Skip to main content

Beyond the island: Top mythologist reorients the geography of the Ramayana

 
In a compelling new analysis that challenges conventional geographical assumptions about the ancient epic, writer and mythologist Devdutt Pattanaik has traced the roots of the Ramayana to the forests and river systems of Central and Eastern India, rather than the peninsular south or the modern island nation of Sri Lanka.
Drawing on archaeological evidence, ecological markers, and literary analysis in an article published in The Hindu, Pattanaik uses a striking 11th-century sculpture from Ratanpur in Chhattisgarh as a starting point to unravel what he describes as “older memories that go back 3,000 years.”
A Sculpture That Tells a Different Story
The article, titled “From Cult to Culture: The Ravana of Ratanpur,” focuses on a rare sculpture found at the Ratanpur Fort. It depicts Ravana in an act not described in Valmiki’s Ramayana: cutting off his own heads to offer into a sacrificial fire.
“This scene does not come from Valmiki’s Ramayana, but from a later imagination,” Pattanaik writes. He notes that the offering is made to Brahma in the Mahabharata’s ‘Ramapakhyana’ and to Shiva in later regional versions. The sculpture, dating to around 1000 CE, serves as a physical marker of how the epic’s narrative has evolved through regional traditions and centuries of retelling.
Ecology as Evidence
Central to Pattanaik’s argument is the ecological landscape described in the Valmiki Ramayana. He points to the repeated mention of sala trees, which do not grow in southern India.
“Sala forests do not grow in southern India. They grow in central and eastern India, north of Chhattisgarh and closer to the Himalayan foothills,” he states. He argues that the forest Rama enters is not the peninsular Tamilakam or Kerala, but the dense forest belt of Central India.
Similarly, he connects the Ashoka tree, abundant in the wet mountainous regions of Odisha, to Sita’s captivity. “In the Ramayana, Sita is held captive in a garden full of Ashoka trees. This again points to an eastern-central Indian ecology.”
Pattanaik delineates a specific geographical zone bounded by four great rivers—the Ganga to the north, the Godavari to the south, the Mahanadi to the east, and the Narmada to the west—as the true setting for the epic’s core events. He notes that the region, once known as Dakshina Kosala, lies just south of Rama’s homeland, Uttara Kosala.
The Buddhist Connection and a Later Shift
The mythologist further observes that the sala and Ashoka trees are deeply embedded in Buddhist lore—the Buddha was born under an Ashoka tree and died between two sala trees.
“Ravana’s Lanka being linked to these two trees cannot be a coincidence,” Pattanaik argues, suggesting it reflects a “Brahmin-Buddhist conflict in the post-Ashokan era.”
He traces a dramatic geographical shift in popular memory to after 1000 CE, during the Chola period. Locked in conflict with Sri Lankan kings and dependent on copper resources, the Cholas began to identify Sri Lanka with Ravana’s Lanka.
“Cities such as Anuradhapura are plundered. Sinhaladvipa becomes equated with the rakshasa kingdom,” he writes. He adds that this identification was retrospectively reinforced by the Lankavatara Sutra, a Mahayana Buddhist text whose symbolic “Lanka” was later conflated with the physical island.
Legacy in the Landscape
By the Vijayanagara period (circa 1500 CE), Pattanaik notes that the Deccan had been re-imagined as Kishkindha, the land of monkeys, with hundreds of Hanuman temples built across the region. This, he argues, caused the older memory of Dandakaranya in Chhattisgarh and Central India to “fade from popular consciousness.”
Yet, he concludes, traces of this older geography endure. River names like Subarnarekha, cities such as Sonpur and Ratanpur, and local legends continue to echo the figure of Ravana. Notably, the medieval Gand kings of the region minted coins claiming descent from the rakshasa king, distinguishing themselves from other Rajput lineages and preserving a unique cultural memory that predates the modern political narratives surrounding the epic.

Comments

TRENDING

A Hindu alternative to Valentine's Day? 'Shiv-Parvati was first love marriage in Universe'

The other day, I was searching on Google a quote on Maha Shivratri which I wanted to send to someone, a confirmed Shiv Bhakt, quite close to me -- with an underlying message to act positively instead of being negative. On top of the search, I chanced upon an article in, imagine!, a Nashik Corporation site which offered me something very unusual.  I don't know who owns this site, for there is nothing on it in the About Us link. It merely says, the Nashik Corporation  site   "is an educational and news website of the municipal corporation. Today, education and payment of tax are completely online." It goes on to add, "So we provide some of the latest information about Property Tax, Water Tax, Marriage Certificate, Caste Certificate, etc. So all taxpayer can get all information of their municipal in a single place.some facts about legal and financial issues that different city corporations face, but I was least interested in them."  Surely, this didn't interest...

Caste, class, and Patidar agitation: Veteran academic 'unearths' Gujarat’s social history

Recently, I was talking with a veteran Gujarat-based academic who is the author of several books, including "Social Movements in India: A Review of Literature", "Untouchability in Rural India", "Public Health and Urban Development: The Study of Surat Plague", and "Dalit Identity and Politics", apart from many erudite articles and papers in research and popular journals.

Disappearing schools: India's education landscape undergoing massive changes

   The other day, I received a message from education rights activist Mitra Ranjan, who claims that a whopping one lakh schools across India have been closed down or merged. This seemed unbelievable at first sight. The message from the activist, who is from the advocacy group Right to Education (RTE) Forum, states that this is happening as part of the implementation of the National Education Policy (NEP), 2020, which floated the idea of school integration/consolidation.

Varnashram Dharma: How Gandhi's views evolved, moved closer to Ambedkar's

  My interaction with critics and supporters of Mahatma Gandhi, ranging from those who consider themselves diehard Gandhians to Left-wing and Dalit intellectuals, has revealed that in the long arc of his public life, few issues expose his philosophical tensions more than his shifting stance on Varnashram Dharma—the ancient Hindu concept that society should be divided into four varnas, or classes, based on duties and aptitudes.

A story Gujarat forgot: Dalits and the Dakor temple movement

The other day, I was talking with Martin Macwan, a well-known Gujarat Dalit rights leader. He revealed to me an interesting chapter of the Gandhian movement in Gujarat — how Ravishankar Maharaj (1884–1984), a prominent Gandhian social reformer of the state, played a pivotal role in the struggle for temple entry for Dalits (then referred to as Harijans) in the late 1940s.

Top Hindu builder ties up with Muslim investor for a huge minority housing society in Ahmedabad

There is a flutter in Ahmedabad's Vejalpur area, derogatorily referred to as the "border" because, on its eastern side, there is a sprawling minority area called Juhapura, where around five lakh Muslims live. The segregation is so stark that virtually no Muslim lives in Vejalpur, populated by around four lakh Hindus, and no Hindu lives in Juhapura.

'Shameful lies': Ambedkar defamed, Godse glorified? Dalit leader vows legal battle

A few days back, I was a little surprised to receive a Hindi article in plain text format from veteran Gujarat Dalit rights leader Valjibhai Patel , known for waging many legal battles under the banner of the Council of Social Justice (CSJ) on behalf of socially oppressed communities.

Did caste define taste? A Dalit official's take on Gujarat's food traditions

Following  my recent blog on Dalit cuisine —where I argued, citing several studies, that it is deeply shaped by the caste system and the history of untouchability—I received an intriguing response on a private WhatsApp chat from a retired Gujarat-cadre bureaucrat. A likeable and thoughtful official, I have known him since the early 2000s, when I was covering the Gujarat Sachivalaya for The Times of India.

Gujarat cadre to HDFC: When bureaucratic style hits corporate walls

I was a little amused by the abrupt March 17 resignation of Atanu Chakraborty—a Gujarat cadre IAS officer of the 1985 batch who retired in 2020—as chairman of HDFC Bank. Much of what may have led to his decision to quit this ostensibly high post—actually a non-executive, part-time role—is by now well known. I followed most of it online with considerable interest, partly because I had interacted with him umpteen times during my stint as The Times of India correspondent in Gandhinagar from 1997 to 2012.