Transcript India
India
A Mad Dash Through History
Geography
SOUTH Asia – The “Indian
Subcontinent”
3 Topographical Regions
Northern India: Mountain Zone
& Indus/Ganges Basins
Southern Peninsula: Flatlands &
Sri Lanka
Separated from the north by
Deccan plateau
The Vedic Age (1500-500 BCE)
Invasion by Aryans into
N. India (1000 BCE)
Indo-European nomads
(Central Asian)
people
Domesticated horse
Early iron workers
Aryan Control in India
Politics:
Economy:
Individual city-states with local rulers
Aryan language (Sanskrit) in the North – Dravidic
languages continue in the South
Small, self-sufficient communities
Introduction of iron technology
Religion:
Local Indian gods continue to be worshipped
Aryan scriptures = Vedas (thus “Vedic Age”)
Combined elements create Hinduism
Aryan Social Structure
Varna = Color (came to mean class)
Brahmins – scholars & priests (classes
occupied by Aryans)
Kshatriyas – government officials &
warriors
Vaishyas – merchants, artisans, & farmers
Shudra – peasants & laborers
Dalits (untouchables) – not part of the
class structure, did most demeaning work
Strict segregation; little/no mobility
Reincarnation/karma beliefs helped
justify/explain the class structure
Challenges to Brahmin Power
Aryan religion/social structure placed Brahmin
priests on top
2 challenges to this structure: Jainism & Buddhism
Jainists – ascetics, practiced non-violence
Buddhists – followers of Siddhartha Gautama
Focused on the individual, less emphasis on the gods
Brahmin response: codified religious traditions into
Hinduism
Vedic Age Ends With
Darius & Alexander
The Mauryan Empire
Greek control of India
ended with Alexander’s
death in 324 BCE
Power vacuum filled in
N. India filled by
Chandragupta
Centralized government
control over regional
kingdoms
Territory expanded by
grandson Ashoka
Ashoka
Major figure in classical Indian history:
Early career: brutal military commander, extended
the empire into S. India
Battle of Kalinga – 260 BCE
100,000 Kalingans died; 150,000 driven from home
More died from disease/starvation in the aftermath
Ashoka was overwhelmed by brutality, converted to
Buddhism & preached non-violence, morality,
moderation, religious tolerance
Published this program on rock pillars spread throughout
empire
Trade & Economy
Economy based on agriculture
United India increased trade
Roads were renovated, towns built textile
industries
Uniform system of currency, weights & measures
Provinces ruled by governors who collected taxes
and enforced laws
Taxes rose to pay for Ashoka’s projects
Trade: silk cotton and spices to
Mesopotamia, China, Egypt, and Rome
Social Structure
Varna (caste) system still in place – limited
social opportunities and controlled who
people could marry
Patriarchal society – eldest male controlled
family
Laws limited women’s opportunities
Sati was practiced: widows burned themselves
on their husband’s funeral pyre
Buddhist women had more rights
Single women could become nuns
Political Fragmentation
After Ashoka’s death, Mauryan
Empire declines
Trade network/roads allow small
kingdoms to maintain contact
Merchants become politically powerful
Small kingdoms rose in
Central/Southern India
Deccan Plateau: Andhra dynasty
Southern India: Tamil Kingdoms
Reunification Under Gupta
(320-550 CE)
Gupta Politics
Grew out of kingdom of Magadha, capital at
Pataliputra (former home of the Mauryans)
Modeled after Mauryan Emperors:
Chandra Gupta, Samudra Gupta, Chandra Gupta II
Never had the military might of Mauryans
“persuaded” territories to join the empire
Married neighboring princess
Splendor, beauty, orderliness of life at the capital
Rituals and ceremonies meant to impress
“Theater-state”
Gupta Economy
Government owned mines (metals &
salt), collected rent money from
farmers
Trade along the Silk Roads went
through Gupta territory
Indians: ivory, jewels, textiles, salt, iron
Romans: glass, jewels, clothes
China: silk, spices, tea, porcelain
Additional profits from religious
trade & religious pilgrims
Gupta Social Structure
Gupta returned Hinduism to primary religion
Change in architecture as Hindu styles became more
prominent
Loss of status for women
Could not own property
Could not study sacred texts or participate in rituals
Women expected to obey father husband sons
Child marriage became common (sometimes as young as 6
years old)
Sati became more common
Gupta Math/Science
Astronomers, mathematicians, scientists
received government support
Developed concept of zero; “Arabic” numerals
Charted star movements;
earth is round
Developments in medicine