Persian cognate Harauvati Importance in Hinduism editThe Saraswati river was revered and considered important for Hindus because it is said that it was on this river s banks along with its tributary Drishadwati in the Vedic state of Brahmavarta that Vedic Sanskrit had its genesis 32 and important Vedic scriptures like initial part of Rigveda and several Upanishads were supposed to have been composed by Vedic seers In the Manusmriti Brahmavarta is portrayed as the pure centre of Vedic culture Bridget and Raymond Allchin in The Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan took the view that The earliest Aryan homeland in India Pakistan Aryavarta or Brahmavarta was in the Punjab and in the valleys of the Sarasvati and Drishadvati rivers in the time of the Rigveda 33 Rigveda edit nbsp Map of northern India in the late Vedic periodAs a river edit The Sarasvati River is mentioned in all but the fourth book of the Vedas Macdonell and Keith provided a comprehensive survey of Vedic references to the Sarasvati River in their Vedic Index 34 j In the late book 10 only two references are unambiguously to the river 10 64 9 calling for the aid of three great rivers Sindhu Sarasvati and Sarayu and 10 75 5 the geographical list of the Nadistuti Sukta In this hymn the Sarasvati River is placed between the Yamuna and the Sutlej In the oldest texts of the Rigveda she is described as a great and holy river in north western India 2 but Michael Witzel notes that the Rigveda indicates that the Sarswati had already lost its main source of water supply and must have ended in a terminal lake samudra approximately 3000 years ago 3 The middle books 3 and 7 and the late books 10 depict the present day situation with the Sarasvati having lost most of its water 19 b The Sarasvati acquired an extalted status in the mythology of the Kuru Kingdom 36 where the Rigveda was compiled 37 As a goddess edit nbsp Painting of Goddess Saraswati by Raja Ravi VarmaMain article Saraswati Sarasvati is mentioned some fifty times in the hymns of the Rigveda 38 It is mentioned in thirteen hymns of the late books 1 and 10 of the Rigveda 39 The most important hymns related to Sarasvati goddess are RV 6 61 RV 7 95 and RV 7 96 40 As a river goddess she is described as a mighty flood and is clearly not an earthly river 5 According to Michael Witzel superimposed on the Vedic Sarasvati river is the heavenly river Milky Way which is seen as a road to immortality and heavenly after life 7 41 k The description of the Sarasvati as the river of heavens is interpreted to suggest its mythical nature 42 In 10 30 12 her origin as a river goddess may explain her invocation as a protective deity in a hymn to the celestial waters In 10 135 5 as Indra drinks Soma he is described as refreshed by Sarasvati The invocations in 10 17 address Sarasvati as a goddess of the forefathers as well as of the present generation In 1 13 1 89 10 85 10 66 and 10 141 she is listed with other gods and goddesses not with rivers In 10 65 she is invoked together with holy thoughts dhi and munificence puraṃdhi consistent with her role as a goddess of both knowledge and fertility citation needed Though Sarasvati initially emerged as a river goddess in the Vedic scriptures in later Hinduism of the Puranas she was rarely associated with the river Instead she emerged as an independent goddess of knowledge learning wisdom music and the arts The evolution of the river goddess into the goddess of knowledge started with later Brahmanas which identified her as Vagdevi the goddess of speech perhaps due to the centrality of speech in the Vedic cult and the development of the cult on the banks of the river 43 It is also possible to postulate two originally independent goddesses that were fused into one in later Vedic times 4 Aurobindo has proposed on the other hand that the symbolism of the Veda betrays itself to the greatest clearness in the figure of the goddess Sarasvati She is plainly and clearly the goddess of the World the goddess of a divine inspiration 44 Other Vedic texts edit In post Rigvedic literature the disappearance of the Sarasvati is mentioned Also the origin of the Sarasvati is identified as Plaksa Prasravana Peepal tree or Ashwattha tree as known in India and Nepal 45 46 In a supplementary chapter of the Vajasaneyi Samhita of the Yajurveda 34 11 Sarasvati is mentioned in a context apparently meaning the Sindhu Five rivers flowing on their way speed onward to Sarasvati but then become Sarasvati a fivefold river in the land 47 According to the medieval commentator Uvata the five tributaries of the Sarasvati were the Punjab rivers Drishadvati Satudri Sutlej Chandrabhaga Chenab Vipasa Beas and the Iravati Ravi The first reference to the disappearance of the lower course of the Sarasvati is from the Brahmanas texts that are composed in Vedic Sanskrit but dating to a later date than the Veda Samhitas The Jaiminiya Brahmana 2 297 speaks of the diving under upamajjana of the Sarasvati and the Tandya Brahmana or Pancavimsa Br calls this the disappearance vinasana The same text 25 10 11 16 records that the Sarasvati is so to say meandering kubjimati as it could not sustain heaven which it had propped up 48 l The Plaksa Prasravana place of appearance source of the river may refer to a spring in the Sivalik hills The distance between the source and the Vinasana place of disappearance of the river is said to be 44 Ashwin between several hundred and 1 600 miles Tandya Br 25 10 16 cf Av 6 131 3 Pancavimsa Br 49 In the Latyayana Srautasutra 10 15 19 the Sarasvati seems to be a perennial river up to the Vinasana which is west of its confluence with the Drshadvati Chautang The Drshadvati is described as a seasonal stream 10 17 meaning it was not from Himalayas Bhargava 50 has identified Drashadwati river as present day Sahibi river originating from Jaipur hills in Rajasthan The Asvalayana Srautasutra and Sankhayana Srautasutra contain verses that are similar to the Latyayana Srautasutra Post Vedic texts edit Wilke and Moebus note that the historical river Sarasvati was a topographically tangible mythogeme which was already reduced to a small sorry trickle in the desert by the time of composition of the Hindu epics These post Vedic texts regularly talk about drying up of the river and start associating the goddess Sarasvati with language rather than the river 18 Mahabharata edit According to the Mahabharata 3rd c BCE 3rd c CE the Sarasvati River dried up to a desert at a place named Vinasana or Adarsana 51 52 and joins the sea impetuously 53 MB 3 81 115 locates the state of Kurupradesh or Kuru Kingdom to the south of the Sarasvati and north of the Drishadvati The dried up seasonal Ghaggar River in Rajasthan and Haryana reflects the same geographical view described in the Mahabharata According to Hindu scriptures a journey was made during the Mahabharata by Balrama along the banks of the Saraswati from Dwarka to Mathura There were ancient kingdoms too the era of the Mahajanapads that lay in parts of north Rajasthan and that were named on the Sarasvati River 54 55 56 Puranas edit Several Puranas describe the Sarasvati River and also record that the river separated into a number of lakes saras 57 In the Skanda Purana the Sarasvati originates from the water pot of Brahma and flows from Plaksa on the Himalayas It then turns west at Kedara and also flows underground Five distributaries of the Sarasvati are mentioned 58 The text regards Sarasvati as a form of Brahma s consort Brahmi 59 According to the Vamana Purana 32 1 4 the Sarasvati rose from the Plaksa tree Pipal tree 57 The Padma Purana proclaims One who bathes and drinks there where the Ganga Yamuna and Sarasvati join enjoys liberation Of this there is no doubt 60 Smritis edit In the Manu Smriti the sage Manu escaping from a flood founded the Vedic culture between the Sarasvati and Drishadvati rivers The Sarasvati River was thus the western boundary of Brahmavarta the land between the Sarasvati and Drishadvati is created by God this land is Brahmavarta 61 Similarly the Vasistha Dharma Sutra I 8 9 and 12 13 locates Aryavarta to the east of the disappearance of the Sarasvati in the desert to the west of Kalakavana to the north of the mountains of Pariyatra and Vindhya and to the south of the Himalaya Patanjali s Mahabhaṣya defines Aryavarta like the Vasistha Dharma Sutra The Baudhayana Dharmasutra gives similar definitions declaring that Aryavarta is the land that lies west of Kalakavana east of Adarsana where the Sarasvati disappears in the desert south of the Himalayas and north of the Vindhyas Contemporary religious significance edit nbsp Triveni Sangam Allahabad the confluence of Ganga Yamuna and the unseen Sarasvati Diana Eck notes that the power and significance of the Sarasvati for present day India is in the persistent symbolic presence at the confluence of rivers all over India 62 Although materially missing 63 she is the third river which emerges to join in the meeting of rivers thereby making the waters thrice holy 63 After the Vedic Sarasvati dried new myths about the rivers arose Sarasvati is described to flow in the underworld and rise to the surface at some places 18 For centuries the Sarasvati river existed in a subtle or mythic form since it corresponds with none of the major rivers of present day South Asia 6 The confluence sangam or joining of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers at Triveni Sangam Allahabad is believed to also converge with the unseen Sarasvati river which is believed to flow underground This is despite Allahabad being at a considerable distance from the possible historic routes of an actual Sarasvati river At the Kumbh Mela a mass bathing festival is held at Triveni Sangam literally confluence of the three rivers every 12 years 6 64 65 The belief of Sarasvati joining at the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna originates from the Puranic scriptures and denotes the powerful legacy the Vedic river left after her disappearance The belief is interpreted as symbolic 66 The three rivers Sarasvati Yamuna Ganga are considered consorts of the Hindu Trinity Trimurti Brahma Vishnu as Krishna and Shiva respectively 59 In lesser known configuration Sarasvati is said to form the Triveni confluence with rivers Hiranya and Kapila at Somnath There are several other Trivenis in India where two physical rivers are joined by the unseen Sarasvati which adds to the sanctity of the confluence 67 Romila Thapar notes that once the river had been mythologized through invoking the memory of the earlier river its name Sarasvati could be applied to many rivers which is what happened in various parts of the Indian subcontinent 21 Several present day rivers are also named Sarasvati after the Vedic Sarasvati Sarsuti is the present day name of a river originating in a submontane region Ambala district and joining the Ghaggar near Shatrana in PEPSU Near Sadulgarh Hanumangarh the Naiwala channel a dried out channel of the Sutlej joins the Ghaggar Near Suratgarh the Ghaggar is then joined by the dried up Drishadvati river Sarasvati is the name of a river originating in the Aravalli mountain range in Rajasthan passing through Sidhpur and Patan before submerging in the Rann of Kutch Saraswati River a tributary of Alaknanda River originates near Badrinath Saraswati River in Bengal formerly a distributary of the Hooghly River has dried up since the 17th century Identification theories editAlready since the 19th century attempts have been made to identify the mythical Sarasvati of the Vedas with physical rivers 11 Many think that the Vedic Sarasvati river once flowed east of the Indus Sindhu river 66 Scientists geologists as well as scholars have identified the Sarasvati with many present day or now defunct rivers Two theories are popular in the attempts to identify the Sarasvati Several scholars have identified the river with the present day Ghaggar Hakra River or dried up part of it which is located in Northwestern India and Pakistan 68 42 25 26 A second popular theory associates the river with the Helmand river or an ancient river in the present Helmand Valley in Afghanistan 23 69 Others consider Sarasvati a mythical river an allegory not a thing 70 The identification with the Ghaggar Hakra system took on new significance in the early 21st century 24 suggesting an earlier dating of the Rigveda and renaming the Indus Valley Civilisation as the Sarasvati culture the Sarasvati Civilization the Indus Sarasvati Civilization or the Sindhu Sarasvati Civilization 25 26 27 suggesting that the Indus Valley and Vedic cultures can be equated 28 Rigvedic course edit nbsp Vedic riversThe Rigveda contains several hymns which give an indication of the flow of the geography of the river and an identification of the Sarasvati as described in the later books of the Rigveda with the Ghaggra Hakra RV 3 23 4 mentions the Sarasvati River together with the Drsadvati River and the Apaya River b RV 6 52 6 describes the Sarasvati as swollen pinvamana by the rivers sindhubhih RV 7 36 6 sarasvati saptathi sindhumata can be translated as Sarasvati the Seventh Mother of Floods 71 but also as whose mother is the Sindhu which would indicate that the Sarasvati is here a tributary of the Indus m b RV 7 95 1 2 describes the Sarasvati as flowing to the samudra a word now usually translated as ocean c but which could also mean lake 3 8 9 10 d b RV 10 75 5 the late Rigvedic Nadistuti sukta enumerates all important rivers from the Ganges in the east up to the Indus in the west in a clear geographical order The sequence Ganges Yamuna Sarasvati Shutudri places the Sarasvati between the Yamuna and the Sutlej which is consistent with the Ghaggar identification b Yet the Rigveda also contains clues for an identification with the Helmand river in Afghanistan The Sarasvati River is perceived to be a great river with perennial water which does not apply to the Hakra and Ghaggar 72 The Rigveda seems to contain descriptions of several Sarasvatis The earliest Sararvati is said to be similar to the Helmand in Afghanistan which is called the Harakhwati in the Avesta 72 Verses in RV 6 61 indicate that the Sarasvati river originated in the hills or mountains giri where she burst with her strong waves the ridges of the hills giri It is a matter of interpretation whether this refers only to the Himalayan foothills where the present day Sarasvati Sarsuti river flows or to higher mountains The Rigveda was composed during the latter part of the late Harappan period and according to Shaffer the reason for the predominance of the Sarasvati in the Rigveda is the late Harappan 1900 1300 BCE population shift eastwards to Haryana 35 Ghaggar Hakra River edit The present Ghaggar Hakra River is a seasonal river in India and Pakistan that flows only during the monsoon season but satellite images in possession of the ISRO and ONGC have confirmed that the major course of a river ran through the present day Ghaggar River 73 The supposed paleochannel of the Hakra is actually a paleochannel of the Sutlej flowing into the Nara river bed 13 presently a delta channel c q paleochannel of the Indus River 74 75 76 At least 10 000 years ago well before the rise of the Harappan civilization the sutlej diverted its course leaving the Ghaggar Hakra as a monsoon fed river 13 14 77 Early in the 2nd millennium BCE the monsoons diminished and the Ghaggar Hakra fluvial system dried up which affected the Harappan civilisation 11 Paleochannels and ancient course edit nbsp Vedic and present day Gagghar Hakra river course with Aryavarta Kuru Kingdom and pre Harappan Hakra Sutlej Yamuna paleochannels as proposed by Clift et al 2012 and Khonde et al 2017 n See also this satellite image 1 ancient river 2 today s river 3 today s Thar desert 4 ancient shore 5 today s shore 6 today s town 7 dried up Harappan Hakkra course and pre Harappan Sutlej paleochannels Clift et al 2012 Main article Ghaggar Hakra River While there is general agreement that the river courses in the Indus Basin have frequently changed course the exact sequence of these changes and their dating have been problematic 78 Pre Holocene diversion of the Sutlej and Yamuna edit Older publications have suggested that the Sutlej and the Yamuna drained into the Hakra well into Mature Harappan times providing ample volume to the supply provided by the monsoon fed Ghaggar The Sutlej and Yamuna then changed course between 2500 BCE and 1900 BCE due to either tectonic events or slightly altered gradients on the extremely flat plains resulting in the drying up of the Hakra in the Thar Desert 79 80 o p q More recent publications have shown that the Sutlej and the Yamuna shifted course well before Harappan times 13 14 87 leaving the monsoon fed Ghaggar Hakra which dried up during late Harappan times 11 Clift et al 2012 using dating of zircon sand grains have shown that subsurface river channels near the Indus Valley civilisation sites in Cholistan immediately below the presumed Ghaggar Hakra channel show sediment affinity not with the Ghagger Hakra but instead with the Beas River in the western sites and the Sutlej and the Yamuna in the eastern ones This suggests that the Yamuna itself or a channel of the Yamuna along with a channel of the Sutlej may have flowed west some time between 47 000 BCE and 10 000 BCE The drainage from the Yamuna may have been lost from the Ghaggar Hakra well before the beginnings of Indus civilisation 13 Ajit Singh et al 2017 show that the paleochannel of the Ghaggar Hakra is a former course of the Sutlej which diverted to its present course between 15 000 and 8 000 years ago well before the development of the Harappan Civilisation Ajit Singh et al conclude that the urban populations settled not along a perennial river but a monsoon fed seasonal river that was not subject to devastating floods 14 77 Khonde et al 2017 confirm that the Great Rann of Kutch received sediments from a different source than the Indus but this source stopped supplying sediments after ca 10 000 years ago 87 Likewise Dave et al 2019 state that o ur results disprove the proposed link between ancient settlements and large rivers from the Himalayas and indicate that the major palaeo fluvial system traversing through this region ceased long before the establishment of the Harappan civilisation 88 According to Chaudhri et al 2021 the Saraswati River used to flow from the glaciated peaks of the Himalaya to the Arabian sea and an enormous amount of water was flowing through this channel network until BC 11 147 89 IVC and diminishing of the monsoons edit nbsp Outline of the Indus Civilization with concentration of settlements along the Ghaggar Hakra which had dried up by the time of the Indo Aryan migrations See Sameer et al 2018 for a more detailed map Many Indus Valley civilisation Harrapan Civilisation sites are found on the banks of and in the proximity of the Ghaggar Hakra fluvial system due to the high monsoon rainfall which fed the Ghaggar Hakra in Mature Harappan Times 90 91 Giosan et al in their study Fluvial landscapes of the Harappan civilisation make clear that the Ghaggar Hakra fluvial system was not a large glacier fed Himalayan river but a monsoonal fed river 11 They concluded that the Indus Valley Civilisation prospered when the monsoons that fed the rivers diminished around 5 000 years ago When the monsoons which fed the rivers that supported the civilisation further diminished and the rivers dried out as a result the IVC declined some 4000 years ago 11 This in particular effected the Ghaggar Hakra system which became an intermittent river and was largely abandoned 92 Localized Late IVC settlements are found eastwards toward the more humid regions of the Indo Gangetic Plain where the decentralised late Harappan phase took place 92 f r The same widespread aridification in the third millennium BCE also led to water shortages and ecological changes in the Eurasian steppes web 2 95 leading to a change of vegetation triggering higher mobility and transition to nomadic cattle breeding 95 s 96 t These migrations eventually resulted in the Indo Aryan migrations into South Asia 97 web 2 Identification with the Sarasvati edit A number of archaeologists and geologists have identified the Sarasvati river with the present day Ghaggar Hakra River or the dried up part of it 42 25 26 98 99 100 101 102 despite the fact that it had already dried up and become a small seasonal river before Vedic times 11 In the 19th and early 20th century a number of scholars archaeologists and geologists have identified the Vedic Sarasvati River with the Ghaggar Hakra River such as Christian Lassen 1800 1876 103 Max Muller 1823 1900 104 Marc Aurel Stein 1862 1943 93 C F Oldham 105 and Jane Macintosh 106 Danino notes that the 1500 km long bed of the Sarasvati was rediscovered in the 19th century 107 According to Danino most Indologists were convinced in the 19th century that the bed of the Ghaggar Hakra was the relic of the Sarasvati 107 Recent archaeologists and geologists such as Philip and Virdi 2006 K S Valdiya 2013 have identified the Sarasvati with Ghaggar 108 According to Gregory Possehl Linguistic archaeological and historical data show that the Sarasvati of the Vedas is the modern Ghaggar or Hakra 84 According to R U S Prasad we find a considerable body of opinions sic among the scholars archaeologists and geologists who hold that the Sarasvati originated in the Shivalik hills and descended through Adi Badri situated in the foothills of the Shivaliks to the plains and finally debouched herself into the Arabian sea at the Rann of Kutch 109 According to Valdiya it is plausible to conclude that once upon a time the Ghagghar was known as Sarsuti which is a corruption of Sarasvati because at Sirsa on the bank of the Ghagghar stands a fortress called Sarsuti Now in derelict condition this fortress of antiquity celebrates and honours the river Sarsuti 110 Textual and historical objections edit Ashoke Mukherjee 2001 is critical of the attempts to identify the Rigvedic Sarasvati Mukherjee notes that many historians and archaeologists both Indian and foreign concluded that the word Sarasvati literally being full of water is not a noun a specific thing However Mukherjee believes that Sarasvati is initially used by the Rigvedic people as an adjective to the Indus as a large river and later evolved into a noun Mukherjee concludes that the Vedic poets had not seen the palaeo Sarasvati and that what they described in the Vedic verses refers to something else He also suggests that in the post Vedic and Puranic tradition the disappearance of Sarasvati which to refers to going under the ground in the sands was created as a complementary myth to explain the visible non existence of the river 70 Romila Thapar terms the identification controversial and dismisses it noticing that the descriptions of Sarasvati flowing through the high mountains does not tally with Ghaggar s course and suggests that Sarasvati is Haraxvati of Afghanistan 21 Wilke and Moebus suggest that the identification is problematic since the Ghaggar Hakra river was already dried up at the time of the composition of the Vedas 18 let alone the migration of the Vedic people into northern India 3 20 Rajesh Kocchar further notes that even if the Sutlej and the Yamuna had drained into the Ghaggar during Rigvedic it still would not fit the Rigvedic descriptions because the snow fed Satluj and Yamuna would strengthen lower Ghaggar Upper Ghaggar would still be as puny as it is today 22 Helmand river edit nbsp The Helmand River Afghanistan known in ancient Iranian Avestan as Harahvaiti is identified by some as the ancient Sarasvati river 111 nbsp Helmund river basin with tributary Arghandab River originates in Hindu Kush mountain in north Afghanistan and falls in to Hamun Lake in southern Afghanistan at the border of Iran Main articles Helmand River and Arghandab River An alternative suggestion for the identity of the early Rigvedic Sarasvati River is the Helmand River and its tributary Arghandab 111 in the Arachosia region in Afghanistan separated from the watershed of the Indus by the Sanglakh Range The Helmand historically besides Avestan Haetumant bore the name Haraxvaiti which is the Avestan form cognate to Sanskrit Sarasvati The Avesta extols the Helmand in similar terms to those used in the Rigveda with respect to the Sarasvati The bountiful glorious Haetumant swelling its white waves rolling down its copious flood 112 However unlike the Rigvedic Sarasvati Helmand river never attained the status of a deity despite the praises in the Avesta 113 The identification of the Sarasvati river with the Helmand river was first proposed by Thomas 1886 followed by Alfred Hillebrandt a couple of years thereafter 111 According to Konrad Klaus 1989 the geographic situation of the Sarasvati and the Helmand rivers are similar Both flow into terminal lakes The Helmand flows into a swamp on the Iranian plateau the extended wetland and lake system of Hamun i Helmand This matches the Rigvedic description of the Sarasvati flowing to the samudra which according to him at that time meant confluence lake heavenly lake ocean the current meaning of terrestrial ocean was not even felt in the Pali Canon 8 9 Rajesh Kocchar after a detailed analysis of the Vedic texts and geological environments of the rivers concludes that there are two Sarasvati rivers mentioned in the Rigveda The early Rigvedic Sarasvati which he calls Naditama Sarasvati is described in suktas 2 41 7 36 etc of the family books of the Rigveda and drains into a samudra The description of the Naditama Sarasvati in the Rigveda matches the physical features of the Helmand River in Afghanistan more precisely its tributary the Harut River Heu Rud or Sabzawar River Rajesh Kocchar however believes that the name Harut is traced to Harauvaiti the name for the region of Arachosia not a river and Harut is not actually a part of Arachosia but of Dragiana The later Rigvedic Sarasvati which he calls Vinasana Sarasvati is described in the Rigvedic Nadistuti sukta 10 75 which was composed centuries later after an eastward migration of the bearers of the Rigvedic culture to the western Gangetic plain some 600 km to the east The Sarasvati by this time had become a mythical disappeared river and the name was transferred to the Ghaggar which disappeared in the desert 23 The later Rigvedic Sarasvati is only in the post Rigvedic Brahmanas said to disappear in the sands According to Kocchar the Ganga and Yamuna were small streams in the vicinity of the Harut River When the Vedic people moved east into Punjab they named the new rivers they encountered after the old rivers they knew from Helmand and the Vinasana Sarasvati may correspond with the Ghaggar Hakra river 114 22 Romila Thapar 2004 declares the identification of the Ghaggar with the Sarasvati controversial Furthermore the early references to the Sarasvati could be the Haraxvati plain in Afghanistan The identification with the Ghaggar is problematic as the Sarasvati is said to cut its way through high mountains which is not the landscape of the Ghaggar 21 Contemporary politico religious meaning edit Main article Indigenous Aryans Drying up and dating of the Vedas edit The Vedic description of the goddess Sarasvati as a mighty river and the Vedic and Puranic statements about the drying up and diving under of the Sarasvati have been used by some as a reference point for a revised dating of the Vedic culture 6 Some see these descriptions as a mighty river as evidence for an earlier dating of the Rigveda identifying the Vedic culture with the Harappan culture which flourished at the time that the Gaggar Hakra had not dried up and rejecting the Indo Aryan migrations theory which postulates a migration at 1500 BCE h i Michel Danino places the composition of the Vedas therefore in the third millennium BCE a millennium earlier than the conventional dates 119 Danino notes that accepting the Rigveda accounts as a mighty river as factual descriptions and dating the drying up late in the third millennium are incompatible 119 According to Danino this suggests that the Vedic people were present in northern India in the third millennium BCE 120 a conclusion which is controversial amongst professional archaeologists 119 u Danino states that there is an absence of any intrusive material culture in the Northwest during the second millennium BCE 119 v a biological continuity in the skeletal remains 119 i and a cultural continuity Danino then states that if the testimony of the Sarasvati is added to this the simplest and most natural conclusion is that the Vedic culture was present in the region in the third millennium 28 Danino acknowledges that this asks for studying its tentacular ramifications into linguistics archaeoastronomy anthropology and genetics besides a few other fields 28 Identification with the Indus Valley Civilisation edit The Indus Valley Civilisation is sometimes called the Sarasvati culture Sarasvati Civilization Indus Ghaggar Hakra civilisation Indus Sarasvati Civilization or Sindhu Sarasvati Civilization by Hindutva revisionists 125 126 referring to the Sarasvati river mentioned in the Vedas and equating the Vedic culture with the Indus Valley Civilisation In this view the Harappan civilisation flourished predominantly on the banks of the Ghaggar Hakra not the Indus 25 26 27 For example Danino notes that his proposed dating of the Vedas to the third millennium BCE coincides with the mature phase of the Indus Valley civilisation 119 and that it is tempting to equate the Indus Valley and Vedic cultures 28 Romila Thapar points out that an alleged equation of the Indus Valley civilization and the carriers of Vedic culture stays in stark contrast to not only linguistic but also archeological evidence She notes that the essential characteristics of Indus valley urbanism such as planned cities complex fortifications elaborate drainage systems the use of mud and fire bricks monumental buildings extensive craft activity are completely absent in the Rigveda Similarly the Rigveda lacks a conceptual familiarity with key aspects of organized urban life e g non kin labour facets or items of an exchange system or complex weights and measures and doesn t mention objects found in great numbers at Indus Valley civilization sites like terracotta figurines sculptural representation of human bodies or seals 127 Hetalben Sindhav notes that claims of a large number of Ghaggar Hakra sites are politically motivated and exaggerated While the Indus remained an active river the Ghaggar Hakra dried up leaving many sites undisturbed 126 Sidhav further notes that the Ghaggar Hakra was a tributary of the Indus so the proposed Sarasvati nomenclatura is redundant 126 According to archaeologist Shereen Ratnagar many Ghaggar Hakra sites in India are actually those of local cultures some sites display contact with Harappan civilization but only a few are fully developed Harappan ones 128 Moreover around 90 of the Indus script seals and inscribed objects discovered were found at sites in Pakistan along the Indus river while other places accounting only for the remaining 10 w 129 130 Revival edit In 2015 Reuters reported that members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh believe that proof of the physical existence of the Vedic river would bolster their concept of a golden age of Hindu India before invasions by Muslims and Christians The Bharatiya Janata Party Government had therefore ordered archaeologists to search for the river 131 According to the government of Indian state of Haryana research and satellite imagery of the region has confirmed to have found the lost river when water was detected during digging of the dry river bed at Yamunanagar 132 Surveys and satellite photographs confirm that there was once a great river that rose in the Himalayas entered the plains of Haryana flowed through the Thar Cholistan desert of Rajasthan and eastern Sindh running roughly parallel to the Indus and then reached the sea in the Rann of Kutchh in Gujarat The strange marshy landscape of the Rann of Kutchh is partly due to the fact that it was once the estuary of a great river 133 The government constituted Saraswati Heritage Development Board SHDB had conducted a trial run on 30 July 2016 filling the river bed with 100 cusecs of water which was pumped into a dug up channel from tubewells at Uncha Chandna village in Yamunanagar The water is expected to fill the channel until Kurukshetra a distance of 40 kilometres Once confirmed that there is no obstructions in the flow of the water the government proposes to flow in another 100 cusecs after a fortnight At that time there were also plans to build three dams on the river route to keep it flowing perennially 134 In 2021 the Chief Minister of the State of Haryana stated that over 70 organizations were involved with researching the Saraswati River s heritage and that the river is still flowing underground from Adi Badri and up to Kutch in Gujarat 135 The Saraswati revival project seeks to build channels and dams along the route of the lost river and develop it as a tourist and pilgrimage circuit See also editBrahmavarta Drishadwati River Rigvedic rivers Sapta Sindhu Saraswati goddess Indus River Saraswat Brahmins Triveni Sangam Sarasvati PushkaramNotes edit See Clift et al 2012 map and Honde te al 2017 map a b c d e f g h Witzel 2001 p 81 The autochthonous theory overlooks that RV 3 33206 already speaks of a necessarily smaller Sarasvati the Sudas hymn 3 33 refers to the confluence of the Beas and Sutlej Vipas Sutudri This means that the Beas had already captured the Sutlej away from the Sarasvati dwarfing its water supply While the Sutlej is fed by Himalayan glaciers the Sarsuti is but a small local river depending on rain water In sum the middle and later RV books 3 7 and the late book 10 75 already depict the present day situation with the Sarasvati having lost most of its water to the Sutlej and even earlier much of it also to the Yamuna It was no longer the large river it might have been before the early Rgvedic period a b RV 7 95 1 2 This stream Sarasvati with fostering current comes forth our sure defence our fort of iron As on a chariot the flood flows on surpassing in majesty and might all other waters Pure in her course from mountains to the ocean alone of streams Sarasvati hath listened Thinking of wealth and the great world of creatures she poured for Nahusa her milk and fatness a b According to Bhargava 1964 samudra stands for a huge inland lake of which there were four or seven in Rigvedic sources He translates sagara as ocean In this view the lowlands of Kashmir and Kuruksetra were samudra but the sea in which the Ganga fell is a sagara 10 See also Talageri The Proto Indo European Word for Sea Ocean Talageri notes that Paṇini gives the meaning of mira as samudra Uṇadi Sutra ii 28 and notes that according to Mallory IE meer mira originally referred to lake and not to sea In contrast to the mainstream view Chatterjee et al 2019 suggest that the river remained perennial till 4 500 years ago a b c Giosan et al 2012 Contrary to earlier assumptions that a large glacier fed Himalayan river identified by some with the mythical Sarasvati watered the Harappan heartland on the interfluve between the Indus and Ganges basins we show that only monsoonal fed rivers were active there during the Holocene Numerous speculations have advanced the idea that the Ghaggar Hakra fluvial system at times identified with the lost mythical river of Sarasvati e g 4 5 7 19 was a large glacier fed Himalayan river Potential sources for this river include the Yamuna River the Sutlej River or both rivers However the lack of large scale incision on the interfluve demonstrates that large glacier fed rivers did not flow across the Ghaggar Hakra region during the Holocene The present Ghaggar Hakra valley and its tributary rivers are currently dry or have seasonal flows Yet rivers were undoubtedly active in this region during the Urban Harappan Phase We recovered sandy fluvial deposits approximately 5 400 y old at Fort Abbas in Pakistan SI Text and recent work 33 on the upper Ghaggar Hakra interfluve in India also documented Holocene channel sands that are approximately 4 300 y old On the upper interfluve fine grained floodplain deposition continued until the end of the Late Harappan Phase as recent as 2 900 y ago 33 Fig 2B This widespread fluvial redistribution of sediment suggests that reliable monsoon rains were able to sustain perennial rivers earlier during the Holocene and explains why Harappan settlements flourished along the entire Ghaggar Hakra system without access to a glacier fed river Valdiya 2013 dispute this arguing that it was a large perennial river draining the high mountains as late as 3700 2500 years ago Giosan et al 2013 have responded to and rejected Valdiya s arguments The Helmand river historically besides Avestan Haetumant bore the name Haraxvaiti which is the Avestan form cognate to Sanskrit Sarasvati a b According to David Anthony the Yamna culture was the Urheimat of the Indo Europeans at the Pontic steppes 97 From this area which already included various subcultures Indo European languages spread west south and east starting around 4 000 BCE 115 These languages may have been carried by small groups of males with patron client systems which allowed for the inclusion of other groups into their cultural system 97 Eastward emerged the Sintashta culture 2100 1800 BCE from which developed the Andronovo culture 1800 1400 BCE This culture interacted with the BMAC 2300 1700 BCE out of this interaction developed the Indo Iranians which split around 1800 BCE into the Indo Aryans and the Iranians 116 The Indo Aryans migrated to the Levant northern India and possibly south Asia 117 a b c The migration into northern India was not a large scale immigration but may have consisted of small groups 118 which were genetically diverse Their culture and language spread by the same mechanisms of acculturalisation and the absorption of other groups into their patron client system 97 According to Shaffer the reason for the predominance of the Sarasvati in the Rigveda is the late Harappan 1900 1300 BCE population shift eastwards to Haryana 35 Wilke amp Moebus 2011 p 310 note 574 Witzel suggests that Sarasvati is not an earthly river but the Milky Way that is seen as a road to immortality and heavenly after life In mythical logic as outlined above the two interpretations are not however mutually exclusive There are passages which clearly suggest a river See Witzel 1984 48 for discussion for maps 1984 of the area p 42 sqq While the first translation takes a tatpurusha interpretation of sindhumata the word is actually a bahuvrihi Hans Hock 1999 translates sindhumata as a bahuvrihi giving the second translation A translation as a tatpurusha mother of rivers with sindhu still with its generic meaning would be less common in RV speech See Clift et al 2012 map and Honde te al 2017 map The suggestion of a change of river courses during Mature Harappan times due to tectonic activity has been used by Indigenists to argue for the identification of the Ghaggar Hakra with the Vedic Sarasvati Gupta 1995 The lost Saraswati and the Indus Civilization makes ample reference to such suggestions According to Misra as cited in Gupta 1995 pp 149 50 there are several dried out river beds paleochannels between the Sutlej and the Yamuna some of them two to ten kilometres wide They are not always visible on the ground because of excessive silting and encroachment by sand of the dried out river channels Raikes 1968 and Suraj Bhan 1972 1973 1975 1977 as cited in Gupta 1995 p 149 have argued based on archaeological geomorphic and sedimentological research that the Yamuna may have flowed into the Sarasvati during Harappan times According to Misra as cited in Gupta 1995 p 153 the Yamuna may have flowed into the Sarasvati river through the Chautang or the Drishadvati channel since many Harappan sites have been discovered on these dried out river beds There are no Harappan sites on the present Yamuna river but there are however Painted Gray Ware 1000 600 BC sites along the Yamuna channel showing that the river must then have flowed in the present channel Other Indigenist Aryanism cloroued publications include According to Gupta 1999 there are no Harappan sites on the Sutlej in its present lower course only in its upper course near the Siwaliks and along the dried up channel of the ancient Sutlej According to Pal 1984 p 494 also cited in Bryant 2001 the course of the Sutlej suggests that the Satluj periodically was the main tributary of the Ghaggar and that subsequently the tectonic movements may have forced the Satluj westward and the Ghaggar dried At Ropar the Sutlej river suddenly turns sharply away from the Ghaggar The narrow Ghaggar river bed itself is becoming suddenly wider at the conjunction where the Sutlej should have met the Ghaggar river There also is a major paleochannel between the turning point of the Sutlej and where the Ghaggar river bed widens According to Lal 2002 p 24 who supports the Indigenous Aryans theory the disappearance of the river may additionally have been caused by earthquakes which may have led to the redirection of its tributaries Mitra amp Bhadu 2012 referring to three other publications state that active faults are present in the region and lateral and vertical tectonic movements have frequently diverted streams in the past The Ghaggar Hakra may have migrated westward due to such uplift of the Aravallis Puri amp Verma 1998 argue that the present day Tons River was the ancient upper part of the Ghaggar Hakra river identified with the Sarasvati river by them The Ghaggar Haggar would then had been fed with Himalayan glaciers which would make it the mighty river described in the Vedas The terrain of this river contains pebbles of quartzite and metamorphic rocks while the lower terraces in these valleys do not contain such rocks A major seismic activity in the Himalayan region caused the rising of the Bata Markanda Divide This resulted in the blockage of the westward flow of Ghaggar Hakra forcing the water back Since the Yamuna Tear opening was not far off the blocked water exited from the opening into the Yamuna system Anthropologists Gregory Possehl 1942 2011 and J M Kenoyer writing in the 1990s have suggested that many religious and literary invocations to Sarasvati in the Rig Veda were to a real Himalayan river whose waters on account of seismic events were diverted leaving only a seasonal river the Ghaggar Hakra in the original river bed 81 82 Archaeologists Gregory Possehl and Jane McIntosh refer to the Ghaggar Hakra river as Sarasvati throughout their respective 2002 and 2008 books on the Indus Civilisation 83 84 supposing that the Sutlej and Yamuna diverged their courses during late Harappan times 74 Chatterjee et al 2019 identify the Sarasvati with the Ghaggar arguing that during 9 4 5 ka the river was perennial and was receiving sediments from the Higher and Lesser Himalayas by distributaries of the Sutlej which likely facilitated development of the early Harappan settlements along its banks 85 In response Sinha et al 2020 state that most workers have documented the cessation of large scale fluvial activity in NW India in early Holocene thereby refuting the sustenance of the Harappan civilization by a large river 86 Painted Grey Ware sites ca 1000 BCE have been found in the bed and not on the banks of the Ghaggar Hakra river suggesting that the river had dried up before this period 93 94 Demkina et al 2017 In the second millennium BC humidification of the climate led to the divergence of the soil cover with secondary formation of the complexes of chestnut soils and solonetzes This paleoecological crisis had a significant effect on the economy of the tribes in the Late Catacomb and Post Catacomb time stipulating their higher mobility and transition to the nomadic cattle breeding 95 See also Eurogenes Blogspot The crisis Witzel If the RV is to be located in the Panjab and supposedly to be dated well before the supposed 1900 BCE drying up of the Sarasvati at 4000 5000 BCE Kak 1994 Misra 1992 the text should not contain evidence of the domesticated horse not found in the subcontinent before c 1700 BCE see Meadow 1997 1998 Anreiter 1998 675 sqq of the horse drawn chariot developed only about 2000 BCE in S Russia Anthony and Vinogradov 1995 or Mesopotamia of well developed copper bronze technology etc 121 Michael Witzel points out that this is to expected from a mobile society but that the Gandhara grave culture is a clear indication of new cultural elements 122 Michaels points out that there are linguistic and archaeological data that shows a cultural change after 1750 BCE 123 and Flood notices that the linguistic and religious data clearly show links with Indo European languages and religion 124 Number of Indus script inscribed objects and seals obtained from various Harappan sites Mohanjodaro 1540 Harappa 985 Chanhudaro 66 Lothal 165 Kalibangan 99 Banawali 7 Ur Iraq 6 Surkotada 5 Chandigarh 4 References edit Kinsley 1998 p 11 13 a b Wilke amp Moebus 2011 p 310 a b c d e f Witzel 2001 p 93 a b Kinsley 1998 p 10 55 57 a b Ludvik 2007 p 11 13 a b c d Sarasvati Hindu deity Encyclopedia Britannica 2 May 2023 a b Witzel 2012 pp 74 125 133 It can easily be understood as the Sarasvati the river on earth and in the nighttime sky emerges just as in Germanic myth from the roots of the world tree In the Middle Vedic texts this is acted out in the Yatsattra along the Rivers Sarasvati and Dṛṣadvati northwest of Delhi a b c Klaus K Die altindische Kosmologie nach den Brahmaṇas dargestellt Bonn 1986 a b c Samudra XXIII Deutscher Orientalistentag Wurzburg ZDMG Suppl Volume VII Stuttgart 1989 367 371 a b c Bhargava M L 1964 The Geography of Rigvedic India Lucknow p 5 a b c d e f g h i Giosan et al 2012 a b c Maemoku et al 2013 a b c d e f g h Clift et al 2012 a b c d e f g Singh et al 2017 Sankaran 1999 Wilke amp Moebus 2011 Giosan et al 2012 p 1688 1689 a b c d Wilke amp Moebus 2011 pp 310 311 a b Witzel 2001 p 81 a b Mukherjee 2001 p 2 8 9 a b c d e Romila Thapar 2004 Early India From the Origins to AD 1300 University of California Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 520 24225 8 a b c Kocchar Rajesh The rivers Sarasvati Reconciling the sacred texts RajeshKochhar com blog post based on The Vedic People Their history and geography a b c d e Kochhar Rajesh 1999 On the identity and chronology of the Ṛgvedic river Sarasvati in Roger Blench Matthew Spriggs eds Archaeology and Language III Artefacts languages and texts Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 10054 0 a b Encyclopaedia Britannica Sarasvati a b c d e Upinder Singh 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education India pp 137 8 ISBN 978 81 317 1677 9 a b c d e Charles Keith Maisels 16 December 2003 The Indus Harappan Sarasvati Civilization Early Civilizations of the Old World The Formative Histories of Egypt The Levant Mesopotamia India and China Routledge p 184 ISBN 978 1 134 83731 1 a b c Denise Cush Catherine A Robinson Michael York 2008 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Psychology Press p 766 ISBN 978 0 7007 1267 0 a b c d e Danino 2010 p 258 e g 7 96 4 10 66 5 Mayrhofer EWAia s v Saraswati as a common noun in Classical Sanskrit means a region abounding in pools and lakes the river of that name or any river especially a holy one Like its cognates Welsh hel heledd river meadow and Greek ἕlos helos swamp the root is otherwise often connected with rivers also in river names such as Sarayu or Susartu the suggestion has been revived in the connection of an out of India argument N Kazanas Rig Veda is pre Harappan p 9 by Lommel 1927 Lommel Herman 1927 Die Yasts des Awesta Gottingen Leipzig Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht JC Hinrichs Manu 2004 Olivelle Patrick ed The Law Code of Manu Oxford University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 19280 271 2 Bridget Allchin Raymond Allchin The Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan Cambridge University Press 1982 P 358 Macdonell Arthur Anthony Keith Arthur Berriedale 1912 Vedic Index of names and subjects Vol 2 London Murray p 434 OCLC 1014995385 a b J Shaffer in J Bronkhorst amp M Deshpande eds Aryans and Non Non Aryans Evidence Interpretation and Ideology Cambridge Harvard Oriental Series Opera Minora 3 1999 Ludvik 2007 p 84 85 Ludvik 2007 p 4 5 Prasad 2017 Chapter 2 1 3 13 89 164 10 17 30 64 65 66 75 110 131 141 Ludvik 2007 p 11 Ludvik 2007 p 85 The Sarasvati river which according to Witzel personifies the Milky Way falls down to this world at Plakṣa Prasarvaṇa the world tree at the center of heaven and earth and flows through the land of the Kurus the center of this world a b c Pushpendra K Agarwal Vijay P Singh 16 May 2007 Hydrology and Water Resources of India Springer Science amp Business Media pp 311 2 ISBN 978 1 4020 5180 7 Prasad 2017 Chapter 3 K R Jayaswal Hindu Polity pp 12 13 Pancavimsa Brahmana Jaiminiya Upanisad Brahmana Katyayana Srauta Sutra Latyayana Srauta Macdonell and Keith 1912 Asvalayana Srauta Sutra Sankhayana Srauta Sutra Macdonell and Keith 1912 II 55 Griffith p 492 a b Witzel 1984 D S Chauhan in Radhakrishna B P and Merh S S editors Vedic Saraswati 1999 According to this reference 44 asvins may be over 2 600 km Bhargava Sudhir 20 22 November 2009 Location of Brahmavarta and Drishadwati river is important to find earliest alignment of Saraswati river Saraswati river a perspective organised by Saraswati Nadi Shodh Sansthan Haryana Kurukshetra Kurukshetra University pp 114 117 Mhb 3 82 111 3 130 3 6 7 47 6 37 1 4 9 34 81 9 37 1 2 Mbh 3 80 118 Mbh 3 88 2 Haigh Martin 2011 Interpreting the Sarasvati Tirthayatra of Shri Balarama Research Journal of Akhil Bhartiya Itihas Sankalan Yojana ABISY New Delhi 16 2 179 193 ISSN 0974 3065 via www academia edu org Richard MAHONEY r dot mahoney at indica et buddhica dot INDOLOGY Sarasvati Sindhu civilization c 3000 B C indology info Studies in Proto Indo Mediterranean culture Volume 2 page 398 a b D S Chauhan in Radhakrishna B P and Merh S S editors Vedic Saraswati 1999 p 35 44 compare also with Yajurveda 34 11 D S Chauhan in Radhakrishna B P and Merh S S editors Vedic Saraswati 1999 p 35 44 a b Eck p 149 Eck 2012 p 147 Manusmriti 2 17 18 Eck 2012 p 145 a b Eck 2012 p 148 Ludvik 2007 p 1 At the Three Rivers TIME 23 February 1948 a b Eck p 145 Eck p 220 Darian 2001 p 58 Darian p 59 a b Mukherjee 2001 p 2 6 9 Griffith a b S Kalyanaraman ed Vedic River Sarasvati and Hindu Civilization ISBN 978 81 7305 365 8 PP 96 Valdiya K S 1 January 2002 Saraswati The River that Disappeared Indian Space Research Organization p 23 ISBN 9788173714030 a b McIntosh 2008 p 19 21 Schuldenrein et al 2004 p fig 23 Clift et al 2012 p fig 1 a b Malavika Vyawahare 29 November 2017 New study challenges existence of Saraswati river says it was Sutlej s old course HindustanTimes Schuldenrein et al 2004 McIntosh 2008 p 20 21 Jain Agarwal amp Singh 2007 p 312 Possehl 1997 Kenoyer 1997 McIntosh 2008 a b Possehl 2002 p 8 Chatterjee et al 2019 Sinha Singh amp Tandon 2020 p 240 a b Khonde et al 2017 Dave et al 2019 Chaudhri Akshey Rajan Chopra Sundeep Kumar Pankaj Ranga Rajesh Singh Yoginder Rajput Subhash Sharma Vikram Verma Veerendra Kumar Sharma Rajveer 2021 Saraswati River in northern India Haryana and its role in populating the Harappan civilization sites A study based on remote sensing sedimentology and strata chronology Archaeological Prospection 28 4 565 582 doi 10 1002 arp 1829 S2CID 236238153 Jayant K Tripathi Barbara Bock V Rajamani A Eisenhauer 25 October 2004 Is River Ghaggar Saraswati Geochemical constraints PDF Current Science 87 8 Stein Aurel 1942 A Survey of Ancient Sites along the Lost Sarasvati River The Geographical Journal 99 4 173 182 doi 10 2307 1788862 ISSN 0016 7398 JSTOR 1788862 a b Giosan et al 2012 p 1693 a b Stein Aurel 1942 A Survey of Ancient Sites along the Lost Sarasvati River The Geographical Journal 99 4 173 182 doi 10 2307 1788862 JSTOR 1788862 Gaur R C 1983 Excavations at Atranjikhera Early Civilization of the Upper Ganga Basin Delhi a b c Demkina 2017 Anthony 2007 p 300 336 a b c d Anthony 2007 Darian p 58 Proceedings of the second international symposium on the management of large rivers for fisheries Volume II Fao org 14 February 2003 Archived from the original on 13 September 2016 Retrieved 12 July 2012 Tripathi Jayant K Bock Barbara Rajamani V Eisenhauer A 2004 Is River Ghaggar Saraswati Geochemical constraints Current Science 87 8 1141 1145 JSTOR 24108988 Press Information Bureau English Releases Retrieved 18 October 2016 PTI Government constituted expert committee finds Saraswati river did exist Indian Express PTI Retrieved 19 October 2016 Indische Alterthumskunde Sacred Books of the East 32 60 Oldham 1893 pp 51 52 Feuerstein Georg Kak Subhash Frawley David 11 January 1999 In Search of the Cradle of Civilization New Light on Ancient India Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120816268 via Google Books a b Danino 2010 p 252 Prasad 2017 p 13 Prasad 2017 p 14 Valdiya 2017 p 6 a b c Danino 2010 p 260 Kochhar 2012 p 263 Prasad 2017 p 42 Kochhar Rajesh 1999 On the identity and chronology of the Ṛgvedic river Sarasvati In Blench Roger Spriggs Matthew eds Artefacts Languages and Texts Archaeology and Language Vol III Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 10054 0 Beckwith 2009 p 29 Anthony 2007 p 408 Beckwith 2009 Witzel 2005 p 342 343 a b c d e f Danino 2010 p 256 Danino 2010 p 256 258 Witzel 2001 p 31 Witzel 2005 Michaels 2004 p 33 Flood 1996 p 33 Etter 2020 a b c Sindhav 2016 p 103 Romila Thapar 2002 Early India Penguin Books p 110 ISBN 978 0 1430 2989 2 Ratnagar Shereen 2006 Understanding Harappa Civilization in the Greater Indus Valley New Delhi Tulika Books pp 7 8 ISBN 978 81 89487 02 7 If in an ancient mound we find only one pot and two bead necklaces similar to those of Harappa and Mohenjo daro with the bulk of pottery tools and ornaments of a different type altogether we cannot call that site Harappan It is instead a site with Harappan contacts Where the Sarasvati valley sites are concerned we find that many of them are sites of local culture with distinctive pottery clay bangles terracotta beads and grinding stones some of them showing Harappan contact and comparatively few are full fledged Mature Harappan sites Iravatham Mahadevan 1977 The Indus Script Text Concordance and Tables pp 6 7 Upinder Singh 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century p 169 Rupam Jain Nair Frank Jack Daniel 12 October 2015 Special Report Battling for India s soul state by state Reuters Retrieved 29 May 2018 Hunt for mythical Saraswati river a test of history and science india news Hindustan Times 26 January 2018 Retrieved 11 July 2020 Bhadra B K Gupta A K Sharma J R February 2009 Saraswati Nadi in Haryana and its linkage with the Vedic Saraswati River Integrated study based on satellite images and ground based information Journal of the Geological Society of India 73 2 273 288 doi 10 1007 s12594 009 0084 y ISSN 0016 7622 S2CID 140635500 Zee Media Bureau 6 August 2016 Lost Saraswati river brought back to life Zee Media Retrieved 19 August 2016 Haryana to launch revival of Saraswati river to construct dam barrage amp reservoir at Adi Badri IE 15 February 2021 Sources editPrinted sourcesAnthony David W 2007 The Horse The Wheel And Language How Bronze Age Riders From the Eurasian Steppes Shaped The Modern World Princeton University Press Beckwith Christopher I 16 March 2009 Empires of the Silk Road A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1400829941 retrieved 30 December 2014 Bryant Edwin 2001 The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513777 4 Chatterjee Anirban Ray Jyotiranjan S Shukla Anil D Pande Kanchan 20 November 2019 On the existence of a perennial river in the Harappan heartland Scientific Reports 9 1 17221 Bibcode 2019NatSR 917221C doi 10 1038 s41598 019 53489 4 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 6868222 PMID 31748611 Clift Peter D Carter Andrew Giosan Liviu Durcan Julie et al 2012 U Pb zircon dating evidence for a Pleistocene Sarasvati River and capture of the Yamuna River Geology 40 3 211 214 Bibcode 2012Geo 40 211C doi 10 1130 g32840 1 S2CID 130765891 Danino Michel 2010 The Lost River On the trail of the Sarasvati Penguin Books India Darian Steven G 2001 5 Ganga and Sarasvati The Transformation of Myth The Ganges in Myth and History Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 978 81 208 1757 9 Dave Aditi Krishna Courty Marie Agnes Fitzsimmons Kathryn E Singhvia Ashok Kumar 2019 Revisiting the contemporaneity of a mighty river and the Harappans Archaeological stratigraphic and chronometric constraints Quaternary Geochronology 49 230 235 Bibcode 2019QuGeo 49 230D doi 10 1016 j quageo 2018 05 002 S2CID 134501741 Demkina T S 2017 Paleoecological crisis in the steppes of the Lower Volga region in the Middle of the Bronze Age III II centuries BC Eurasian Soil Science 50 7 791 804 Bibcode 2017EurSS 50 791D doi 10 1134 S1064229317070018 S2CID 133638705 Eck Diana L 2012 India A Sacred Geography Clarkson Potter Ten Speed Harmony ISBN 978 0 385 53191 7 Etter Anne Julie 2020 Creating Suitable Evidence of the Past Archaeology Politics and Hindu Nationalism in India from the End of the Twentieth Century to the Present South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal 24 25 doi 10 4000 samaj 6926 Flood Gavin D 1996 An Introduction to Hinduism Cambridge University Press Giosan et al 2012 Fluvial landscapes of the Harappan civilization PNAS 109 26 E1688 E1694 Bibcode 2012PNAS 109E1688G doi 10 1073 pnas 1112743109 PMC 3387054 PMID 22645375 Giosan Liviu Clift Peter D Macklin Mark G Fuller Dorian Q 10 October 2013 Sarasvati II Current Science 105 7 888 890 JSTOR 24098502 Gupta S P ed 1995 The lost Saraswati and the Indus Civilization Jodhpur Kusumanjali Prakashan Gupta S P 1999 Pande G C Chattophadhyaya D P eds The dawn of Indian civilization History of Science Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization Vol I New Delhi Centre for Studies in Civilizations Hock Hans 1999 Through a Glass Darkly Modern Racial Interpretations vs Textual and General Prehistoric Evidence on Arya and Dasa Dasyu in Vedic Indo Aryan Society in Aryan and Non Aryan in South Asia ed Bronkhorst amp Deshpande Ann Arbor Jain Sharad K Agarwal Pushpendra K Singh Vijay P 2007 Hydrology and Water Resources of India Springer Science amp Business Media Bibcode 2007hwri book J ISBN 9781402051807 Keith and Macdonell 1912 Vedic Index of Names and Subjects Kenoyer J M 1997 Early city states in south Asia Comparing the Harappan phase and the Early Historic period In Nichols D L Charlton T H eds The Archaeology of City States Cross cultural approaches Washington DC Smithsonian Institution pp 52 70 ISBN 978 1560987222 Khonde Nitesh Kumar Singh Sunil Maur D M Rai Vinai K Chamyal L S Giosan Liviu 2017 Tracing the Vedic Saraswati River in the Great Rann of Kachchh Scientific Reports 7 1 5476 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 5476K doi 10 1038 s41598 017 05745 8 PMC 5511136 PMID 28710495 Kinsley David 1998 Hindu Goddesses Visions of the Divine Feminine in the Hindu Religious Tradition Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 978 81 208 0394 7 Kochhar Rajesh On the identity and chronology of the Ṛgved ic river Sarasvati in Archaeology and Language III Artefacts languages and texts Routledge 1999 ISBN 0 415 10054 2 Kochhar Rajesh 2012 On the identity and chronology of the Ṛgved ic river Sarasvati Archaeology and Language III Artefacts languages and texts Routledge Lal B B 2002 The Saraswati Flows on the Continuity of Indian Culture New Delhi Aryan Books International Ludvik Catherine 2007 Sarasvati Riverine Goddess of Knowledge From the Manuscript carrying Viṇa player to the Weapon wielding Defender of the Dharma BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 15814 6 Maemoku Hideaki Shitaoka Yorinao Nagatomo Tsuneto Yagi Hiroshi 2013 Geomorphological Constraints on the Ghaggar River Regime During the Mature Harappan Period in Giosan Liviu Fuller Dorian Q Nicoll Kathleen Flad Rowan K Clift Peter D eds Climates Landscapes and Civilizations American Geophysical Union Monograph Series 198 John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 70443 1 McIntosh Jane 2008 The Ancient Indus Valley New Perspectives ABC CLIO Michaels Axel 2004 Hinduism Past and present Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press Mitra D S Bhadu Balram 10 March 2012 Possible contribution of River Saraswati in groundwater aquifer system in western Rajasthan India Current Science 102 5 Mukherjee Ashoke 2001 RIGVEDIC SARASVATI MYTH AND REALITY PDF Breakthrough Breakthrough Science Society 9 1 Oldham R D 1893 The Sarsawati and the Lost River of the Indian Desert Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1893 49 76 Pal Yash 1984 Remote Sensing of the Lost Sarasvati River In Lal B B ed Frontiers of the Indus Civilization Possehl Gregory L December 1997 The transformation of the Indus Civilization Journal of World Prehistory 11 4 425 472 doi 10 1007 bf02220556 JSTOR 25801118 S2CID 161129625 Possehl Gregory L 2002 The Indus Civilization A Contemporary Perspective Rowman Altamira ISBN 978 0 7591 0172 2 Prasad R U S 2017 River and Goddess Worship in India Changing Perceptions and Manifestations of Sarasvati Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315209401 ISBN 9781315209401 Puri V M K Verma B C 1998 Glaciological and Geological Source of Vedic Saraswati in the Himalayas Itihas Darpan IV 2 7 36 Archived from the original on 14 September 2006 Radhakrishna B P and Merh S S editors Vedic Saraswati Evolutionary History of a Lost River of Northwestern India 1999 Geological Society of India Memoir 42 Bangalore Review on page 3 Review permanent dead link Sankaran A V 25 October 1999 Saraswati The ancient river lost in the desert Current Science 77 8 1054 1060 JSTOR 24103577 archived from the original on 19 September 2004 Schuldenrein Joseph Wright Rita P Mughal M Rafique Khan M Afzal 2004 Landscapes soils and mound histories of the Upper Indus Valley Pakistan New insights on the Holocene environments near ancient Harappa Journal of Archaeological Science 31 6 777 797 Bibcode 2004JArSc 31 777S doi 10 1016 j jas 2003 10 015 Shaffer Jim G 1995 Cultural tradition and Palaeoethnicity in South Asian Archaeology in George Erdosy ed Indo Aryans of Ancient South Asia Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 014447 5 Sindhav Hetalben Dhanabhai 2016 The Indus Valley Civilisation Harappan Civilisation International Journal of Social Impact 1 2 Singh Ajit 2017 Counter intuitive influence of Himalayan river morphodynamics on Indus Civilisation urban settlements Nature Communications 8 1 1617 Bibcode 2017NatCo 8 1617S doi 10 1038 s41467 017 01643 9 PMC 5705636 PMID 29184098 Sinha Rajiv Singh Ajit Tandon Sampat 25 July 2020 Fluvial archives of north and northwestern India as recorders of climatic signatures in the late Quaternary review and assessment Current Science 119 2 232 doi 10 18520 cs v119 i2 232 243 S2CID 239534661 S G Talageri The RigVeda A Historical Analysis chapter 4 Archived 15 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine Valdiya K S 2002 Saraswati The River That Disappeared Universities Press India Hyderabad ISBN 978 81 7371 403 0 Valdiya K S 2013 The River Saraswati was a Himalayan born river PDF Current Science 104 1 42 Valdiya K S 2017 Prehistoric River Saraswati Western India Society of Earth Scientists Series Cham Springer International Publishing doi 10 1007 978 3 319 44224 2 ISBN 978 3 319 44223 5 ISSN 2194 9204 S2CID 132865905 Wilke Annette Moebus Oliver 2011 Sound and Communication An Aesthetic Cultural History of Sanskrit Hinduism Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 018159 3 Witzel Michael 1984 Sur le chemin du ciel PDF Witzel Michael 2001 Autochthonous Aryans The Evidence from Old Indian and Iranian Texts PDF Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies 7 3 1 93 Witzel Michael 2005 Indocentrism in Bryant Edwin Patton Laurie L eds TheE Indo Aryan Controversy Evidence and inference in Indian history Routledge Witzel Michael 2012 The Origins of the World s Mythologies Oxford University Press Web sources Mythical Saraswati River Press Information Bureau Government of India 20 March 2013 Archived 9 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine a b Rajesh Kochhar 2017 The Aryan chromosome The Indian ExpressFurther reading editChakrabarti D K amp Saini S 2009 The problem of the Sarasvati River and notes on the archaeological geography of Haryana and Indian Panjab New Delhi Aryan Books International An archaeological tour along the Ghaggar Hakra River by Aurel SteinExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sarasvati River nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Sarasvati River Is River Ghaggar Saraswati by Tripathi Bock Rajamani Eir Saraswati the ancient river lost in the desert by A V Sankaran Sarasvati research and Education Trust C P Rajendran 2019 Saraswati The River That Never Was Flowing Always in the People s Hearts The Wire Map પ રદ શ નદ ન તટપ રદ શ બ ઝ ન સરસ વત Regional River Basin Saraswati Basin Narmada Water Resources Water Supply and Kalpsar Department Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sarasvati River amp oldid 1182923510, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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