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Chapter 2 - Ancient India Diversity of India • Two major religions – Hinduism and Buddhism • Multiple languages • Geography – – – – – Himalayan and Karakoram mountains Ganges Valley Indus River “holy river” Hills Plains Harappan Civilization • Indus River valley held a civilization • Believed that the Harappa city emerged from the Dravidian people – Because of this, the people of India are Harappans • Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa cities – Walled, had drainage systems for bathrooms, ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. Harappan Civilization • Unlike Egypt and Sumer because it was not a centralized monarchy – Loose collection of cities tied together by trade and alliance to landlords • Agricultural society – Maybe 1st to cultivate cotton ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. The City of Mohenjo-Daro Harappan Civilization • Culture – Functional architecture – Sculpture were artistic – Kiln-fire pottery and wheel turned • Writing – not deciphered – We do not know much about their society because of this Lost Civilization • Perhaps in the north of Indus River from Caspian Sea to Afghanistan – Signs of domestication of animals – Irrigation systems – In process of developing writing Aryans • Great mystery of how Harappan civilization ended – Believed natural disaster (like Pompeii) • Aryans were great at war • Nomads, pastoralists people • Indo-European language who moved south – Unlike other Indo-Europeans who moved westward Aryan • Adopted agriculture, used • • • iron plow Writing system based on Aramaic script from Middle East Most of what is known about early Aryans from oral traditions of the Rig Veda Tribes led by chiefs called rajas, kings were maharajas (“great rajas”) – Warrior class were the kshatriya – Required to follow the dharma, or laws, that set out standards for all Aryan • Impact of the Greeks – Alexander the Great arrived in India in 326 B.C.E. – Left Greek administrators and veneer of Greek culture The Mauryan Empire • Founded by Chandragutpa Maurya (324–301 B.C.E.) • Advised by Kautilya, possible author of Machiavellian-like Arthasastra – 1) Practical politics, ends justify the means – 2) Provinces ruled by appointed governors, divided into districts – 3) Most lived in agricultural villages, governed by council of elders Caste/Varna (color) and Class: Social Structures in Ancient India Brahmins Priestly class Kshatriya Warrior class Vaisyas Commoners/merchants Sundras Servants and laborers Indigenous people Outcasts or untouchables Caste and Class: Social Structures in Ancient India • The Class System – Aryans superior over non-Aryans/Dravidians • Light skin high status, dark skin lower status • Class divisions were to be absolute in theory, born and died in same class – enforced by numerous taboos • Class system provided an identity for individuals in • a hierarchical society The Jati: kinship groups living in specific areas and carrying out specific functions – Each jati was composed of hundreds or thousands of individual families Daily Life in Ancient India • The Family: three generations under same roof and generally patriarchal – Linked together by ancestral religious rites – Male superiority, could be priests, and had monopoly on education • Marriage – Woman legally considered as a minor, and divorce generally prohibited – Child marriage common for young girls – Ritual of sati required wife to immolate herself on husband’s funeral pyre Daily Life in Ancient India • The Role of Women – Little utility outside home, but could have much influence inside it – A liability because parents required to provide dowry when marry – Indians fascinated by female sexuality • The Economy – Indian Farmers • Life harsh: taxes, often worked land as sharecroppers, famine • common Unpredictable climate as much depended upon the seasonal monsoons – Trade and Manufacturing • Trade networks from China to the Mediterranean • Indians trade spices, perfumes, jewels, textiles for gold, tin, lead, • wine Under the Mauryas, government played a major role The Religious World of Ancient India • Hinduism: over time the original Aryan worship evolved into Hinduism – Vedas are the sacred texts of hymns and ceremonies transmitted by Aryan priests • Pantheon of nature gods, common to most Indo-Europeans – Indra (warrior god) and Varuna (lord of justice) – Sacrifice important in ceremonies by priests (brahmins) – Asceticism in pursuit of spiritual meditation to get beyond material reality • Led to yoga (union) • Reincarnation: individual soul is reborn after death in different forms Indra – warrior god The Religious World of Ancient India • Final destination is union with • Brahma • Shiva • Great World Soul, Brahman, and escape from the cycle of existence Karma (one’s actions) determine where one is reborn on scale of existence Dharma is the law regulating human behavior, differs depending upon class Hindu Gods and Goddesses— 33,000 gods and goddesses – Primary trinity, and all had wives Vishnu • Brahma the Creator • Vishnu the Preserver • Shiva the Destroyer – Different manifestations of one ultimate reality Buddhism: The Middle Path • The Life of Siddhartha Gautama (c.560–480 B.C.E.), the Buddha – Quest for how to escape from human suffering, which is caused by attachment to things of this world – The Middle Path between extreme asceticism and materialism – Material world is an illusion – Desires can be overcome through wisdom (bodhi=Buddhism) Buddhism: The Middle Path – Escape from the wheel of life and achieve Nirvana by following the Eightfold Way – Reject Hinduism’s concept of class reincarnation as well as Hindu gods – After his death, some of his followers worshipped the Buddha as a god • Stupas (stone towers containing relics of the Buddha) constructed • Monastic orders established, even for women ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. Stupa at Sarnath Buddhism: The Middle Path • Jainism: founded by • Mahavira, contemporary of Siddhartha – Stress poverty and asceticism and thus more extreme than Buddhism Asoka, a Buddhist Monarch (269-232 B.C.E.), grandson of Chandragupta Maurya – Became benevolent ruler, considered the greatest in Indian history – Constructed rock edicts throughout India Wheel of Righteous ©2004 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. The Empire of Asoka The Rule of the Fishes: India after the Mauryas, whose dynasty ended in 183 B.C.E. • Numerous small kingdoms • Xiongnu warriors established the Kushan kingdom over much of north India • Rule of the fishes refer to the glorification of warfare, common attitude at the time Indian Culture • Literature – Four Vedas, from c. 1500, transmitted orally for a thousand years – Literary language was Sanskrit, an Indo-European language, replaced by Prakit in oral communication – The Mahabharata (written c. 100 B.C.E.): story of Bharata family feud c. 1000 B.C.E. • Bhagavad Gita and dialogue between Krishna (Vishnu) and Arjuna Rama (right) seated on the shoulders of Hanuman, battles the demon-king Ravana. – The Ramayana (also written c. 100 B.C.E), story of Rama, the ideal Aryan hero, whose wife Sita was kidnapped by demon-king of Sri Lanka Indian Culture • Architecture and Sculpture – Religious structures included stone pillars (weighing up to 50 tons), stupas, and rock chambers (such as at Ajanta), many built by Ashoka • Popular and sacred themes, including Vedic, Buddhist, and pre-Aryan • Religious art often exuberant and sexual in portrayal of otherworldly delights Indian Culture • Science – Devised numerical system which is known as Arabic numbers – Recognized spherical nature of the earth – Matter was divided into five elements of earth, air, fire, water, and ether (heaven) Discussion Questions • What factors influenced the development of • • India’s caste system? What role did skin color play in the creation of caste distinctions? What challenges did Chandragupta Maurya face in creating an Indian empire? How successful was he? What does the Mahabharata tell us about ancient Indian values and beliefs?