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Old 07-09-2023   #5
jay999
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Read the bullshit on here..They know fully well people will start doing google searches and the page was updated only yesterday.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bharatas_(tribe)

wtf is this shit >>> Etymology
Quote:
The name Bharata is of Indo-Aryan and Indo-Iranian origin, meaning "bearers" or "carriers"
Indo Iranian? What the fuckers are saying is, Aryans came from outside of India and settled in the north



Quote:
Two Bharatas, Devaśravas Bhārata and Devavāta Bhārata, are mentioned as living near the Āpayā, Sarasvatī and Dr̥ṣadvatī rivers.[6]

Devavāta's son, Sṛñjaya Daivavāta, defeated the Turvaśas, and is mentioned alongside Abhyāvartin Cāyamāna who defeated the Vṛcīvants under Varaśikha. These battles occurred at the Hariyūpiyā (modern Hali-āb) and Yavyāvatī rivers (modern Zhob) in what is now eastern Afghanistan.[7][8][9][10][11][12][13] In a hymn to Sarasvatī, it is stated that she aided (or is sought to aid) Vadhryaśva in defeating niggards, foreigners, insulters of gods, haters, and the sons of Br̥saya. Witzel notes that the name Br̥saya is of non-Indo-Aryan origin,[14][15] and Parpola proposes that the name came from the language of the Bactria–Margiana Archaeological Complex. He states that Br̥saya was a hereditary regnal title in the region, and that it existed even till the time of Alexander the Great.[16] In addition, the poet expresses the desire not to leave the Sarasvatī river (modern Helmand and Arghandab).[17][18][19][20] Both hymns mentioning the two are attributed to Bharadvāja Bārhaspatya.[21]

Under the chieftain Divodāsa Atithigva, the Bharatas moved through the Hindu Kush mountain range, which borders the Indian subcontinent in the northwest
Quote:
The Bharatas were an early Vedic tribe that existed in the latter half of the second millennium B.C.E.
Quote:
In the epic Mahābhārata, the ancestor of Kurus becomes Emperor Bharata, and his ruler and kingdom is called Bhārata.[43] The Bharata clan mentioned in Mahabharata is a Kuru clan which is a sub clan of the Puru clan who were the cousins of the Yadavas.[44] "Bhārata" today is an official name of the Republic of India.[45]
Bharat was the ancestors of the Kurus and Pandavs.
So why have they only put Kurus?
His kingdom was Hastinapur, which ruled pretty much India at that time.


Guess who the source is of this wiki update bullshit ?

That famous bitch Thapar, Romila (2002),

The Penguin History of Early India: From the Origins to AD 1300, Allen Lane; Penguin Press (published 2003), p. 114, ISBN 0141937424
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