Prabhat Kumar, Vinai Kumar Donthula
Due to the spread of Buddhism and
Buddhist culture to the East, Chinese travellers and pilgrims started visiting
India in pursuit of Buddhist scriptures and learning of Buddhist philosophy as
early as the first half of the first millennium of Common Era. These
pilgrims and travellers also left the description of their travel. In the
medieval and modern period also Chinese travellers, diplomats and scholars
continued their journey towards India. However, the situation and perception
both were different in these two periods from previous ancient era. German
travellers to India started with the participation of the German soldiers in
the British East India Company from the army of the Electorate of Hanover in
1782. The German nationalism grew as a reaction to the political and cultural
domination of France and Britain. In their quest to find the roots of their
language, they started looking at Sanskrit, Indian philosophy and culture.
During the early 19th Century several German Romantics and scholars
showed interest in Sanskrit literature. Some of the prominent names among them
are Friedrich and August Wilhelm Schlegel, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Max
Müller, Alexander and Wilhelm von Humboldt and Johann Gottfried Herder.
Friedrich von Schlegel studied Sanskrit for over forty years and in 1808 he
published the book Über die Sprache und Weisheit der Indier, wherein he
argued that the prototypical “Aryans” founded the ancient European
civilizations. With August Wilhelm Schlegel, the first Indology chair was
started in the University of Bonn in 1819. Karl August Schlegel, the elder
brother of Friedrich and August Wilhelm Schlegel prepared a military survey of
southern India for the East India Company which proved very useful.
Buddhism, Buddhist philosophy,
Chinese travellers, British East India company, German nationalism, Sanskrit,
Indology chair
VOL.15, ISSUE No.3, September 2023