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- From: kalki33!system@lakes.trenton.sc.us
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.indian
- Subject: Vedic civilization
- Message-ID: <mDs1uB3w165w@kalki33>
- Date: Sun, 29 Nov 92 16:32:57 EST
- Organization: Kalki's Infoline BBS, Aiken, SC, USA
-
- From Back to Godhead magazine, May/June 1991
-
- CROSS-CULTURAL TRACES OF VEDIC CIVILIZATION
-
- by Sadaputa Dasa
-
- (c) 1991 The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust
- Used by permission.
-
- The ancient Greek writer Aratos tells the following story about the
- constellation Virgo, or the virgin. Virgo, he says, may have belonged to
- the star race, the forefathers of the ancient stars. In primeval times,
- in the golden age, she lived among mankind as Justice personified and
- would exhort people to adhere to the truth. At this time people lived
- peacefully, without hypocrisy or quarrel. Later, in the age of silver,
- she hid herself in the mountains, but occasionally she came down to
- berate people for their evil ways. Finally the age of bronze came.
- People invented the sword, and "they tasted the meat of cows, the first
- who did it." At this point Virgo "flew away to the sphere"; that is, she
- departed for the celestial realm.[1]
-
- The Vedic literature of India gives an elaborate description of the
- universe as a cosmos -- a harmonious, ordered system created according
- to an intelligent plan as a habitation for living beings. The modern
- view of the universe is so different from the Vedic view that the latter
- is presently difficult to comprehend. In ancient times, however,
- cosmogonies similar to the Vedic system were widespread among people all
- over the world. Educated people of today tend to immediately dismiss
- these systems of thought as mythology, pointing to their diversity and
- their strange ideas as proof that they are all simply products of the
- imagination.
-
- If we do this, however, we may be overlooking important information that
- could shed light on the vast forgotten period that precedes the brief
- span of recorded human history. There is certainly much evidence of
- independent storytelling in the traditions of various cultures, but
- there are also many common themes. Some of these themes are found in
- highly developed form in the Vedic literature. Their presence in
- cultures throughout the world is consistent with the idea that in the
- distant past, Vedic culture exerted worldwide influence.
-
- In this article we will give some examples of Vedic ideas concerning
- time and human longevity that appear repeatedly in different traditions.
- First we will examine some of these ideas, and then we will discuss some
- questions about what they imply and how they should be interpreted.
-
- In the Vedic literature time is regarded as a manifestation of Krsna,
- the Supreme Being. As such, time is a controlling force that regulates
- the lives of living beings in accordance with a cosmic plan. This plan
- involves repeating cycles of creation and destruction of varying
- durations. The smallest and most important of these repeating cycles
- consists of four yugas, or ages, called Satya, Treta, Dvapara, and Kali.
- In these successive ages mankind gradually descends from a high
- spiritual platform to a degenerated state. Then, with the beginning of a
- new Satya-yuga, the original state of purity is restored, and the cycle
- begins again.
-
- The story of Virgo illustrates that in the ancient Mediterranean world
- there was widespread belief in a similar succession of four ages, known
- there as the ages of gold, silver, bronze, and iron. In this system
- humanity also starts out in the first age in an advanced state of
- consciousness and gradually becomes degraded. Here also, the progressive
- developments in human society are not simply evolving by physical
- processes, but are superintended by a higher controlling intelligence.
-
- It is noteworthy that Aratos' story specifies the eating of cows as a
- sinful act that cut mankind off from direct contact with celestial
- beings. This detail fits in nicely with the ancient Indian traditions of
- cow protection, but it is unexpected in the context of Greek or European
- culture.
-
- One explanation for similarities between ideas found in different
- cultures is that people everywhere have essentially the same
- psychological makeup, and so they tend to come up independently with
- similar notions. However, details such as the point about cow-killing
- suggest that we are dealing here with common traditions rather than
- independent inventions.
-
- Another example of similarities between cultures can be found among the
- natives of North America. The Sioux Indians say that their ancestors
- were visited by a celestial woman who gave them their system of
- religion. She pointed out to them that there are four ages, and that
- there is a sacred buffalo that loses one leg during each age. At present
- we are in the last age, an age of degradation, and the buffalo has one
- leg.[2]
-
- This story is a close parallel to the account in the Srimad Bhagavatam
- of the encounter between Maharaja Pariksit and the bull of Dharma.
- There, Dharma is said to lose one leg with each successive yuga, leaving
- it with one leg in the present Age of Kali.
-
- According to the Vedic system, the lengths of the Satya, Treta, Dvapara,
- and Kali yugas are 4, 3, 2, and 1 times an interval of 432,000 years.
- Within these immense periods of time the human life span decreases from
- 100,000 years in the Satya-yuga to 10,000 years in the Treta-yuga, 1,000
- years in the Dvapara-yuga, and finally 100 years in the Kali-yuga.
-
- Of course, this idea is strongly at odds with the modern evolutionary
- view of the past. In the ancient Mediterranean world, however, it was
- widely believed that human history had extended over extremely long
- periods of time. For example, according to old historical records,
- Porphyry (c. 300 A.D.) said that Callisthenes, a companion of Alexander
- in the Persian war, dispatched to Aristotle Babylonian records of
- eclipses and that these records covered 31,000 years. Likewise,
- Iamblicus (fourth century) said on the authority of the ancient Greek
- astronomer Hipparchus that the Assyrians had made observations for
- 270,000 years and had kept records of the return of all seven planets to
- the same position.[3] Finally, the Babylonian historian Berosus assigned
- 432,000 years to the total span of the reigns of the Babylonian kings
- before the Flood.[4]
-
- We do not wish to suggest that these statements are true (or that they
- are false). The point here is that people in the old Mediterranean
- civilization evidently had a much different view of the past than the
- dominant view today. And this view was broadly consistent with Vedic
- chronology.
-
- Although the Bible is well known for advocating a very short time-span
- for human history, it is interesting to note that it contains
- information indicating that people at one time lived for about 1,000
- years. In the Old Testament the following ages are listed for people
- living before the Biblical Flood: Adam, 930; Seth, 912; Enos, 905;
- Kenan, 910; Mahaleel, 895; Jared, 962; Enoch, 365; Methusaleh,969;
- Lamech, 777; and Noah, 950. If we exclude Enoch (who was said to have
- been taken up to heaven in his own body), these persons lived an average
- of 912 years.[5]
-
- After the Flood, however, the following ages were recorded: Shem, 600;
- Arphachshad, 438; Selah, 433; Eber, 464; Peleg, 239; Reu, 239; Serug,
- 230; Nahor, 148; Terah, 205; Abraham, 175; Issac, 180; Job, 210; Jacob,
- 147; Levi, 137; Kohath, 133; Amaram, 137; Moses, 120; and Joshua, 110.
- These ages show a gradual decline to about 100 years, similar to what
- must have happened after the beginning of Kali-yuga, according to the
- Vedic system.
-
- Here we should mention in passing that the Biblical Flood is
- traditionally said to have taken place in the second or third millenium
- B.C., and the traditional date in India for the beginning of Kali-yuga
- is February 18, 3102 B.C. This very date is cited as the time of the
- Flood in various Persian, Islamic, and European writings from the sixth
- to the fourteenth centuries A.D.[6] How did the middle-eastern Flood
- come to be associated with the start of Kali-yuga? The only comment we
- can make is that this story shows how little we really know about the
- past.
-
- In support of the Biblical story of very long human life-spans in
- ancient times, the Roman historian Flavius Josephus cited many
- historical works that were available in his time:
-
- Now when Noah had lived 350 years after the Flood, and all that
- time happily, he died, having the number of 950 years, but let
- no one, upon comparing the lives of the ancients with our
- lives...make the shortness of our lives at present an argument
- that neither did they attain so long a duration of life....
-
- Now I have for witnesses to what I have said all those that have
- written Antiquities, both among the Greeks and barbarians, for
- even Manetho, who wrote the Egyptian history, and Berosus, who
- collected the Chaldean monuments, and Mochus, and Hestiaeus, and
- beside these, Hiernonymous the Egyptian, and those who composed
- the Phoenician history, agree with what I here say: Hesiod also,
- and Hecataeus, Hellanicaus, and Acuzilaus, and besides Ephorus
- and Nicolaus relate that the ancients lived a thousand years:
- but as to these matters, let everyone look upon them as he sees
- fit.[7]
-
- Unfortunately, practically none of the works referred to by Josephus are
- still existing, and this again shows how little we know of the past. But
- in existing Norse sagas it is said that people in ancient times lived
- for many centuries. In addition, the Norse sagas describe a progression
- of ages, including an age of peace, an age when different social orders
- were introduced, an age of increasing violence, and a degraded
- "knife-age and axe-age with cloven shields."[8] The latter is followed
- by a period of annihilation, called Ragnarok, after which the world is
- restored to goodness.
-
- The Norse Ragnarok involves the destruction of the earth and the abodes
- of the Norse demigods (called Asgard), and thus it corresponds in Vedic
- chronology to the annihilation of the three worlds that follows 1,000
- yuga cycles, or one day of Brahma. It is said that during Ragnarok the
- world is destroyed with flames by a being called Surt, who lives beneath
- the lower world (appropriately called Hel) and was involved in the
- world's creation. By comparison, the Srimad Bhagavatam (3.11.30) states
- that at the end of Brahma's day, "the devastation takes place due to the
- fire emanating from the mouth of Sankarsana." Sankarsana is a plenary
- expansion of Krsna who is "seated at the bottom of the universe" (Srimad
- Bhagavatam 3.8.3), beneath the lower planetary systems.
-
- There are many similarities between the Norse and Vedic cosmologies, but
- there are also great differences. One key difference is that in the
- Srimad Bhagavatam, all beings and phenomena within the universe are
- clearly understood as part of the divine plan of Krsna, the Supreme
- Personality of Godhead. In contrast, in the Norse mythology God is
- conspicuously absent, and the origin and purpose of the major players in
- the cosmic drama are very obscure. Surt, in particular, is a "fire
- giant" whose origins and motives are unclear even to experts in the
- Norse literature.[9]
-
- One might ask, If Vedic themes appear in many different societies, how
- can one conclude that they derive from an ancient Vedic civilization?
- Perhaps they were created in many places independently, or perhaps they
- descend from an unknown culture that is also ancestral to what we call
- Vedic culture. Thus parallels between the accounts of Surt and
- Sankarsana may be coincidental, or perhaps the Vedic account derives
- from a story similar to that of Surt.
-
- Our answer to this question is that available empirical evidence will
- not be sufficient to prove the hypothesis of descent from an ancient
- Vedic culture, for all empirical evidence is imperfect and subject to
- various interpretations. But we can decide whether or not the evidence
- is consistent this hypothesis.
-
- If there was an ancient Vedic world civilization, we would expect to
- find traces of it in many cultures around the world. We do seem to find
- such traces, and many agree with Vedic accounts in specific details
- (such as the location of Surt's abode or the sacred buffalo's loss of
- one leg per world age). Since this civilization began to lose its
- influence thousands of years ago, at the beginning of Kali-yuga, we
- would expect many of these traces to be fragmentary and overlain by many
- later additions, and this we also see. Thus the available evidence seems
- to be consistent with the hypothesis of a Vedic origin.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- [1] E. C. Sachau, trans., Alberuni's India
- (Delhi: S. Chand & Co., 1964), pp. 383-4.
- [2] J. E. Brown, ed., The Sacred Pipe
- (Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1971), p. 9.
- [3] D. Neugebauer, History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy
- (Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1975), pp. 608-9.
- [4] J. D. North, "Chronology & the Age of the World," in Cosmology,
- History & Theology, eds. Wolfgang Yourgrau and A. D. Breck
- (N. Y.: Plenum Press, 1977), p. 315.
- [5] D. W. Patten and P. A. Patten, "A Comprehensive Theory on Aging,
- Gigantism & Longevity," Catastrophism & Ancient History,
- Vol. 2, Part 1 (Aug. 1979), p. 24.
- [6] J. D. North, Ibid., p. 316-7.
- [7] D. W. Patten, Ibid., p. 29.
- [8] V. Rydberg, Teutonic Mythology, R. B. Anderson, trans.
- (London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co., 1889), pp. 88,94.
- [9] Ibid., pp. 448-9.
-
- END OF ARTICLE
-
- Posted by Kalki Dasa for Back to Godhead
-
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