After my successful decipherment of the Indus Script in my book, "India and Sanskrit as deciphered in the Indus Script " many scholars requested me to re-decipher the inscribed seals and potteries unearthed from Chandraketugarh who could not accept the decipherment of Dr. B. N. Mukhrjee, the former Carmichael Professor of Ancient Indian History and Culture, University of Calcutta. Dr. B.N. Mukhrjee attempted to decipher more than 50 inscriptions of different types of seals and potteries in a monograph under the title of Kharosti and KharostiBrahmi Inscriptions (KKBI) in West Bengal (India), (published as the Indian Museum Bulletin, vol. XXV), Kolkata. 1990 because those scholars questioned the existence of Kharosti and Kharosti-Brahmi Inscriptions in West Bengal. In response to the request of those scholars as well as guided by my curiosity and responsibility of unveiling Bengal’s remote past and rewriting the history of pre-Mauryan Bengal, I have accepted the challenging tasks of deciphering the Indus-Brahmi inscriptions of Chandraketugarh. The most ancient civilization in the undivided Bengal has been unearthed from Chandraketugarh. The most ancient civilization in the undivided Bengal has been unearthed from Chandraketugarh collectively known as the localities of Deulia, Berachampa and Hadipur under Police Station of de Ganga in the Sub-Division of Barasat in the District of North 24 Pargans in West Bengal, 42 km away from kolkata via Barasat in the north eastern direction.
Ancient Indian Coins: Decoding of their Indus-Brahmi Inscriptions with Special Emphasis on the Punch-Marked Coins
The importance of the study ...
$222.30
$247.00
There are no reviews yet.