Steps Into Eternity: The Ancient Hindu Stepwells and the Science of a Civilization Ahead of Its Time Long before the architects of Rome designed their aqueducts, and centuries before European cities began to think seriously about water management, the people of ancient Bharat had already mastered the art and science of water harvesting. Their answer to the challenge of water conservation was not merely functional but transcendently beautiful — the stepwell, known in Sanskrit as Vapi or Vaapi, and in various regional tongues as Baoli, Bavdi, or Kalyani. These magnificent structures, hewn from sandstone and granite, descended in precise geometric steps into the earth, reaching groundwater with a sophistication that continues to astonish engineers and architects to this day. The stepwell was not an accident of nature or a product of simple trial and error. It was the outcome of a civilisation deeply rooted in the union of science, spirituality, and civic responsibility — a civilisation ...