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Sophia Ashiqueali Mr. Tavernia AP World History/Period 3 Packet: C [Social]:(Untouchables) The untouchables were a low status of Hindu people who held menial jobs. The Hindu caste system is separated into four parts: the Brahmin, the Kshatriya, the Vaishya, and the Shudras. The Brahmins are at the top of the caste system and include scholars and priests. The Kshatriyas are below Brahmins and include warriors. The Vaishya are artisans or farmers and the Shudras are servants. Members are not allowed to approach those of other castes otherwise they would receive penalties and sometimes be removed from the caste. These principals were influenced by the beliefs of karma; if you do good in your current life then you will be reincarnated into a higher cast after you die. Being born into a high caste meant you had done good and being born into a low caste meant you had committed sin. The untouchables are so lowly that they are not included in the caste system. The untouchables performed unwanted tasks such as working with the dead hide of cows. They also performed jobs such as burning the holy stairs of the temple that led to the river and performing executions. Untouchables were not allowed to enter Hindu temples, read religious Hindu books, use common village wells, live outside the village, and enter the residential areas of higher castes. The untouchables could only marry people that share the same status as they do. Members of the elite caste governed the actions of the untouchables. They made rules stating that the untouchables were forbidden from using modes of transportation, apparel and accessories, and markers of honor and status. Mikhal Ben-Joseph Mr. Tavernia AP World History Period 3 Packet: C Social: Plebeian (Module 6) During the era of the Roman Republic, from 507 to 31 BCE, the main power of politics came from a body called the Senate. The Senate was at first simply an advisory council to the Assembly, but as time went on, it became more responsible for policy and government activity. Senator positions were held for life and handed down hereditarily. This conglomerated the wealthiest and most influential male citizens. However, this severe, politically backed social disparity led to a recurrent struggle known as the “Conflict of Orders”, where the elite Patricians and majority Plebeians often disagreed. The Plebeians went on strikes of sorts, refusing to work, fight, or participate in society, demanding changes in their treatment. This forced the Patricians to concede to some Plebeian requests, such as the publication of laws on the Twelve Tablets and the creation of tribunes, who were Plebeian actors in the assembly who could stand up for the rights of non-elites. However, these concessions weren’t always what the Plebeians desired because the Patricians managed to counteract the reforms, sometimes by bringing in tribunes to the elite class. The Patron-Client relationship, which was basically a Plebeian obedience in return for protection from a Patrician, also ingrained social inequality into the Roman way of life. Vincent Brando Mr. Tavernia World History AP/Period 3 Packet: C [Social] - (Social and Economic Classes) Plebeians: At the top of the social hierarchy pyramid of Rome were the rich and wealthy, including generals, landowners, political figures, and the occasional merchant. At the other end of the spectrum were Rome’s plebeians. This class contained the peasants, commoners, and working class. People with such jobs as builders, workers, or farmers would fall under the category of a plebeian, and often took orders from the patricians. These plebeians made up the bulkhead or Rome’s population and workforce, as most plebeian-tier jobs required little to no skill or education, placing many plebeians in the unskilled laborers category. Plebeians also had little class mobility. A plebeian was unable to marry into wealth, as it was forbidden until 445 BC when the Lex Canuleia law was passed. The plebeians also were aware of these social disadvantages and started a revolt known as the Conflict of Orders, to gain more recognition in the eyes of the patricians. Gabi Coutinho Mr. Tavernia AP World History Period III Packet C Social: Brahmin The word “brahmin” derives from the Sanskrit word “Brahmana”, which means “Supreme Self” or God. It is used to refer to a person who has knowledge of Vedas and teaches about God. In Vedic Indian society, the caste system divided the population in four distinct occupation-based social classes. Brahmin included priests and scholars; Kshatriya included warriors and officials; Vaishya included merchants, artisans, and landowners; and Shudra included laborers. A group not included in these four classes were the Untouchables, who performed undesirable, unclean tasks. This division was justified by past life good or bad karma and explained by a creation myth about Purusha, a creature from which each class emerged from a different body part. The Brahmin came from Purusha’s mouth and was a symbol of knowledge and intelligence. The Brahmin priests taught about the atman, karma, and reincarnation according to past life. They presided the sacrifices, were the only ones to know the Veda, and were considered intermediary between gods and humans. Their knowledge was passed down orally from generation to generation of priests. Some believe they might have avoided writing to maintain power by keeping their knowledge exclusive. Women could not serve as Brahmins but could participate in religious activity. Brahmin’s power and Vedic religion, which evolved into Hinduism, was opposed by those who started following Buddhism or Jainism. Luis Garcia Mr. Tavernia Period 3 Packet: C Social: Varna The Varna are the four major social divisions of Indian history. The classes are the Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya, Shudra, who are the priest, warrior and elite, merchant and farmer, and laborer classes, respectively. The classes are believed to correspond to the body parts of Purusha, a primordial creature. The Brahmins represents the mouth, the Kshatriyas the arms, the vaishya the thighs, and the shudras the feet. Each class, also referred to as caste, is said to have its own dharma, or duty, and require diligence in fulfilling their dharma in order to come closer to enlightenment. The varna are further subdivided into Jati, or birth groups, that put region into context in Indian social division. . Theme 5: Untouchables Untouchables, also called Dalit, refers to any member of a wide range of low-caste Hindu groups and any person outside the caste system. The groups characterized as untouchable were those whose occupations and habits of life involved ritually polluting activities. These activities include taking life for a living (ex. fisherman), killing or disposing of dead cows and working with their hides for a living, performing activities that brought the worker into contact with the human body, or eating the flesh of cattle, domestic pigs or chickens. The Hindu people referred to the Hill Tribes of India as untouchables not because they were primitive, but because they consumed beef. Until the reform of the Indian constitution, untouchables were under severe restrictions in the Hindu social system. They were segregated into hamlets outside of the cities, and were usually not allowed inside of temples, schools, or wells from which higher castes drew water. Rishab Jain Mr. Tavernia AP World History/P.3 Packet C [Social]: Plebeians Plebeians was the lower class of people in the Roman empire which was normally set by the census. Plebeians were commoners that didn’t own as much and were discriminated compared to the elite class during that time period. Although the origins of this labeling isn’t certain, it has been predicted that under the rule of Ancus Marcius this set of classification was established. The plebeians often grew mad because of the unfair treatment and the fact that they had no say in the government. The elite class or the patricians denied them the right to some say in the government which led to rebellion. The rebellion between patricians and plebeians was a form of class warfare that caused the decline of the Roman empire. In conclusion, plebeians was the lower class who demanded that they have power in the government leading to conflict with the elites of the society. Paridhi Kapadia Mr. Tavernia AP World History, Pd. 3 Packet C Social: Plebeian In ancient Roman society, during the classical period, there existed a social hierarchy. At the top was the ruler, the priests, the patricians, (elites) and finally, the masses, or the plebeians. The plebeians were mainly made up of farmers, and other unskilled, lower class workers. The disparate inequalities in Rome led to period conflict between these plebeians and patricians. They would refuse to work or fight, and even withdraw from the city itself in order to garner political concessions on the part of the patricians. Furthermore, they created new officials, the tribunes, who acted as the voice of the plebeians in any and all political discussions. However, eventually, to fight back against the revolting masses, the elites just added the tribunes to the “elite” class and paid them off, creating a major economic disturbance solely through the imbalance of the social classes. Leah Kapela Mr. Tavernia AP World History/ Period 3 Packet: C Social: Plebeians In ancient Rome, the majority of the population was known as “plebeians” meaning that they were common people. The other social group, called patricians, were considered the elites and were wealthy. During the 4th and 5th centuries BCE, the plebeians were not a part of the Roman Senate and were not given many rights. The patricians, the wealthy, had rights and had control of The Senate. The plebeians were the working class of Rome and were the farmers, builders, bakers, etc. However, together the plebeians made up their own class and had meeting, formal records, and elected their own members. Eventually, both the patricians and the plebeians were able to combine in to one group and shared rights in regards to The Senate. The split between the working class and the wealthy, however, is something that is seen in many civilizations even in modern times. Abhitya Krishnaraj Mr. Tavernia AP World History Period 3 Packet C Social: Kshatriya Kshatriya is one of the four major varna of the hindu society. It is the second highest level of the indian caste system. Traditionally, the kshatriya constituted the ruling and military elite. Their role was to protect society by fighting in wartime and governing in peacetime. The Prakrit derivative of Kshatriya is Khatri. Kings usually belonged to this caste and it was considered their duty (dharma) to acquire a knowledge of weapons in addition to cultivating their aptitude for command and good governance. The science of weaponry (dhanurveda) was one of the 13 branches of learning which every educated kshatriya male was expected to study. Both the king's suite and the army were naturally recruited from among this caste but not every kshatriya exercised a military calling. Many kshatriya were authorised to take up a craft or trade rather than gaining their living as professional warriors. This is a major part of the social structure of india as they kept the order and peace in the land. They were the leaders and fighters in battles and were the reasons that the empires grew. Social life in Hindu systems constrict people so that they have to stay in the same caste as their ancestors. Sam Marx Mr. Tavernia AP World History Period 3 Packet C Theme 5: Social- The Untouchables Eventually a fifth group was marked off: the Untouchables. They were excluded from the class system, and members of the other groups literally avoided them because of the demeaning or polluting work to which they were relegated—such as leather tanning, which involved touching dead animals, and sweeping away ashes of the dead after cremations. Many different hereditary castes have been traditionally subsumed under the title untouchable, each of which subscribes to the social rule of marriage exclusively within the caste community that governs the caste system. Traditionally, the groups characterized as untouchable were those whose occupations and habits of life involved ritually polluting activities, of which the most important were taking life for a living, for example, fishermen, killing or disposing of cattle, pursuing activities that meant contact with human excretes and eating the flesh of cattle or of domestic pigs and chickens, a category into which most of the indigenous tribes of India fell. Until the adoption of the new constitutions in independent India and Pakistan, the untouchables were subjected to many social restrictions. They were forbidden entry to many temples, to most schools, and to wells from which higher castes drew water. Jacob Mass Mr. Tavernia AP World History/Period 3 Packet C Social: Untouchables The Untouchables, also known as the Dalit, have to do with the caste system in ancient India. Though most of society and the Hindi religion was divided into castes, predetermined social classes deciding one’s job and place in society, the Untouchables were seen as not even part of the caste system. While each caste had specific assigned jobs, the Untouchables did not have specified jobs, and traditionally did the horrible jobs seen as impure by the rest of society. This idea of Untouchable people was actually not mentioned explicitly in Vedic texts, and instead just sort of formed as a result of society continuing and people separating into this unwanted jobs. Jobs like this included killing animals for a living, working with dead animals or hides, and dealing with human excretion. This was seen as so impure that the majority of the population, members already of current castes, preferred not to even identify with the Untouchables. Traditionally, a Hindi’s caste reflected his or her actions in a past life, meaning that Untouchables were supposedly so horrible that they were removed from the caste system. Many looked down on the Untouchables; thus, they often left Hinduism to join another religion such as Buddhism, in which they could attain their goal, in this case enlightenment, from any stage. Nicolas Menendez Mr. Tavernia AP World History Period 3 9 November 2016 Packet C Portfolio Project Social As societies and population grew there was an invent of distinct social classes. These social classes provides a social structure for the society as it sets apart people due to the class and work they are in. In the Hindu society there was a caste system in the classical period. The different classes were thought to make up the different parts of the body of God. The mouth of God was the highest social class on the Hindu social hierarchy, the priests. The people of which had a divine connection with God made up the highest class of the caste system and were thought to make up the mouth and head of God. This was impressive as this civilization puts priests above the second class of rulers and kings, that made the arms of the God. The brahmin were the highest and most important people of this early civilization and were part of this unique social structure which civilization. encompassed the entire Hindu Isabel Mitre Mr. Tavernia AP World History/Period 3 Packet C Social: Social and Economic Classes Although Rome considered itself a republic, it was in name only. Excluding slaves, there were two main classes: the patricians and the plebeians. Only the patricians, or the wealthy, landowning aristocrats were the ones who had a say in the government. They considered themselves better than the other classes, born with a right to rule. The rest of the citizens, the plebeians, who were the non-landowning masses. However, as time went on, the “right to rule” became hereditary, which allowed the patricians to separate themselves from what they considered the lower class. The two citizen classes, the patricians and plebeians, grew further and further apart. Some plebeians managed to beat the odds, and became wealthy. The plebeians were the clear majority of Roman citizenry. As the more affluent plebeians began to threaten to leave Rome if they didn’t have some voice in the government, the patricians realized they were losing control. They also recognized that they needed the plebeians more than the plebeians needed them, so they decided to relinquish some, but not all, authority. The struggle for power between the classes would last decades. Emily Moon Mr. Tavernia AP World History P3 Packet C AP Social Theme: Caste System The caste system from Hinduism is a very well known social hierarchy that emerged with the religion. There are four classes with Brahmin at the top, which were priests. This showed how important religious figures were to the society, as they placed them above the Kshatriya, who were the warriors and the leaders. Next they placed the merchants and the landowners under the warriors, followed by the commoners or lower class. Servants were included in that caste, or varna. The dalits were thought to be so low and so unworthy that they are not even included as a caste, but a whole separate category under everything because of their duty to clean the streets and deal with dead animals. It is clear that the social classes of Hindu society were heavily dictated by their religion. Ephraim Oyetunji Mr. Tavernia AP World History/ Period 3 Packet: C Social: Brahmin In South Asia, Hinduism dominated the social statuses of all individuals within the society. Brahmins were at the top of the caste system, a social hierarchy based on one’s deeds in their past life. They were essentially Hindu priests that performed religious rituals for the general populations such as wedding prayers, temple rituals, and messengers of the holy deities. They were considered to be above the emperors and kings of that time and had a stronger influence in politics than priests of other cultures. Their dharma required them to be honest, Vedic scholars. If they obeyed and fully adhered to their dharma, they would achieve moksha and become one with the Brahman. Emily Pallack Mr. Tavernia AP World History Period 3 Packet C Social:Brahmin Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism were born in India. The country is also an adopted home for Zoroastrianism. About 80 percent of Indians are Hindu. Officially, Hinduism is considered not a religion but a way of life. Shared beliefs of various indigenous religions merged over thousands of years, so people often include images of gods from other religions in their family temples. Differences between religions usually are minor due to the historical Brahmin influence on most castes. Brahmin spread throughout India over time, adopting and adapting local religions and then writing their philosophies in Sanskrit and the local languages. Brahmanism helped shape many religious traditions. Buddhism even stems, in part, from Brahmin philosophy. Hindu concepts include reincarnation and veneration for trees and animals, which can be symbols of a certain god. Among the most prominent Hindu gods in various states are Narayana, Rama, Krishna, Shiva, Durga, Jagannath, Ganesh, Murugan, and Vishnu. About 14 percent of Indians are Muslims, who follow the teachings found in the Qur'an and regard Muhammad as the last messenger of Allah. Austin Park Mr. Tavernia AP World History 4 November 2016 Theme 5: Untouchables The Untouchables were members of Hindu groups that were not included in the caste system. People in this social class were thought of as a very low social status. The reason they were regarded to as so low was because of their occupations. They did jobs that had to deal with polluting activities. These included coming in contact with emissions of the human body, killing dead cattle, eating cattle flesh, and taking a life of a living thing. Along with this categorization came social restrictions. Most of the time, they were segregated in hamlets that were not inside certain villages or towns. Also, they were not allowed to enter certain places, touch certain things, and sometimes be seen. These actions were considered to pollute society. This caused people in this social class to convert to other religions such as Buddhism and Christianity. Eventually, people realized that this was wrong and started to ban untouchability. Matthew Robbins Tavernia AP World History - Period 3 November 10, 2016 Social - Patricians Patrician is a term used to describe the wealthy families of ruling class in Ancient Rome. While both free citizens, those of the patrician class received far more privileges than those of the plebeian class. For example, positions in Roman assemblies, political offices, and in priesthoods were offered exclusively to patricians. Because the plebeians lacked the same opportunities as the patricians in Rome, a perenni perennial al dichotomy between the two classes was established, allowing little diffusion between the two sides. In addition, because your position on either side was determined strictly by the family you were born into, success in one’s lifetime was largely a matter of luck. Childhood in patrician families focused greatly on receiving an education. Private tutors would prepare students for life as a sophisticated noble through teachings of various subjects, including poetry and literature, history and geography, mythology, mythology, and public speaking. As they grew older, their positions in society were practically handed to them in the fields of politics and religion, allowing them to live relatively charmed lives compared to other inhabitants of Rome and to pass on their glory to their children. Snigdha Sama Michael Tavernia AP World History, Period 3 Packet: C Theme 5: Development & Transformation of Social Structures- Varna Theme 5 describes gender roles & relations, family & kinship, racial & ethnic constructions and social & economic classes. Varna o Varna includes 4 classes Brahmin (priest class) Kshatriya (warrior class) Vaishya (merchant and farmer class) Shudra (servant class) o These classes are decided by birth and based on their family name. The class assigned to a person is considered his/her duty to perform. o The 4 classes are depicted in a myth written in ancient India. In the myth, a primordial creature called Purusha allowed itself to be sacrificed. From its mind came the Brahmins, from its arms came the Kshatriyas, from its thighs came the Vaishyas and from its feet came the Shudras. Aaron Thaler AP World History Period 3 Social - Plebians In the Roman Empire, there were two main social classes. These included the Patricians (wealthy elite) and the Plebians. The Plebians were the majority of Roman population that was not elite. There was a great and powerful conflict between elites and plebeians, known as the Conflict of the Orders. This was analogous to the Yellow Turban Revolution in Han China, as the commoners lost in this conflict as well. However, despite the traditional definition of Plebians, it is still widely used in modern society. Today, plebian refers to a form of art or culture that is liked by a significant population, and therefore may not be of the highest class or quality. In addition, when people refer to others as plebians (or “plebs,” as some more dissolute teenagers say), this means that the person who is being referred to is a commoner who may be conforming to the norms of mainstream society. Coco Zheng Mr. Tavernia AP World History pd. 3 Packet C Untouchables India's social hierarchy is known as the caste system. The status of untouchables, or Dalits, is so low that they do not even have a caste. They do all the dirty work, including digging graves, cleaning up after dead animals, and manure. These jobs do not provide nearly enough income, so Dalits are mostly uneducated and live in poverty. The caste system did not allow people to have inter-caste marriages, much less have someone of a higher caste marry a Dalit. The caste system was abolished when India got independence from Britain. Though it is legal for any two people to marry, "honor killings" still happen sometimes. Often, stories of a Dalit getting hacked to death for wanting to marry a higher-class person make the headlines, even though in 2011 the Indian Supreme Court assigned the death penalty as punishment for those convicted of honor killings.