Tania Gagarin Sharma.
24 years of age.
An only child of her parents.
A student doing her Ph.D. from the University in Moscow, Russia.
Father was Doctor Mahesh Sharma, now deceased.
Mother was Doctor Svetlana Gagarin Sharma, now deceased.
Both parents worked as Doctors in Moscow Medical college and hospital.
Both died in a car accident.
Paternal Grandfather (Dada ji) Dinesh Sharma.
Paternal Grandmother (Dadi ji) Mira Sharma.
Residents of Dharmshala, Himachal Pradesh, India.
Maternal Grandfather (Nana ji) Fedor Gagarin, now deceased.
Maternal Grandmother (Nani ji)) Nikita Gagarin.
Maternal Aunt (Massi ji) Galine.
Maternal Uncle (Mama ji/Mamu ji) Igor Gagarin.
Dr. Victor Dimitrius, Phychiatrist and Past Life Regression Therapist.
Sanya, Princess of Kalibangan province of the Indus Valley Civilization (IVC), Tania in the present life.
Sanya's Father, King of Kalibangan province of the IVC, Tania's father in the present life.
Sanya's Mother, Queen of Kalibangan province of IVC, died of an illness.
Sanya's Brother, Crown Prince of Kalibangan province of IVC, died of an illness.
Sanya's Uncle, King's younger brother (Chacha ji) who wants to usurp the throne.
Saroj Verma Medical Student in a Medical College in Rajasthan, Tania in the present life.
Intern in a hospital in Rajasthan Died in 1978 because of Gas leak.
Her professor's daughter, Komal Mishra, is a rival.
The Professor, Mihr Mishra, father of Komal Mishra, Tania's Uncle Igor in the present life.
He murdered Saroj Verma.
Little girl, Anastasia, Tania in the present life.
Born in a farmer family in Khayenky village near Kiev, Ukraine in 1981.
Died at 10 years of age in a fire along with her parents.
The fire was caused by a short circuit in 1991 when USSR split up to form a number of separate countries. Anastasia and her family were neighbors of the Gagarin family.
The old man and his wife were the Great grandparents of Tania in the present life.
Their son Fedor, now deceased, was Tania's maternal grandfather and Nikita is Tania's maternal grandmother in the present life.
Margret Smith, Tania in present life. Died in 1867 due to fall from cliff in the Valley of flowers.
Age-24 years.
Father, Professor Albert Smith, Botanist from UK.
Ian Brown, the person who fell from cliff. Tania's Uncle Igor in the present life.
Peter Black, the friend of Ian Brown, who committed suicide.
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Tania Gagarin Sharma had become an orphan after the demise of her parents in a car accident. It was a head-on collision, and they had died in an instant. Her parents had belonged to two different cultures, two different religions, two different languages and two different eating habits. They had been boycotted by their respective parents.
An only child of her parents, Tania's life was not easy. It has been a struggle since her parents left her alone in this world to fend for herself.
Her father was an Indian and her mother was a Russian. They had met when her father and mother were studying medicine at the First Moscow State University. He was in the final year of his studies and her mother was in her 3rd year. It was love at first sight. They got married as soon as they completed their studies. Her father stayed behind and did not go back to India. They both started working in the medical college and hospital.
Their marriage was held in secret and within a year of their marriage, her mother gave birth to a little girl they named Tania. Tania was a cute little Russian girl with sharp Indian features. As is usual, in inter-religious and international type marriages, neither of her grandparents accepted their marriage nor their grandchild. Her father was a Hindu and her mother was an Orthodox Christian.
Neither side was willing to accept such a marriage nor a progeny from such a marriage. But for her parents, their love was all that mattered. They both believed in spirituality which is beyond religion. Something like live and let others live too. Not to interfere in another's space. Your space ends where the space of another person begins. They had tried to reconcile with their respective parents even after Tania was born, but to no avail.
The name of Tania's father was Mahesh Sharma and the name of her mother was Svetlana Gagarin. Both were made for each other and could not live apart. They understood each other perfectly, just by reading each other's facial expressions. She, being their only child, was pampered and provided with whatever she desired. All the toys and clothes were bought for her, no matter how expensive they were.
Her entire childhood was spent in Moscow, the capital of Russia. She wanted to visit India with all of her heart. It was a burning desire. She would sometimes see many temples and forts in her dreams. The dreams were so vivid, so vibrant that it seemed as if she had lived in those temples and forts at some time.
Since her name was too long, she had shortened it to Tania G. Sharma.
Ever since she had decided to keep her name long, there had been regular arguments with her parents which went like this.
"Why do you want to have such a long name?" her mother would ask her.
"Just to let everyone know who my mother is and who my father is." She had replied.
"I am sure that when you fill up your application forms for any job, you will not be able to fit in your surname in the blank boxes," added her father.
"Well...! In that situation I will just add the first letter G between my name and my surname." She replied.
When she went to file her application papers for admission in the University, this situation had actually arisen. She had thus, truncated her name to Tania G. Sharma.
Soon, she entered higher studies and went on to study Ancient Indian History. She was an avid reader of Friedrich Max Müller, a German-born philologist and Orientalist, who lived and studied in Britain for most of his life. He was one of the founders of the western academic field of Indian studies and the discipline of study of religions. Müller wrote both scholarly and popular works on the subject of Indology.
Tania had learnt that Max Müller was educated in Sanskrit, the classical language of India, and other languages in Leipzig, Berlin, and Paris. She also found out that he had translated many texts from the ancient and revered religious and philosophical books of Asia. Among these, especially noteworthy, was his edition of the great collection of Sanskrit hymns called the Rigveda,
However, she was more interested in the prehistory period that is the Indus Valley Civilization which was a Bronze Age civilization in the northwestern regions of South Asia, lasting from 3300 BCE to 1300 BCE, and in its mature form from 2600 BCE to 1900 BCE. Harappa and the city of Mohenjo-Daro, Lothal, Kalibangan, Dolivera etc, were the greatest achievements of the Indus valley civilization. These cities are well known for their impressive, organized and regular layout. They had well laid out plumbing and drainage system, including indoor toilets.
Harappa and Mohenjodaro are now in present day Pakistan. These were great cities known for the huge number of residents, the burnt bricks used in construction, the drainage system, their guilds, their merchants who visited many countries on basis of their seals found in other countries.
Harappa has structural remains include those of a citadel/fortress, a massive monumental building once called the granary, and at least three cemeteries.
Mohenjo-Daro had a Citadel and the Lower City. The Citadel supported public baths, a large residential structure designed to house about 5,000 citizens, and two large assembly halls. The lower city had a central marketplace, with a large central well. Individual households or groups of households obtained their water from smaller wells.
Wastewater was channeled to covered drains that lined the major streets. Some houses, presumably those of more prestigious inhabitants, include rooms that appear to have been set aside for bathing, and one building had an underground furnace (known as a hypocaust), possibly for heated bathing. Most houses had inner courtyards, with doors that opened onto side-lanes. Some buildings had two stories. Something like how the present city of Chandigarh has been built.
Lothal was the port city of Indus Valley Civilization and had the world's earliest known dry dock, which connected the city to an ancient course of the Sabarmati River on the trade route between Harappan cities in Sindh and the peninsula of Saurashtra when the surrounding Kutch desert of today was a part of the Arabian Sea. It was situated in Gujarat, India and was excavated by S.R.Rao in the year 1957. It is said that the dockyard was located away from the main current to avoid deposition of silt. It is speculated that Lothal engineers studied tidal movements, and their effects on brick-built structures since the walls are of kiln-burnt bricks.
Kalibangan, in present-day Rajasthan, India, was a major provincial capital of the Indus Valley Civilization. Kalibangan is distinguished by its unique fire altars and "world's earliest attested ploughed field". The citadel and the lower city were in evidence here too. Things found here were small blades of chalcedony and agate, sometimes serrated or backed; beads of steatite, shell, carnelian, terracotta and copper; bangles of copper, shell and terracotta; terracotta objects like a toy-cart, wheel and a broken bull; quem with mullers, a bone point, and copper celts, including an unusual axe, etc. Toy carts suggest carts were used for transportation in Kalibangan.