For thousands of years, humanity has whispered of a world drowned beneath the sea-a lost civilization whose wisdom seeded the cultures that followed. Plato called it Atlantis. The sages of India remembered it as Rutas, Kumari Kandam, and the flood of Manu. Across continents, the same story survives: a high civilization destroyed by water, its survivors rebuilding in distant lands. Atlantis in India challenges everything we think we know about ancient history.
Drawing upon Vedic scripture, Tamil epic, archaeology, and modern geology, it reveals that the memory of Atlantis is not a Western legend but an Eastern inheritance preserved with unparalleled fidelity in India's sacred tradition. Beneath the hymns of the Rig Veda, the geometry of Vedic altars, and the myth of Manu's ship lies a record of cataclysmic sea-level rise at the end of the Ice Age-an event now confirmed by oceanography and sediment science.
This groundbreaking work unites myth and data, showing that the survivors of the drowned world carried their sciences eastward: astronomy, mathematics, architecture, and the moral philosophy of dharma, the law of cosmic balance. From the submerged ruins of Dwarka and Poompuhar to the enduring cosmology of the Vedas, India emerges as the living heir of Atlantis-the civilization that refused to vanish.
Sweeping in scope and rich in evidence, Atlantis in India invites readers into the oldest story ever told-the story of a world lost, remembered, and reborn. It is both revelation and restoration: the Atlantean record recovered through the voice of India.
For thousands of years, humanity has whispered of a world drowned beneath the sea-a lost civilization whose wisdom seeded the cultures that followed. Plato called it Atlantis. The sages of India remembered it as Rutas, Kumari Kandam, and the flood of Manu. Across continents, the same story survives: a high civilization destroyed by water, its survivors rebuilding in distant lands. Atlantis in India challenges everything we think we know about ancient history.
Drawing upon Vedic scripture, Tamil epic, archaeology, and modern geology, it reveals that the memory of Atlantis is not a Western legend but an Eastern inheritance preserved with unparalleled fidelity in India's sacred tradition. Beneath the hymns of the Rig Veda, the geometry of Vedic altars, and the myth of Manu's ship lies a record of cataclysmic sea-level rise at the end of the Ice Age-an event now confirmed by oceanography and sediment science.
This groundbreaking work unites myth and data, showing that the survivors of the drowned world carried their sciences eastward: astronomy, mathematics, architecture, and the moral philosophy of dharma, the law of cosmic balance. From the submerged ruins of Dwarka and Poompuhar to the enduring cosmology of the Vedas, India emerges as the living heir of Atlantis-the civilization that refused to vanish.
Sweeping in scope and rich in evidence, Atlantis in India invites readers into the oldest story ever told-the story of a world lost, remembered, and reborn. It is both revelation and restoration: the Atlantean record recovered through the voice of India.