*WAS CHOTANAGPUR (JHARKHAND), THE LANKA
<http://www.shvoong.com/tags/lanka/>OF RAMAYANA?
*
*By*
*Dr. Nitish Priyadarshi.*

http://www.shvoong.com/social-sciences/anthropology/1753065-chotanagpur-jharkhand-lanka-ramayana/

At present many Indian news channels are searching the historical records of
the Lord Ram and place of incidents in
RAMAYANA<http://www.shvoong.com/tags/ramayana/>in country of Sri Lanka
as well as in India. After the Ram Setu controversy
many of us are showing  interest regarding the existence of Lord Ram and his
warriors. Recently I found an old research
report<http://www.shvoong.com/tags/report/>in my Home Library. Report
is regarding the site of the Lanka during the
Ramayana age.
Report was published by   historian Mr. H.D. Sankalia in the year 1971 in
the Statesman news paper dated 5/10/1971. According to the report
Chotanagpur (Jharkhand State,India) was the Lanka of Ramayana.

Sankalia is of the opinion that the Ramayana belongs to
early<http://www.shvoong.com/tags/early/>iron-age and the Lanka in the
holy epic can not be the island of Ceylon
(Lanka). According to him, the Lanka of the Ramayana was somewhere in the
Chotanagpur Plateau (Ranchi and Hazaribag district) of Jharkhand State of
India <http://www.shvoong.com/tags/india/> and the 'Vanaras' and 'Raksasas
'(demons) were the merely the Adivasis (tribe) of the area. Asurs were the
early settlers in the Jharkhand. He has deduced from archaeological,
geographical and botanical interpretation of the clues in the epics. His
theory is that the story or the various incidents could have taken place in
present Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand Plateau and Eastern Madhya Pradesh
as early as 1,500 B.C.
He has sited excavations at Kausambi, Prahladpur, Chirand, Sonpur etc. to
reveal the existence of a settled way of life about circa 2,000-1,500 B.C.
These earlier cultures were destroyed or displaced by an iron-manufacturing
people as is evident from archaeological findings at Mahisadal and
Rajar-Dhipi.
In Ranchi district alone are found Asur forts and cemeteries. Over a hundred
villages scattered through this region have Asur sites of this "long ancient
people", who were thought by the Mundas as a tall, huge limbed race of
Herculean strength, having a much higher civilization. Asur graves are in
irregular order and are marked by the slabs. The roof stones are generally 8
feet and sometimes 10 to 12 feet long.

He concludes that the critical edition of Ramayana belongs to the
early iron<http://www.shvoong.com/tags/iron/>age. " this is amply
proved by the repeated references to weapons of
'Kalayasa', Karsayasa' and 'Ayasa' definitely means iron and not copper. At
that time in Jharkhand iron smelting by the Asur tribes was flourishing
industry. "The iron chest (box) with eight wheels in which the bow of Rudra
was kept and which Rama alone could wield, requires highly advanced iron
technology.

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