Beyond the Himalayas is a journey into India's forgotten civilisational geography beyond the northern mountains. It explores the ancient roads, Buddhist centres, caravan towns, sacred routes and old place names that once connected India with Tibet, Xinjiang and Central Asia.The book revisits the Himalayas not as walls that separated India from the wider Asian world, but as bridges through which monks, merchants, pilgrims, scholars and translators moved for centuries. Along these routes travelled Buddhism, Sanskrit learning, manuscripts, art, philosophy, medicine, trade goods and cultural ideas that helped shape the history of Asia.Through places such as Khotan, Kucha, Agni-desa, Turpan, Aksu, Yarkand, Kashgar, Aksai Chin, Demchok and Taklakot, the book traces memories preserved in old maps, manuscripts, travel accounts, archaeological remains and historical traditions. It does not seek to redraw modern boundaries, but to recover a neglected dimension of India's shared past with the trans-Himalayan and Central Asian world.Written for general readers, students and history enthusiasts, this book invites us to look beyond familiar maps and rediscover the roads where India's ideas travelled farther than armies.