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Limitations & Quick Revision






⚡ Topic 05 of 5 · Chapter 01 · Quick Revision

Limitations of Sources & Quick Revision

Limitations of each source type, key scholars, comparison table, and complete chapter revision checklist.

⚠️ Limitations of Each Source Type

Source TypeLimitations
ArchaeologicalSilent on political history; only durable materials survive; interpretation varies; biased towards elites; IVC script undeciphered
Literary — ReligiousMix myth with history; written by Brahmins (biased); no fixed dates; oral tradition errors; glorify religion over facts
Literary — SecularCourt poets glorify rulers; Arthashastra is prescriptive (ideal), not descriptive (actual); limited coverage
Foreign AccountsOutsiders misunderstood Indian customs; language barriers; limited areas visited; personal biases; Megasthenes’ Indica survives only in fragments
InscriptionsRulers record victories, not defeats; formal language; limited to important events; many undiscovered
CoinsCannot tell us about social history; limited to rulers and trade; forgeries exist

👨‍🏫 Key Scholars & Their Contributions

ScholarContribution
James PrinsepDeciphered Brahmi script (1837) — unlocked Ashokan edicts
Alexander CunninghamFounded ASI (1861); identified ancient sites; wrote Archaeological Survey Reports
John MarshallDiscovered IVC (1920s); excavated Taxila, Mohenjo-daro
Mortimer WheelerScientific excavation of Harappa (1944); introduced stratigraphy
R.D. BanerjiDiscovered Mohenjo-daro (1922)
Daya Ram SahniExcavated Harappa (1921)
R. ShamasastryRediscovered and translated Arthashastra (1904)
Vincent SmithWrote “Early History of India” — pioneering work on ancient Indian history

✅ Complete Chapter 01 Revision Checklist

✅ Sources of ancient history: Archaeological, Literary, Foreign Accounts
✅ ASI founded: 1861 by Alexander Cunningham
✅ Brahmi script deciphered: James Prinsep (1837)
✅ IVC discovered: Harappa by Daya Ram Sahni (1921); Mohenjo-daro by R.D. Banerji (1922)
✅ Arthashastra: Kautilya; rediscovered by R. Shamasastry (1904)
✅ Indica: Megasthenes (Greek ambassador to Chandragupta Maurya)
✅ Fa-Hien: Visited during Chandragupta II (Gupta); wrote Fo-Kuo-Chi
✅ Xuanzang: Visited during Harshavardhana; wrote Si-Yu-Ki
✅ Al-Biruni: Came with Mahmud of Ghazni; wrote Kitab-ul-Hind
✅ Ibn Battuta: Visited during Muhammad bin Tughlaq; wrote Rihla
✅ Allahabad Pillar: Samudragupta (by Harishena)
✅ Aihole Inscription: Pulakesi II (by Ravikirti)
✅ Junagarh Inscription: Rudradaman I — first long Sanskrit inscription
✅ Hathigumpha Inscription: Kharavela of Kalinga
✅ Rajatarangini: Kalhana — India’s first historical chronicle
✅ Punch-marked coins: Earliest Indian coins (600 BCE); silver/copper
✅ Indo-Greek coins: First coins with rulers’ portraits in India
✅ Gupta gold coins (Dinaras): Highest quality ancient Indian coins
✅ PGW (Painted Grey Ware): Later Vedic period (1000–600 BCE)
✅ NBPW (Northern Black Polished Ware): Mahajanapada period (600–200 BCE)