Was the Ramayana Actually set in and Around Today’s Afghanistan?

369d6c0b-1fbc-4320-95fc-fc5b378a79feAn examination of a book by physicist Rajesh Kochhar debunks the notion that the events of the epic took place in modern-day India.
 

INDIA, April 30, 2015 (Scroll.in by Dhiman Dasgupta): An examination of a book by physicist Rajesh Kochhar [claims to] debunk the notion that the events of the epic took place in modern-day India. The primary objective of this essay is to point to the geographical location of the Ramayana. It is not the writer who has arrived at the answer, nor an Indologist like Max Mueller or even a historian or archaeologist. The person in question is Rajesh Kochhar, a physicist with an inclination for history, who has broken through the traditional techniques of history in his work The Vedic People – Their History and Geography.

There are 49 cosmic hymns in the Rig and the Yajur Vedas whose meanings have not been explained. But one particular hymn from Vedanga Jyotish informs us that the longest day of the year, or summer solstice, comprised 18 periods of daylight and 12 of night. Day and night are of equal length on the Equator; in the higher latitudes, summer days are longer than nights. The latitude at which the proportion of daylight and darkness is 3:2 is 34 degrees North. It is worth noting that the cities to be found around this latitude today are Herat and Kabul in Afghanistan. In other words, the place and time of the composition of the Vedanga Jyotish is the same as that of Vedic Afghanistan and Iran.

Source: Hinduism Today