Kerajaan Indo-Yunani: Perbedaan antara revisi

Konten dihapus Konten ditambahkan
Baris 290:
 
Menurut Yugapurana, orang Yawana mundur sesudah pecah konflik-konflik internal:
{{quote|"Orang YawanYawana akan memerintahberkuasa, raja-raja akan sirna. (Tetapi pada akhirnya) orang Yawana, lantaralantaran dimabukmabuk pertempuranperang, tidak tetap tinggal di Madadesa ([[Madhya Pradesh|Negeri Tengah]]); tidak pelak lagi akan pecah perang saudara di tengah-tengah mereka, tersulut di negeri mereka sendiri ([[Baktria]]), akan berkobar perang dahsyat dan berdarah-darah." (Gargasanghita, Yugapurana, Pupuh 7).<ref name="Chakrbarti"/>}}<!--
 
According to Mitchener, the [[Hathigumpha inscription]] indicates the presence of the Indo-Greeks led by a ruler listed as "ta" from [[Mathura]] during the 1st century BCE.<ref>"The name Dimita is almost certainly an adaptation of "Demetrios", and the inscription thus indicates a Yavana presence in Magadha, probably around the middle of the 1st century BC." Mitchener, ''The Yuga Purana'', p. 65.</ref> Although, the name of the king has been omitted and undeciphered. The remaining syllables [ta] has been disputed. It has been argued by Tarn to be referencing the ruler Demetrius. However this interpretation is disputed by other historians like Narain, which point out the discrepancies in chronology and the fact Demetrius didn't ventured past Punjab.<ref>"The Hathigumpha inscription seems to have nothing to do with the history of the Indo-Greeks; certainly it has nothing to do with Demetrius I", Narain, ''The Indo-Greeks'', p. 50.</ref> Instead most historians now theorize it to be the Indo-Greek ruler Menander I, or perhaps a later Yavana king from Mathura.