The YÁdavas in DwÁrikÁ.The next PurÁ?ic legends relate to the establishment of the YÁdava kingdom at DwÁrikÁ. The founder and namegiver of the YÁdava dynasty was Yadu of whose family the PurÁ?as give very detailed information. The family seems to have split into several branches each taking its name from some prominent member, the chief of them being Vrish?i, Kukkura, Bhoja, SÁtvata, Andhaka, Madhu, Surasena, and DasÁrha. SÁtvata was thirty-seventh from Yadu and in his branch were born Devaki and Vasudeva, the parents of the great YÁdava hero and god K?ish?a. It was in K?ish?a’s time that the YÁdavas had to leave their capital MathurÁ and come to DwÁrikÁ. This was the result of a joint invasion of MathurÁ on one side by a According to the story KÁlayavana followed the fugitive K?ish?a and his companions as far as SurÁsh?ra where in a mountain cave he was burnt by fire from the eye of the sleeping sage Muchakun?a whom he had roused believing him to be his enemy K?ish?a. According to the Harivansa the fugitive YÁdavas quitting MathurÁ went to the Sindhu country and there established the city of DwÁrikÁ on a convenient site on the sea shore making it their residence. The leading YÁdava chief in DwÁrikÁ was Ugrasena, and Ugrasena’s three chief supporters were the families of Yadu, Bhoja, and Andhaka. As the entire peninsula of KÁthiÁvÁ?a was subject to them the YÁdavas used often to make pleasure excursions and pilgrimages to PrabhÁs and GirnÁr. K?ish?a and Baladeva though not yet rulers held high positions and took part in almost all important matters. They were in specially close alliance with their paternal aunt’s sons the PÁndava brothers, kings of HastinÁpura or Delhi. Of the two sets of cousins K?ish?a and Arjuna were on terms of the closest intimacy. Of one of Arjuna’s visits to KÁthiÁvÁ?a the MahÁbhÁrata gives the following details: ‘Arjuna after having visited other holy places arrived in AparÁnta (the western seaboard) whence he went to PrabhÁs. Hearing of his arrival K?ish?a marched to PrabhÁs and gave Arjuna a hearty welcome. From PrabhÁs they came together to the Raivataka hill which K?ish?a had decorated and where he entertained his guest with music and dancing. From GirnÁr they went to DwÁrikÁ driving in a golden car. The city was adorned in honour of Arjuna; the streets were thronged with multitudes; and the members of the Vrish?i, Bhoja, and Andhaka families met to honour K?ish?a’s guest.’ Some time after, against his elder brother Baladeva’s desire, K?ish?a helped Arjuna to carry off K?ish?a’s sister SubhadrÁ, with whom Arjuna had fallen in love at a fair in GirnÁr of which the MahÁbhÁrata gives the following description: ‘A gathering of the YÁdavas chiefly the Vrish?is and Andhakas took place near Raivataka. The hill and the country round were rich with fine rows of fruit trees and large mansions. There was much dancing singing and music. The princes of the Vrish?i family were in handsome carriages glistening with gold. Hundreds and thousands of the people of JunÁga?h with their families attended on foot and in vehicles of various kinds. Baladeva with his wife Revati moved about attended by many Gandharvas. Ugrasena was there with his thousand queens and musicians. SÁmba and Pradyumna attended Some time after this gathering SubhadrÁ came to GirnÁr to worship and Arjuna carried her off. Eventually Vasudeva and Baladeva consented and the runaways were married with due ceremony. The large fair still held in MÁgh (February-March) in the west GirnÁr valley near the modern temple of BhavanÁth is perhaps a relic of this great YÁdava fair. The YÁdava occupation of DwÁrikÁ was not free from trouble. When K?ish?a was at HastinÁpura on the occasion of the RÁjasÚya sacrifice performed by Yudhish?hira, SÁlva king of M?ittikÁvatÍ in the country of Saubha led an army against DwÁrikÁ. He slew many of the DwÁrikÁ garrison, plundered the city and withdrew unmolested. On his return K?ish?a learning of SÁlva’s invasion led an army against SÁlva. The chiefs met near the sea shore and in a pitched battle SÁlva was defeated and killed. In the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, XX. XXI. and XXII. Mr. Hewitt has recently attempted to trace the history of Western India back to b.c.3000 perhaps to as early as b.c.6000. The evidence which makes so far-reaching a past probable is the discovery of Indian indigo and muslin in Egyptian tombs of about b.c.1700 (J. R. A. S. XX. 206); and the proof that a trade in teak and in Sindhu or Indian muslins existed between Western India and the Euphrates mouth as far back as b.c.3000 or even b.c.4000 (J. R. A. S. XX. 336, 337 and XXI. 204). According to Mr. Hewitt the evidence of the Hindu calendar carries the historical past of India into still remoter ages. The moon mansions and certain other details of the Hindu calendar seem to point to the Euphrates valley as the home of Hindu lunar astronomy. As in the Euphrates valley inscriptions of the Semitic king Sargon of Sippara prove that in b.c.3750 moon-worship was already antiquated (J. R. A. S. XXI. 325), and as the precession of the equinoxes points to about b.c.4700 as the date of the introduction of the sun zodiac (Sayce’s Hibbert Lectures, 398) the system of lunar mansions and months, if it came from the Euphrates valley, must have reached India before b.c.4700. The trade records of the black-headed perhaps Dravidian-speaking Sumris of the Euphrates mouth prove so close relations with the peninsula of Sinai and Egypt as to make a similar connection with Western India probable as far back as b.c.6000. (Compare Sayce’s Hibbert Lectures, 33: J. R. A. S. XXI. 326.) Of the races of whose presence in GujarÁt and the neighbourhood Mr. Hewitt finds traces the earliest is the same black-headed moon-worshipping Sumri (Ditto). Next from Susiana in south-east Persia, the possessors of a lunar-solar calendar and therefore not later than b.c.4700 (J. R. A. S. XXI. 325, 327, 330), the trading Sus or Saus, in Hindu books known as Suvarnas, entered India by way of BaluchistÁn and settled at PÁtala in South Sindh. (J. R. A. S. XXI. 209.) With or soon after the Sus came from the north the cattle-herding sun-worshipping Sakas (J. R. A. S. XXII. 332). The Sus and Sakas passed south and together settled in SurÁsh?ra and West GujarÁt. At a date which partly from evidence connected with the early Vedic hymns (J. R. A. S. XXII. 466) partly from the early Babylonian use of the Sanskrit Sindhu for India (J. R. A. S. XXI. 309), Mr. Hewitt holds cannot be later than b.c.3000 northern Áryas entered GujarÁt and mixing with the Sus and Sakas as ascetics traders and soldiers carried the use of Sanskrit southwards. (J. R. A. S. XX. 343.) Of other races who held sway in GujarÁt the earliest, perhaps about b.c.2000 since their power was shattered by ParasurÁma long before MahÁbhÁrata times (J. R. A. S. XXI. 209–266), were the snake-worshipping perhaps Accadian (Ditto, 265) Haihayas now represented by the Gonds and the Haihayas’ vassals the Vaidarbhas (Ditto, 209) a connection which is supported by trustworthy Central Indian Uraon or Gond tradition that they once held GujarÁt (Elliott’s Races, N. W. P., I. 154). Next to the Haihayas and like them earlier than the MahÁbhÁrata (say b.c.1500–2000) Mr. Hewitt would place the widespread un-Aryan BhÁrats or BhÁrgavs (J. R. A. S. XXI. 279–282, 286) the conquerors of the Haihayas (Ditto, 288). In early MahÁbhÁrata times (say between b.c.1000 and 800, Ditto 197 and 209) the BhÁrats were overcome by the very mixed race of the Bhojas and of K?ish?a’s followers the Vrish?is (Ditto, 270). Perhaps about the same time the chariot-driving Gandharvas of Cutch (Ditto, 273) joined the Sus and Sakas, together passed east to Kosala beyond Benares, and were there established in strength at the time of Gautama Buddha (b.c.530) (Ditto). To the later MahÁbhÁrata times, perhaps about b.c.400 (Ditto, 197–271), Mr. Hewitt would assign the entrance into GujarÁt of the ÁbhÍras or Ahirs whom he identifies with the northern or |