Mumbai’s glorious past pre-dates Portuguese-era

Mumbai’s glorious past pre-dates Portuguese-era
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Fresh archaeological evidence found in Mumbai has provided some missing historical links from 100 BC to the 12th century AD, indicating that development of the area started long before the 15th century advent of the Portuguese, a top expert said.

FINDINGS THROW NEW LIGHT ON MAHA CAPITAL

Mumbai : Fresh archaeological evidence found in Mumbai has provided some missing historical links from 100 BC to the 12th century AD, indicating that development of the area started long before the 15th century advent of the Portuguese, a top expert said. Under the Mumbai-Salsette Archaeological Exploration Project, 2015-2016, funded by India Study Centre Trust (INSTUCEN Trust) a team of researchers from Mumbai University's Centre for Extra-Mural Studies (CEMS) and PTVA-Sathaye College students explored ancient temples, historical sites and old communities in what is now Greater Mumbai.

They discovered, among other things, pre-historic tools, inscriptions, relics, pillars, land grant stones, Gadhegals (engraved stones), and seven new caves inside the 2,000-year old Kanheri Caves complex of suburban Borivali. "This and other evidence, ancient records and field research provide the historical links that appeared to have snapped from 100 BC to the 12th century," said CEMS Director Mugdha D. Karnik. Effectively, she said, this pushes back history by three-four centuries, shattering the hitherto- held belief that the development of the region began from the Portuguese era, starting with the landing of Vasco da Gama in Calicut in May 1498.

Many of the new discoveries in the Mumbai metropolitan region, comprising Mumbai- Salsette, shed light on the littleknown pre-Portuguese era and would require deeper research to connect them to a glorious past, Karnik added. Salsette is bound to the north by the Bassein Creek, to the northeast by Ulhas River, to the east by Thane Creek and Mumbai Harbour, and to the south and the west by the Arabian Sea.

They were gradually merged by massive land reclamation during the 19th-20th centuries to form Bombay, now called Mumbai. Karnik stumbled upon this older history almost accidentally when she casually contacted C K Salunkhe, head of horticulture at BARC about any archaeological remnants in the premises of the country's first atomic plant which is situated in a part of the old Salsette. Surprisingly, Salunkhe brought out an ancient inscription and a sandstone Shikhara, which was examined by the research team of Karnik, Kurush F Dalal, Suraj Pandit and journalist- cum-archaeologist Vinayak Parab and others.

"The inscription bears clear references to the Sultan of Delhi, a local vassal of Bimba Dynasty, Hambir Rao; the place is stated as Konkan-Bimbasthana, with names of villages which exist even today like Marol, Nanale (BARC), Devnare (Deonar)," Parab explained. The reference points to Salsette or Sashti in the word "Sansathi", bearing a clear date "Kartika Shuddha Dwadashi, Saka Samvat 1290" (corresponding to November 3, 1368).

It is quite likely that the etymology of Mumbai-Bombay- Bombahem originated from Bimbasthana, according to the research paper. Dalal said past studies showed the area's urbanisation started only with the arrival of the Portuguese, but the new discoveries and archaeological artefacts prove it to be much older. An exciting dimension to the project was the discovery of seven new caves in the Kanheri complex, located deep inside the 100 sq km Sanjay Gandhi National Park in northern Mumbai, by Parab, Pandit and others. In fact, the team found sculptures, some dating to the Shilahara Dynasty (765-1029) in the Marol area which was its commercial capital and is today a bustling Mumbai CBD, besides ancient temple pillars (of the same era) located near the old Aarey Milk Colony toll-plaza.

By QUAID NAJMI

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