"SHIVKAR BAPUJI TALPADE" The First Inventor Of AirPlane NAMED "MARUTASKHA" actually before the Wright Brothers
The original writer of this article is K R N SWAMY who had published this article in the Deccan Herald on 16 Dec 1999.
The original writer of this article is K R N SWAMY who had published this article in the Deccan Herald on 16 Dec 1999.
“The
ancient Hindus could navigate the air, and not only navigate it but
fight battles in it like so many war-eagles, combating for the
domination of the clouds. To be so perfect in aeronautics they must have
known all the arts and sciences relating to the science, including the
strata and currents of the atmosphere, the relative temperature,
humidity, density and specific gravity of the various gases…..” – Col.
Olcott in a lecture in Allahabad in 1881.
The
Rig Veda, the oldest document of the human race includes references to
the following modes of transportation: Jalayan – a vehicle designed to
operate in air and water (Rig Veda 6.58.3); Kaara- Kaara- Kaara- a
vehicle that operates on ground and in water. (Rig Veda 9.14.1);
Tritala- Tritala- Tritala- a vehicle consisting of three stories. (Rig
Veda 3.14.1); Trichakra Ratha – Trichakra Ratha – Trichakra Ratha – a
three-wheeled vehicle designed to operate in the air. (Rig Veda 4.36.1);
Vaayu Ratha- Vaayu Ratha- Vaayu Ratha- a gas or wind-powered chariot.
(Rig Veda 5.41.6); Vidyut Ratha- Vidyut Ratha- Vidyut Ratha- a vehicle
that operates on power. (Rig Veda 3.14.1).
Ancient
Sanskrit literature is full of descriptions of flying machines –
Vimanas. From the many documents found it is evident that the
scientist-sages Agastya and Bharadwaja had developed the lore of
aircraft construction.
The
“Agastya Samhita” gives us Agastya`s descriptions of two types of
aeroplanes. The first is a “chchatra” (umbrella or balloon) to be filled
with hydrogen. The process of extracting hydrogen from water is
described in elaborate detail and the use of electricity in achieving
this is clearly stated. This was stated to be a primitive type of plane,
useful only for escaping from a fort when the enemy had set fire to the
jungle all around. Hence the name “Agniyana”. The second type of
aircraft mentioned is somewhat on the lines of the parachute. It could
be opened and shut by operating chords. This aircraft has been described
as “vimanadvigunam” i.e. of a lower order than the regular aeroplane.
Aeronautics
or Vaimaanika Shastra is a part of Yantra Sarvasva of Bharadwaja. This
is also known as Brihadvimaana Shastra. Vaimaanikashastra deals about
aeronautics, including the design of aircraft, the way they can be used
for transportation and other applications, in detail. The knowledge of
aeronautics is described in Sanskrit in 100 sections, eight chapters,
500 principles and 3000 slokas. Great sage Bharadwaja explained the
construction of aircraft and way to fly it in air, on land, on water and
use the same aircraft like a sub-marine. He also described the
construction of war planes and fighter aircraft.
Vaimaanika
Shastra explains the metals and alloys and other required material,
which can be make an aircraft imperishable in any condition. Planes
which will not break (abhedya), or catch fire (adaahya) and which cannot
be cut (achchedya) have been described. Along with the treatise there
are diagrams of three types of aeroplanes – “Sundara”, “Shukana” and
“Rukma”.
The
aircraft is classified into three types- Mantrika, Tantrika and
Kritaka, to suit different yugas or eras. In kritayuga, it is said,
Dharma was well established. The people of that time had the devinity to
reach any place using their Ashtasiddhis. The aircraft used in
Tretayuga are called Mantrikavimana, flown by the power of hymns
(mantras). Twenty-five varieties of aircraft including Pushpaka Vimana
belong to this era. The aircraft used in Dwaparayuga were called
Tantrikavimana, flown by the power of tantras. Fiftysix varieties of
aircraft including Bhairava and Nandaka belong to this era. The aircraft
used in Kaliyuga, the on-going yuga, are called Kritakavimana, flown by
the power of engines. Twenty-five varieties of aircraft including
“Sundara”, “Shukana” and “Rukma” belong to this era.
Bharadwaja
states that there are thirty-two secrets of the science of aeronautics.
Of these some are astonishing and some indicate an advance even beyond
our own times. For instance the secret of “para shabda graaha”, i.e. a
cabin for listening to conversation in another plane, has been explained
by elaborately describing an electrically worked sound-receiver that
did the trick. Manufacture of different types of instruments and putting
them together to form an aircraft are also described.
It
appears that aerial warfare was also not unknown, for the treatise
gives the technique of “shatru vimana kampana kriya” and “shatru vimana
nashana kriya” i.e. shaking and destroying enemy aircraft, as well as
photographing enemy planes, rendering their occupants unconscious and
making one`s own plane invisible.
In
Vastraadhikarana, the chapter describing the dress and other wear
required while flying, talks in detail about the wear for both the pilot
and the passenger separately.
Ahaaraadhikarana
is yet another section exclusively dealing with the food habits of a
pilot. This has a variety of guidelines for pilots to keep their health
through strict diet.
Bhardwaja
also provides a bibliography. He had consulted six treatises by six
different authors previous to him and he gives their names and the names
of their works in the following order : Vimana Chandrika by
Narayanamuni; Vyoma Yana Mantrah by Shaunaka; Yantra Kalpa by Garga;
Yana Bindu by Vachaspati; Kheta Yaana Pradeepika by Chaakraayani; Vyoma
Yaanarka Prakasha by Dundi Natha.
As
before Bharadwaja, after him too there have been Sanskrit writers on
aeronautics and there were four commentaries on his work. The names of
the commentators are Bodh Deva, Lalla, Narayana Shankha and
Vishwambhara.
Evidence
of existence of aircrafts are also found in the Arthasastra of Kautilya
(c. 3rd century B.C.). Kautilya mentions amongst various tradesmen and
technocrats the Saubhikas as `pilots conducting vehicles in the sky`.
Saubha was the name of the aerial flying city of King Harishchandra and
the form `Saubika` means `one who flies or knows the art of flying an
aerial city`. Kautilya uses another significant word `Akasa Yodhinah`,
which has been translated as `persons who are trained to fight from the
sky.` The existence of aerial chariots, in whatever form it might be,
was so well-known that it found a place among the royal edicts of the
Emperor Asoka which were executed during his reign from 256 B.C. – 237
B. C.
It
is interesting to note that the Academy of Sanskrit Research in
Melkote, near Mandya, had been commissioned by the Aeronautical Research
Development Board, New Delhi, to take up a one-year study,
‘Non-conventional approach to Aeronautics’, on the basis of Vaimanika
Shastra. As a result of the research, a glass-like material which cannot
be detected by radar has been developed by Prof Dongre, a research
scholar of Benaras Hindu University. A plane coated with this unique
material cannot be detected using radar. (Did You Know this?
http://www.indpride.com/didyouknow.html)
But
perhaps the most interesting thing, about the Indian science of
aeronautics and Bharadwaja`s research in the field was that they were
successfully tested in actual practice by an Indian over hundred years
ago. In 1895, full eight years before the Wright Brothers` first flight
at Kitty hawk, North Carolina, USA, Shivkar Bapuji Talpade and his wife
gave a thrilling demonstration flight on the Chowpatty beach in Mumbai.
An
even more astonishing feature of Talpade’s aircraft was the power
source he used- An Ion Engine. The theory of the Ion Engine has been
credited to Robert Goddard, long recognized as the father of Liquid-fuel
Rocketry. It is claimed that in 1906, long before Goddard launched his
first modern rocket, his imagination had conceived the idea of an Ion
rocket. But the fact is that not only had the idea of an Ion Engine been
conceived long before Dr Goddard, it had also been materialized in the
form of Talpade’s aircraft.
Mr.
Talpade, a resident of Mumbai, was an erudite scholar of Sanskrit
literature, especially of the Vedas, an inventor and a teacher in the
School of Arts. His deep study of the Vedas led him to construct an
aeroplane in conformity with descriptions of aircraft available in the
Vedas and he displayed it in an exhibition arranged by the Bombay Art
Society in the Town Hall. Its proving the star attraction of the
exhibition encouraged its maker to go deeper into the matter and see if
the plane could be flown with the aid of mercurial pressure. For the one
hundred and ninetieth “richa” (verse) of the Rig Veda and the
aeronautical treatise of Bharadwaja mention that flying machines came
into full operation when the power of the sun`s rays, mercury and
another chemical called “Naksha rassa” were blended together. This
energy was, it seems, stored in something like an accumulator or storage
batteries. The Vedas refer to eight different engines in the plane and
Bharadwaja adds that they are worked by electricity.
He
was a scholar of Sanskrit and from his young age was attracted by the
Vaimanika Sastra (Aeronautical Science) expounded by the great Indian
sage Maharishi Bhardwaja. One western scholar of Indology Stephen-Knapp
has put in simple words or rather has tried to explain what Talpade did
and succeeded!
According
to Knapp, the Vaimanika Shastra describes in detail, the construction
of what is called, the mercury vortex engine the forerunner of the ion
engines being made today by NASA. Knapp adds that additional information
on the mercury engines can be found in the ancient Vedic text called
Samaranga Sutradhara. This text also devotes 230 verses, to the use of
these machines in peace and war. The Indologist William Clarendon, who
has written down a detailed description of the mercury vortex engine in
his translation of Samaranga Sutradhara quotes thus ‘Inside the circular
air frame, place the mercury-engine with its solar mercury boiler at
the aircraft center. By means of the power latent in the heated mercury
which sets the driving whirlwind in motion a man sitting inside may
travel a great distance in a most marvellous manner. Four strong mercury
containers must be built into the interior structure. When these have
been heated by fire through solar or other sources the vimana (aircraft)
develops thunder-power through the mercury.
NASA
(National Aeronau-tical and Space Administra-tion) world’s richest/
most powerful scientific organisation is trying to create an ion engine
that is a device that uses a stream of high velocity electrified
particles instead of a blast of hot gases like in present day modern jet
engines. Surprisingly according to the bi-monthly Ancient Skies
published in USA, the aircraft engines being developed for future use by
NASA by some strange coincidence also uses mercury bombardment units
powered by Solar cells! Interestingly, the impulse is generated in seven
stages. The mercury propellant is first vapourised fed into the
thruster discharge chamber ionised converted into plasma by a
combination with electrons broke down electrically and then accelerated
through small openings in a screen to pass out of the engine at
velocities between 1200 to 3000 kilometres per minute! But so far NASA
has been able to produce an experimental basis only a one pound of
thrust by its scientists a power derivation virtually useless.
Mr.
Talpade carried on his research along these lines and constructed an
aeroplane. In his experiments he was aided by his wife, also a deep
scholar of the Vedic lore, and an architect friend. The plane combined
the constructional characteristics of both “Pushpaka” and “Marut Sakha”,
the sixth and eighth types of aircraft described by Bharadwaja. It was
named “Marut Sakha” meaning “Friend of the Wind”.
With
this plane this pioneer airman of modern India gave a demonstration
flight on the Chowpatty Beach in Mumbai in the year 1895. The machine
attained a height of about 1500 feet and then automatically landed
safely. The flight was witnessed, among many others, by Sir Sayajirao
Gaekwad, the Maharaja of Baroda and Justice Govind Ranade and was
reported in “The Kesari” a leading Marathi daily newspaper. They were
impressed by the feat and rewarded the talented inventor.
According
to Indian scholar Acharya, ‘Vaimanika Shastra deals about aeronautics
including the design of aircraft the way they can be used for
transportation and other applications in detail. The knowledge of
aeronautics is described in Sanskrit in 100 sections, eight chapters,
500 principles and 3000 slokas including 32 techniques to fly an
aircraft. In fact, depending on the classifications of eras or Yugas in
modern Kaliyuga aircraft used are called Krithakavimana flown by the
power of engines by absorbing solar energies!’ It is feared that only
portions of Bharadwaja’s masterpiece Vaimanika Shas-tra survive today.
The
question that comes to one’s mind is, what happened to this wonderful
encyclopaedia of aeronautical knowledge accumulated by the Indian
savants of yore, and why was it not used? But in those days, such
knowledge was the preserve of sages, who would not allow it to be
misused, just like the knowledge of atomic bombs is being used by
terrorists today!
According
to scholar Ratnakar Mahajan who wrote a brochure on Talpade. ‘Being a
Sanskrit scholar interested in aeronautics, Talpade studied and
consulted a number of Vedic treatises like Brihad Vaimanika Shastra of
Maharishi Bharadwaja Vimanachandrika of Acharya Narayan Muni Viman
yantra of Maharish Shownik Yantra Kalp by Maharishi Garg Muni Viman
Bindu of Acharya Vachaspati and Vimana Gyanarka Prakashika of Maharishi
Dhundiraj’. This gave him confidence that he can build an aircraft with
mercury engines. One essential factor in the creation of these Vedic
aircraft was the timing of the Suns Rays or Solar energy (as being now
utilised by NASA) when they were most effective to activate the mercury
ions of the engine. Happily for Talpade Maharaja Sayaji Rao Gaekwad of
Baroda a great supporter of the Sciences in India, was willing to help
him and Talpade went ahead with his aircraft construction with mercury
engines. One day in 1895 (unfortunately the actual date is not mentioned
in the Kesari newspaper of Pune which covered the event) before an
curious scholarly audience headed by the famous Indian judge/
nationalist/ Mahadeva Govin-da Ranade and H H Sayaji Rao Gaekwad Talpade
had the good fortune to see his un manned aircraft named as
‘Marutsakthi’ take off, fly to a height of 1500 feet and then fall down
to earth.
N.B:- According to popular sources
But
this success of an Indian scientist was not liked by the Imperial
rulers. Warned by the British Government the Maharaja of Baroda stopped
helping Talpade. It is said that the remains of the Marutsakthi were
sold to ‘foreign parties’ by the relatives of Talpade in order to
salvage whatever they can out of their loans to him. Talpade’s wife died
at this critical juncture and he was not in a mental frame to continue
with his researches. But his efforts to make known the greatness of
Vedic Shastras was recognised by Indian scholars, who gave him the title
of Vidya Prakash Pra-deep.
Talpade passed away in 1916 un-honoured, in his own country.
As
the world rightly honours the Wright Brothers for their achievements,
we should think of Talpade, who utilised the ancient knowledge of
Sanskrit texts, to fly an aircraft, eight years before his foreign
counterparts.
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