India's Golden Age Podcast

Sarvajeet Dinesh Chandra

What if I told you India once owned 30% of the global economy AND the world's philosophical imagination? We invented Zero. We gave the world Karma, Ahimsa, Yoga, Nirvana, Maths, Geometry etc. Then we fell silent for a millennium. But the Great Wheel of History is turning again. This podcast by Sarvajeet Dinesh Chandra explores the untold stories of India's first Golden Age. And the blueprint for our second. Discover forgotten inventions, untold stories, and strategic conversations that define India's comeback. Subscribe to reclaim your heritage and build the future.

Episodes

  1. The Steel That Cut Through Crusader Swords | India's Forgotten Superweapon, Wootz Steel

    15H AGO

    The Steel That Cut Through Crusader Swords | India's Forgotten Superweapon, Wootz Steel

    The steel that armed Vikings, shattered Crusader swords, and defeated Faraday: iit was never Damascus. It was always Indian wootz. Discover how Indian women smiths created nanotechnology 2300 years early, and how Britain deliberately silenced them. In the 11th century, Crusader knights discovered their European broadswords, forged over six months of labour, shattered on contact with slender Indian blades. The steel they faced wasn't Arab. It was wootz from South Indian furnaces, already two thousand years in development. Tamil women like Velvi were the custodians of this knowledge, controlling charcoal preparation and wood selection with a precision that modern chemistry would take millennia to understand. Cassia auriculata wood. Calotropis gigantea leaves. Ores from specific mines. Science now knows why these choices produced carbon nanotubes. She just knew that they worked. The Volga trade route carried Indian steel from Tamil Nadu through Baghdad to Birka, Sweden. When Michael Faraday attempted to recreate wootz in the early 19th century, he failed repeatedly. Shortly after, the East India Company ensured no Indian smith could succeed where Faraday could not. Workshops closed. Guilds dissolved. Artisans moved to agriculture. India's 25% global manufacturing share collapsed to under 2%. In 2006, a Dresden research team examining a 300 BCE wootz blade found carbon nanotubes. Their paper concluded that ancient craftsmen "ended up making nanotubes" through empirical mastery. Some knowledge, once lost, takes millennia to rediscover. 0:00 — The Crusades: A Superior Blade Changes Everything  0:49 — India's Metallurgical Legacy: A 3,000-Year History  1:14 — Challenging the Accepted Iron Age Narrative  1:42 — Tamil Nadu Evidence: Rewriting the Iron Age Timeline  2:06 — Velvi, 300 BCE: Ancient Steel in Practice  3:00 — Women's Role in Indian Metallurgical Tradition  3:30 — The Iron Pillar of Delhi: An Unexplained Achievement  3:58 — Indian Steel in Viking-Age Scandinavia  4:52 — Global Trade Networks and the Wootz Steel Journey  5:19 — Tipu Sultan's Sword and Faraday's Failed Experiments 5:44 — Colonial De-industrialisation and India's Decline  6:25 — Dresden 2006: Carbon Nanotubes in Ancient Wootz  7:19 — Living Craft Knowledge and the Risk of Its Loss  7:44 — Conclusion: India's Metallurgical Legacy Today

    9 min
  2. 9 Centuries Before Harvard | India's MBA Shaped Persia, Tibet & China

    FEB 13

    9 Centuries Before Harvard | India's MBA Shaped Persia, Tibet & China

    India had the world's first MBA program in 640 CE, and almost nobody knows. Discover why Vallabhi's merchant-monks trained emperors across three continents, then vanished from history. Fourteen centuries ago, while Europe was deep in the Dark Ages, an institution in Gujarat was teaching economics, statecraft, and strategic thinking to students from Persia, Tibet, and Tang China. Vallabhi wasn't just a monastery. It was a business school in saffron robes, training advisors who shaped empires from the Mediterranean to the Mekong. This isn't abstract philosophy. Vallabhi graduates ran taxation systems, settled multi-kingdom disputes, and designed trade networks that lasted centuries. They solved what we still struggle with: integrating spiritual depth with practical skill, profit with purpose, strategy with ethics. Then around 775 CE, Arab raids disrupted the coast. Trade routes shifted. Patronage dried up. The institution that trained minds to think like merchants instead of monks slowly faded, taking with it the idea that a civilisation could educate whole humans, not just specialists. 0:00 World's First Business School Under Attack 0:22 Ancient MBA Program Destroyed - Students Flee 0:50 Gujarat's Elite Institution Rivaled Nalanda1:19 Why Vallabhi Vanished Around 775 CE 2:09 Chinese Monk Xuanzang Records Vallabhi's Wealth 2:34 Goldman Sachs Meets Philosophy Professors 3:01 Teaching Strategy, Not Just Meditation3:26 Harvard Business School in Saffron Robes 3:55 Archaeological Discovery: A Trade School Logo 4:19 Vallabhi's Brand vs Harvard's Global Recognition 4:42 Lecture on Economics During Famine 5:25 Graduates Shaped Policy Across Continents 5:54 Nalanda vs Vallabhi: Truth vs Practical Action 6:26 Ancient University's Revenue Model 6:48 The Fall of Vallabhi 7:37 Ideas That Survived 1,400 Years #VallabhiUniversity #AncientBusinessSchool #BuddhistEducation #IndianMBA #MedievalEducation

    9 min
  3. Before Europe Had Museums | How Indian Monks Built The World's Greatest Art Gallery

    FEB 6

    Before Europe Had Museums | How Indian Monks Built The World's Greatest Art Gallery

    Celibate monks painted THESE women 1,500 years ago? Ajanta's apsaras aren't passive. They advance narratives, show agency, and challenge everything you thought about "patriarchal" ancient India. Here's what surprised me most while researching Ajanta: the women. They're everywhere: dancing apsaras, determined queens, knowing courtesans, nursing mothers. And they're not decoration. They're characters with interiority, agency, and voice. In one painting, a queen grabs her husband's robe as he renounces his kingdom—the feeling lands across 1,500 years. The old monks who commissioned these paintings understood something timeless: you cannot tell a human story without women at its center. They drew not from observation but from memory and longing—images they carried in secret, that still haunted them in meditation. This wasn't objectification; it was honoUring complexity. But there's a larger pattern here. Across ancient India. From Ajanta's artists to the Gupta queens I write about in my novel, women's contributions have been systematically erased from popular narratives. Not because they weren't central, but because later histories chose to forget them. The continuity is startling: faces in these paintings look like people in modern Maharashtra. Two millennia should feel like a gulf. Instead, the past feels urgent and present. 0:00 British Officer Discovers Hidden Caves While Hunting 0:49 One Thousand Years of Silence Broken 1:18 Buddhist Monks Choose a 100-Foot Basalt Wall 1:47 Carving a Monastery Inside Solid Rock 2:09 Vakatakas Restart the Abandoned Project 2:36 Engineering Marvel: Carving From Top Down 3:03 No Blueprints, Only Shared Knowledge 3:32 The Paintings That Made Ajanta World Famous 3:54 Old Monks Painting From Memory and Longing 4:19 Women Given Agency and Voice in Art 4:45 Stories That Still Land After 1,500 Years 5:10 Buddha's Previous Lives: Tales of Sacrifice 6:01 Artistic Excellence Rivalling Athens and Florence 6:28 Painter Madhava Creates the Lotus Bearer's Eyes 7:23 How Paintings Survived 1,500 Years 7:46 Three-Layer Engineering of the Walls 8:45 The Oldest Painted Indian Faces on Record 9:32 Ajanta's Impact Across Asian Buddhist Art 10:31 British Failures and Unintended Consequences 11:22 Preserving Handmade Craftsmanship in the AI Age

    13 min
  4. Chess Is India’s Metaverse | The Ancient Indian IQ Test That Built Empires

    JAN 30

    Chess Is India’s Metaverse | The Ancient Indian IQ Test That Built Empires

    Chess = India's 1,500-year masterclass in soft power, transformation, and exponential thinking. Every founder needs to hear this story. Forget European chess. Ancient India invented Chaturanga: the original strategy game that conquered the world not through force, but through pure engagement. This episode reveals how one Indian innovation spread globally by being better, richer, and more adaptable than anything else. Learn the strategic frameworks that made chess eternal. Modern Strategy Lessons: Soft Power Wins: Chess spread through interest, not propaganda, a lesson for building global brandsTransformation Requires Risk: Like the pawn's journey to queen, growth demands surviving dangerous exposureOpen Architecture Scales: India built chess, but its flexibility allowed global evolutionProtect the Periphery: Systems fail when the center wastes its edges (organizational wisdom)Embrace Change: The "Mad Queen" upgrade proves that tradition lives when it evolves 00:00 - AI Crushes Chess Genius Kasparov 00:29 - India Reclaims Its 1500-Year Legacy 00:57 - War Trapped in a Box: 6th Century India 01:59 - Chess 4,000 Years Old? 02:25 - India's IQ Test That Humbled Persia 03:54 - How Checkmate Became Persian Propaganda 04:23 - Islam's Chess Controversy 05:56 - Europe Rewrites Chess History 07:26 - Queens Become Deadly 08:41 - China & Japan's Chess Knockoffs 10:02 - Scholar Proves India Invented Chess 10:29 - Colonised Indian Humiliates British Masters 11:29 - Rice Grains & The Story of Sissa 12:16 - More Games Than Atoms

    14 min
  5. How India Addicted the West to Pepper. And What it Teaches Us About Semiconductors and Power

    JAN 23

    How India Addicted the West to Pepper. And What it Teaches Us About Semiconductors and Power

    Rome paid barbarian king Alaric 3,000 pounds of Indian pepper in 410 CE. Not as food but as psychological warfare currency. This is India's forgotten trade empire that drained Rome of millions, funded temples, and created the first NRI diaspora. The story they never taught you. In this episode, discover how Kerala's pepper monopoly lasted 3,000 years, why Indian sailors carved their names into Egyptian walls, and how Tamil women with "pepper-stained fingers" ran the world's first global supply chain. From Pharaoh Ramesses II's nose to Roman toilets at Hadrian's Wall, black peppercorns tell the story of India's first golden age. Modern Lessons: Why Columbus died chasing India How Indians detected Roman currency debasement instantly. Why trust-based systems beat state guarantees. The semiconductor parallel to pepper monopolies. Why strong cultures absorb while weak ones build walls. 0:00 Introduction: Pepper as Economic Weapon in Ancient Rome 1:38 Archaeological Evidence of Indian Pepper in Roman Empire 2:34 Pepper Trade Routes: From Kerala to Pharaoh's Egypt 3:01 The Muziris Papyrus: Captain Marcus's High-Stakes Voyage 4:35 Ancient India's Sophisticated Pepper Production & Trade Systems 5:44 Tamil Maritime Networks: India's Early Global Diaspora 6:39 Roman Complaints & Trade Deficit: Pliny the Elder's Account 7:36 Monsoon Wind Navigation: Correcting the Hippalus Attribution 9:05 Information Asymmetry: Medieval Myths Protecting Trade Monopolies 10:06 Currency Philosophy: Indian Preference for Intrinsic Value 11:29 Columbus's Quest for India & Impact on World History

    13 min

About

What if I told you India once owned 30% of the global economy AND the world's philosophical imagination? We invented Zero. We gave the world Karma, Ahimsa, Yoga, Nirvana, Maths, Geometry etc. Then we fell silent for a millennium. But the Great Wheel of History is turning again. This podcast by Sarvajeet Dinesh Chandra explores the untold stories of India's first Golden Age. And the blueprint for our second. Discover forgotten inventions, untold stories, and strategic conversations that define India's comeback. Subscribe to reclaim your heritage and build the future.