The Greek Experience of India: From Alexander to the Indo-Greeks

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An exploration of how the Greeks reacted to and interacted with India from the third to first centuries BCE

When the Greeks and Macedonians in Alexander’s army reached India in 326 BCE, they entered a new and strange world. They knew a few legends and travelers’ tales, but their categories of thought were inadequate to encompass what they witnessed. The plants were unrecognizable, their properties unknown. The customs of the people were various and puzzling. While Alexander’s conquest was brief, ending with his death in 323 BCE, the Greeks would settle in the Indian region for the next two centuries, forging an era of productive interactions between the two cultures. The Greek Experience of India explores the various ways that the Greeks reacted to and constructed life in India during this fruitful period.

From observations about botany and mythology to social customs, Richard Stoneman examines the surviving evidence of those who traveled to India. Most particularly, he offers a full and valuable look at Megasthenes, ambassador of the King Seleucus to Chandragupta Maurya, and provides a detailed discussion of Megasthenes’ now-fragmentary book Indica. Stoneman considers the art, literature, and philosophy of the Indo-Greek kingdom and how cultural influences crossed in both directions, with the Greeks introducing their writing, coinage, and sculptural and architectural forms, while Greek craftsmen learned to work with new materials such as ivory and stucco and to probe the ideas of Buddhists and other ascetics.

Relying on an impressively wide variety of sources from the Indian subcontinent, The Greek Experience of India is a masterful account of the encounters between two remarkable civilizations.

Author(s): Richard Stoneman
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: 525
City: Princeton & Oxford
Tags: Greco-Hellenism

Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
CONTENTS
List of Illustrations
Preface and Acknowledgements
Abbreviations and Conventions
Prologue: The Moon at Noon
Part I. First Impressions
1 Writing a Book about India
2 Alexander in India
3 Heracles and Dionysus
4 The Natural History of India
Part II. Megasthenes’ Description of India
5 Introducing Megasthenes
6 Megasthenes’ Book
7 Geography and Ancient History
8 Culture and Society
9 The Question of Utopia
10 Megasthenes on the Natural World
Part III. Interactions
11 The Indian Philosophers and the Greeks
12 Two Hundred Years of Debate: Greek and Indian Thought
13 The Trojan Elephant: Two Hundred Years of Co-existence from the Death of Alexander to the Death of Menander, 323 to 135 BCE
14 Bending the Bow: Kṛṣṇa, Arjuna, Rāma, Odysseus
15 Greeks and the Art of India
16 Apollonius of Tyana and Hellenistic Taxila
Appendix: Concordance of the Fragments of Megasthenes
Bibliography
Index