Genetic origin was quite beside my point. I never once referenced genetics. My reference to the Mughals being Muslim Perso-Turks was emphasizing their cultural foreignness to India, not their genetic foreignness.You see, we're really beginning to stretch the whole concept of what exactly constitutes a Civilisation...to split the Mughals from India (and now I am regarding India as the geographical region, not the Nehruvian republic - which I think is the least accurate representation of "Indianness") on the basis of genetic origin is possibly inconsistent and exceptionalist.
1) You're actually incorrect; the succeeding Celtic, Anglo-Saxon, Danish, and Norman invasions all had fairly negligible influence on the British genetic landscape. Numerous studies have shown that the genetic makeup of the British Isles has not changed significantly in the past several thousand years. 2) Um, what? A British or Anglo-Saxon civ would be very viable alongside an English civ; indeed, I'd be delighted to see an Anglo-Saxon civ--and puzzled to see an Anglo-Saxon leader tacked onto the English civ as it stands (much less trying someone like Boudicca or Cunobeline). I think a British civ would be considerably less desirable than a Gaulish civ given how little we know of pre-Roman Britons and how vigorously they assimilated to Roman culture afterwards, but they could be done. Even a Norman civ would be very doable, if not terribly desirable (I'd rather have Brittany myself if we're balkanizing France for some reason). 3) Genetics really has nothing to do with it. It's a matter of culture, which, as the British Isles show, cares very little about genes.Let us consider the English civilisation as a case in point. It is substantially composed of the DNA and legacy of invaders. The "Angles" (who gave us the word "England") are pretty much Danes/Germans and the "Saxons" a bit more Germanic. They attacked and brutalised the pre-existing Romanised Britons (ostensibly natives, but equally subjugated by the Romans under Claudius etc). After the Anglo-Saxons came Normans and all sorts. England isn't so much an island fortress as it is an island free-for-all! The point being made here is that none of these groups can somehow be balkanised out of English civilisational history simply because they were non-native genetically.
Yes, this is precisely what I'm proposing. Ditch India, and let's have a Chola civ, a Maurya or some other Indo-Aryan civ, and Mughals, too, as long as they don't squeeze out my Afghan/Durrani and Sogdia/Kushan/Hephthalite civs.On this basis, I have to conclude that if the Mughals can be summarily dismissed from Indian history because they aren't "Indian" enough, then the same would apply to most inhabitants of north and central India today, which includes EVERY single Civ leader ever put forward to represent the Indian civilisation.

See, I see it as the other way around: "India" is the last great blob in the game, a relic of the surface level pop culture research of Civ1. India, as you point out, has a rich and varied history; the India civ makes as much sense as lumping Western Europe into a single civ. I am, by preference, a splitter, and I've consistently argued against the India blob (and against proposed Persian blobs, as well). The idea of a single national identity in India is a strictly modern idea that was essentially created by people outside of India (chiefly Europeans but also, to a lesser extent, the Mughals).I personally regard the dissociation of Mughals from Indian civs to be inconsistent with the way other civs are treated and inconsistent with India's own history and genealogy.
If we're going to obsess over genetics to that level, I recommend having no civilizations, because none will qualify. Everyone is originally from somewhere else; there are no autochthonous people if you go back far enough.If we are truly truly to go down the route of genetics though, even "Indians" in the modern sense and throughout much of history are not native to the subcontinent anyway! The Indus valley civilisation has recently been confirmed to contribute a genomic majority to most modern Indians, certainly in the northern and central belts. This is confirmed through genetic studies in IVC remains. The IVC - in turn - was inhabited by people of Iranian ancestry. If we delve further, a study last year showed that 3/4 of a sample of "Brahmins" are most probably originally genetically traceable to central Asia or the Fertile Crescent of the middle east.
On this basis, I have to conclude that if the Mughals can be summarily dismissed from Indian history because they aren't "Indian" enough, then the same would apply to most inhabitants of north and central India today, which includes EVERY single Civ leader ever put forward to represent the Indian civilisation.
