Books > History > World history > BCE to 500 CE
|
Buy Now
Meluhha - A Visible Language (Paperback)
Loot Price: R967
Discovery Miles 9 670
|
|
Meluhha - A Visible Language (Paperback)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
This monumental book is a master-piece in world literature, theory
of knowledge, Vedic hermeneutics and boundaries of the sacred. It
makes path-breaking contributions to understanding links of
life-activities with language, art and written communication for 3
millennia from ca 4th millennium BCE. The change in paradigm of art
appreciation is hermeneutics -- hermeneuo, 'translate' or
'interpret' -- of ancient texts. The book shows most of the early
art forms and symbols not as abstractions but founded on
underlying, meaningful speech and as innovations to match
artificers' inventions, which define the transition from
chalcolithic age to bronze age, particularly in the Ancient Near
East. Masterpieces of bronze-age art demonstrate Meluhha semantics.
This is a tribute to the artisans of the Bronze-age Indo-Eurasia
who laid the foundations for 1) an industrial revolution with the
invention of tin-bronzes and brass and 2) a cultural revolution
with the invention of writing systems. The glyphs of early writing
systems of Bronze-age in Ancient Near East, represent a visible
language of Meluhha. A synonym of 'visible language' is 'incised
speech' takshat vaak, (a metaphor used in what is possibly the
oldest human document, the Rgveda.) It is likely that many unique
pictorial motifs on cylinder seals of contact areas of
Sumer-Elam-Mesopotamia were inspired by the Meluhha cipher since
some hieroglyphs used in a metallurgy-lapidary context are also
used in the contact areas, together with cuneiform texts. This
calls for a re-evaluation of some art-historians' interpretation of
some symbols explained in astronomical or religious contexts.
Homonymous glosses matching the glyphs explain the semantics of
Meluhha. The writing systems were intended to document trade and
workshop processes of the bronze-age merchants, smiths and
lapidaries. This context is exemplified by two terms used in
ancient texts naming writing systems: 1. mlecchita vikalpa (cipher
of mleccha/meluhha), a term attesed ca. 6th century BCE by
Vatsyayana; 2. kharosti (cognate harosheth hagoyim, 'smithy of
nations'). The writing systems on cylinder seals of
Sumer-Elam-Mesopotamia and on Indus script corpora are based on
rebus method -- rendering mleccha language metallurgy-related or
bronze-age workshop-related sememes. Such sememes are attested in
many languages of Indian sprachbund providing a framework to
outlinine features of mleccha (Meluhha) language of
artisans/traders of Bronze-age. Meluhha were sea-faring merchants
and artisans working in tin, zinc, copper and other bronze-age
alloying minerals (attested in cuneiform texts). Meluhha
settlements are also attested in Ancient Near East archaeology.
Meluhha Smithy (kole.l) denotes the divine space, a temple
(kole.l). Implements produced in a smithy and repertoire of a
smithy denote attributes of the divine. This world-view of Meluhha
is discerned from hundreds of cylinder seals with hundreds of
hieroglyphs - as visible language or incised Meluhha speech. A list
of Meluhha glosses evidenced in Indian sprachbund is presented. A
list of languages and dialects listed in Indo-Aryan, Dravidian and
Munda lexicons annexed to the list constitutes a resource base for
identifying and clustering semantics of Meluhha. The intimations of
semantics conveyed by Meluhha cipher should be augmented by further
language explorations and studies to detail the grammatical
features of Meluhha/mleccha language. Such studies could be on the
lines of Jules Bloch's La formation de la Langue Marathe and of
Prakrit grammars. apurvyaa purustamanyasmai mahe viiraaya tavase
turaaya; viripzane vajrine zantamaani vacaamsyaasaa sthaviiaaya
taksham (RV. VI.32.1) Trans.: a seer has composed, inscribed,
unprecedented, comprehensive and gratifying praises for the mighty
Indra. The word 'taksham' is a reference to the metaphor of incised
speech. The composers of the chandas, our ancestors, are artisans,
architects, inquirers par excellenc
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
You might also like..
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.