“Greek mythology.” “Roman mythology.” “Norse mythology.”
Now try: “Hindu mythology.”
Notice anything? The first three refer to dead civilizations whose gods no one worships anymore. But Hinduism has over 1.2 billion living practitioners. Yet their epics, traditions, and sacred histories are routinely classified alongside Zeus and Thor—as “mythology.”
Mythology: Stories that are fictional, legendary, or unproven.
History: Events that actually happened, backed by evidence.
When we accept the label “Hindu mythology,” we unconsciously accept that our civilizational memory is fictional—that Rama, Krishna, Hanuman, and the events of the Ramayana and Mahabharata never existed.
This wasn’t accidental. It was intellectual colonization—a systematic project to delegitimize Indian civilization by reframing its foundational texts as “myths” while European and Abrahamic traditions were upheld as “history.”
Today, we’re deconstructing this framework, examining its origins, presenting archaeological evidence, and reclaiming the Sanskrit concept of Itihasa (इतिहास) – “thus it happened.”
The word “mythology” comes from Greek:
Original meaning: “Study of stories.”
Modern connotation: “Study of fictional stories, legends, and folklore.”
When “mythology” is applied to Greco-Roman traditions, it’s understood that these were once religions but are now historical curiosities. No one worships Zeus or Jupiter anymore, so calling them “mythology” is factually accurate—these are stories about gods no longer believed in.
But when the same term is applied to living Hindu traditions, it carries an implicit judgment: “These aren’t real either.”
Consider how different civilizations’ foundational texts are treated academically and educationally:
| Civilization | Term Used | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Greek/Roman | “Classical Mythology” | Dead religion, studied for literary/historical value |
| Norse/Celtic | “Norse/Celtic Mythology” | Dead religion, pagan folklore |
| Judeo-Christian | “The Bible,” “Sacred Scripture,” “Biblical History” | Living tradition, treated seriously |
| Islamic | “Quranic History,” “Islamic Tradition” | Living tradition, respected as historical/theological |
| Hindu | “Hindu Mythology,” “Indian Myths” | Living tradition treated as folklore |
The hypocrisy is stark:
This isn’t mere academic categorization—it’s epistemic violence: the systematic devaluation of a civilization’s knowledge systems.
To understand how this framework was established, we must examine the 19th-century Orientalist project, particularly the work of Friedrich Max Müller (1823-1900).
Max Mueller’s private correspondences reveal troubling motivations. In letters to his wife and colleagues, he expressed explicitly colonial and missionary intentions:
Letter to his wife (December 9, 1867):
“I feel convinced, though I shall not live to see it, that this edition of mine and the translation of the Veda will hereafter tell to a great extent on the fate of India, and on the growth of millions of souls in that country. It is the root of their religion, and to show them what the root is, I feel sure, is the only way of uprooting all that has sprung from it during the last 3,000 years.”
Letter to Baron Christian von Bunsen (1856):
“India is much riper for Christianity than Rome or Greece were at the time of St. Paul… The ancient religion of India is doomed, and if Christianity does not step in, whose fault will it be?”
These weren’t casual observations—they were statements of strategic intent. Max Mueller saw his translation work as part of a larger colonial project:
Sanskrit is not a dead language—it’s a sacred language with living interpretive traditions.
For over 3,000 years, the Vedas were transmitted through oral tradition with extraordinary precision. Scholars like Sayanacharya (14th century) had written extensive Sanskrit commentaries explaining context, philosophy, and proper interpretation.
Max Mueller’s approach:
German scholar Prof. Prodosh Aich (in his book Fundamentals of Indology) argues that Mueller and other early Indologists:
Mueller also promoted the Aryan Invasion/Migration Theory:
The political utility of this theory:
Modern scholarship has largely debunked this theory:
Yet this theory continues to shape Indian textbooks and popular understanding even today.
Max Mueller’s work was part of a larger colonial education project initiated by Thomas Babington Macaulay.
Macaulay’s infamous Minute on Education (1835):
“I have no knowledge of either Sanskrit or Arabic… But I have done what I could to form a correct estimate of their value… A single shelf of a good European library was worth the whole native literature of India and Arabia… We must at present do our best to form a class who may be interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of persons, Indian in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals, and in intellect.”
The Goal: Create an Indian elite class that would:
The Mechanism:
You might think, “This happened 150+ years ago. Why does it matter now?”
Because these frameworks still shape how we think:
In Education:
In Media:
In Self-Perception:
The Sanskrit term for the Ramayana and Mahabharata is NOT “mythology.” It’s Itihasa (इतिहास).
इतिहास = इति + ह + आस
Literal translation: “Thus indeed it happened.”
This isn’t a label applied to fictional stories. Itihasa is the technical Sanskrit term for historical narrative—accounts of events that actually occurred.
Sanskrit has precise terminology for different types of literature:
| Term | Meaning | Examples | Nature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Itihasa | “Thus it happened” – Historical accounts | Ramayana, Mahabharata | Specific events in specific time/place |
| Purana | “Ancient” – Cosmological/genealogical texts | Vishnu Purana, Shiva Purana | Mix of history, cosmology, theology |
| Katha | “Story” – Narrative tales | Panchatantra, Hitopadesha | Didactic fiction, fables |
The Mahabharata explicitly states its nature:
इतिहासपुराणाभ्यां वेदं समुपबृंहयेत्।
“The Veda should be supplemented by Itihasa and Purana.” (Mahabharata, Adi Parva 1.267)
This places Itihasa on par with the Vedas as authoritative knowledge—not as “mythology” but as essential historical-spiritual truth.
Oral Tradition with Extraordinary Precision:
The Ramayana and Mahabharata were transmitted orally for centuries before being written down, using sophisticated mnemonic techniques:
This ensured near-perfect transmission across centuries—far more reliable than written manuscripts that could be corrupted.
Compare this to:
Yet these are studied as “literature” while Ramayana/Mahabharata are “mythology.” Why? Because the former belong to dead civilizations while the latter remains living tradition.
Now let’s examine physical evidence that supports the historicity of the epics.
Textual Description:
The Mahabharata describes Dwaraka as Krishna’s magnificent coastal capital, built on the western coast of India. After Krishna’s departure, the city was submerged by the sea.
Mahabharata, Mausala Parva 7.40:
समुद्रः स तु तां सर्वां द्वारकां विषयाग्रताम्।
प्रविवेश पुरीं कृत्स्नां वारिणा समलीयताम्॥
“The ocean submerged the entire prosperous city of Dwaraka, overwhelming it with water.”
Archaeological Discoveries:
1983-2007: Marine Archaeology by ASI and Indian Navy
The Archaeological Survey of India’s Underwater Archaeology Wing (UAW), led initially by marine archaeologist S.R. Rao, conducted systematic underwater explorations off the coast of Dwaraka, Gujarat.
Findings:
2024-2025: Renewed Explorations
In November 2024, ASI revived the Underwater Archaeology Wing and resumed explorations off Dwaraka coast, led by Prof. Alok Tripathi (Additional Director General, ASI).
Latest findings (as of early 2025):
Significance:
S.R. Rao’s Assessment:
“The artefacts and structures found in Dwaraka match descriptions from ancient texts, transforming myth into history.”
National Institute of Oceanography (NIO) Study (2003):
Found pottery, artifacts, and fortification walls from Late Harappan to Medieval periods at both Dwaraka and Bet Dwaraka, supporting the theory that Dwaraka was a significant trade hub connecting India and West Asia.
Textual Description:
The Ramayana describes a bridge built by Rama’s vanara (monkey) army from Rameshwaram (India) to Lanka (Sri Lanka) to rescue Sita.
Valmiki Ramayana, Yuddha Kanda 22.60-76:
Describes the construction using stones, trees, and mountains thrown into the ocean.
Physical Evidence:
Controversy:
Geological Survey of India (GSI) in 2007 stated it’s a natural formation (limestone bridge formed naturally).
Counter-arguments:
The debate continues, but the physical structure’s existence matching the textual description is undeniable.
The great Mahabharata war was fought at Kurukshetra (modern-day Haryana).
Findings:
Textual Description:
Capital of Lord Rama’s kingdom on the banks of Sarayu River.
Archaeological Findings:
ASI Report (2003):
Found evidence of “massive structure” and temple-like features beneath the disputed site, though the report sparked political controversy.
Hastinapura (Mahabharata’s capital):
Sravasti, Kapilavastu (Buddha’s time, c. 6th century BCE):
The Pattern:
Archaeological evidence consistently supports the existence of cities, cultures, and events described in Indian texts. While exact dating remains debated, the geographic accuracy, cultural continuity, and physical remains validate the Itihasas as rooted in historical events, not pure fiction.
Let’s examine how Western and Indian histories are treated differently:
Homer’s Iliad describes the Trojan War and the city of Troy.
For centuries: Dismissed as pure mythology.
1870s: German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann discovered ancient Troy in Turkey.
Result: Homer’s Iliad reclassified as “epic literature based on historical events.”
No one calls it “Greek mythology” anymore in scholarly contexts—it’s “ancient Greek epic literature” with historical basis.
Old Testament describes:
Academic treatment: “Biblical history,” “Abrahamic tradition,” studied seriously as religious and cultural history even without archaeological proof.
Describe:
Academic treatment: “Hindu mythology,” “Indian epics”—implies fiction despite evidence.
The double standard is clear:
| Text | Evidence Level | Academic Label |
|---|---|---|
| Iliad | One city found | “Epic literature, historical basis” |
| Bible | Limited archaeological support | “Sacred history” |
| Ramayana/Mahabharata | Multiple cities, astronomical data, cultural continuity | “Mythology” |
Here’s the most important distinction:
Dead religions can be called mythology because their practitioners don’t exist. Calling Zeus and Odin “mythology” offends no one—those religions are extinct.
But Hinduism is a living tradition with 1.2 billion practitioners who:
When you label their sacred history “mythology,” you’re telling them: “Your foundational beliefs are fiction. The figures you worship never existed. Your civilization’s memory is a fairy tale.”
This isn’t neutral academic categorization—it’s epistemic colonization.
Imagine if we said:
There would be justified outrage because it delegitimizes living faith.
Yet “Hindu mythology” is normalized—even among Hindus themselves.
So what should we do?
Instead of: “Hindu mythology”
Use: “Itihasa,” “Hindu epics,” “Sanskrit epics,” “sacred narratives,” “Hindu sacred history”
Instead of: “Mythological characters”
Use: “Epic heroes,” “divine incarnations,” “sacred figures”
Instead of: “Mythological serial”
Use: “Epic television series,” “devotional series,” “Itihasa adaptation”
When someone uses “mythology,” gently correct them:
“Actually, we call them Itihasa—which means ‘thus it happened’—because they’re regarded as historical-spiritual narratives, not fictional myths like Greek gods.”
Advocate for education reform:
Don’t rely solely on:
Instead:
There’s a balance:
Harmful: “Everything was perfect in ancient India; West has nothing to teach us”
Healthy: “India had sophisticated knowledge systems that deserve respect alongside Western knowledge”
Harmful: “Ramayana/Mahabharata are 100% literal historical records with no symbolic elements”
Healthy: “Ramayana/Mahabharata are Itihasas—historical events narrated with spiritual-philosophical depth”
Harmful: “All criticism of Hindu tradition is Western conspiracy”
Healthy: “Valid criticism should be distinguished from colonial-era delegitimization”
Many Indians have internalized the colonial framework:
Decolonization is an internal process:
The battle over “mythology” vs. “Itihasa” isn’t mere semantics—it’s a battle for civilizational memory and identity.
When you control how a people’s history is labeled, you control:
The colonial project understood this perfectly:
The result?
A population of 1.4 billion people, heirs to one of the world’s oldest continuous civilizations, who:
But the tide is turning.
Archaeological discoveries at Dwaraka, Ram Setu studies, astronomical dating of the Mahabharata, linguistic research on Sanskrit, and growing scholarship by Indian academics are slowly validating what traditional practitioners always knew:
Rama walked this earth. Krishna built Dwaraka. The Mahabharata war happened.
Not as mythology. As Itihasa. As history.
The details may be debated. The exact dates may vary. The supernatural elements may be interpreted diversely.
But the core events, the cultural memory, the civilizational continuity—these are real.
We are not the descendants of myths and legends.
We are the children of rishis who mapped the stars,
Warriors who upheld dharma,
Sages who spoke the language of consciousness,
And heroes whose stories are not fiction—but legacy.
Next time someone says “Hindu mythology,” pause.
Ask them: “Do you say ‘Christian mythology’ or ‘Islamic mythology’?”
When they hesitate, explain: “Then please don’t call our living tradition ‘mythology’ either. We call them Itihasa—’thus it happened’—because they’re our sacred history.”
Behind every so-called myth, there is memory.
And behind every memory, there is truth waiting to return.
Jayanth Dev is an author writing on Hindu scriptures, Sanatana Dharma, and mythological narratives through books, long-form articles, and explanatory talks.
His work focuses on examining scriptural ideas in context—drawing from the Vedas, Upanishads, and Puranas to clarify commonly misunderstood concepts and traditions. Across both fiction and non-fiction, he approaches Sanatana thought as a living framework rather than a static belief system.
Jayanth is the author of I Met Parashurama, Escaping the Unknown, and the Dhantasura series.

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