Post on 24-Dec-2015
Classical India
• By 600 BCE, India had passed through its formative phase.
• A classical civilization could now build on the social and cultural themes introduced during the Vedic and Epic ages.
• Indian development in the classical era didn’t take on the Chinese structure of rising and falling dynasties. Indian history was irregular.
Geography• India’s distinctive culture was a product of its
geography. It was far less isolated from other civs than was China.
• The Indian subcontinent is separated from the rest of Asia by the Himalayas, but there are several passes in the mountains, linking India to Mid East.
• Open to both Mid Eastern & Mediterranean influences.
• For ex: while Alex the Great didn’t establish a durable empire, he connected India with Hellenistic culture.
• Geography made political unity difficult, so India was more diverse than China.
Geography
• Monsoons: a season wind that brings rains. Sometimes too little, and famine causing. Sometimes torrential and flood causing.
THE MAURYAN DYNASTY
Mauryan Dynasty: Chandragupta
• In 327 BCE, Alexander the Great, after conquering Greece and much of the Mid East, pushed into northwestern India, establishing the border state of Bactria.
• Political reactions to this invasion produced the next stage in Indian history when a young soldier named Chandragupta Maurya seized power along the Ganges River.
• He began the Mauryan dynasty of rule. These were the 1st rulers to unify the subcontinent.
• Chandragupta’s style of govt was autocratic, relying on his military power.
Chandragupta: 321 BCE-298 BCE
Unified northern India.
Defeated the Persian general Seleucus.
Divided his empire into provinces, then districts for tax assessments and law enforcement.
He feared assassination food tasters, slept in different rooms, etc.
301 BCE gave up his throne & became a Jain.
Mauryan Dynasty: Ashoka
• Chandragupta’s grandson, Ashoka, was an even greater Mauryan ruler.
• Ashoka extended Mauryan conquests, gaining control of territory through fierce fighting.
• He gave up his thirst for blood after the gruesome battle of Kalinga, when he converted to Buddhism, and adopted belief in the dharma, or the law of moral consequences.
• Ashoka promoted Buddhism throughout India, but still honored Hinduism.
The Maurya Empire
321 BCE – 185 BCE
Asoka’s
Empire
Asoka’s law code Edicts scattered in
more than 30 places in India, Nepal, Pakistan, & Afghanistan.
Written mostly in Sanskrit, but one was in Greek and Aramaic.
10 rock edicts. Each pillar [stupa] is 40’-50’ high.
Buddhist principles dominate his laws.
One of
Asoka’sStupas
Kushan Empire
• After Ashoka, the Mauryan empire collapsed. • The Kushans pushed across the Hindu Kush
range through the Khyber pass into India and established a short-lived kingdom.
• The greatest Kushan king, Kanishka, converted to Buddhism but actually damaged its popularity in India, because it became associated with foreign rule.
• The collapse of the Kushan state in 220 CE ushered in 100 years of political instability before the rise of the Gupta dynasty
THE GUPTA DYNASTY
Gupta Dynasty• In 320 CE, a new line of kings, the Guptas,
established a new empire. • The Guptas did not produce any individual
rulers as influential as the 2 great Mauryan rulers, but they had perhaps greater impact on the shape of Indian civilization.
• 2 centuries of Gupta rule gave classical India its greatest period of political stability.
• It was ended in 535 CE by a new invasion of nomadic warriors, the Huns.
• After the decline of the Gupta empire, north India broke into a number of separate Hindu kingdoms and was not really unified again until the coming of the Muslims in the 7c.
Gupta Empire: 320 CE – 647 CE
Gupta Rulers Chandra Gupta I
r. 320 – 335 CE
“Great King of Kings”
Chandra Gupta II r. 375 - 415 CE
Profitable trade with the Mediterranean world!
Hindu revival.
Gupta
Art
Greatly influenced Southeast Asian art &
architecture.
Medicine Literature
MathematicsAstronomy
Printedmedicinal guides
1000 diseasesclassified
PlasticSurgery
C-sectionsperformed
Inoculations
500 healingplants
identified
DecimalSystem
Conceptof Zero
PI = 3.1416
Kalidasa
SolarCalendar
The earth
is round
GuptaIndia
Gupta Achieveme
nts
Political Institutions• The Guptas created a taxation system, spread
uniform law codes, and built roads, but didn’t create an extensive bureaucracy.
• Instead, they allowed local rulers to maintain regional control so long as they respected Gupta authority.
• .
Political Institutions• The caste syst and religion did for India life what
more conventional govt structures did in other cultures for promoting public order.
• It was virtually impossible to rise above the caste of birth, or to marry someone from a higher caste. Karma was the only way- one could be reborn into a higher caste with good karma.
Political Institutions• Loose political framework but rigid social
structure.• Slavery was avoided. Untouchables were
scorned, but their members were not owned by others.
Religion & Culture: Hinduism• Religion was the clearest cultural cement, cutting
across political and language barriers, and across caste.
• Hinduism didn’t displace minority religions, and has shown incredible capacity to survive as the major system of belief in India even to the present.
• Even w/o enduring polit institutions, India has retained continuity and cultural cohesiveness b/c of religion.
• Tradition of scientific inquiry emerged along with religion.
Religion & Culture: Hinduism• Unlike most religions, Hinduism had no single
founder, & no central holy figure. • Hindus are guided by dharma, or the moral path. • Mystics, called gurus and brahman priests
formalized the religion by the 1st centuries CE. • The divine aspects of brahma (holy essence)
are manifested in the forms of several gods, including Vishnu, the preserver, and Shiva, the destroyer.
• A proper life is one devoted to seeking union with the soul, but the quest may take many lieftimes.
• Hindus stress the principle of reincarnation, in which souls don’t die, but pass into other beings, human or animal.
Religion & Culture: Hinduism• After many good lives, the soul reaches full
union with the soul of brahma, and worldly suffering ceases.
• Some try to reach this through the meditation and self-discipline of yoga, which means union. It allows the mind to be free to concentrate on the divine spirit.
• Goal is to be reincarnated into a higher caste, and eventually salvation.
• Relig reinforced the caste system, giving people of lower castes hope for better rebirth.
• Epic poems are the key texts.
Religion & Culture: Buddhism• Siddhartha Guatama, aka Buddha, accepted
many Hindu beliefs, such as reincarnation, but denied the validity of others, such as caste.
• Buddhism spread through monasticism, and the emperor Ashoka attracted many followers.
• Like Confucius, the Buddha was seen as divine. • Brahaman opposition to Buddhism was strong,
so it did not gain a permanent following in India.
Religion & Culture: Science• Indian science was influenced by the Greeks after the
conquest of Alex the Great. • Inoculation against smallpox. • Sterilization of wounds in hospitals. • Many medical findings reached the Western world only in
modern times. • We use the Indian numbering system today, although we
call it Arabic b/c Europeans imported it secondhand from the Arabs.
• Developed concept of zero and decimal syst, negative numbers, square roots and sine. Computed pi more accurately than the Greeks.
Econ & Society• Justice syst influenced by caste. A brahman who
killed a servant faced penalties than if he had killed an animal.
• Dominance of husbands and fathers was strong, and women’s right were limited.
• Women could only advance spiritually if reborn as a man.
• System of arranged marriage and dowries. • Merchants had high caste status and traveled
widely, over the subcontinent and into the Mid East and east Asia.
Econ & Society• Caravan trade w/ China developed. India
dominated trade over the Silk Road, beyond the Himalayas.
• The Indian Ocean, dominated by Indian merchants, was the most active linkage point among cultures (Mediterranean was a close second).
• No previous civ in southeast Asia could compete with India.
International Trade Routes during the Guptas
Extensive Trade:4c
spices
spices
gold &
ivory
gold & ivory
rice & wheathorses
cotton g
oods
cotton g
oodssilks
India vs China: Differences
• Restraint of Chinese art and poetry vs dynamic sensual styles of India.
• Strong bureaucracy in China vs. decentralized govt in India
• Dominant religion in India vs. religious diversity in China.
• Social mobility in China vs. fixed caste syst in India.
• High status of merchants in India vs. low statues in China.
• Extensive trade and openness in India vs. isolation in China.
India vs China: Similarities
• Both agricultural societies with large peasant class.
• Both patriarchal. • Classical traditions in both societies
endure to the present.
Works cited
• Adas, M., Gilbert, M.J., Schwartz, S.B., & Stearns, P.N. (2007). World civilizations: The global experience. (5th ed.). New York: Pearson Education.
• Images from Susan M. PojerHorace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY, http://www.pptpalooza.net/.