Philip Jodidio - <p>India is often perceived by the general public as an ancient civilization steeped in age-old tradition resistant to outside influence. History shows the very opposite to have been true throughout the ages. The remarkable aptitude of India at integrating loans and recasting them on its own terms into thoroughly new creations may owe something to the historical process that led to the make-up of its population: the slow penetration, spread over centuries, of Indo-European speakers arriving amid populations ethnically and linguistically unrelated to them.</p><p><span style="font-weight: bold;"><br></span></p><p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Source</span><br></p><p>From&nbsp;The Mughal Period: A Pluralist Society&nbsp;in <span style="font-style: italic;">Heritage of the Mughal World</span> (Philip Jodidio, editor)</p>

The Syncretic Culture of Hindustan

Type
book section
Year
2015

India is often perceived by the general public as an ancient civilization steeped in age-old tradition resistant to outside influence. History shows the very opposite to have been true throughout the ages. The remarkable aptitude of India at integrating loans and recasting them on its own terms into thoroughly new creations may owe something to the historical process that led to the make-up of its population: the slow penetration, spread over centuries, of Indo-European speakers arriving amid populations ethnically and linguistically unrelated to them.


Source

From The Mughal Period: A Pluralist Society in Heritage of the Mughal World (Philip Jodidio, editor)

Citation

Melikian-Chirvani, Assadullah Souren. "The Syncretic Culture of Hindustan". In Heritage of the Mughal World, edited by Philip Jodidio, 43-65. Munich: Prestel, 2015.


Parent Publications

Authorities

Copyright

Prestel and the Aga Khan Trust for Culture

Country

Afghanistan
India

Language

English

Keywords