Indo-Europeans in Ancient India
About 1500 BC, India
was invaded by Indo-European
people. These people came from the area between the Black
Sea and the Caspian sea. Between 2500 and 2000 BC, many Indo-Europeans
migrated all over Eurasia. Some went to Europe and became the Romans
and the Greeks,
some settled in Turkey and became the Hittites.
Others migrated south-east instead. Some of them stopped in Iran, while
others continued south-east to Pakistan and India. The slow migration
did not arrive in northern India until about 1500 BC. In India, the
Indo-Europeans are usually called the Aryans.
Some people have disputed this arrival of the Indo-Europeans, and if you search the web you will find some sites saying that it never happened. But there are written records of the language that these Indo-European people brought with them to India, Sanskrit. We can read Sanskrit, and we can easily see that many words in Sanskrit are basically the same as in other Indo-European languages. In addition, recent genetic evidence supports the arrival of the Indo-Europeans.
In addition to their language, the Aryans brought their gods with them to India. These gods form the basis of the Rig Veda and other sagas which were first written down in Sanskrit. They also brought the domesticated horse.
Some people have disputed this arrival of the Indo-Europeans, and if you search the web you will find some sites saying that it never happened. But there are written records of the language that these Indo-European people brought with them to India, Sanskrit. We can read Sanskrit, and we can easily see that many words in Sanskrit are basically the same as in other Indo-European languages. In addition, recent genetic evidence supports the arrival of the Indo-Europeans.
In addition to their language, the Aryans brought their gods with them to India. These gods form the basis of the Rig Veda and other sagas which were first written down in Sanskrit. They also brought the domesticated horse.

Indus River
The Aryans first settled along the Indus River, in the same place
where the Harappa people had lived. They settled
down and mixed with the local Indian people. They lived there from about
1500 BC to about 800 BC. It seems to be at this time that the caste
system got started in India.
About 800 BC, the Aryans learned how to use iron
for weapons and tools. They probably learned to work iron from the people
of West Asia, the Assyrians,
who had learned it from the Indo-European Hittites.
Once the Aryans learned how to use iron, they used their new weapons
to conquer more of India, and moved to the south and east into the Ganges
river valley. They settled there not long after 800 BC.
To find out more about the Indo-Europeans' arrival in India, check out these books from your local library or from Amazon:
Eyewitness India, by Manini Chatterjee (2002). Written for kids.
Ancient India, by Virginia Schomp (2005). Written for middle schoolers. Very good for reports.
Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History, by Edwin Bryant (2005). A scholar's discussion for other scholars of all the evidence concerning Indo-European nomads coming to India (for and against), but written for adults rather than kids.
The Aryan Debate, by Thomas Trautman (2005). Not a kids' book, but a collection of past writings about this question, designed to show why it is so political and what the problems are with the evidence.


