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Vedic
Archeology
The
Heliodorus Column
Most Vaisnavas
refer to
Krishna as having appeared 5,000 years ago and generally credit
Vedic civilization and Vaisnavism with great antiquity. But what hard,
empirical proof do we have for this assertion? Certainly some
archeological or other evidence must exist to confirm or deny these
claims. Herein, we shall survey the most prominent archeological
discoveries that clearly demonstrate the antiquity of Krishna worship
and Vaisnavism.
First
of all, detailed historical evidence of Vedic
civilization is not that easy to come by, since the Vedic culture
itself seems to have not valued the keeping of histories. In his book Traditional
India, O. L. Chavarria- Aguilar writes of Indians: "A more un-
historical
people would be difficult to find." Vedic civilization believed in
recording the eternal and infinite. The ephemeral details of daily life
(so much the concern of contemporary people) need not be recorded,
since they had so little bearing on the larger, more significant goals
of human life. Leisure time was to be used for self-realization,
cultural pursuits, and worship of God–not rehashing current events or
the past. Therefore, practically no histories, according to the Western
concept of history, exist today about ancient India, because none were
written.
Into
this vacuum of historical data on India’s past
stepped the European scholars during the last several hundred years,
and it is interesting to note how they first dealt with what they
found. Religious scholars were especially shocked to observe the
remarkable similarities between the lives and philosophies of Krishna
and Jesus Christ. As a defensive reflex they automatically assumed that
Indians must have come across Christianity in the early centuries after
Christ’s ministry and had assimilated much of it into their own
religious tradition. This slant on Vaisnavism was called "the borrowing
theory" and gained many adherents in the West. Concerning this
viewpoint, Hemchandra Raycaudhuri in his book Materials for
the Study of the Early History of the Vaisnava Sect writes,
"The appearance in India of a religion of Bhakti [devotion] was, in the
opinion of several eminent Western scholars, an event of purely
Christian origin. Christianity, according to these scholars, exercised
an influence of greater or less account on the worship and story of
Krishna."
In
1762 in Rome, P. Georgi was the first Western
scholar to propound this theory. In his Alphabetum Tibetanum
he wrote that "Krishnu" is only a "corruption of the name of the
Saviour; the deeds correspond wonderfully with the name, though they
have been impiously and cunningly polluted by most wicked imposters."
The extreme fanaticism of Georgi’s position was soon repudiated by
other Western scholars. Even pro-Christian researchers admitted that
the name Krishna existed before the birth of Jesus, but they still
maintained that the life of Krishna and the philosophy of Vaisnavism
had undergone major transformations because of Christian influence.
In his
monograph Uber die Krishnajanmasthami, Albrecht
Weber pointed out the many and striking similarities between the birth
stories of Krishna and Jesus. The following quote from his work notes
many of these similarities:
Take,
for
example the statement of the Vishnu Purana that Nanda, the
foster-father of Krishna, at the time of the latter’s birth, went with
his pregnant wife Yasoda to Mathura to pay taxes (cf. Luke II, 4, 5) or
the pictorial representation of the birth of Krishna in the cowstall or
shepherd’s hut, that corresponds to the manger, and of the shepherds,
shepherdesses, the ox and the ass that stand round the woman as she
sleeps peacefully on her couch without fear of danger. Then the stories
of the persecutions of Kamsa, of the massacre of the innocents, of the
passage across the river (Chris- tophorus), of the wonderful deeds of
the
child, of the healing-virtue of the water in which he was washed, etc.,
etc. Whether the accounts given in the Jaimini Bharata of the raising
to life by Krishna of the dead son of Duhsala, of the cure of Kubja, of
her pouring a vessel of ointment over him, of the power of his look to
take away sin, and other subjects of the kind came to India in the same
connection with the birth-day festival may remain an open question.
Weber
even contended that the whole Vedic system of
avatars, or incarnations of God, was
"borrowed" from
the "Incarnation of Jesus Christ."
Dr. F.
Lorinser translated
the Bhagavad-gita and compared it scrupulously to
the New Testament. He concluded, writes Raychaudhari, "that the author
of the Hindu poem knew and used the Gospels and Christian Fathers."
According to Lorinser, continues Raychaudhari, the similarities were
"not single and obscure, but numerous and clear …" There was no doubt
in Lorinser’s mind that the Bhagavat-gita had been
largely "borrowed" from the New Testament.
Other
Western scholars
disputed the borrowing theory. Sir William Jones’ studies found Krishna
to be one of the more ancient gods of India, who Vaisnavas asserted was
"distinct from all the Avatars, who had only [a]…portion of his
divinity …" In his fascinating and provocative work, On the
Gods Of Greece, Italy, And India, Sir William Jones writes
that "in the principal Sanskrit dictionary, compiled about two thousand
years ago, Krishna, Vasudeva, Govinda, and other names of the Shepherd
God, are intermixed with epithets of Narayana, or the Divine Spirit."
Following in the direction of Sir Jones’ research, Edward Moore even
went so far as to say that the popular Greek myths had some basis in
real life and could be traced ultimately to India. However, solid proof
for either side escaped their grasp, and the scholars theorized and
debated the issue back and forth. Literary evidence did exist in India
to prove that Vaisnavism predated Christianity, but this evidence was
brushed under the rug and given little credence until a Western
literary source decided the issue once and for all.
 The most important and
earliest non-Indian literary record of ancient India is found in the
book, Indica, written by Megasthenes. Sometime in
the third century BC, Meghastenes journeyed to India. The King of
Taxila had appointed him ambassador to the royal court at Pataliputra
of the great Vaisnava monarch, Chandragupta. Evidently while there,
Megasthenes wrote extensively on what he heard and saw. Unfortunately,
none of Megasthenes’ original book survived the ravages of time.
However, through Megasthenes’ early Greek and Roman commentators, like
Arrian, Diodorus, and Strabo, fragments of his original work are
available to us today, as well as Megasthenes’ general message. Dr.
Hein reports that Megasthenes "described Mathura as a place of great
regional importance and suggested that it was then, as now, a center of
Krishna worship."
Christian
Lassen was the
first Western scholar to bring Megasthenes into the debate on the
"borrowing theory." He noted that Megasthenes wrote of Krishna under
the pseudonym of Heracles and that "Heracles", or Krishna, was
worshipped as God in the area through which the Yamuna River flows.
 A respected Indologist,
Richard Garbe, agreed with Lassen’s analysis and called the testimony
of Megasthenes indisputable. Soon, scholars like Alan Dahlquist, who
had formerly supported the "borrowing theory," changed their minds and
admitted, in Dahlquist’s words, that Garbe had "exploded Weber’s theory
once and for all." The life of Krishna and the religion of Vaisnavism
had not been influenced by Christianity, but had appeared autonomously
on Indian soil and was already well-established by at least the third
century BC.
With
Megasthenes’ proof in hand, the credibility of
Indian literary sources became enhanced. The great grammarian and
author of the Yoga Sutras, Patanjali, who lived in
the second century BC, wrote that Krishna had slain the tyrant Kamsa in
the far distant past. Raychaudhari tells us the exact words were
"chirahate Kamse’ which means that Kamsa’s death occurred at a very
remote time." In the fifth century BC, the greatest Sanskrit
grammarian, Panini, mentions that Vaisnavism "was even in the fifth
century BC a religion of Bhakti," writes Raychaudhari. The Artha-shastra
of Kautila, from the fourth century BC, also refers several times to
Krishna, while the Baudhayana Dharma Sutra of the
same century gives twelve different names for Krishna, including
popular ones like Keshava, Govinda, and Damodara.
Since
Krishna is mentioned in the pre-Buddhistic Chandogya
Upanishad we must conclude that Krishna lived
before
Gautama Buddha (563?-?483 BC). The scriptures of the Jains push
Krishna’s life back farther still. Raychaudhari writes, "Jaina
tradition makes Krishna a contemporary of Arishtanemi… who is the
immediate predecessor of Parsvanatha…. As Parsvanatha flourished about
817 B.C., Krishna must have lived long before the closing years of the
ninth Century B.C." Of course, the Srimad Bhagavatam and
Mahabharata themselves place Krishna’s life at
about
3000 BC. Still, whatever the exact dates of Krishna’s earthly
appearance and disappearance, because of the abundance of evidence of
Krishna’s antiquity, The Cambridge History of India
definitely states that Krishna worship predates Christianity by many
centuries.
Let us
now turn our attention to the earliest
archeological discoveries regarding Krishna’s antiquity. By far the
most important discovery was made by the indefatigable General Sir
Alexander Cunningham in 1877. During an archeological survey of
Beshnagar in central India, he noted an ornamental column. The shape of
the column caused Cunningham to attribute it erroneously to the period
of the Gupta Dynasty (AD 300-550). Thirty-two years later, however, a
Mr. Lake felt he saw some lettering on the lower part of the column in
an area where pilgrims customarily smeared it with a lead, vermilion
paint. When the thick, red paint was removed, Lake’s hunch was proven
correct.
Dr. J.
H. Marshall, who accompanied Mr. Lake on
this investigation, was thrilled at the find’s significance. In the Journal
of the Royal Asiatic Society in 1909, he described his
conclusions. Cunningham had dated the column far too late and
could
little have dreamt of the value of the record
which he just missed discovering…. A glance at the few letters exposed
was all that was needed to show that the Column was many centuries
earlier than the Gupta era. This was, indeed, a surprise to me, but a
far greater one was in store when the opening lines of the inscription
came to be read

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The following
transliteration and translation of this ancient Brahmi inscription was
published in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (London:
JRAS, Pub., 1909, pp. 1053-54.
1)
Devadevasa Va [sude]vasa Garudadhvajo ayam 2) karito i[a] Heliodorena
bhaga- 3) vatena Diyasa putrena Takhasilakena 4) Yonadatena agatena
maharajasa 5) Amtalikitasa upa[m]ta samkasam-rano 6) Kasiput[r]asa
[Bh]agabhadrasa tratarasa 7) vasena [chatu]dasena rajena vadhamanasa
"This Garuda-column of Vasudeva (Visnu), the god
of gods, was
erected here by Heliodorus, a worshipper of Visnu, the son of Dion, and
an inhabitant of Taxila, who came as Greek ambassador from the Great
King Antialkidas to King Kasiputra Bhagabhadra, the Savior, then
reigning prosperously in the fourteenth year of his kingship."
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The
column had been erected in BC 113 by
Heliodorus, a Greek ambassador to India. He, like Megasthenes, hailed
from Taxila in the Bactrian region of northwest India, which had been
conquered by Alexander the Great in BC 325. By Heliodorus’ time Taxila
covered much of present-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the Punjab.
Taxila’s king, Antialkidas, had sent Heliodorus to the court of King
Bhagabhadra, but while Megasthenes had only written about Krishna and
Vaisnavism, Heliodorus had found them so attractive that he had adopted
the practice of Vaisnavism for his own spiritual advancement!
Heliodorus’
Column recognized Vasudeva, or Krishna, as the "God of gods."
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1)
Trini amutapadani‹[su] anuthitani 2) nayamti svaga damo chago apramado
"Three
immortal precepts (footsteps)... when
practiced lead to heaven‹self-restraint, charity, consciousness."
From
this inscription it is clear Heliodorus was a
Vaisnava, a devotee of Visnu.
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Raychaudhuri
maintains that
Heliodorus most probably was already acquainted with Vaisnavism in
Taxila, even before he went to India proper, since, "It was at that
city that Janamejaya heard from Vaishampayana the famous story of the
Kurus and the Pandus [the Mahabharata]."
Furthermore, Raychaudhuri then suggests, "Heliodorus of Taxila actually
heard and utilized the teaching of the great Epic, " since we know from
Panini that the Epic was "well known to the people of Gandhara
[Taxila]" long before the time of the Greek ambassador.
In
any case, by BC 113 Heliodorus publicly acknowledged in the most
conspicuous way that he held Vasudeva, or Krishna to be the "Gods of
all gods." He also had written on his column’s inscription that "Three
immortal precepts when practiced lead to heaven–self-restraint,
charity, and conscientiousness." These three virtues appear in the
exact same order in the Mahabharata, which makes
Professor Kunja Govinda Swami of Calcutta University conclude that
Heliodorus "was well acquainted with the texts dealing with the Bhagavat
[Vaisnava] religion." Raychaudhuri concurs that "there was some close
connection between the teaching of the Mahabharata and that of the
Besnagar Inscription," proving that Heliodorus was a knowledgeable
devotee of Vaisnavism.
The Heliodorus
Column also struck down the myth
that the Vedic religion never condoned the conversion of non-Indians to
its fold. While this exclusionary tendency has been manifest here and
there in India (although much less so in Vaisnavism), the Islamic
historian, Abu Raihan Alberuni, maintains that it was not practiced
until sometime after the Muslim incursions into India, which started
around AD 674. Alberuni went to India to study in AD 1017 and published
his findings in his book Indica (not to be confused
with Megasthenes’ work of the same title). He concluded that the
violent conflicts and forced conversions of Indians into Muslims made
Indians adopt an exclusionary policy, more out of self-defense than
religious principle. He discovered that, for many centuries prior to
the Muslim invasions, there was no bar to conversions, and the
Heliodorus Column certainly attests to this fact.
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