Rise and Fall of
Sanskrit - In
Historical
Perspective
Sanskrit
-
the
only
preserved
and
the
most
ancient
of
all
languages,
generally
proclaimed
as
language
of
the
gods.
According
to
Indian
tradition,
Sanskrit
has
neither
beginning
nor
an
end.
It
is
eternal.
It
is
everlasting.
Historically,
the
Sanskrit
was
adopted,
developed
and
refined
by
the
invading
Aryans
in
the
Indus
Valley,
during
1500 BC.
Sanskrit
survived
as
the
language
of
religion,
literature
and
Hindu
philosophy
for
over
3,357
years,
dating
from
about
1500
BC
to
a
close
AD
1857.
The
term
Aryans,
Indo-
Europeans
and
Indo-European
Languages
?
frequently
used
by
historians
is
misleading;
it
is
not
correct
that
the
Aryans
or
the
Indo-
Europeans
were
part
of
a
great
civilized
nation.
Aryan
is
a
term
that
refers
to
migrants
who
settled
in
the
Indus
Valley;
they
were
a
mixed
people;
wanderers,
criminals,
mercenaries
from
the
areas
now
known
as
Afghanistan,
Iran,
the
tribal
areas
of
Pakistan
and
Central
Asia
down
to
the
Caspian
Sea.
In
modern
terms
they
can
be
identified
as
Pashtun,
Tajik,
Uzbek,
Hazara,
Kamboja,
Yusufzai,
Afridi,
Khilji
and
the
other
Turkic
tribes.
The
present-day
Talibans
and
most
of
the
people
affiliated
with
Al-Qaeda
are also the descendants of the Aryans.
Quis ut aliquip est proident
lorem est proident