Social Scientist. v 24, no. 272-74 (Jan-Mar 1996) p. 29.


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THEORY OF ARYAN RACE AND INDIA

A. Ghosh, The Encyclopaedia of Indian Archaeology, I, Delhi, 1985.

Romila Thapar, Asoka and the Decline of the Mauryas, Oxford, 1961, p. 128.

An example of this is A.K. Sharma, 'The Harappan Horse was buried under the dunes

of.. /, Puratattva, 1992-93,23,30-34.

S.R. Rao, Lothal, New Delhi, 1985,641.

A. Ghosh (ed.), op cit., 1,337.

D.K. Chakrabarti, 'The Beginning of Iron in India' Antiquity, 50,1976, pp. 114-24.

F. Kortland, 'The Spread of Indo-Europeans'JownflZ oflndo-European Studies, 1990,18,

land 2, pp. 131-140.

from Lineage to State, Delhi, 1984. The symbiosis involved for instance, pastoralists

grazing their animals on the post-harvest stubble in the fields and thereby helping to

manure the fields. This initial simple, inter-dependence can lead to more complex

relationships.

Burrow, op cit Kuiper, op cit.

D.K. Chakrabarti, The Aryan Hypothesis in Indian Archaeology', /ndiizn Studies: Past

and Present, 1968, DC 4, pp. 343-58.

Ri^eda,7,33;7.83.

D.D. Kosambi, 'On the Origin of the Brahmana Gotras', journal of the Bombay Branch

of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1950,26, pp. 21-80.

An example of such arevision, althoughrather extreme, canbeseeninM. Bernal, Black

Athena, London, 1987. See also MA. Dandamaev and V.G. Lukonin, The Culture and

Social Institutions of Ancient Iran, Cambridge, 1989.



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