Title: Ancient India
1Ancient India
2Geography What is a subcontinent?
- Large landmass that juts out from a continent
- Contains 1 ½ million square miles
- Bhutan, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri
Lanka - Less than 1/3 is arable (fertile)
3What are the three major zones of the Indian
Subcontinent?
- The well-watered northern plain
- The dry triangular Deccan Plateau
- The coastal plains on either side of the Deccan
4Northern Plain
- Lies just south of the mountains
- Very fertile
- Watered by the Indus, Ganges, and Brahmaputra
Rivers
5The Deccan Plateau
- Triangular raised area of level land that juts
into the Indian Ocean - Arid, unproductive, and sparsely populated
6Coastal Plains
- Separated from the Deccan by low lying
mountains-Eastern and Western Ghats - Rivers and heavy seasonal rains provide water for
farmers - Seas available for fishing trade
7The Monsoon
- Significant impact on daily life
- Rain needed for crops
- If late, famine and starvation
- If too heavy, deadly floods occur
- In October, the winter monsoons blow from the NE
bring hot, dry air that withers crops - May/June, the wet summer monsoons blow from the
SW, pick up moisture from the Indian Ocean
drench the land with daily downpours
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9Barriers The Himalayas
- Worlds highest mountain range
- North of the 1500-mile wide Hindustani plain
- Restricts overland entry into subcontinent
10Barriers Jungles
11Barriers Hindu Kush
12Pathway Khyber Pass
- Passes provided the main link with Eurasia
- Allowed numerous invaders to enter and settle
- Contributed to the cultural, racial, linguistic
diversity
13Indus River Valley
- Western region of the Indus valley
- Indias Neolithic revolution 1st civilization
- 100,000 square miles
- Drained by the snow-fed Indus River and four main
tributaries - the Punjab
- the Sind
14Ganges Plains
- Much wetter
- Snow-fed by the Ganges-Brahmaputra river valleys
- 115,000 square miles of Indias best agricultural
land - Most populous region
- Rice
15Deccan
- Semi-tropical peninsula
- Large triangular plateau that extends into the
India Ocean - Agriculturally inferior to North India
- infertile soil and limited water
- Crops totally dependent on unpredictable monsoon
rains - Rain is reduced because of the Western and
Eastern Ghats - Navigation on the Deccan rivers very difficult in
dry season - Few good natural harbors
- Proximity to SE Asia helped it to have influence
- Distance from Northern India enabled it to
preserve its own political cultural identity
16 What was the Indus Valley Civilization?
- Emerged in Indus River Valley in present-day
Pakistan about 2500 BCE - Flourished for about 1000 years-then vanished
- Cities only recently excavated
17Life in Indus River Valley
- Rich soil provided surplus wheat and other grains
- Food surpluspopulation increased
- Population increasedcities
- 2500 BCE-1500BCE, well planned cities flourished
- Mohenjo-Daro
- Harappa
18Harappa Mohenjo-Daro
- Large, well-planned, dominated by hill-top
structure - Fortress? Temple?
- Huge warehouses to store grain
- Well-organized government
- Powerful Priests-kings?
- Mathematics, surveying skills
- Uniform weights measure
- Houses built with uniform oven-fired clay bricks
- Modern Indoor plumbing systems
- Baths, drains, and water chutes that led to
sewers
19Mohenjo-Daro Harappa
- Contemporary to Egypts Middle Kingdom
Mesopotamias Ur Dynasty - Covered about ½ million square miles
- Discovered in the 1920s
- Very wealthy
- Bronze tools, copper, pottery, gold and silver
20Economy How did people make a living?
- Barley, melons, dates
- Cultivated cotton for cloth
- Merchants
- Traders
- Ships carried cotton cloth, grain, copper,
pearls, and ivory combs - Contact with Sumer inspired them to develop
writing system
21Religion
- Polytheistic
- Mother goddess
- Sacred animals
- Bull
- Veneration of cattle begun here?
22Why did this civilization disappear?
- Around 1750 BCE, quality of life declined
- Cities fell into disorder
- Crude pottery
- Volcanic eruption?
- mud found in the streets indicates the Indus may
have flooded - Earthquake?
- Environmental damage?
- -trees cut down to fuel the ovens for bricks
23The Aryans
- By 1500 BCE, nomadic people from southern Russia
migrated into the area - Cattle, sheep, goats
- Horse-drawn chariots and superior weapons overran
the Indus region - Warrior culture
- Destroyed and looted the weakened Indus Valley
civilization
24The Aryans
- Rose in the NE along the Ganges
- One of many groups of Indo-Europeans who migrated
across Europe and Asia seeking water and pasture
for their horses and cattle - No cities
- no statues
- No stone seals
- What we know comes from the Vedas
25The Vedic Age 1500-500BCE
- Collection of prayers, hymns, and other religious
teachings - Priests memorized and recited the Vedas for a
thousand years before they were written down - Aryans portrayed as warriors who loved drinking,
music, chariot races, dice games - Valued cattle
26Aryan Society
- At first, warriors enjoyed the most prestige
- Later, priests gained respect and power because
they claimed only they could conduct the
ceremonies needed to win the favor of the gods - Aryans felt superior to the Dravidians-conquered
people who may have been the original Indus
valley descendants
27Aryan Society
- Divided people by occupation
- Brahmins priests
- Kshatriyas Warriors
- Vaisyas herders, farmers, artisans, merchants
- Sudras farmworkers, servants, laborers
28Aryan Society Jati (Caste System)
- Class divisions were social and economic not
ethnic - Eventually developed into the complex caste
system - People were born into their caste and could not
change
29Aryan Religious Beliefs
- Polytheistic
- Gods and goddesses embodied natural forces such
as the sky, sun, storm, fire - Brahmins sacrificed food and drink
- Rituals and prayers call on the gods for health,
wealth and victory in war - Later evolved into a single power of the brahman,
that resided in all things - Mystics devoted their lives to spiritual
truth-meditation, yoga, spiritual and bodily
discipline - Sought direct communion with divine forces
30Expansion and Change
- Over many centuries, waves of Aryans went through
the mountain passes into NW India - Tribes were led by rajahs
- Most skilled war leader
- Elected by an assembly of warriors
- Ruled with the advice of a council of elders made
up of heads of families
31Aryans From Nomads to Farmers
- Aryans mingled with people they conquered
- Gave up nomadic ways and settle into villages
- Spread east to the Ganges
- By 800BCE, they learned to make tools of iron
- Iron axes and weapons helped them create villages
in the rainforests of the NE - Tribal leaders fought to control trade
territory - Some rajahs became powerful hereditary rulers
- Walled cities arose in the jungles
32Expansion and Change
- New civilization emerged in about 500 BCE
- Many rival kingdoms
- Aryan and Dravidian cultures blended together
- Common written language-Sanskrit
- Priests began writing down the sacred texts.
33Epic LiteratureThe Mahabharata The Ramayana
- Despite the development of written language, the
Aryans continued their strong oral tradition - Continued to memorize and recite ancient hymns
and long, epic poems - Mix of mythology, adventure, and religion
34The Mahabharata
- Greatest epic with 100,000 verses
- Battles of Aryan tribes and how they won control
over the Ganges region - Five royal brothers, the Pandavs, lose their
kingdom to their cousins - 18 day battle, they regain their kingdom and
restore peace to India - Bhagavad-Gita reflects important Indian religious
beliefs about the immortality of the soul and the
importance of duty
35The Ramayana
- Hero Rama and his beautiful bride Sita
- Sita is kidnapped by the demon-king Ravan
- Rama rescues Sita with the aid of the monkey
general Hanuman
36What role do these epics play in Indian society?
- Over the years, priests added new morals to the
tales to teach different lessons - Rama virtuous, brave ideal king
- Sita virtuous, loyal, obedient ideal woman
37What was the impact of the Aryans?
- Religious beliefs evolved into major world
religions - Hinduism
- Buddhism
- Caste System