Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Classical Art and Ancient India: Proceedings of the Workshop Held in Oxford, 21-22 March 2023

Edited by Peter Stewart
book cover

Throughout the centuries of classical, Graeco-Roman history, India had strong connections with the world of the Mediterranean and Western Asia, sometimes by land or as a result of direct conquest, at other times through the maritime links of the Indian Ocean. In the Hellenistic and Roman Imperial periods (c. fourth century BC to fifth century AD) the movement of artistic ideas between these regions intensified. It appears to be vividly attested in the earliest cave-paintings at Ajanta in Maharashtra, for example, and in the Buddhist sculptures of Andhra Pradesh. In the first two centuries AD, when trade with India was central to Roman luxury consumption and brought colossal revenue to the Empire, Roman coins and other artefacts reached India in abundance and artistic connections are manifest, albeit often subtle and elusive.

Building on the Classical Art Research Centre’s earlier Gandhāra Connections project, Classical Art and Ancient India brings together research presented by international scholars at a workshop in Oxford in 2023. The papers, which include a keynote address by the historian William Dalrymple, seek to make sense of the cross-cultural artistic currents that joined India to the classical world. They offer new insights on particular topics and refine our picture of the broader cultural relationship. In doing so, they also question some of the assumptions that underpin it.

H 276 x W 203 mm

194 pages

180 figures (colour throughout)

Published May 2025

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781803279633

Digital: 9781803279640

DOI 10.32028/9781803279633

Contents

Preface – Peter Stewart

From Berenike to Ajanta:The Romano-Egyptian Connection to the early Buddhist art of South and Central Asia – William Dalrymple

Greeks and the Art of India: Philosophy through Art – Richard Stoneman

Yavanas in Early Indian Inscriptions Upinder Singh

Beyond Gandhara: Expressions of Art along Ancient Indian Trade Routes (3rd century BC to 5th century AD) – Sunil Gupta

Small Figurines Shaping the Ancient Global World across the Indian Ocean Serena Autiero

Coining Koine: Reading Numismatic Images in the Context of Global Exchange – Jeremy A. Simmons

Exploring Navagrahas (the Nine Planets) in Indian and Graeco-Roman Art – Mandira Sharma

Reflections of Roman Art in Southern India: Amarāvatī and Nāgārjunakoṇḍa – Elizabeth Rosen Stone

On Ivory and Theatre: The Exchange between Āndhradeśa and the West – Monika Zin

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