Transcript 28236485
Ancient India
AP World History
Indus River Valley
Located on the Indian Subcontinent (India,
Pakistan, and Bangladesh)
Geographic Factors:
Bodies of Water: Bay of Bengal, Arabian Sea, and
Indian Ocean
Mountains: Himalayas, Hindu Kush, and Karakorum
Important Rivers: Indus and Ganges
Monsoons can cause crop failure and famine
Ancient India
Indus River fostered the development of
civilization
Major cities of ancient India
Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro
Harappan Civilization
Well-planned cities
Extensive drainage systems and brick buildings with
bathrooms
Highly productive farms with irrigation canals and
domesticated animals
System of writing on clay seals (not deciphered)
Animals were important – presence of animals on
artifacts
Pottery and implements show similarities to Sumerians
Indus River Valley Civilization ended by invading
Aryans
Aryans & the Caste System
AP World History
Aryans
Excelled at the art of war
Used iron (for plow &
weapons)
Developed Sanskrit
(language) and Maharajas
Conquered the Dravidians
Introduced the Caste System
Were pastoralists/herders
Social system that people are born into and
there is no way to move into a higher caste
Four (4) main castes based
loosely on occupation
Brahmin - priests (highest)
Kshatriya - warriors and
political leaders
Vaishya - merchants and
farmers
Sudra - laborers and
servants
Untouchables
Members of what can be called the “5th Caste”
Perform jobs such as cleaning the streets,
transporting dead bodies, and slaughtering
animals.
Also called “outcasts”
Mauryan & Gupta Dynasties
AP World History
Similarities
Rulers: Chandragupta (Maurya) & Chandra Gupta
(Gupta)
Centralized governments
Wars-violence
Declines perpetuated because of invasions
Patriarchal
Literature
Tamil people in southern India
Advances: math - value of pi
Maurya Empire
Chandragupta Maurya (1st ruler)
Fierce warrior
Fought Seleucus (Greek General) and won
321 B.C. claimed throne – united north India for the
first time by 303 B.C.
Relied on advisor named Kautilya (priest who
advocated tough minded policies); divided empire into
four (4) provinces
Maintained large armies
Levied high taxes
Developed a large bureaucracy (w/a postal service)
Highly autocratic – relied on personal & military power
“No, I’m not a girl!”
Maurya Dynasty
Ashoka
Grandson of Chandragupta who converted to
Buddhism
Became king in 301 B.C.
Tolerant of non-Buddhists; urged religious
toleration
Extended Maurya rule & created extensive road
network
Power vacuum created after his death
Gupta Empire (320-535 C.E.)
Established by Chandra Gupta
Large empire
Uniform law code
Influence w/o constant fighting (through
intermarriage)
Greatest period of political stability and
flowering of Indian civilization
(astronomy, mathematics, literature,
medicine, and trade)
Trade expanded to distant regions (Silk
Roads)
Was patriarchal (north) and matriarchal
(south – Tamil groups)
Overturned by the Huns
Miscellaneous
Literature – Panchantanta (Sinbad & Jack the Giant
Killer), Mahabharata & Ramayana (Aryan epic poems
composed in Sanskrit which include myths, legends,
philosophy, and moral stories) & Upanishads (poems
with mystical themes that inspired Hindu ideas of divine
forces and how they formed the universe)
Tamils – Southern Indians who traded cotton, silks, and
many other materials with the Middle East and with
Rome. Reflected strong merchant spirit in classical
India
Miscellaneous (cont.)
Yoga – Hindu practice of meditation and self-
discipline which has the goal to free the mind to
concentrate on the divine spirit