[The AMAIC finds the following interesting,
but has its own view of location of Land of Ophir]
Taken from: http://www.hinduwisdom.info/India_and_Egypt.htm
....
All through the ages the peoples of
India have had active intercourse with the other peoples of the world. Since the
days of Mohenjo daro culture, the Hindus have never lived in an alleged
"splendid isolation." It is generally assumed that internationalism or
cosmopolitism is a very recent phenomenon in human affairs. As a matter of fact,
however, culture has ever been international.
The dawn of human civilization finds the
Hindus as captains of industry and entrepreneurs of commerce. They were in touch with the Pharaohs of Egypt. The mummies of
the Egyptians were wrapped in muslin which was imported from India.
Hindu trade gave to the land of the Nile ivory, gold, spices, tamarind-wood,
sandal-wood, monkeys, and other characteristic Indian plants and animals. It is
also believed that the textile craftsmen of Egypt dyed their cloth with Hindu
indigo. Hindu ships brought the Indian commodities to the Arabian ports, or to
the Land of Punt; and from there these were transported to Luxor, Karnak and
Memphis.
Hindu commerce with the land of the
Euphrates was more intimate and direct. As early as about 3000 B.C. the Hindus
supplied the Chaldean city of Ur on the Euphrates with teak-wood. The Assyrians
also, like the Egyptians, got their muslin from India. In fact, vegetable
"wool", i.e. cotton, and wool producing plants have been some of the earliest
gifts of Hindu merchants to the world. From the tenth to the sixth century B.C.
the Assyro-Babylonian trade of the Hindus seems to have been very brisk. Hindus
brought with them apes, elephants, cedar, teak, peacocks, tigers, rice, ivory,
and other articles to Babylon, the Rome of Western Asia. It was through this
Indo-Mesopotamian trade that the Athenians of the sixth century B.C. came to
know of rice and peacocks.
(India) vanadevata's (wood spirit)
hand issuing from tree trunk offering water - (Egypt) deceased drinking water
offered by tree divinity
(image source: India and Egypt - edited by Saryu Doshi p.
69).
***
This expansion of Hindu activity
influenced the literature of the time, e.g. the Vedas and Jatakas. A cylinder
seal of about 2,000 B.C. bearing cuneiform inscriptions and images of Chaldean
deities have been unearthed in Central India. In Southern India has been found a
Babylonian sarcophagus.
Hindu trade with the Hebrews also was
considerable. Soloman (1015 B.C), King of Judaea, was a great internationalist.
In order to promote the trade of his land he set up a port at the head of the
right arm of the Red Sea. He made his race the medium of intercourse between
Phoenicians and Hindus. The port of Ophir (in Southern India) is famous in
Hebrew literature for its trade in gold under Soloman. The Books of Genesis,
Kings and Ezekiel indicate the nature and amount of Hindu contact with Asia
Minor. It is held by Biblical scholars that the stones in the breast plate of
the high priest may have come from India. The Hindus supplied also the demand of
Syria for ivory and ebony. The Hebrew word, tuki
(peacock), is derived from Tamil (South Indian) tokei, and ahalin (aloe) from
aghil.
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