Wright Brothers demonstrated on December 17th 1903 that it was possible for a ‘manned
heavier than air machine to fly’. But, in 1895, eight years earlier, the
Sanskrit scholar Shivkar Bapuji Talpade had designed a basic aircraft
called Marutsakthi (meaning Power of Air) based on Vedic technology and
had it take off unmanned before a large audience in the Chowpathy beach
of Bombay. The importance of the Wright brothers lies in the fact, that it was
a manned flight for a distance of 120 feet and Orville Wright became the first
man to fly. But Talpade’s unmanned aircraft flew to a height of 1500 feet
before crashing down and the historian Evan Koshtka, has described Talpade
as the ‘first creator of an aircraft’.
Shivkar Bapuji Talpade |
Shivkar Bapuji Talpade
was born in 1864 .Talpade lived at Dukkar
Wadi (now renamed Vijay Wadi), Chira Bazaar, near Mumbai (Bombay).He
was a scholar of Sanskrit and Vedas and from his young age was attracted
by the Vaimanika Sastra (Aeronautical Science) expounded by the great Indian
sage Maharishi Bhardwaja. Thanks to the help of
Pandit Subbaraya Sastry, the man who gifted to the world the Vaimanika Shastra,
Talpade constructed the Marutsakhā and managed to take off it in the Mumbai’s
Chowpatty beach in 1895. We remember that the first unmanned heavier-than-air
flight was John Stringfellow’s in 1848 but the real first man flight was
Wright’s brother of 1908. The Talpade’s work could be considered, however, the
first Indian flight.
As the world observes the
one hundredth anniversary of the first manned flight, it is interesting to
consider the saga of India’s 19th century first aircraft inventor for his
design was entirely based on the rich treasury of India’s Vedas.
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. But 108 years ago Talpade was
able to use his knowledge of Vaimanika Shastra to produce sufficient thrust to
lift his aircraft 1500 feet into the air!
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 Shastra survive 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.
Vimana In Vedik Texts |
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.
Sources
- http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-890055,curpg-1.cms
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shivkar_Bapuji_Talpade
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaim%C4%81nika_Sh%C4%81stra
- https://www.causes.com/actions/1693357-shivkar-bapuji-talpade-who-in-1895-flew-indias-first-aeroplane-in-the-air-be-included-in-school-syllabus
- http://zeenews.india.com/news/videos/top-stories/shivkar-bapuji-talpade-first-indian-to-fly-airplane-in-1895_1525245.html
- http://archive.deccanherald.com/Deccanherald/dec16/snt2.asp
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