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The Fortunes of Empire in Classical India

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Title: The Fortunes of Empire in Classical India


1
The Fortunes of Empire in Classical India
  • State, Society, the Quest for
  • Salvation

2
Do Now Read TWEDY on Indias Geography And
evaluate its role on Classical India
3
Idea of empire was less prominent
  • Fall of Indus Valley civilization by 1500 BCE
  • Creation of new civilization along Ganges River
  • Debate continues over role of Aryan invaders
  • 1500-500 BCE Sanskrit language, earliest
    literature caste system nobles, priests,
    poets, warriors, workers

4
Foundation of Classical Civilization by 600 BCE
  • Enormous political, ethnic, cultural and
    linguistic diversity
  • Indian civilization as a whole shaped by
    political fragmentation and cultural diversity
  • Identity provided by distinctive religious
    tradition and social organization Hinduism and
    the caste system

5
"The genius of India consists of synthesis"
  • It is the combination of parts into a new whole.
  • India's early language, Sanskrit, is the basis
    for many of modern languages such as Russian,
    Slavic, Indian, Farsi, Greek, Latin and all the
    Romance languages, Germanic, Scandinavian,
    English.
  • Its Vedic mythology is the basis for Greek and
    Roman myths.
  • India's language was exported to the West while
    part of its religious philosophy, Buddhism, was
    exported to East Asia (China, Japan, SE Asia).

6
India Before the Mauryan Dynasty
  • 563 - 463 BCE Gautama Buddha
  • 520 BCE Persian Emperor Darius conquers
    north-west India
  • Introduces Persian ruling pattern
  • 327 BCE Alexander of the Great destroys Persian
    Empire in India
  • Troops mutiny, depart after two years , political
    power vacuum
  • New government will be influenced by Persian and
    Greek penetration of northwest through Khyber
    Pass of Hindu Kush Mountains

7
Chronology of Indian History
  • 400 - 100 BCE Mauryan Age Emperor Asoka
    patronizes Buddhism
  • 320 - 450 CE Gupta Dynasty - Golden Age of
    Indian Civilization
  • 450 CE White Hun invasions

8
State, Society, the Quest for Salvation in India
  • The Fortunes of Empire in Classical India
  • The Mauryan Dynasty the Temporary Unification
    of India

The Mauryan Gupta Empires, 321 B.C.E. 550 C.E.
9
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10
COT
  • Continuities
  • Patriarchal
  • Hinduism predominates
  • Central trading location ( Maritime and Overland)
  • Fragmented geographically
  • Role of monsoon winds for trade and agriculture
  • Caste
  • Decentralized political structure due to
    geography
  • Dowry/child brides
  • Changes
  • Kautilya advises Chandragupta Mauryan
  • Buddhism state sponsored under Asoka Mauryan
  • Greek influence on statuary and literature(Silk
    Routes)
  • Increase in trade under Classical leadership
  • Rock pillar edicts establish Pax Mauryan
  • Division of Buddhism into Theravada and Mahayana
  • Buddhist and Hindu monumental architecture
  • Gupta Golden Age Mathematics, decimal system,
    surgery techniques, treaties on smallpox,
  • Hindu epic literature Mahabharata, Ramayana (
    Baghavad Gita)
  • Code of Manu- Hindu laws including Sati ( Window
    immolation)
  • Kalidassas poetry

11
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 like Saddam Hussein
    ? food tasters, slept in different rooms, etc.
  • 301 BCE ? gave up his throne became
    a Jain.

12
Kautilya
  • Chandraguptas advisor.
  • Brahmin caste.
  • Wrote The Treatise on Material Gain or the
    Arthashastra.
  • A guide for the king and his ministers
  • Supports royal power.
  • The great evil in society is anarchy.
  • Therefore, a single authority is needed to
    employ force when necessary!

13
Mauryan Empire
326 BCE 184 BCE
14
The Mauryan Dynasty the Temporary Unification
of India
  • Ruled all but southern tip of India
  • Population of about 50 million people
  • Large military and civilian bureaucracy the
    administration of a government chiefly through
    bureaus or departments staffed with nonelected
    officials
  • State-operated industries

15
Asoka (304 232 BCE)
  • Religious conversion to Buddhism after the
    gruesome battle of Kalinga in 262 BCE.
  • Dedicated his life to Buddhism.
  • Built extensive roads.
  • Conflict How to balance Kautilyas methods of
    keeping power and Buddhas demands tobecome a
    selfless person?

16
Buddhist Doctrine The Dharma
  • The Four Noble Truths
  • all life is suffering
  • there is an end to suffering
  • removing desire removes suffering
  • this may be done through the eight-fold path
  • (right views, intention, speech, action,
    livelihood, effort, mindfulness, concentration)

17
Appeal of Buddhism
  • Less dependence on Brahmins for ritual activities
  • No recognition of caste, jati status
  • Philosophy of moderate consumption
  • Public service through lay teaching
  • Use of vernacular, not Sanskrit

18
Asokas Empire, r. 268 - 232 BCE
19
Asokas 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 lawsas he
    makes an effort to develop a moral code for his
    empire. Religious tolerance, remorse for
    aggression (Ahimsa), conquest through teaching,
    welfare for all

20
Decline of the Mauryan Empire
  • Economic crisis follows death of Ashoka
  • High costs of bureaucracy,
  • military not supported by tax revenue
  • Regions begin to abandon Mauryan Empire
  • Disappears by 185 BCE

Ashoka Lion Capital Legacy
21
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22
Regional Kingdom Bactria
  • Northwestern India
  • Ruled by Greek-speaking descendants of
    Alexanders campaigns
  • Intense cultural activity accompanies active trade

23
Turmoil a Power Vacuum220 BCE 320 CE
Tamils
The Mauryan Empire is divided into many kingdoms.
24
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25
The Gupta Dynasty
  • Based in Magadha
  • Founded by Chandra Gupta (no relation to
    Chandragupta Maurya), c. 320 CE
  • Slightly smaller than Mauryan Empire
  • Highly decentralized leadership
  • Gupta Decline
  • Frequent invasions of White Huns, 5th c. CE
  • Gupta Dynasty disintegrates along regional fault
    lines
  • Smaller local kingdoms dominate until Mughal
    Empire founded in 16th c.

26
Gupta Empire 320 CE 647 CE
27
Society Economy
  • Gender Relations
  • Patriarchy entrenched
  • Child marriage common (8 year old girls married
    to men in 20s)
  • Women encouraged to remain in private sphere
  • Castes Guilds
  • Wealth the Social Order
  • Economy Towns Manufacturing
  • Manufactured goods in big demand
  • Developed in dense network of small workshops
  • Trade intense, capitalizes on trade routes across
    India

28
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
  • Huns invade 450 CE

29
Fa-Hsien Life in Gupta India
  • Chinese Buddhist monk traveled along the Silk
    Road and visited India in the 5th century.
  • He was following the path of the Buddha.
  • He reported the people to be happy,
    relatively free of government oppression, and
    inclined towards courtesy and charity.
    Other references in the journal, however,
    indicate that the caste system was rapidly
    assuming its basic features, including
    "untouchability," the social isolation of a
    lowest class that is doomed to menial labor.

30
Extensive Trade4th century
spices
silks
cotton goods
rice wheat
spices
horses
gold ivory
gold ivory
cotton goods
31
International Trade Routes during the Guptas
32
Gupta Achievements
1000 diseasesclassified
500 healingplants identified
Printedmedicinal guides
Kalidasa
Literature
Medicine
PlasticSurgery
GuptaIndia
Inoculations
C-sectionsperformed
SolarCalendar
Astronomy
Mathematics
DecimalSystem
The earthis round
PI 3.1416
Conceptof Zero
33
The Decline of the Guptas
  • Invasion of the White Huns from Central Asia in
    the 4th century signaled the end of the Gupta
    Golden Age, even though at first, the Gupta
    defeated them.
  • 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 7th century.
  • Great cultural diversity
  • Caste system encouraged local loyalties
  • QUESTION Is the best literature and art
    written as the civilization is on the rise,
    at its height, or in its decline?

34
Indian trade flourished despite lack of unity
  • Merchants and artisans patronized public
    buildings and festivals
  • Hinduism Buddhism spread through much of Asia
    Indian mathematics astronomy as well
  • Trade along the Silk Roads
  • Trade in the Indian Ocean Basin
  • Seasonal sea trade expands
  • Spring/winter winds blow from south-west,
    fall/winter winds blow from north-west
  • Trade from Asia to Persian Gulf and Red Sea,
    Mediterranean

35
Classical India COT
  • Classical Indias caste system regulated social
    order despite the fact that it would have to
    compete with Buddhism in the Mauryan Empire,
    patriarchy through Hinduism minimized womens
    roles, but eventually the increasingly
    decentralized Gupta Empire would be toppled by
    Huns
  • In South Asia 600 B.C.E-600 C.E the strategic
    location India would generate greater
    interregional trade with Indian Vaisyas
    (merchant caste) being the most venturesome
    sailors in the Indian Ocean, Hinduism would
    become increasingly more codified through the
    laws of Manu and epic literature like the
    Mahayana, however, Indias fragmented geography
    would continue to contribute greatly to its
    diverse identification of language and culture (
    Deccan Planteau,Thar Desert, Himalayan Mountains,
    etc.)
  • Classical India (600 B.C.E-600 C.E) was
    dramatically altered by Asokas conversion in the
    Mauryan Empire to Buddhism establishing a
    pattern of tolerance and understanding,
    facilitating monastic orders to spread Buddhism
    and its rejection of caste, however, Hinduism
    would remain the majority faith based of
    traditions and historical social divisions.
  • In South Asia 600 B.C.E-600 C.E the introduction
    of Greco-Buddhism facilitated the spread of
    Buddhism across the silk road with depictions of
    the Buddha in traditional Greek fashion,
    literature became inspired by Homeric Epics in
    the Baghavad Gita, however, the role of caste and
    principles of Dharma (duties) and Karma(
    determination of future rebirths/samsara) would
    continue to guide social and economic
    relationships.

36
In South Asia 600 B.C.E-600 C.E the strategic
location India would generate greater
interregional trade with Indian Vaisyas
(merchant caste) being the most venturesome
sailors in the Indian Ocean, Hinduism would
become increasingly more codified through the
laws of Manu and epic literature like the
Mahayana, however, Indias fragmented geography
would continue to contribute greatly to its
diverse identification of language and culture (
Deccan Planteau,Thar Desert, Himalayan Mountains,
etc.)
South Asias location along the silk routes and Indian Ocean trade routes facilitated its middle man status amongst the other classical civlizations Hinduism, already a staple in South Asia would become increasingly more complex and codified through the code of Manu, and literary epics like the Mahabarata and Ramayana. Indias fragmented geography would keep its political system decentralized through the rougly 1200 year time frame governed ( with the exception of the Maurya and Gupta) decentralized Hindu kingdoms.
Finished products from Rome and Silks and Spices from China and SE Asia would see the massive exports of gold into India garnering tremendous wealth and significant outside nfluence. Brahmin would study and establish universities where they would translate Vedas to teach moraility , social cohesiveness and (perhaps Gree inspired) tales of Gods and humans interacting. Its mountainous, diverse and fragmented nature severely hindered its ability to centralized, instead, looking toward Hinduism as its only true cohesive factor ( thousands of languages, ethnici
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