Telling the world about the Indian millennium
Hindustan Times|December 07, 2024
Written engagingly and often drawing from new finds in archaeology, The Golden Road by William Dalrymple is rich in historical detail
Renuka Narayanan
Telling the world about the Indian millennium

History as taught in India is a 19th-century colonial construct. It is heavily Delhi-centric, ignoring other important histories such as that of the eastern seaboard and its audacious seafarers. The Cholas in their heyday, a millennium ago, are called a thalassocracy or maritime empire. But by cultural influence, not military conquest, for culture sailed like a bird perched on the shoulder of commerce. South-East Asia and China know this, as do Indians on the eastern coast. But modern India has not told her ancient tale well, either to herself or the world, a task newly accomplished by William Dalrymple's book, The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World.

Nobody has done this since A.L. Basham in The Wonder That Was India, in 1954, a book widely read in South-East Asian universities. And Sanjeev Sanyal's account of our maritime history, The Ocean of Churn (2016). So, let's first review a few things that we Asians do know about ourselves.

This story is from the December 07, 2024 edition of Hindustan Times.

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This story is from the December 07, 2024 edition of Hindustan Times.

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