HomeNewsTrendsAncient India's knowledge transfer to the world is the subject of William Dalrymple's new book

Ancient India's knowledge transfer to the world is the subject of William Dalrymple's new book

Commerce along sea routes was central to how Ancient Indian ideas spread around the world. William Dalrymple's new book traces how these ideas changed the world forever.

September 20, 2024 / 16:58 IST
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William Dalrymple's latest book is titled 'The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World'; and (right) Ashoka's visit to the Ramagrama stupa Sanchi Stupa 1 Southern gateway. (Images via Instagram, Dharma from Sadao/Wikimedia Commons 2.0)
William Dalrymple's latest book is titled 'The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World'; and (right) Ashoka's visit to the Ramagrama stupa Sanchi Stupa 1 Southern gateway. (Images via Instagram, Dharma from Sadao/Wikimedia Commons 2.0)

William Dalrymple is the closest thing we have to a pop-historian of India. Primarily because he is an established storyteller, a prerequisite for most historians but especially those who want to be read outside of the fraternity. But also because he has a knack for picking subjects and stories that are likely to find a more general audience. In his latest book, 'The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World', Dalrymple looks back at ancient Indian exports from Buddhism and Hinduism to astronomical texts, the number zero and the game of chess, and argues that more than the famous Silk Road, it was the waterways connecting India to Europe via Persia, Arabia and northern Africa to the west and China, South-East Asia and Sri Lanka to the east that helped India build its empire of ideas.

Now, a lot of this is already widely known in India. We knew about ancient India's vast trade networks as far as ancient Rome, and the incredible wealth that India had amassed exporting spices and gems among other things. We knew about the Kushans and the Gupta and the Chola dynasties. We knew about Ashoka and his conversion to Buddhism. We knew about the influence of the Ramayana and Mahabharat as far as South-East Asia, and the architectural legacy of Angkor Wat. We knew that Ashoka sent his children to spread the message of the Buddha and that his son Mahinda's seminars in Anuradhapura in Sri Lanka drew large crowds. We knew also about Aryabhata's contributions to maths and the phenomenal astronomical legacy of Indian cities like Ujjain and Udayagiri in present-day Madhya Pradesh that were centres of learning and excellence.

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What is less widely understood, and what Dalrymple explains in his book is how this exchange of knowledge happened. How both ancient India's economic prosperity and enormous soft power owed much to a success formula that continues to be hailed today: location, location, location (Dalrymple explains in 'The Golden Road' that it was India's monsoon winds that made very fast [for the time] and relatively safe sea travel possible off both the east and west coasts of the country).

In 'The Golden Road', Dalrymple also puts to work a long and illustrious cast of characters to make this case. Emperors Chandragupta Maurya (ruled 320-297 BC) and Ashoka (304-232 BC) share space in the book with Indian mathematicians Aryabhata (476-550 AD), Brahmgupta (598-670 AD) and Chajaka - the self-declared king of calculations who was interested in metallurgy and weighing metals.

There's a special focus also on the people and things that helped ideas move from India to the rest of the world. Like, the seventh-century Chinese traveller Xuanzang who visited many Buddhist monasteries in ancient India including Nava Vihara in northern Afghanistan and stayed for many years at Nalanda (in present-day Bihar). Xuanzang, along with Chinese empress Wu Zetian, was instrumental in bringing Buddhist learning and faith to China. As was Kumarajiva (344-413 AD), who translated Mahayana Buddhist texts like the 'Lotus Sutra' from Sanskrit into Chinese. (Dalrymple says this only obliquely in the book by charting out the route he took into "India" via present-day Afghanistan, but Xuanzang took the Silk Road to India and not the Golden Road.)