By Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan Linguistic Transition and Cultural Recontextualization To reconstruct the intellectual history of the Indian subcontinent, one must apply a rigorous philological lens to the layers of linguistic transition that define its past. The shift from Pali—the medium of the Buddha’s original teachings—to later Sanskrit frameworks was not a natural linguistic drift, but a strategic recontextualization of sociolinguistic authority. While Sanskrit eventually emerged as a structured literary medium, its foundational vocabulary was systematically appropriated from earlier Prakrit dialects. These "native" or "natural" tongues (Magadhi, Ardhamagadhi) were chosen specifically to bypass exclusionary elite structures and establish a direct connection with the masses through the ethos of Karuna (compassion). Defining the Linguistic Origins The term 'Paliya' (Pali) did not originally serve as a language name. Epigraphically and textually, it re...
By Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan The Familiar Mystery of the 'Katha' In the sun-drenched courtyards of Bahujan households across India—homes of the SC, ST, and OBC communities—a familiar ritual unfolds. A priest arrives to narrate a Katha . Whether it is the Satyanarayan Katha or the Bhagwat Katha , these stories are presented as the bedrock of Brahmanical tradition. However, to the investigative historian, a linguistic and archaeological mystery hides in plain sight. If these traditions are purely Sanskrit-based, why is the very word used to describe them, "Katha," a Pali term? This article applies a "Scientific Temperament"—not merely as a legal disclaimer, but as a rigorous lens of inquiry—to peel back the layers of India’s narrative history. What we find is a sophisticated "rebranding": an ancient, verifiable Buddhist history carved in stone that was later modified into the paper-based epics we know today. The Linguistic Fingerprint: 'K...