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Indian chronology has some unsolved puzzles like the chronological evolution of the concept of Yugas before Mahabharata era, the chronological error of 1381 years in dating of Buddha Nirvana etc. The present research by Vedveer Arya found that the epoch of the end of the 28th Krita Yuga of the Vaivasvata Manvantara would be the strongest basis, if it is accurately established, to retrieve that lost chronology. Lāṭadeva, a disciple of Āryabhaṭa provides verifiable astronomical details of the epoch of the Kritayugānta in his Sūrya Siddhānta. According to him, Mayāsura wrote Sūrya Siddhānta at the end of the 28th Krita Yuga when all five planets, the sun and the moon were in a perfect conjunction in Meṣa Rāśi (Aries) on Chaitra Śukla Pratipadā. This research is able to determine that this rarest of conjunctions occurred on 22nd Feb, 6778 BCE, leading to the accurate fixing of the epoch of the beginning of the 28th Tretā Yuga as 6777 BCE. Accordingly, the following chronology of ancient India from the time of Svāyambhuva Manu to the Mahābhārata era has been established: · Proto-Vedic Period (16000-14500 BCE) · Vedic Period (14500-10500 BCE) o Ādiyuga : The Era of Early Manu Dynasty (14500-14000 BCE) o Devayuga: The Vedic Period (14000-11000 BCE) o The Great Flood in Vaivasvata Manu’s Kingdom (11200 BCE) o Vedic Sarasvati River lost in Thar Desert (10950 BCE) o Later Rigvedic Period (11500-10500 BCE) o Post-Vedic Sarasvati River started flowing westwards (10950-10000 BCE) · The Post-Vedic Period (10500-6777 BCE) o The submergence of the city of Dvāravatī (9400-9300 BCE) o The Recompilation of Avestā, i.e.,Asuraveda (7000 BCE) o The epoch of the end of the 28thKrita Yuga (6778-6777 BCE) · The 28th Tretā Yuga (6777-5577 BCE) o The Rāmāyaṇa era (5677-5577 BCE) o The Birth Date of Sri Rāma (3rd Feb 5674 BCE) · The 28th Dvāpara Yuga (5577-3176 BCE) o The epoch of Yudhiṣṭhira’sRājasūya and his coronation in Indraprastha (3188 BCE) o The Epoch of the Mahābhārata War and Yudhiṣṭhira Era (3162 BCE) · The Epoch of the 28th Kaliyuga (3176 BCE) [The Mahābhārata] o The Epoch of the 28th Kaliyuga (3173-3172 BCE)[Āryabhaṭa] o The Epoch of the 28th Kaliyuga (3101 BCE) [Lāṭadeva’sSūryaSiddhānta] o The submergence of Dwārakā city of the Mahābhārata era in a tsunami (3126 BCE) o The disappearance of Post-Vedic Sarasvati and Dṛṣadvati Rivers (3000 BCE) In fact, the complex problems in Indian chronology arise from a misunderstanding of the epochs of ancient Indian eras. I have discovered that the Kurtakoti copper plate dated Saka 530 refers to a total solar eclipse occurred on 9th May 53 BCE in Northern Karnataka which conclusively establishes that the Saka era commenced in 583 BCE and the Sakanta era commenced in 78 CE. Historians mistakenly mixed up these two epochs which led to a chronological error of 660 years. Out of two contemporary copper plates found at Pranaveshvara temple, Talagunda, one plate is dated in the Saka era whereas, another is dated in the Sakanta era. Apart from this error of 660 years, later Jain historians inadvertently identified Ujjain King Chandragupta, a disciple of Bhadrabahu with the Maurya King Chandragupta which made Mahavira, a contemporary of Buddha. In reality, Buddha attained nirvana 675 years before the year of Mahavira nirvana. Puranas and the Burmese inscriptions clearly indicate that Buddha attained nirvana in 1864 BCE. Recent excavations at Lumbini and the radiocarbon samples collected from the Trench C5 at the center of the Buddhist shrine at Lumbini indicate an earliest date of 1681 BCE. Thus, there is a chronological error of 1380 years in dating of Buddha nirvana due to mixing up of two different epochs of Saka and Sakanta eras and the mistaken identification of Chandragupta, the disciple of Bhadrabahu. The dating of Buddha nirvana in 1864 BCE also validates the traditional date of Adi Sankaracharya in the 6th century BCE. About the Speaker: - Vedveer Arya is a civil servant and a senior officer from Ministry of Defence. He is a Sanskrit scholar and a researcher with profound insights in the chronological history of India. He made in-depth study of various epigraphs in original and critiqued the chronology of India put forth by colonial historians and their followers. Subscribe to our YouTube channels: YouTube English: / sangamtalks YouTube Hindi: / sangamhindi Follow Sangam Talks on social media : Telegram : https://t.me/sangamtalks Twitter: / sangamtalks Facebook: / sangamtalks Instagram: / sangamtalks Website: http://www.sangamtalks.org Donate: http://www.sangamtalks.org/donatet