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One of the big contentions of popular historian William Dalrymple’s latest book “The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World,” which came out in the United States a few weeks ...
Today's WorldView How ancient India changed the world. The Indian subcontinent’s connections to the West, especially via the Roman empire, were far richer than once thought.
Madhya Pradesh's lone hill town, Pachmarhi, offers serene natural wonders and ancient caves steeped in lore - explore the top ...
GUJARAT, India (RNS) — In western India, where thousands of monks once worshipped in caves chiseled into the rocky hills, a fight is on to keep Hindu chauvinists from erasing a 2,000-year-old ...
ancient india and the roman empire Recent archaeological discoveries are leading to a radical revision by scholars of the intensity, scale and importance of maritime trade between the Subcontinent ...
William Dalrymple On Why It Is A "Surprise That India Dominated Asia For 1,000 Years" William Dalrymple pointed out Rome and India were the main trading partners of each other in ancient India and ...
The elephant fossils themselves were found in 2000 in Pampore in the Kashmir Valley, India, and date back to between 300,00 and 400,000 years ago. However, quite which species the fossils belonged ...
Mahakumbh 2025: 'Sangam' of India's ancient rituals, rich culture and super-advanced technology Mahakumbh 2025: The main bathing rituals of Kumbh Mela, known as the Shahi Snan (royal baths), will ...
Ancient India’s greatest engineering achievement wasn’t a monument but a metamorphosis. When Emperor Ashoka, who ruled most of the Indian subcontinent in the third century BCE, saw the carnage ...