:
But recent discovery of 14000+ BC year old city found.Which had a huge
Dock and Port.It is a port city .So it Proves Ancient Hindus invented
Ships too. Greatest Civilization on this Planent Yest to be Declared has
Mother of All Human Civilization. Truth can be hidden But History
cannot be changed.All western civilizations are puzzled by the facts
emerge one by one every day and every
minute. The time will come all human will return to their Mother
Religion Real Culture. Jai Sri RAM... Read More
The art of
Navigation was born in the river Sindhu 6000 years ago. The very word
Navigation is derived from the Sanskrit word ‘Navgatih’. The word navy
is also derived from Sanskrit ‘Nou’. In those days India had colonies,
in Cambodia (Kambuja in Sanskrit) in Java, (Chavakam or Yava dwipa) in
Sumatra, in Borneo, Socotra (Sukhadhara) and even in Japan. Indian
traders had established settlements in Southern China, in the Malayan
Peninsula, in Arabia, in Egypt, in Persia, etc., Through the Persians
and Arabs, India had cultivated trade relations with the Roman Empire.
Sanskrit and Pali literature has innumerable references to the maritime
activity of Indians in ancient times. There is also one treatise in
Sanskrit, named Yukti Kalpa Taru which has been compiled by a person
called Bhoja Narapati. (The Yukti Kalpa Taru (YKT) had been translated
and published by Prof. Aufrecht in his ‘Catalogue of Sanskrit Manu
scripts. An excellent study of the YKT had been undertaken by Dr. Radha
Kumud Mookerji entitled ‘Indian Shipping’. Published by Orient Longman,
Bombay in 1912.) A panel found at Mohenjodaro, depicting a sailing
craft. Vessels were of many types Their construction is vividly
described in the Yukti Kalpa Taru an ancient Indian text on
Ship-building. This treatise gives a technocratic exposition on the
technique of shipbuilding. It sets forth minute details about the
various types of ships, their sizes, the materials from which they were
built. The Yukti Kalpa Taru sums up in a condensed form all the
available information The Yukti Kalpa Taru gives sufficient information
and date to prove that in ancient times, Indian shipbuilders had a good
knowledge of the materials which were used in building ships. Apart
from describing the qualities of the different types of wood and their
suitability in shipbuilding, the Yukti Kalpa Taru also gives an
elaborate classification of ships based on their size. The primary
division is into 2 classes viz. Samanya (ordinary) and Vishesha
(Special). The ordinary type for sea voyages. Ships that undertook sea
voyages were classified into, Dirgha type of ships which had a long and
narrow hull and the Unnata type of ships which had a higher hull. The
treatise also gives elaborate directions for decorating and furnishing
the ships with a view to making them comfortable for passengers. Also
mentioned are details about the internal seating and accommodation to be
provided on the ships. Three classes of ships are distinguished
according to their length and the position of cabins. The ships having
cabins extending from one end of the deck to the other are called
Sarvamandira vessels. These ships are recommended for the transport of
royal treasure and horses. The next are the Madhyamarnandira vessels
which have cabins only in the middle part of their deck. these vessels
are recommended for pleasure trips. And finally there is a category of
Agramandira vessels, these ships were used mainly in warfare.
MACCHA-YANTRA – THE ANCIENT INDIAN MARINER’S COMPASS There were
Sanskrit terms for many parts of a ship. The ship’s anchor was known as
Nava-Bandhan-Kilaha which literally means ‘A Nail to tie up a ship’ .
The sail was called Vata Vastra a which means ‘wind-cloth’. The hull was
termed StulaBhaga i.e. an’expanded area’. The rudder was called
Keni-Pata, Pata means blade; the rudder was also known as Karna which
literally means a ‘ear’ and was so called because it used to be a hollow
curved blade, as is found today in exhaust fans. The ship’s keel was
called Nava-Tala which means ‘bottom of a ship’. The mast was known as
Kupadanda, in which danda means a pole. Even a sextant was used for
navigation and was called Vruttashanga-Bhaga. But what is more
surprising is that even a contrived mariner’s compass was used by Indian
navigators nearly 1500 to 2000 years ago. “The early Hindu astrologers
are said to have used the magnet, in fixing the North and East, in
laying foundations, and other religious ceremonies. The Hindu compass
was an iron fish that floated in a vessel of oil and pointed to the
North. The fact of this older Hindu compass seems placed beyond doubt by
the Sanskrit word Maccha Yantra, or fish machine, which Molesworth
gives as a name for the mariner’s compass”. It is significant to note
that these are the words of a foreign Naval Architect and Shipbuilding
Expert. It is thus quite possible that the Maccha Yantra (fish machine)
was transmitted to the west by the Arabs to give us the mariner’s
compass of today. Indian shipping has thus had a long and brilliant
history covering a period of about five millennia from the very dawn of
India’s civilization in the Indus Valley. Both Hindu and Buddhistic
texts are thus replete with references to the sea-borne trade of India
that directly and indirectly demonstrate the existence of a national
shipping and shipbuilding. It was one of the great national key industry
of India. Indeed, all the evidence available clearly shows that for
full thirty centuries India stood at the very heart of the commercial
world, cultivating trade relations successively with the Phoenicians,
Jews, Assyrians, Greeks, Egyptians, and Romans in ancient times, and
Turks, Venetians, Portuguese, Dutch and English in modern times. There
is enough evidence to prove that Indians maintained their maritime
activity through out the ancient and mediaeval periods, naturally with
variations in its extent and excellence, over such a long period of
time. Both Basham and Marxist historians of India have presented
untruth, and half truth as truth. Sylvain Levi French art Historian has
shown how references in the Ramayana, Mahabharata, Mahaniddesa and
Brihat-Katha that the products of Burma and Malaya Peninsula were known
to Indian merchants and sailors and also some of its ports such as
Suvarnakudya, Suvarnabhumi, Takkolam, Tamlin and Javam from at least
first century A.D. (source: Ancient India – By V. D. Mahajan p.
752-753). That Indian traders and settlers repeatedly undertook
journeys to Southeast Asia, despite the hazards and perils involved,
speaks well for their physical prowess, courage, and determination, even
if allowance for the pull of profit is made. Historian K. M. Panikkar,
who in his brilliant exposition, India and the Indian Ocean, speaks
about the ‘influence of the Indian Ocean on the shaping of Indian
history.’ For Panikkar, the geographical ‘imperative’ of the Indian
Ocean – and indeed the Himalaya in the North – has conditioned and
shaped the history and civilization of this subcontinent. ‘The
importance of geographical path on the development of history is only
now receiving wide and general recognition,’But recent discovery of
14000+ BC year old city found.Which had a huge Dock and Port.It is a
port city .So it Proves Ancient Hindus invented Ships too. Greatest
Civilization on this Planent Yest to be Declared has Mother of All Human
Civilization. Truth can be hidden But History cannot be changed.All
western civilizations are puzzled by the facts emerge one by one every
day and every minute. The time will come all human will return to their
Mother Religion Real Culture. Jai Sri RAM
All western civilizations are puzzled by the facts emerge one by one every day and every minute.www.performqanceautocarrier.com
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