India's
Great Divide is the Vindhya Mountains. They run
from east to west, separating the fertile river
valley of the Ganges called the Ganga, from the
Deccan Plateau which occupies much of the peninsula
of India. It also separates the north, where the
predominant languages are Sanskrit - based (brought
in by the Indo Iranian herds people about 3,500
years ago), from the Dravidian tongues brought
in by a long headed race from the Mediterranean
about a thousand years earlier. The South's coastal
plains are backed by the mountains rimming the
wedge of the Deccan plateau. On these plains lie
the best beaches in India. On the rimming mountains,
the western and eastern ghats are the tea, coffee
and spice lands. Beyond these mountains, in the
wedge shaped plateau, are great old cities supported
by rich farm lands and a culture that has its
roots in the almost historical Kumari Continent
from where, they claim, civilization spread across
the world. The south is gracious, graceful, Old
India. |