Perspectives from TextsUsing the vedas as a historical sourceWho were the Indo-Aryans?The culture reflected in the family books of the Rig Veda SamhitaTribes and warsThe Hymn to arms (Rig Veda Samhita 6.75)Lineage, clan, tribePastoralism, agriculture, and other occupationsVarna in the Rig VedaWomen, men, and the householdThe family and the householdReligion: sacrifices to the godsHymn to Indra (Rig Veda 2.12)The soma plant and its juiceThe historical milieu of later vedic textsAspects of everyday lifeThe emergence of monarchyThe invention of the war elephantThe ceremony of the jewel offeringThe varna hierarchyThe Purusha-sukta (Rig Veda 10.90)Gender and the householdReligion, ritual, and philosophyCreation (Rig Veda 10.129)The sacrificial arenaThe atman, according to Uddalaka AruniPopular beliefs and practicesAtharva Veda spellsScience and mathematics in Vedic textsArchaeological Profiles of Different Regions of the Subcontinent, c. 2000–500 BCENeolithic–chalcolithic and chalcolithic culturesThe north-west and northMythological motifs on Cemetery-H potteryThe Indo-Gangetic divide, the upper Ganga valley, and the doabThe Sanauli cemeteryThe enigma of copper anthropomorphsBlack and Red Ware