sato1986 said:Want to gain some real knowledge about Indian history? I found this one perfect:
The Story of India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An excellent documentary, a must watch.
This was on NGC some years back, what got me was the enthusiasm of the presenter Michael Wood. Hard core indophile to the point he gave his daughters hindu names.
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letmein said:This?
Vaimanika Shastra - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
According to wiki, it was written in 1918-23.
Too bad IIS Bangalore was not impressed
Any reader by now would have concluded the obvious – that the planes described above are the best poor concoctions, rather than expressions of something real. None of the planes has properties or capabilities of being flown; the geometries are unimaginably horrendous from the point of view of flying; and the principles of propulsion make then resist rather than assist flying. The text and the drawings do not correlate with each other even thematically. The drawings definitely point to a knowledge of modern machinery. This can be explained on the basis of the fact that Shri Ellappa who made the drawings was in a local engineering college and was thus familiar with names and details of some machinery. Of course the text retains a structure in language and content from which its 'recent nature' cannot be asserted. We must hasten to point out that this does not imply an oriental nature of the text at all. All that may be said is that thematically the drawings ought to be ruled out of discussion. And the text, as it stands, is incomplete and ambiguous by itself and incorrect at many places.