First of all, sorry for taking so long to get back to this thread. I've been quite busy quite exams. You may find this information interesting. I hope that it has not already been presented. I thought I would provide information from an educational text:
Almost a century ago, Winternitz ([1907] 1962) was refreshingly forthright about the lack of agreement regarding even the approximate date of the Veda: "It is a fact, and a fact which it is truly painful to admit, that the opinions of the best scholars differ, not to the extent of centuries, but to the extent of thousands of years, with regard to the age of the Rg Veda. Some lay down the year 1000 B.C. as the earliest limit for the Rg Vedic hymns, while others consider them to have originated between 3000 and 2500 B.C." (253). Despite such differences of opinion in this matter, eventually, communi consensu, the Indological community settled on 1200 B.C.E. as the probable date for the compilation of the Rgveda-a date that has remained standard to this day. As opponents never tire of pointing out, "it was Max Milller who put forth die hypothesis . . . that die Rgveda began to be composed in 1200 B.C." (Varma 1984, 2).
Muller based his calculations on information he gleaned partly from the Kathasaritsagara, a collection of stories written in the twelfth century c.E. by Somadeva. In one of these stories, we find a Katyayana Vararuchi, who was reported to have eventually become a minister in the court of King Nanda. Since, in the Puranas, Nanda is the predecessor of the Mauryas, Milller assigned him a date in the second half of the fourth century B.C.E., shortly before the accepted date for this dynasty. 3 In brief, Muller felt he now had a reasonably secure date for Katyayana Vararuci. His next step was to correlate this Katyayana with a Katyayana who was said to have authored a variety of sutras. 4 Since other sutras were both anterior and posterior to this latter Katyayana, to whom he had assigned a date in the fourth century B.C.E., Miiller ([1859] 1968) decided that "as an experiment, therefore, though as no more than an experiment, we propose to fix the years 600 and 200 B.C. as the limits of that age during which the Brahmanic literature was carried on in the strange style of Sutras" (218). Preceding the sutras are the Brahmana portions of the Vedic texts (since the latter are presupposed by the former). Regarding these, Muller ([1859] 1968) considered that "it would seem impossible to bring the whole within a shorter space than 200 years. Of course this is merely conjectural" (395). Conjectural or not, the Brahmanas, in Miiller's schema, are consequently assigned a date from 800 to 600 B.C.E., "although it is more likely that hereafter these limits will have to be extended" (406). Older still than the Brahmanas are the Mantras, which, in turn, are anterior to the Chandas so, since he seemed to be on a roll with these concise 200-year brackets, Muller felt that "if we assign but 200 years to the Mantra period, from 800 to 1000 B.C., and an equal number to the Chandas period, from 1000 to 1200 B.C., we can do so only under the supposition that during the early periods of history the growth of the human mind was more luxuriant than in later times" (525). As Winternitz ([1907] 1962) points out, "it is at the fixing on these purely arbitrary dates that the untenable part of Max Miiller's calculations begins" (255).
Reaction to Muller's perfectly synchronized, two-hundred-year periods for the development of these different genres of literature was not slow in coming. Goldstiicker ([I860] 1965) objected that "neither is there a single reason to account for his allotting 200 years to the first of his periods, nor for his doubling this amount of time in the case of the Sutra period" (80). He points out that, ultimately, "the whole foundation of Muller's date rests on the authority of Somadeva . . . [who] narrated his tales in the twelfth century after Christ [and] would not be a little surprised to learn that 'a European point of view" raises a 'ghost story' of his to the dignity of an historical document" (91). Barthelemy Saint-Hilaire (1861) remonstrated that "Mr. Max Muller would have done well not to have fixed things so precisely, and not to have circumscribed things so neatly" (54; my translation).
Winternitz (1907), too, felt that since "all the external evidence fails, we are compelled to rely on the evidence out of the history of Indian literature itself, for the age of the Veda. . . . We cannot, however, explain the development of the whole of this great literature, if we assume as late a date as round about 1200 or 1500 B.C. as its starting point. We shall probably have to date the beginning of this development about 2000 or 2500 B.C.".
Max Milller (1892), who hastily acknowledged that he had only considered his date for the Veda a terminus ad quern, completely submitted to his detractors: "I need hardly say that I agree with almost every word of my critics. I have repeatedly dwelt on the hypothetical character of the dates. . . . All I have claimed for them has been that they are minimum dates . . . Like most Sanskrit scholars, I feel diat 200 years . . . are scarcely sufficient to account for the growth of the poetry and religion ascribed to the Khandas period" (xiv-xv). A few years later, at the end of his long and productive life, he again acknowledged the complete arbitrariness of his previous calculations: "Whether the Vedic hymns were composed 1000, or 1500, or 2000, or 3000 years B.C., no power on earth will ever determine" (Muller 1891, 91). Elsewhere, Muller (1897, 87) was quite happy to consider a date of 3000 B.C.E. based on Sayce's discovery of two Babylonian ideographs— cloth + vegetable fiber (which Sayce believed was cotton)—that had to be pronounced 'sindhu . This suggested that the Babylonians knew of the river Sindhu and, by extension, since he considered this word to be Sanskrit, the Indo-Aryan-speaking people, in 3000 B.C.E. However, despite Muller's willing retraction of his hasty attempt at chronology: It became a habit already censured by W. D. Whitney, to say that Max Muller had proved 1200-1000 B.C. as the date of the Rg Veda. It was only timidly that a few scholars, like L. von Schroeder ventured to go as far back as 1 500 or even 2000 B.C. And when all at once, H. Jacobi attempted to date Vedic literature back to the third millenary B.C. on the grounds of astrological calculations, scholars raised a great outcry at such heretical procedure. . . . Strange to say it has been quite forgotten on what a precarious footing stood the "opinion prevailing hitherto," which was so zealously defended. (Winternitz [1907) 1962 256) Whitney ([1874] 1987) had made a point of mentioning that Miiller himself had made no pretensions that his dates had "in any essential manner contributed to the final settlement of the question." But his concern is that Muller "is in danger of being misunderstood as doing so; we have already more than once seen it stated that 'Muller has ascertained the date of the Vedas to be 1200-1000 B.C.'" (78). Winternitz (1907), too, hastened to note that "Max Muller himself did not really wish to say more than that such an interval at least must be assumed. . . . He always considered his date of 12001000 B.C. only as a terminus ad quern" (293).
Bryant, Edwin. Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture : The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate.
Cary, NC, USA: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2004. p 246.
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