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This interaction further shaped the Indo-Iranians, which split at sometime between 2000 and 1600 BCE into the Indo-Aryans and the Iranians. [8] The Indo-Aryans migrated to the Levant and South Asia. [19] The migration into northern India was not a large-scale immigration, but may have consisted of small groups [20] [note 2] which were ...
Around the first millennium AD, Iranian groups began to settle on the eastern edge of the Iranian plateau, on the mountainous frontier of northwestern and western Indian subcontinent, displacing the earlier Indo-Aryans from the area.
Indo-Aryans moved into the Bactria–Margiana Archaeological Complex (c. 2400 –1600 BCE) and spread to the Levant , northern India (Vedic people, c. 1700 BCE). [2] The Iranian languages spread back throughout the steppes with the Scyths , and into Ancient Iran with the Medes , Parthians and Persians from c. 800 BCE .
The Indo-Aryans were united by shared cultural norms and language, referred to as aryā 'noble'. Over the last four millennia, the Indo-Aryan culture has evolved particularly inside India itself, but its origins are in the conflation of values and heritage of the Indo-Aryan and indigenous people groups of India. [ 20 ]
While Schlegel and early 19th-century proponents of Aryan migrations had defined Aryans in cultural rather than biological terms, aligning with early national thinkers like Herder, later scholars, beginning with Julius Klaproth (1783–1835) and Frédéric Eichhoff (1799–1875), began reinterpreting the ancient Aryans in racial and biological ...
Indo-Aryans. Indo-Aryans; ... At that time they had settled the region north of the Black Sea and ... Marquart (1905), pp. 240–241, did not accept this ...
' Land of the Aryans ', [a] [web 1] [web 2] Sanskrit pronunciation: [aːrjaːˈʋərtə]) is a term for the northern Indian subcontinent in the ancient Hindu texts such as Dharmashastras and Sutras, referring to the areas of the Indo-Gangetic Plain and surrounding regions settled by Indo-Aryan tribes and where Indo-Aryan religion and rituals ...
The Indo-Aryans split off around 1800–1600 BCE from the Iranians, [84] whereafter the Indo-Aryans migrated into the Levant and north-western India and possibly Inner Asia. Lazaridis et al. (2016) notes that the demographic impact of steppe related populations on South Asia was substantial and forms a major component in northern India. [85]