Harappa


The Chronicle of Sapta Sindhu
Harappa: Curse of the Blood River
New Perspectives on the Harappan Culture in Light of Recent Excavations at Rakhigarhi: 2011-2017; Bioarchaeological Research on the Rakhigarhi ... Archaeology and Updated Scientific Research
Gem in the Lotus: The Seeding of Indian Civilisation
Early Indians: The Story of Our Ancestors and Where We Came From
Kashi: Secret of the Black Temple (Harappa Series)
Pralay: The Great Deluge
A History of India, Vol. 1: From Origins to 1300
Subhajit Ganguly
Considering the fact that the Harappan script may have been proto-Brahmi, the underlying language to be expected should be Sanskrit, or proto-Sanskrit, or derivatives of Sanskrit. Many of the rules of evolution that apply to scripts are equivalently true for languages too. Like scripts, languages too render themselves to similar evolutionary inspections, as they too carry imprints of their journey down the ages.
Subhajit Ganguly, Call Of The Lost Ages: A Study Of The Indus Valley Script

Subhajit Ganguly
Sometimes, in the ancient writing samples found in the Indian subcontinent, we find that a mixture of Harappan and Brahmi features has been used. This definitely points towards a continuous evolutionary process that transformed the Harappan script into the later day Brahmi. This also explains why many of the Harappan signs seem to have been simply carried forward (even in actual form) in the Brahmi script.
Subhajit Ganguly, Call Of The Lost Ages - A Study Of The Indus Valley Script

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