Ancient Greece–Ancient India relations
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For the ancient Greeks, “India" (Greek: Ινδία) referred to the geographical region situated east of Persia and south of the Himalayas (with the exception of Serica). During various periods of history, the term could refer to the much wider Indian subcontinent or the much less extensive Indus Plain.[1]
Names
[edit]The Greeks referred to the ancient Indians as "Indoi" (Greek: Ἰνδοί, lit. 'people of the Indus River'). The Indians referred to the Greeks as "Yavanas",[2] or Yona or Yonaka,[3] in reference to the Ionians.[3] "Yawan" is a Hebrew term that refers to the ancient Greeks. The inscriptions in Pali texts trace the Prakrit equivalent of the Sanskrit word "Yavana" as "Yona."[3] It is suggested that the Indians took the word either from the Persians (who called the Greeks Yaunas) or from some Semitic language.[3]
The traditional Indian grammarians believed that the word Yavanas was derived from the Sanskrit root Yu (to mix, to mingle).[3] The earliest written record of the term Yavana is in the Astadhyayi, a work of Pāṇini. While demonstrating the use of the suffix anuk, he gives Yavanani as one of his examples.[3] In addition, Katyayana explains that when the suffix is added to the word Yavana, it indicates handwriting. Yavanani and Yavanallipyam are examples of scripts used by the Yavana people.[3]
Although originally the word Yavana meant Greek, in later centuries it was also applied to Romans, Arabs and westerners in general.[3]
Mythology and legends
[edit]Dionysus
[edit]Megasthenes wrote about the prehistoric arrival of Dionysus in India. Apollodorus in Bibliotheca wrote about Dionysus and the Indians.[4] Polyaenus wrote that after Dionysus had subdued the Indians, he formed an alliance with them and the Amazons and took them into his service. He later used them in his campaign against Bactria.[5]
The epic poem Dionysiaca by Nonnus talks about the god Dionysus' expedition to India. He also wrote about Colletes (Ancient Greek: Κολλήτης) who was huge, immense, and formidable, and whose ancestor was the founder of the Indian race.[6] In addition, in Book 14, Hera took on the likeness of an Indian in order to talk and persuade the Indian chief to fight Dionysus' army.[7]
A hymn to Dionysus in the Greek Anthology is called Dionysus Indoletes (Ἰνδολέτης), which means slayer or killer of Indians.[8] Other poems in the Greek Anthology also mention the campaign of Dionysus against the Indians.[9] Alphesiboea (Ἀλφεσιβοῖα) was an Indian nymph who was loved by Dionysus.[10]
Philostratus reports that Dionysus was called Nysian or Nysean (Νύσιος) by the Indians.[11] According to legend, he founded the city of Nysa, sometimes identified with Nagara.[12] When Alexander the Great arrived in Nysa, representatives of the city met him and asked him not to capture the city and the land because Dionysus had founded the city and named it after his nurse. He had also named the mountain near the city, Meron (Μηρόν) (i.e. thigh), because Dionysus grew in the thigh of Zeus.[13][14][15] In addition, Philostratus mentioned that at Delphi there was a disc of silver for an offering bearing the inscription: "Dionysus the son of Semele and of Zeus, from the men of India to the Apollo of Delphi" (ΔΙΟΝΥΣΟΣ Ο ΣΕΜΕΛΗΣ ΚΑΙ ΔΙΟΣ ΑΠΟ ΙΝΔΩΝ ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΙ ΔΕΛΦΩΙ).[16] Furthermore, he mentioned that Indians who dwell in the Caucasus and along the river Cophen said that Dionysus was an Assyrian visitor, who knew the religious rites of the city of Thebes in Greece (according to Ancient Greek legend, Dionysus was born in Thebes when his mother Semele had insisted upon seeing his father Zeus in his real form and was consumed by lightning as a result. Dionysus completed his gestation in Zeus's thigh).
Apollonius Rhodius in Argonautica wrote about the Nysean, son of Zeus, who had left the tribes of the Indians and came to dwell at Thebes.[17] Indians who inhabited the district between the Indus and the Hydraotes and the continental region beyond, which ends at the river Ganges, declared that Dionysus was the son of the river Indus and that Dionysus of Thebes was his disciple.[16] Phylarchus wrote that Dionysus was the first to bring two bulls, named Apis and Osiris, from India to Egypt. But Plutarch found this theory absurd.[18]
Heracles
[edit]Megasthenes also wrote about the legendary arrival of Heracles in India. Pandaie (Ancient Greek: Πανδαίη) was a daughter of Heracles whom he fathered in India. He gave her the southern part of India, where she then reigned as queen.[19] According to legend, the Indian tribe of Pandae was descended from her and, for this reason, they were the only tribe in India who had the habit of having female sovereigns.[20] An Indian tribe called Sourasenoi worshipped Heracles at the time of Alexander the Great. Quintus Curtius Rufus mentions Indian soldiers carrying a banner of "Herakles" during Alexander's push eastwards.[21]
Contact, records and influence between the two civilizations
[edit]Coinage
[edit]Between about 200 BC and the very beginning of the first millennium AD, The Indo-Greek Kingdom covered an area encompassing modern-day Pakistan, parts of Afghanistan and of north-west India. The city of Kapisi appeared on Indo-Greek coins.[22]
The Kushan Empire, which succeeded the Indo-Greek Kingdom for nearly the next four hundred years, used the Greek alphabet and Greek legends on their coins. They also adopted other elements of Greek culture. Art themes derived from Greek mythology were common initially but later Buddhist imagery dominated.[23] The Nahapana, ruler of the Western Kshatrapas, in broadly the same era and south of the Kushan Empire, established the Kshatrapa coinage, derived from Indo-Greek coinage. The obverse of the coins consists of the profile of the ruler with a legend in Greek, while the reverse represents a thunderbolt and an arrow, with Brahmi and Kharoshthi legends. In the first century AD, the king Gondophares minted coins with the Greek title of autokrator.[24]
Inscriptions
[edit]Greeks are mentioned in theYavanarajya inscription in northern India, and on the Rukhuna reliquary. In a Kharoshthi inscription found in the Swat area of Gandhara, which dates to the 1st century BC, there is a dedication from the Greek meridarch Theodorus. The Rabatak inscription uses Greek script to write a language described as Arya. The inscription relates to the rule of the Kushan emperor Kanishka.
Art and literature
[edit]In Greek Anthology, India and Indians are mentioned on many occasions.[25] In Sophocles' play Antigone, Creon mentions the gold of India.[26] The satirist Lucian wrote that Indians get drunk very easily with wine and they get worse than any Greek or Roman would be.[27]
The Yavana Ganika (Greek Ganika) was a common sight in India (Gaṇikā in India was similar to a Hetaira in the Greek world). These girls were also trained in the theatrical arts.[28][29] The Indian theater had adopted some elements of Greek comedy.[30] Kalidasa mention the Yayanis (Greek maidens) in his work.[31]
Hellenistic influence on Indian art is well documented. Gandhara art was heavily influenced by the Greek style. The Art of Mathura is a blend of Indian and Greek art. The Pompeii Yakshii, an Indian sculpture of a Yakshii, was found in the ruins of Roman Pompeii. Bharhut Yavana is a relief, discovered among the reliefs of the railings around the Bharhut Stupa, representing a Greek warrior.
At the Nasik Caves, some of the caves were built by people with Greek heritage. The murals in the Ajanta Caves are painted in such a way which suggest a Greek influence.[32]
Astronomy and astrology
[edit]Greek astronomical texts were translated into Sanskrit.[33] Yavaneśvara translated the Yavanajataka, one of the earliest writings of Indian astrology, from Greek to Sanskrit. The zodiac signs were introduced into India by the Greeks.[34]
The Garga Samhita states: "The Yavanas (Greeks) are barbarians, yet the science of astronomy originated with them, and for this, they must be revered like gods.".[35][36][37][38][39][40] The Yuga Purana, the last chapter of Garga Samhita, mentions the Greeks.[2][41] The Paulisa Siddhanta displays Greek influence, and the Romaka Siddhanta is based on the astronomical learning of the Byzantine Empire.[39][42][43]
Philosophy and religion
[edit]Pyrrhonism
[edit]The philosopher Pyrrho accompanied Alexander the Great on his Indian campaign. According to Diogenes Laërtius, Pyrrho developed his philosophy, now known as Pyrrhonism, in India when he was there. Diogenes Laërtius wrote that Anaxarchus, Pyrrho's teacher, met and spoke with Indian gymnosophists and magi.[44] In the view of Christopher I. Beckwith, Pyrrho's philosophy was strikingly similar to the Buddhist three marks of existence,[45] suggesting that his teaching was influenced by contact with Buddhism.
Because of the high degree of similarity between Nāgārjuna's philosophy and Pyrrhonism, particularly the surviving works of Sextus Empiricus,[46] Nāgārjuna was likely influenced by Greek Pyrrhonist texts imported to India.[47]
Buddhism
[edit]Buddhism flourished under the Indo-Greeks, leading to the Greco-Buddhist cultural syncretism. The iconography of Vajrapani is clearly that of the hero Heracles, with varying degrees of hybridization.[48] Menander I was one of the patrons of Buddhism; he was also the subject of the Milinda Panha and is mentioned on the Shinkot casket. It has been claimed (by G. R. Sharma) that Menander is mentioned in the Reh Inscription, but other scholars disagree. Many Greek rulers after Menander had the description "Maharajasa dhramikasa" (follower of the Dharma) next to their name on their coinage; this does not necessarily imply that they were Buddhists or that Buddhism was dominant in their kingdom, as symbols of the Greek religion were also on the same coins, but it does indicate that Buddhism played a significant role.[49] Buddhist manuscripts in cursive Greek, dated later than the 2nd century AD, have been found in Afghanistan. Some mention the "Lokesvararaja Buddha" (λωγοασφαροραζοβοδδο).[50]
Dharmaraksita was a Greek who converted to Buddhism. He was one of the missionaries sent by the Mauryan emperor Ashoka to proselytize Buddhism. Mahadharmaraksita was a Greek Buddhist master who, according to Mahāvaṃsa traveled to Anuradhapura in Sri Lanka together with 30,000 Greek Buddhist monks from Alexandria of the Caucasus.[51] Mahāvaṃsa also mentions how early Buddhists from Sri Lanka went to Alexandria of the Caucasus to learn Buddhism.[51]
The Kandahar Greek Edicts of Ashoka, which are among Ashoka's Major Rock Edicts, were written in the Greek language. In addition, the Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription was written in Greek and Aramaic. The emperor Ashoka used the word "eusebeia" (piety) as a Greek translation for the central Buddhist and Hindu concept of "dharma" in the Kandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription.[52]
Buddhist gravestones from Ptolemaic Egypt have been found in Alexandria decorated with depictions of the dharma wheel, showing the presence of Buddhists in Hellenistic Egypt.[53] Ptolemy II Philadelphus is mentioned in the Edicts of Ashoka as a recipient of the Buddhist proselytism of Ashoka:
Now it is conquest by Dhamma that Beloved-Servant-of-the-Gods considers to be the best conquest. And it [conquest by Dhamma] has been won here, on the borders, even six hundred yojanas away, where the Greek king Antiochos rules, beyond there where the four kings named Ptolemy, Antigonos, Magas and Alexander rule, likewise in the south among the Cholas, the Pandyas, and as far as Tamraparni. Rock Edict Nb13 (S. Dhammika)
Peripateticism
[edit]Aristotle's knowledge of India came essentially from Scylax and Ctesias. He quoted Scylax to refer to Indian politics and mentions seven Indian animals, by clearly drawing on Ctesias.[54]
The Peripatetic philosopher Clearchus of Soli traveled to the east to study Indian religions.[55]
The Peripatetic philosopher Theophrastus, in his book on the history of plants, wrote an excursus on Indian species.[54] Also, in his work "On Stones," he describes rocks, stones and gems produced in India.[56]
The Peripatetic philosopher Aristocles of Messene (cited by the Christian polemicist Eusebius) said an Indian conversed with Socrates in Athens.[57]
And Aristoxenus the musician said that this argument comes from the Indians. For a man of that people met Socrates in Athens and asked him what his philosophy was about; and when he said that he was investigating human life, the Indian laughed at him, saying that no one could understand human affairs if he ignored the divine. Whether this is true, no one can say for sure.[58]
Christian
[edit]Clement of Alexandria wrote about India, Gymnosophists, Brahmans, Buddha, etc. in the Stromata.[59]
The Greek theologian Pantaenus was said to have traveled to India.
The Suda write that during the reign of Constantine the Great, the nearer Indians were baptized.[60]
Sophism
[edit]The Greek Sophist Philostratus, in his work Life of Apollonius of Tyana (Greek: Βίος Απολλωνίου του Τυανέως) and the Suda,[61] mentioned that the Greek philosopher Apollonius had traveled to India.
The Sophist Dio Chrysostom mentioned India in his work Discourses and wrote that Homer's poetry is sung in India.[62] He also mentioned that Bactrians and Indians were to be found in his audience in Alexandria (circa 100 CE).[63]
Others
[edit]The philosopher Democritus was said to have traveled to India.[64]
The Sibylline Oracles mentioned India.[65]
The Cynic philosopher Onesicritus wrote about the gymnosophists, the people and the landscape of India.[54]
The Academic Skeptic philosopher Favorinus owned an Indian slave[66] named Autolekythos.[67]
Ptolemy wrote about the Brahmanas (Greek: Βραχμάναι Μάγοι),[68] Narmada River and more.
The Neoplatonic philosopher Ammonius Saccas may have been of Shakyan Indian descent.
Varāhamihira, in a passage where he calls on the people to honour the Brahmans, said: “The Greeks, though impure, must be honoured, since they are trained in sciences, and therein they excelled others. What, then, are we to say of a Brahman, if he combines with his purity the height of science?”[69]
Scythianus traveled to India several times during the first century CE. He studied Indian philosophy there. He eventually settled in Alexandria, Egypt, and became a religious teacher. He wrote four books, which because the source of Manichaenism.
Achmet, son of Seirim wrote a work on the interpretation of dreams in Greek which was called Ὀνειροκριτικά and contains what has been written on the same subject by the Indians, Persians, and Egyptians.[70]
Political and military
[edit]During the Second Persian invasion of Greece, the Persian army had Indian troops, both infantry and cavalry.[71][72][73][74]
At the Battle of Gaugamela, Darius used Indian troops against Alexander the Great. Later, during the Indian campaign of Alexander the Great, Alexander's army fought many battles against Indian tribes and kingdoms, including the battle against the army of Porus the Elder. Plutarch wrote about the battle in his work Parallel Lives, "The Life of Alexander.". The Indian King Ambhi (the Greeks called him Taxiles in their scripts) supported Alexander with his forces. Philostratus the Elder in the Life of Apollonius of Tyana wrote that in the army of Porus there was an elephant who fought bravely against Alexander's army, and Alexander dedicated it to the Helios (Sun) and named it "Ajax" because he thought that such a so great animal deserved a great name. The elephant had gold rings around its tusks and an inscription was on them written in Greek: "Alexander the son of Zeus dedicates Ajax to the Helios" (ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ Ο ΔΙΟΣ ΤΟΝ ΑΙΑΝΤΑ ΤΩΙ ΗΛΙΩΙ).[75] Alexander also met and talked with Indian gymnosophists, including Dandamis and Kalanos.[76]
Alexander let Taxiles and Porus keep their kingdoms[77] and added Paropamisadae to the kingdom of Oxyartes.[78] In addition, he gave Peithon[78][77] and Philip Indian satrapies. The Indian king Abisares who sent embassies of submission to Alexander was allowed to retain his kingdom with considerable additions.[79][80]
Alexander also conquered the kingdom of the Indian king Phegeus. The inhabitants welcomed Alexander's army and the king met Alexander and gave him many gifts.[81] He also conquered the city of Sagala.
Alexander asked Phegeus and Porus what was after the Hyphasis River and after their response he decided to continue.[81] He was preparing to march against the Indian King Xandrames, before his army mutinied.[82]
After the mutiny of his army, he conducted the Mallian campaign.
And then they conducted the campaign against the Oritians and Arabitians. After he conquered them, he made Apollophanes the Satrap in the area.[83]
According to ancient writers, the Queen Cleophis of Massaga had a son with Alexander the Great. But modern historians dismiss this.
The pankratiast and Olympic winner Dioxippus accompanied Alexander to India.[84]
After the Battle of Gabiene, Antigonus I Monophthalmus sent the Argyraspides to Sibyrtius at Arachosia.
Indo-Greek kingdoms and Greco-Bactrian Kingdoms were founded by the successors of Alexander the Great (Greek conquests in India). Yavana era describes the period with Greek presence in India.
According to Indian sources, Greek troops seem to have assisted Chandragupta Maurya in toppling the Nanda Dynasty and founding the Mauryan Empire.[85]
Later, Seleucus I's army encountered Chandragupta's army. Chandragupta and Seleucus finally concluded an alliance. Seleucus gave him his daughter in marriage, ceded the territories of Arachosia, Herat, Kabul and Makran and received 500 war elephants.
Bindusara, the second Mauryan emperor of India, had diplomatic relations with and very friendly feelings towards the Greeks. He even asked Antiochus I Soter to send him a Greek sophist for his court.
Megasthenes had traveled to India and had several interviews with Chandragupta Maurya, known as Sandracottus to the Greeks.[86]
Ptolemy II Philadelphus is recorded by Pliny the Elder as having sent an ambassador named Dionysius to the Mauryan court at Pataliputra in India,[87] probably to Emperor Ashoka:
- "But [India] has been treated of by several other Greek writers who resided at the courts of Indian kings, such, for instance, as Megasthenes, and by Dionysius, who was sent thither by Philadelphus expressly for the purpose: all of whom have enlarged upon the power and vast resources of these nations." Pliny the Elder, "The Natural History", Chap. 21 [88]
Asoka also appointed some Greeks to high offices of state (Yavanaraja, meaning Greek King or Governor), for example, the Tushaspha. In addition, his edicts mention a Yona (Greek) province on the north-west border of India, most probably the Arachosia.[89]
Polybius wrote about the use of Indian elephants in battles and about the alliance between the Indian king Sophagasenus and Antiochus III the Great.[90]
Diodorus, quoting Iambulus, mentioned that the king of Pataliputra had a "great love for the Greeks".[91][92]
The Greek historian Apollodorus and the Roman historian Justin, affirmed that the Bactrian Greeks conquered India. Justin also described Demetrius I as "King of the Indians". Greek and Indian sources indicate the Greeks campaigned as far as Pataliputra until they were forced to retreat following a coup in Bactria in 170 BC.
The Heliodorus pillar is a stone column erected around 110 BCE in present-day central India in Vidisha, by Heliodorus (Greek: Ἡλιόδωρος), a Greek ambassador of the Indo-Greek king Antialcidas to the court of the Shunga king Bhagabhadra. The site is located about 5 miles from the Buddhist stupa of Sanchi.
The Roman Emperor Augustus received envoys from the Saka King. They gave him a letter written in Greek and asked for some diplomatic requests.[93][94][27]
The King Phraotes received a Greek education at the court of his father and spoke Greek fluently.[95]
Stephanus of Byzantium called the city Daedala in India an Indo-Cretan city, most probably because it was a settlement of Cretan mercenaries.[96][97]
Tamil poems described the Greek soldiers who served as mercenaries for Indian kings as "the valiant-eyed Yavanas, whose bodies were strong and of terrible aspect".[98]
Alfred Charles Auguste Foucher said that some of the troops of Mara in the Gandhara sculptures may represent Greek mercenaries.[99]
The Cilappatikaram mentions Yavana soldiers, who, according to scholars, including Professor Dikshitar, is a reference to the Greek mercenaries employed by the Tamil kings.[100]
Patanjali, the commentator of Pāṇini describes two sieges the Greeks made: The siege of Saketa and the siege of Madhyamika.[101]
From a kharoshthi inscription found in the Swat area of Gandhara, dated to the 1st century BC, we know about the Greek meridarch Theodorus.
Trade
[edit]Ptolemy II Philadelphus founded the Myos Hormos and selected it as the principal harbour of the trade with India, in preference to Arsinoe, since Arsinoe was at the head of the Red Sea and there was a tedious and difficult navigation down the Heroopolite Gulf. Vessels from Myos Hormos traded with Africa, Arabia, and India.[102]
During the Roman and Byzantine period there were trade relations. (Indo-Roman trade relations)
Isidore of Charax in his work The Parthian Stations (Ancient Greek: Σταθμοί Παρθικοί) described the trade route between the Levant and India in the 1st century BC.[103]
The so-called Muziris papyrus, written in Greek, contains crucial information regarding the cargo of a ship named the Hermapollon that sailed back to Egypt from Muziris in India.[104] Muziris is also mentioned in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea as one of the Indian ports Greek ships were sailing to.[105]
Some of the Indian ports Greek merchants visited were Muziris, Barygaza, Barbarikon, Minnagara, Ujjain and Ariaca.
Tacola (Τάκωλα) was a place on the west coast of the Aurea Chersonesus, in India extra Gangem, which Ptolemy calls an emporium.[106]
The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea was a manual written in Greek for navigators who carried trade between the Roman Empire and other regions, including ancient India. It gives detailed information about the ports, routes and commodities.
Ancient Greek and Roman writers also describe the ports of the Arabia Felix, which were used for the Indian trade.
Procopius writes that, when the Byzantines didn't want to purchase their silk from the Persians any longer due to their conflicts, some monks coming from India, who had also spent a long time in a country called Serinda (Ancient Greek: Σηρίνδα) which was beyond India, talked with the Emperor Justinian and promised to settle the silk question. Thus, the Byzantines would not need to buy the silk from the Persians.[107]
Chanakya mentioned Greeks and their polities in his Arthashastra.
Athenaeus in the Deipnosophistae wrote that Euthydemus the Athenian in his book on Vegetables calls a species of gourd as the Indian gourd (σικύαν Ἰνδικὴν) because the seed of that gourd was originally introduced from India.[108]
After Alexander's period, there were trade relations between the Greek world and Sri Lanka. Ancient writers describe in details what was traded. Cosmas Indicopleustes wrote about a specific Greek merchant named ‘Sopatrus’ who had a trade relationship with Sri Lanka.[109] At the Jaffna Peninsula, archaeologists discovered gold coins with Greek inscriptions, most probably belonging to the Byzantine period.[109]
Travelers and explorers
[edit]Pompeii Yakshii (Lakshmi) | |
---|---|
Material | Ivory |
Height | 24.5 cm (9+1⁄2 in) |
Discovered | c. 1930–1938 Pompeii |
Present location | Secret Museum, Naples, Italy |
Identification | 149425 |
The Greek explorer Scylax, in about 515 BC, was sent by King Darius I of Persia to follow the course of the Indus River and discover where it led.
Nearchus, described India and the people living there.[54]
Onecicritus of Astypaleia who was a captain of Great Alexander's navy wrote about Sri Lanka.[109]
The Greek ethnographer and explorer of the Hellenistic period, Megasthenes was the ambassador of Seleucus I at India. In his work, Indika (Greek: Ινδικά), he wrote the history of Indians and their culture. Megasthenes also mentioned the prehistoric arrival of God Dionysus and Herakles (Megasthenes' Herakles) in India. Deimachus, who was an ambassador to the court of Bindusara, also wrote about India.[54][110]
Strabo didn't believe what the people wrote about India to his age, because they included a lot of fables in their writings, especially Deimachus and Megasthenes, while Onesicritus and Nearchus together with some others wrote "a few words of truth." On the other hand, he trusted the works of Patrocles and Eratosthenes.[111]
Patrocles was an admiral of Seleucus who sailed into the Indian Ocean, and left an account.[1]
Zarmanochegas met Nicholas of Damascus in Antioch and later he also traveled to Athens, where he burned himself to death.[112][113] According to Plutarch, his tomb could still be seen in Athens.[114]
Eudoxus of Cyzicus and Hippalus traveled to India with their ships.
Claudius Ptolemy mentions in his work a Greek captain named Diogenes, who was returning from his trip to India when the winds blew him off course and he had to stop below the Horn of Africa. Since the winds were not favorable to travel north, he traveled south and explored the east coast of Africa where he found the city of Rhapta. According to Ptolemy, this happened during the second trip of Diogenes to India.[115]
The Suda, a 10th-century Byzantine encyclopedia, mentioned that when Theophilos the Indian returned from India, he spent time in Antioch and the Emperor Constantius II treated him with all honor and respect.[116]
Sozomen wrote that Meropius (Μερόπιός), a philosopher of Tyre, traveled together with two of his relatives, Frumentius (Φρουμέντιός) and Edesius (Ἐδέσιος) to India.[117][118]
The Christian Topography by Cosmas Indicopleustes was an essay in scientific geography written in Greek with illustrations and maps. The work mentioned India, and the writer Cosmas Indicopleustes had actually made the journey, and he described and sketched some of what he saw in his topography. Indicopleustes means "Cosmas who sailed to India".
Cities and places
[edit]Around 510 BC, Persians, under the rule of Darius the Great moved the inhabitants of the Greek colony of Barca in Libya into Bactria.[119] Later, Xerxes I also settled there with the "Branchidae," who were the descendants of Greek priests who had once lived at Didyma.[120] Herodotus also records Persian generals threatening to enslave daughters of the revolting Ionians and send them to Bactria if they didn't stop fighting.[121]
According to legend the god Dionysus founded the city of Nysa and named it Nysa and the land Nysaea (Νυσαία) after his nurse and he named the mountain near the city, Meron (Μηρὸν) (i.e. thigh), because he grew in the thigh of Zeus.[13][14] When Alexander arrived at the city, he and his Companion cavalry went to the mountain, where they made ivy garlands and crowned themselves with them, singing hymns in honor of Dionysus. Alexander also offered sacrifices to Dionysus, and feasted in company with his companions.[14]
Alexander the Great founded the cities of Nicaea[122] and Alexandria Bucephalous. He also founded a city and named it after his dog, Peritas.[123] In addition, he ordered Philip (son of Machatas) to build the Alexandria on the Indus. He also founded other cities in India (for more info see List of cities founded by Alexander the Great).
Quintus Curtius Rufus wrote that Alexander founded a number of cities in the Indus Delta, but most probably he meant some garrisons.[124]
Pliny the Elder wrote that Nearchus founded the town of Arbis during his voyage to India.[125]
The ancient Greeks called the modern Bay of Bengal Gangeticus Sinus (Ancient Greek: Κόλπος Γαγγητικός), meaning "Gulf of the Ganges".[126][127]
According to Ptolemy, many Greek cities were founded by the Greco-Bactrians in northern India.[50] The cities of Sirkap and Demetriapolis were founded by Demetrius I of Bactria.
Eucratideia was founded by Eucratides I.
Panchaia was an island paradise located in the Indian Ocean mentioned by Greek writers.
Claudius Aelianus wrote that there were Macedonians who settled in India in the cities founded by Alexander.[128]
Contacossyla (Κοντακόσσυλα) and Allosygna were emporia in the district of Maesolia (Μαισωλία or Μασαλία) (modern Masulipatam).[129][130]
Maliarpha (Μαλιάρφα,) was a place of considerable commerce in the territory of the Arvarni.[131]
Stephanus of Byzantium wrote about a city called Daedala or Daidala (Ancient Greek: Δαίδαλα) in India,[97] which he called an Indo-Cretan city, most probably because it was a settlement of Cretan mercenaries.[96]
In addition to the aforementioned cities, Stephanus of Byzantium also described many other Indian cities and places.
The Greeks called the Punjab region Pentapotamía (Greek: Πενταποταμία), meaning five rivers.[132]
Caspeiria (Κασπειρία) was a district of India intra Gangem with Ptolemy naming 18 cities there, including the Caspeira (Κάσπειρα)[133] and the Rarassa (Ῥαράσσα or Ἠράρασα).[134]
Caspatyrus (Κασπάτυρος) or Caspapyrus (Κασπάπυρος) was a city in the district of Pactyice.[135]
Calinipaxa was a city in India, intra Gangem, made known to the Greeks by the expedition of Seleucus I Nicator.[136]
Gange (Γάγγη), according to Ptolemy, was the capital of the Gangaridae, at the mouth of the Ganges river. While Strabo speaks of a town with a similar name but places it far up the river, in the vicinity of Palibothra or Patna. Periplus of the Erythraean Sea mention a city called Ganges (Γάγγης).[137]
The Greeks called the Eastern Himalayas in the district of India intra Gangem Damassi Montes/Mountains (τὰ Δάμασσα ὄρη).[138]
The Saurashtra (region) was called by the Greeks Syrastrene (Συραστρηνή). Ptolemy mentions Syrastra, which may have once been its capital.[139] Larica (Λαρική) was a rich commercial district between Syrastrene and Ariaca.[140]
Dyrta (τὰ Δύρτα) was a small town in the country of the Assacani[141]
Peperine (Πεπερίνη), was an island off the south-west coast of India, undoubtedly derived its name from producing pepper.[142]
Pactyice (Πακτϋική), a district of North-Western India.[143]
Triglyphon was the metropolis and royal residence of Cirrhadia (the modern Tipperah).[144]
Palimbothra (Παλιμβόθρα) was one of the most important cities in India.[145]
Chryse and Argyre were a pair of legendary islands, located in the Indian Ocean mentioned by ancient writers.
Bessyga (Βήσσυγα) was, according to Stephanus of Byzantium, an emporium in India.[146]
Taprobana/Taprobane-Palaesimundu-Salice
[edit]At the Anuradhapura Kingdom in Sri Lanka, there was a Greek settlement. Professor Merlin Peris, former professor of classics at the University of Peradeniya, wrote that “the Greeks whom King Pandukabhaya settled in the West Gate of Anuradhapura were not the second or third generation of Greeks who arrived in northwest India but were men who, just two decades ago at the most, left Greek homelands as Alexander's camp followers and came to Sri Lanka with or in the wake of Alexander's troops. When their fellow Greeks showed reluctance to push further south, these Greeks apparently had done so.”[147] The Greeks called Sri Lanka Taprobana, some Greek authors also used Palaisimoundou, Salike and Sieladiba.[109] Cirrhadia ,
Palaesimundum (Παλαισιμούνδου) was a town in Taprobane, but in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea the writer inform us that at his time the whole island was called like this (Ptolemy and Stephanus state that the island was called Simundum (Σιμούνδου), but it is very probable that they made a mistake and the correct name was Palaesimundum). Later the island was also called Salice (Σαλική).[148]
Stephanus of Byzantium writes that a metropolis of the Taprobana was called Argyra (Ancient Greek: Ἀργυρᾶ)[149] and that there was also a river called Phasis (Ancient Greek: Φᾶσις).[150] Ptolemy called one of a group of islands which surrounded Sri Lanka Nagadiba (Greek: Ναγάδιβα) (see Jaffna Peninsula).[151] Talacory (Ταλάκωρυ) or Aacote (Ἀακότη) was a port emporium on the north-western side of Taprobana.[152]
Tarachi (Τάραχοι) was a tribe in Taprobane who had a port called Ἡλίου λίμην.[153]
Galiba (Γάλιβα ἄκρα) was a promontory on the northern coast of Taprobane, close to the Cory island. Certain mountains in the immediate neighbourhood of it had the same name Γάλιβα ὄρη and the inhabitants of which were called Galibi (Γάλιβοι).[154]
Cape of Zeus (Δίος ἄκρα) was a promontory on the south of Taprobane. Its exact position cannot be identified, but it must have been close to present Galle, if it be not the same.[155]
Tribes
[edit]Greek writers mention many tribes. For example, the:
- Abastanes or Abastani or Sambastae (Σαμβασταί) or Sabarcae, probably the Ambashtha.[156]
- Arvarni (Ἀρούαρνοι), a tribe of India intra Gangem.[157][158]
- Assakenoi or Assacani (Ἀσσακηνοί) or Astakenoi (Ἀστακηνοί,).[159][160][161]
- Calingae, people of India, live Gangem, close to the sea.[162]
- Caspeiraei (Κασπειραῖοι), a tribe of India intra Gangem.[134] [133]
- Gangaridae (Γαγγαρίδαι), people near the mouths of the Ganges. Ptolemy assigns them a capital, called Ganga Regia, on the western side of the Ganges.[163]
- Guraeans (Γουραίοι).[164]
- Harmatotrophi, a small tribe mentioned by Pliny as living at the foot of the Hindu Kush[165]
- Hippasii (Ἱππάσιοι), most probably the same tribe as the Aspasii (Ἀσπάσιοι) or Aspii (Ἄσπιοι).[166][167]
- Kirradae (Κιρρᾶδαι).[168]
- Maesoli (Μαισώλοι), people of the Maesolia.[130]
- Mallian people
- Mandalae (Μανδάλαι)[169]
- Padaei (Παδαῖοι), an Indian tribe.
- Pandae, an Indian tribe with the habit of having female sovereigns.[20]
- Parapiotae (Παραπιῶται), an Indian tribe along the banks of the Namadus river.[170]
- Pargyetae (Παργυῆται), a tribe who occupied part of the Hindu Kush.[171]
- Passalae (Πασσάλαι) a tribe in India extra Gangem.[172]
- Zamirae or Zamirai (Ζαμῖραι) and Gamerae or Gamerai (Γαμῆραι) was a tribe in India extra Gangem roughly in modern Myanmar.[173]
- Oritae (Ὠρεῖται), a tribe of the sea-coast of Gedrosia.[174]
- Xathri (Ξάθροι), a tribe Indians dwelling along the banks of the Hydraotes. They may have derived their name from the caste of the Kshatriyas.[175]
- Tacaraei (Τακαραῖοι), a mountain tribe of India extra Gangem. They must have occupied part of modern Assam.[176]
- Taluctae, a tribe of India extra Gangem, mentioned by Pliny.[177]
- Tabassi (Τάβασσοι), a tribe of Indians who occupied the interior of the southern part of Hindustan, in the neighbourhood of the present province of Mysore. It seems that they derived their name from the Sanskrit Tapasja, “woods.”[178]
Other
[edit]Pāṇini, an ancient Sanskrit grammarian, was acquainted with the word yavana (Greek) in his composition.
Kātyāyana was a Sanskrit grammarian, mathematician and Vedic priest who lived in ancient India. He explained the term yavanānī as the script of the Yavanas. He took the same line as Pāṇini that the Old Persian term yauna became Sanskritised to name all Greeks.
Theodectes thought the dark color of some Indians was because of the sun.[68]
Athenaeus in his Deipnosophistae mentions a Basilis (Βάσιλις) who wrote a series of books about the History of India.[179]
Claudius Aelianus wrote about the animals in India.[180] He also mentioned that there were Macedonians who settled in India in the cities founded by Alexander.[128]
The Unani System of Medicine, a traditional system of medicine practiced in India, refers to Graeco-Arabic medicine, which is based on the teachings of Greek physicians Hippocrates and Galen. The ancient Greek medical system enriched with local elements was received positively by the Indian people and the physicians.[181]
India and Indians are mentioned in some of the Martial's Epigrams.[182]
A lot of entries in the Suda, the Byzantine encyclopedia, are about India.
Modern archaeological evidence from Bronze Age
[edit]A wall-painting from the Minoan town of Akrotiri has been identified as depicting a grey langur, a species of monkey native to the Indus Valley. Bronze-age contact between the Minoan world and the Indian subcontinent was likely mediated by the civilisations of Mesopotamia.[183][184][185]
The historian Peter Frankopan mentioned that “Long-distance trade, and connections between the Mediterranean, Asia and the Indian Ocean are well attested, even in this period (Bronze Age), for high value, expensive objects.” (see Indo-Mediterranean)[186]
The area of modern Hala Sultan Tekke in Cyprus was an important trade hub during the Late Bronze Age, with large quantities of imported goods from neighbouring regions but also long distance regions, like Afghanistan and India.[187][188]
See also
[edit]- India (Herodotus)
- Indo-Greek Kingdom
- Greco-Bactrian Kingdom
- Indo-Scythians
- Greek campaigns in India
- Achaemenid conquest of the Indus Valley
- The Shape of Ancient Thought
Greco-Buddhism
[edit]- Greco-Buddhism
- Greco-Buddhist monasticism
- Greco-Buddhist art
- Gandharan Buddhism
- Buddhism and the Roman world
- Indo-Greek religions
- Buddhas of Bamiyan
- Third Buddhist council
Trade and relations
[edit]- Buddhism and the Roman world
- Economic history of India
- Historic GDP of India (1-1947 CE)
- Indus–Mesopotamia relations
- Indo-Mediterranean
- Indo-Roman relations
- Indian Ocean trade
- Sino-Roman relations
- Indian maritime history
- Meluhha trade with Sumer
Other
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) William Smith, LLD, Ed. - India
- ^ a b The Influence of Greek Classics on Indian Culture in Ancient Era
- ^ a b c d e f g h Lal, Shyam Bihari. “YAVANAS IN THE ANCIENT INDIAN INSCRIPTIONS.” Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, vol. 65, 2004, pp. 1115–20. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/44144820. Accessed 24 Feb. 2024.
- ^ Apollodorus, Library, 3.5.1-2
- ^ Polyaenus, Strategems, § 1.1.3
- ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca, 36.196
- ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca, 14.303-14.317
- ^ Greek Anthology, 9.524
- ^ Greek Anthology Book 16 Planudean, 183
- ^ A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, Alphesiboea
- ^ Philostratus, Life of Apollonius of Tyana, 2.2
- ^ St. Jerome, Chronicon, B1329
- ^ a b Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander, 5.1
- ^ a b c Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander, 5.2
- ^ Pliny the Elder, Natural History, 6.23.5
- ^ a b Philostratus, Life of Apollonius of Tyana, 2.9
- ^ Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica, 2.904-906
- ^ Plutarch, De Iside et Osiride, 29
- ^ Polyaenus, Strategems, 1.3.4
- ^ a b Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Pandae
- ^ Jones, T. T., (1964). The Genesis of Military River Operations: Alexander the Great at the Hydaspes River. The Military Engineer, vol. 56, issue 374, pp. 424–6. ISSN 0026-3982
- ^ See: Notes on Indian coins and Seals, Part IV, E. J. Rapson in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland, 1905, p 784, (Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland).
- ^ Kushan Empire (ca. Second Century B.C.–Third Century A.D.)-The Metropolitan Museum of Art
- ^ Gazerani 2015, pp. 24–25.
- ^ Greek Anthology
- ^ Sophocles, Antigone, 1039-1040
- ^ a b McLaughlin, Raoul (July 2010). Rome and the Distant East: Trade Routes to the ancient lands of Arabia, India and China. Continuum. ISBN 978-1847252357.
- ^ Pande, L.V.; Varadpande, M.L. (1987). History of Indian Theatre. Vol. 1. Abhinav Publications. p. 255. ISBN 9788170172215. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- ^ M. L. Varadpande (1981). Ancient Indian And Indo-Greek Theatre. Humanities Pr. pp. 77–85, 108, 125–131, 198. ISBN 978-0391024090.
- ^ Daniélou, Alain (11 February 2003). A Brief History of India. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781594777943.
- ^ M. L. Varadpande (1981). Ancient Indian And Indo-Greek Theatre. Humanities Pr. p. 117. ISBN 978-0391024090.
- ^ "Cultural Selection: The Silk Roads Legacy of the Ajanta Cave Paintings". unesco.org. unesco.
The murals are painted in what would go on to become a style distinct to the Indian subcontinent but with some elements such as the use of perspective, lime mortar, and the three quarter profiles of the figures, suggesting a Hellenistic (Ancient Greek) influence. Notably, many of the colour pigments used in the painting, including red ochre, yellow ochre, brown ochre, black, white, and lapis lazuli were likely imported from Central Asia and the Iranian Plateau.
- ^ Pingree, David (1976). "The Recovery of Early Greek Astronomy from India". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 7 (2). Journal for the History of Astronomy, Vol. 7: 109. Bibcode:1976JHA.....7..109P. doi:10.1177/002182867600700202. S2CID 68858864.
- ^ Pingree, David (1976). "The Recovery of Early Greek Astronomy from India". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 7 (2). Journal for the History of Astronomy, Vol. 7: 112. Bibcode:1976JHA.....7..109P. doi:10.1177/002182867600700202. S2CID 68858864.
- ^ Tandle, Sanjeevkumar (July 2014). INDIAN HISTORY. Ashok Yakkaldevi. p. 138. ISBN 9781312372115.
- ^ Roy, D. (2016). Role of Experiments in the Progress of Science: Lessons from our History. Proceedings of Indian National Science Academy. 51. 10.16943/ijhs/2016/v51i3/48847.
- ^ Nath Sen, Sailendra (1999). Ancient Indian History and Civilization. New Age International Publisher. p. 184. ISBN 978-8122411980.
- ^ H G. Rawlinson (2001). Intercourse Between India and the Western World. Franklin Classics. p. 173. ISBN 978-0343201500.
- ^ a b Rama Shankar Tripathi (2014). History of Ancient India. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd. p. 210. ISBN 978-8120800182.
- ^ M. K. Agarwal (2012). From Bharata to India: Volume 1: Chrysee the Golden. iUniverse. p. 483. ISBN 978-1475907650.
- ^ Woodthorpe Tarn, William (June 2010). The Greeks in Bactria and India. Cambridge University Press. p. 452. ISBN 978-1108009416.
- ^ Sarma, (2000), p. 158
- ^ McEvilley, (2001), p385
- ^ Diogenes Laertius, Lives of the Philosophers, 9.61
- ^ Beckwith, Christopher I. (2015). Greek Buddha: Pyrrho's Encounter with Early Buddhism in Central Asia (PDF). Princeton University Press. p. 28. ISBN 9781400866328.
- ^ Adrian Kuzminski, Pyrrhonism: How the Ancient Greeks Reinvented Buddhism 2008
- ^ Thomas McEvilley, The Shape of Ancient Thought 2002 pp. 499-505
- ^ Herakles/Vajrapani, the companion of Buddha
- ^ Christoph Baumer (2018). History of Central Asia, The: 4-volume set. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 44. ISBN 9781788313513.
- ^ a b The Greco Indian Kingdoms, Dr. Uday Dokras
- ^ a b "Greco-Buddhism: The Unknown Influence of the Greeks". Archived from the original on 6 August 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
- ^ Hacker, Paul. Dharma in Hinduism, Journal of Indian Philosophy, 2006, 34:479-496
- ^ The Greeks in Bactria and India, W.W. Tarn, South Asia Books, ISBN 81-215-0220-9
- ^ a b c d e Strabo and India
- ^ The Interactions of Greek and non-Greek Populations in Bactria-Sogdiana during the Hellenistic Period, The University Of British Columbia, 1997, p. 32-33
- ^ Theophrastus, On Stones, 36
- ^ The Book of Eusebius #4, p.343
- ^ Aristocles, Fragment 1.8-9, tr. Chiesara 2001, 11, cited in Monte Ransome Johnson; Brett Shults (2018), "Early Pyrrhonism as a Sect of Buddhism? A Case Study in the Methodology of Comparative Philosophy", Comparative Philosophy, vol. 9, no. 2, p. 16, retrieved 31 March 2022
- ^ Clement of Alexandria, The Stromata, or Miscellanies
- ^ Suda, epsilon, 789
- ^ Suda, https://www.cs.uky.edu/~raphael/sol/sol-entries/alpha/3420, alpha,3420
- ^ Dio Chrysostom, Discourses, The Fifty-third Discourse: On Homer
- ^ "I behold among you, not merely Greeks and Italians and people from neighbouring Syria, Libya, Cilicia, nor yet Ethiopians and Arabs from more distant regions, but even Bactrians and Scythians and Persians and a few Indians...." Dio Chrysostom, Discourses 32.40 https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Dio_Chrysostom/Discourses/32*.html
- ^ Suda, delta, 447
- ^ Sibylline Oracles
- ^ Gleason, Maud W. (2010). "Making Space for Bicultural Identity: Herodes Atticus Commemorates Regilla". In Whitmarsh, Tim (ed.). Local Knowledge and Microidentities in the Imperial Greek World. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521761468.
- ^ Philostratus Lives of the Sophists 490
- ^ a b GREEK IMAGE OF THE INDIAN SOCIETY
- ^ Mishra, Mohan (March 2012). India Through Alien Eyes. BalboaPressAU. p. 54. ISBN 978-1452504513.
- ^ A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, Achmet
- ^ Herodotus Book 7: Polymnia, 65
- ^ Herodotus Book 7: Polymnia, 86
- ^ Herodotus Book 8: Urania, 113
- ^ Herodotus Book 9: Calliope, 31
- ^ Philostratus the Elder, Life of Apollonius of Tyana, § 2.12
- ^ Plutarch, Life of Alexander, §8
- ^ a b Diodorus Siculus, Library 18.3.1
- ^ a b Diodorus Siculus, Library 18.39.1
- ^ Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Abisares
- ^ A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, Porus
- ^ a b Diodorus Siculus, Library, 93
- ^ A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology William Smith, Ed., Aggrammes
- ^ Arrian, Anabasis, 6.22
- ^ Hyperides, In Defence of Lycophron
- ^ Kumar, Praveen (November 2017). Complete Indian History for IAS Exam: Highly Recommended for IAS, PCS and other Competitive Exam. Educreation Publishin. p. 81.
- ^ A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology William Smith, Ed., Megasthenes
- ^ Mookerji, Radha Kumud (1988) [First published 1966]. Chandragupta Maurya and his times (4th ed.). Motilal Banarsidass. p. 38. ISBN 81-208-0433-3.
- ^ Pliny the Elder, "The Natural History", Chap. 21 Archived 2013-07-28 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Sagar, Krishna Chandra (May 1993). Foreign Influence on Ancient India. South Asia Books. p. 71. ISBN 978-8172110284.
- ^ Polybius, Histories
- ^ The historian Diodorus wrote that the king of Pataliputra, apparently a Mauryan king, "loved the Greeks": "Iambulus, having found his way to a certain village, was then brought by the natives into the presence of the king of Palibothra, a city which was distant a journey of many days from the sea. And since the king loved the Greeks ("Philhellenos") and devoted to learning he considered Iambulus worthy of cordial welcome; and at length, upon receiving a permission of safe-conduct, he passed over first of all into Persia and later arrived safe in Greece" Diodorus ii,60.
- ^ "Diodorus testifies to the great love of the king of Palibothra, apparently a Mauryan king, for the Greeks" Narain, "The Indo-Greeks", p. 362.
- ^ McLaughlin, Raoul (November 2016). The Roman Empire and the Silk Routes: The Ancient World Economy & the Empires of Parthia, Central Asia & Han China. Pen & Sword History. ISBN 978-1473833746.
- ^ McLaughlin, Raoul (September 2014). The Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean: The Ancient World Economy and the Kingdoms of Africa, Arabia and India. Pen and Sword Military. ISBN 978-1526738073.
- ^ "(Life of Apollonius Tyana, II 31)". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
- ^ a b Woodthorpe Tarn, William (June 2010). The Greeks in Bactria and India. Cambridge University Press. p. 250. ISBN 978-1108009416.
- ^ a b Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, D216.8
- ^ Pande, L.V.; Varadpande, M.L. (1987). History of Indian Theatre. Vol. 1. Abhinav Publications. p. 235. ISBN 9788170172215. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- ^ William Woodthorpe Tarn (2010). The Greeks in Bactria and India. Cambridge University Press. p. 250. ISBN 978-1108009416.
- ^ M.L. Varadpande (1981). Ancient Indian and Indo-Greek Theatre. Humanities Pr. p. 107. ISBN 978-0391024090.
- ^ Greeks in Mathura the city of KRISHNA, Dr. Uday Dokras
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), MYOS-HORMOS
- ^ Parthian Stations. By Isidore of Charax.
- ^ THE MUZIRIS PAPYRUS AND THE CYCLES OF SOUTH INDIAN PEPPER TRADE
- ^ Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, 54
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Tacola
- ^ Procopius, History of the Wars, 8.17
- ^ Athenaeus, The Deipnosophists, 2.53
- ^ a b c d Katugampola; Munasinghe; Nanayakkara; Fernando; Jayathilake (7 July 2021). "Sri Lanka and Greco-Roman Maritime Trade Relations" (PDF). International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications. 11 (7). Retrieved 7 July 2021.
- ^ A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, Daimachus
- ^ Strabo, Geography, 2.1
- ^ Strabo, xv, 1, on the immolation of the Sramana in Athens (Paragraph 73).
- ^ Dio Cassius, liv, 9.
- ^ Plutarch, Life of Alexander
- ^ McLaughlin, Raoul (2014). The Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean: The Ancient World Economy & the Kingdoms of Africa, Arabia & India. Pen & Sword Military. p. 126. ISBN 978-1526738073.
- ^ Suda Encyclopedia, theta 197
- ^ Sozomenos, Ecclesiastical History, 2.24
- ^ Sozomenos, Ecclesiastical History - GR
- ^ Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, Barca
- ^ Strabo, 11.11.4
- ^ Herodotus, The Histories, 6.9.4
- ^ Suda, nu, 380
- ^ Plutarch, Alexander, 61
- ^ Woodthorpe Tarn, William (June 2010). The Greeks in Bactria and India. Cambridge University Press. p. 244. ISBN 978-1108009416.
- ^ Pliny the Elder, Natural History, §6.26.1
- ^ "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), GANGE´TICUS SINUS". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
- ^ "Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Gangetĭcus Sinus". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
- ^ a b Aelian, Characteristics of Animals, § 16.3
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Contacossyla
- ^ a b Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Maesolia
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Maliarpha
- ^ History of the Panjáb from the Remotest Antiquity to the Present Time - Muḥammad Laṭīf
- ^ a b Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), caspeiria
- ^ a b Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Rarassa
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Caspatyrus
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Calinipaxa
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Gange
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Damassi Montes
- ^ "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Syrastrene". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
- ^ "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Larica". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Assacani
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Peperine
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Pactyice
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Triglyphon
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Palimbothra
- ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, B168.5
- ^ Did Anuradhapura Greeks come east with Alexander?
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Palaesimundu
- ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, §A115.1
- ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, § Ph660.2
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Nagadiba
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Talacory
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Tarachi
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Galiba
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Jovis promontorium
- ^ Brill dictionary, Abastani
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Malanga
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Arvarni
- ^ Arrian, Anabasis, 4.23
- ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, A135.2
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Assacani
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), calingae
- ^ Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Gangaridae
- ^ The Anabasis of Alexander/Book IV/Chapter XXV
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Harmatotrophi
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Hippasii
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Aspasii
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Cirradae
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Mandalae
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Parapiotae
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Pargyetae
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Passalae
- ^ Brill dictionary, Zamirae
- ^ Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary, Oritae
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Xathri
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Tacaraei
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Taluctae
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Tabassi
- ^ Athenaeus, Deipnosophists, 9.390
- ^ Aelian, Characteristics of Animals
- ^ Poulakou-Rebelakou, E; Karamanou, M; George, A (2015). "The impact of ancient Greek medicine in India: the birth of Unani medicine". Acta Med Hist Adriat. 13 (2): 323–8. PMID 27604201.
- ^ Martial, Epigrammata, 1.109, 2.42, 4.28, 5.37, 7.30, 8.26, 8.28, 8.78, 10.16, 10.38, 10.98, 13.100
- ^ Pareja, Marie Nicole; McKinney, Tracie; Mayhew, Jessica A.; Setchell, Joanna M.; Nash, Stephen D.; Heaton, Ray (2020). "A new identification of the monkeys depicted in a Bronze Age wall painting from Akrotiri, Thera". Primates. 61 (2): 159–168. doi:10.1007/s10329-019-00778-1. PMID 31808015.
- ^ Ancient monkey painting suggests Bronze Age Greeks travelled widely
- ^ How we solved the Greek monkey mystery – and found an important clue to Bronze Age world
- ^ Painted Bronze Age Monkeys Hint at the Interconnectedness of the Ancient World
- ^ Cyprus's copper deposits created one of the most important trade hubs in the Bronze Age
- ^ Tombs rich in artifacts discovered by Swedish expedition in Cyprus
Bibliography
[edit]- Gazerani, Saghi (2015). The Sistani Cycle of Epics and Iran's National History: On the Margins of Historiography. BRILL. pp. 1–250. ISBN 9789004282964.
- D.C. Sircar (2008). Studies in Indian Coins. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers. ISBN 978-8120829732.
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), William Smith, LLD, Ed., India
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), William Smith, LLD, Ed., Taprobane