I never liked the late M K Dhavalikar's assertion captured in the enclosed para from his Marathi book 'Maharashtrachi Kulkatha', 2011.
As I understand it, if something that happened in last two thousand years is not proven by archeology, it probably did not happen. He also concludes, it probably did not happen because of frequent droughts in India.
I wonder how much we have excavated to claim that a lot of our history is based on falsehood.
Mary Bard says in TLS in October 2024:
'Archaeology has had its fair share of hype
over the decades. Occasionally that has been entirely justified (it is hard to
imagine not hyping the tomb of Tutankhamun, for example). But the pressure from
headline writers, from university PR departments and (I suspect) from
underfunded excavators looking for sponsorship is to turn any discovery,
however interesting but ordinary it might be, into “the first”, “the best”,
“the most valuable”, or whatever superlative you choose.'