1/n One of the forgotten traditions of ancient India is the breeding & training of expert dogs for hunting & tracking. It has been a warrior tradition for thousands of years. One of the earliest mentions is in the Ramayana, where Bharata is presented with a group of hunting dogs
2/n Such royal hounds were bred by his grandfather & are described as huge dogs with fang like spears & the strength & courage of tigers. They come from the Kaikeya country (R 2:64:21). This pastime of hunting with a pack of expertly trained hounds was called Shvaganika.
3/n Shvaganika was a favorite pastime of Kshatriyas. In the Mahabharata, a hunting party of Kauravas & Pandavas is accompanied by a dog & its keeper. (Mbh 1,123,15) The practice is also mentioned by Panini (Panini 4:4:11 ) & Kalidasa also refers to it in his poetry.
4/n Some of these hounds had beautiful golden leashes and collars studded with gems. The Arthashastra prescribes a fine of 54 Panas for the theft or killing of such dogs & other pets. (Arthashasta 4:10:2) It also refers to special houses or kennels for dogs.
5/n According to Chanakya, The Superintendent of Pasture lands must have among his helpers, hunters with packs of expertly trained hunting dogs. (Arthashastra 2:34:9) In Brihat Samhita, Varahamihira devotes an entire chapter to the predictive abilities of such dogs
6/n The qualities of a good hunting dog who brings good fortune to its owner are also elaborated. Rudradeva’s Syainikashastra also gives accounts of hunting with a pack of hounds. The Macalas dogs of Vidarbha were so fierce that they could kill tigers (Jaiminiya Brahmana).
7/n In the Bhallatiyajataka, an account describes the king going to hunt “with a well-trained pack of clever pedigree hounds”. It also describes royal kennels for these treasured dogs. Murals in Ajanta (Cave XVII) feature such dogs as well.
8/n One of the murals tell a story from the Mriga Jataka about a queen who wants a golden deer. In a scene referred to as “The Return of the King”, the king sets out and captures a golden deer and returns with it in his chariot. Men with dogs on leashes follow the chariot.
9/n Another story is from the Sutasoma Jataka, about Sudasa, the king of Varanasi, who sets out on a hunt with a pack of dogs. They look distinctive – brown-coloured, short-eared, round-headed, with short tails & are held by leashes.
10/n 4300 years ago, Indian sailors of the Sarasvati Sindhu civilization may also have carried such dogs across oceans. A study done in Adelaide, at the Australian Centre for Ancient DNA, has linked ancient Indian canine visitors to the dingoes of Australia.
11/n Other ancient travel accounts tell us that these expertly trained Indian dogs were so widely valued that many other countries sought them as prized possessions. They were particularly valued for their ferocity for military operations & served as formidable aides in battles
12/n During the reign of Artaxerxes I, the king of Persia (465-425 BCE), four revenue-free villages were allotted to the Assyrian governor exclusively for the purpose of maintaining and breeding hunting dogs received from India. They were given a special diet & luxurious kennels.
13/n When Alexander the Great came to India (326 BCE) , King Sopeithes of Gandhara, gifted him 150 hunting dogs as a sign of brokering peace. To demonstrate the ferocity of these dogs, two of them were set loose with a lion. One of the dogs suffered a badly injured leg.
14/n Yet it still held onto the lion. Alexander watched the display of tenacity with complete awe. In his book Indica, the Greek writer, Ctesias (415-397 BCE), talks about an Indian tribe called Kynomologol that kept many large, ferocious dogs to protect them from wild animals.
15/n Many distinctive breeds of native Indian dogs carry the genes of these amazing expert hounds from ancient times. From the Rampur & Mahratta Greyhound, Pariah, Bully Kuttas to the Mahidant mastiffs, these indigenous breeds deserve to be conserved & saved from extinction.
Other References:
India in ancient Greek References - Kalus Karttunen
History of Civilization in ancient India - Romesh Chander Dutt
Maritime Gujarat - Kale, A.
* Klaus Karttunen
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1/n Are Hindus sacrificial lambs to keep bleating in weakness or will we ever see our true reflection & recognize our real strength? Swami Vivekananda in his speech “The Essence Of Religion” narrates a Vedantic tale that is pertinent now more than ever. If you get it, you get it.
2/n “There was once a baby lion left by its dying mother among some sheep. The sheep fed it and gave it shelter. The lion grew apace and said "Baaa" when the sheep said "Baaa". One day another lion came by. "What do you do here?" said the second lion in astonishment
3/n He had heard the sheep - lion bleating with the rest. "Baaa," said the other. "I am a little sheep, I am a little sheep, I am frightened." "Nonsense!" roared the first lion, "come with me; I will show you." And he took him to the side of a smooth stream
1/n Swami Vivekananda knew all too well the role of Hinduism compared to Semitic creeds. Excerpts of his quotes (1893) to the Chicago Daily Tribune & essays ‘The World needs Indian thought’ & ‘Dangers Ahead’ illuminate his enlightening views & warning to Hindus about their future
2/n “We who come from the East have sat here on the platform day after day and have been told in a patronizing way that we ought to accept Christianity because Christian nations are the most prosperous.”
3/n “We look at history and see that the prosperity of Christian Europe began with Spain. Spain’s prosperity began with the invasion of Mexico. Christianity wins its prosperity by cutting the throats of its fellowmen. At such a price Hindus will not have prosperity.
1/n Vanity is never out of style. Ancient Bharatiyas of Saraswati Sindhu had sophisticated grooming tools to look good. Pictured is a 3 in 1 copper gadget (Mohenjodaro, 2600 BCE) with tweezers for stray hairs, ear picker for cleaning ear wax & a tooth picker to keep teeth clean
2/n Attention to hair care & ornamentation are evidenced by discoveries of exported ivory hair combs (Oman, 2500 BCE), decorative metallic hair pins (Harappa, 2100 BCE), & sculptures depicting elaborate hairstyles such as the famous dancing girl (Mohenjodaro, 2600 BCE)
3/n Men's grooming tools such as razors & bottles to hold cosmetics like eyeliner (Kajal) were also unearthed (Mohenjodaro, 2600 BCE). Sculptures reveal that Kajal was used by both men & women to decorate & protect their eyes.
1/n For decades, Leftist & Islamophile historians have claimed that just as Muslim invaders destroyed temples & institutions, so did Hindu kings persecute Buddhists & Jain places of worship. This claim has been propounded by them to justify the iconoclasm of Islam
2/n By suggesting religion had nothing to do with destruction by Islamic invaders & implying intolerance finds support in Hindu practice, they achieve the dual goal of dividing Hindus, Buddhists & Jains as well as glossing over the inherent religious roots of Islamic iconoclasm.
3/n Sita Ram Goel has elaborated how Marxist professors explain away Islamic iconoclasm in terms of what they describe as Hindu destruction of Buddhist and Jain places of worship. They have never been able to cite more than half-a-dozen cases of doubtful veracity.
1/n Over 2 millennia ago, Chandragupta Maurya’s government had a sophisticated & stringent system to detect, prevent & deal with the problem of illegal immigration & malicious activities by foreign nations. Chanakya’s masterpiece Arthashastra provides key details
2/n The office of the Superintendent of Passports was extremely strict about issuing passports. Two witnesses were needed to establish proof along with documents. Only valid & current passport holders were allowed to enter into, or go out of, the country.
3/n Anyone without a passport was fined 12 Panas. A foreigner guilty of the same was fined an astronomical 1200 Panas & imprisonment. A special department in the City Superintendent's office in border areas was responsible for examining passports again at border crossings.
1/n Did you know Alexander the "Great" was such a great strategist that he thought the Indus river was the source of the Nile in Egypt? Despite spies scouting India's geography before his "conquest", he thought that the Eastern Ocean (Bay of Bengal) lay after the Beas river.
2/n Alexander’s poor knowledge of geography was based on his teacher Aristotle who knew nothing about the Ganges river system. No Alexander writer or geographer before Ptolemy mentions even the Sutlej. Justin’s statement that Alexander conquered Magadha was completely fictional.
3/n The truth is he never even reached the Ganga. The soldiers thought they were just one river away from the edge of India at the river Beas. His army rebelled & refused to go further after the Battle of Hydapses (Jhelum).