• COINAGE IN ANCIENT INDIA

    The application of chemistry to archaeology has grown from small beginnings near the close of the 18th century to become at present a subject of widespread interest. The amount of activity in this special field of study has increased greatly in the last few years. One index of this large recent increase is the proportion of papers, monographs and books on the subject published within the last ten years. About 20% of all publications on the chemical analysis of ancient materials and objects have appeared in this last decade. If the publications on dating by chemical methods and on chemical procedures for the restoration and preservation of ancient objects are also taken into consideration, the proportion in the last ten years rises to about 30%. The present volume by Professor Satya Prakash contains many interesting examples of the application of chemistry to the study of a particular class of ancient objects, and is another indication of the current widespread interest in archaeological chemistry.

  • A Sanskrit English Dictionary

    The Student’s Sanskrit-English Dictionary: Containing Appendices on Sanskrit Prosody and Important Literary and Geographical Names in the Ancient Hist. of India

  • The Taj Mahal Is A Temple Palace – PN Oak

    There is no one who has not been cheated at least once in life. But it can be done. Can the world be deceived? It may seem impossible. But in the case of Indian and world history, the world has been cheated in many ways for hundreds of years and is still being cheated.The world famous Taj Mahal of Agra is a living example of this. The amount of time, money and energy that people around the world spend on seeing the Taj Mahal is a concoction. To make visitors believe that the Taj Mahal is not an Islamic tomb but an ancient Shiva temple known as Tejo Mahalaya

  • Who Says AKBAR Was Great? – PN Oak

    The Present day historians consider Akbar as a great Moghul emperor. The author of this book questions this view. He quotes innumerable incidents and deeds of the so called great emperor and proves that Akbar was the greatest rogue. A well documented work worth reading. In the preface to his eight-volume critical study of medieval Muslim chronicles a well-known historian, the late Sir H M Elliot observes that the history of the Muslim era in India is an impudent and interested fraud.

    This book does not claim to be a complete chronological narrative of Akbar’s life or reign. It deals with Akbar’s historical role with a difference. The scope of this book is limited to forcefully impressing on all concerned that Akbar’s image projected through official dossiers, institutional literature and academic text books is totally unwarranted and far removed from facts.

  • Some Missing Chapters of World History – PN Oak

    A revolutionary work by P N Oak. The book is about those facts which were ignored knowingly or unknowingly by the said great historians. In the light of these facts history seems to be different.

    This book is intended to awaken and arouse the world

  • Some Blunders of Indian Historical Research – PN Oak

    The author, P.N. Oak having made some far-reaching discoveries in history, is the founder president of the Institute for Rewriting World History. His latest finding is that in pre-Christian times Vedic culture and Sanskrit language held full sway throughout the world.

    P. Oak was born in a Maharashtrian Brahmin family in which his father talked to him only in Sanskrit, mother only in English, relations in Marathi and town-folk in Hindi. That gave him fluency in these four languages from childhood.

    After obtaining his B.A. degree from Agra University and completing M.A., LL. B, courses of the Bombay University, Oak worked for a year as tutor in English at the Fergusson College, Pune and later having joined the army was posted to Singapore at the age of 24.

    There, after the British surrender, Oak was one of the organizers of the Indian National Army, a director and commentator at the Free India Radio, Saigon, and later a co-worker of Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose.

    After the end of World War II, Oak hitch-hiked from Singapore to Calcutta across the border jungles of several countries.

    From 1947 to 1974 his profession has been mainly journalism having worked on the editorial staffs of the Hindustan Times and the Statesman, as a class I officer in Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India, and as editor in the American Embassy’s information service, all in New Delhi.

    Around 1959, Oak developed a curious new insight into history which led him to some stunning discoveries as a result of his absorbing hobby of visiting historic sites. He then founded (June 14, 1964) the institute for Rewriting Indian History and wrote several books (listed elsewhere in this volume).

    Oak’s historical acumen led him to discover further that even world history has gone wrong. His discoveries have therefore, outgrown the name and scope of the Institute for Rewriting Indian History. Having discovered that from time immemorial up to the Mahabharat War, Vedic culture and Sanskrit pervaded the whole world.

    Oak is keen to find a world Vedic Heritage University to educate the world in the primordial Vedic unity of all humanity. To that end he invites correspondence from all those willing to help.

  • India In The Shadow Of Gandhi and Nehru (In English) Guru Dutt

    In the year 1966, Guru Dutt worte a book under the title of ‘Jawaharlal Nehru—a Critical Study’. The book was so controversial that it gave rise to the rumour that it had been proscribed by the Government of India. In 1967 certain newspapers did come out with the news that steps were in progress to proscribe the book and prosecute its author. However, nothing of the kind took place.

    The present book is a deep study of the words and deeds of Nehru and Gandhi.

    The author has taken great pains in critically studying the activities and philosophies of these two eminent personalities of our country and placing before the reader the other side of the picture. His thesis is based on works of Nehru himself and also on works of other eminent writers of the day. He was referred to more than 200 quotations which support and lead to his logical analysis. How far he succeeded in piercing through the many walls of prejudices which sustain the pet notions about, them it is for the reader to ponder and judge.

  • Christianity Is Chrisn-Nity (In English)- PN Oak

    Their fears were obviously well-founded as it turned out later from the way Christianity put Judaism in the shade and crushed and buried the colourful pre-Christian culture of Rome.

    During that interregnum of nearly four centuries the agitators were from time to time reported to the Roman officials by the Jews, and were punished for their crimes.

    The Jews reported the agitators to the Roman authorities because they were disturbing the peace by fanatically and violently spreading the myth of Jesus. On this pat the Roman magistrates obliged to take action to prevent or quell those new riots.

  • What is Veda (Sanatana Foundation of Universal Dharma) By Dr.Tulsi Ram Sharma

    Veda is the Sanatan foundation of Universal Dharma, original, ancient, Sanatan yet modern, living in creative response to the changing circumstances.

    Sanatan Dharma till today has passed through many historical stages: the Original Vedic in what is called the Vedic age, then ritualistic, pure as well as distorted, theistic, even non- theistic, ethical, moral, symbolic, mythological, with even a variety of ‘Gods’ divine and human, until the time of Swami Dayananda and after.

    Beyond this historical variety of Dharma, as Swami Dayananda asserted, this book concentrates on the Original Vedic Dharmik message of Jnana (Knowledge), Karma (active Living), and Upasana (Praise, Prayer and Meditation). It covers the knowledge and modern relevance of creative evolution of the world, material, biological, spiritual and socio-political.

    It covers the Vedic knowledge of Shruti, Smriti, Sadachara and freedom of Conscience, and many other themes such as age of the Vedas, Devata, science, society, karma and the karmic cycle, punarjanma with reference to reincarnation in other traditions.

    Written on the model of Swami Dayananda’s Rgvedadi Bhci`shy a Bhumikci, this book takes into account the change of circumstances while dealing with Vedic themes in relation to present time. In this I.T. age of science, democracy and globalism, you will feel surprised by the modernity of the ancient and the timeless.

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