India - History
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Earliest physical proof of India's heritage can be
found at the sites of the ancient cities of Mohenjodaro and Harappa, two cities
that belong to the Indus Valley civilization. These excavations, have shown that
people at the time had a sophisticated lifestyle, a highly developed sense of
aesthetics and an astonishing knowledge of town planning. The people of this
civilization also had a script language - however attempts to decipher it have,
unfortunately, largely been unsuccessful. At its height, the Indus civilization
extended nearly a million square kilometres across the Indus river valley, and
though it existed at the same time as the ancient civilizations of Egypt and
Sumer, it far outlasted them.
Records of Indian people and their culture are also found in the four Vedas,
ancient books of knowledge. The Rig Veda, the first of the Vedas, is the oldest
book humanity possesses. It is supposed to have been written in 1500 BC. The
other Vedas, Yajur Veda, Sama Veda and Athar Veda, all date back to 1000 BC. The
Vedas are written in Sanskrit and were brought to India by the Aryans. They were
nomadic people who came to India from various places and settled along the banks
of of the Indus. However, Aryans were conquerors and they soon took over the
north and moved to the east. Dravidians migrated to the south.
Over a period of time, the Aryan and Dravidian cultures began to merge and a new
civilization began to surface. Aryan thought blended with the philosophy of the
older civilization. A combination of socio-economic divisions that existed
within the society of the two cultures gave rise to a stratified, hierarchical
caste system that governs Indian society today. The term Hindu, signifying the
people of the land of the Indus, a highly organized civilization that discovered
the use of iron and built cities across the north of India, now applies to a
comprehensive Indian culture.
One distinctive feature of these times, which later on led to their downfall,
was the division of the land into smaller (and more manageable) pieces. India
was divided into several territorial states, who had their own kings with a
measure of autonomy. The most powerful of these states was Pataliputra (now
called Patna), was ruled over by the Nandas. In 326 BC, Alexander, the Greek
emperor, invaded India and ruled over most of north India. However, Alexander
was more of a soldier than a king. Instead of staying back to consolidate his
conquest, he left India and died shortly thereafter in Babylon. Seven years
after the invasion, Chandragupta Maurya, the founder of the Maurya Empire,
routed the Nandas and took over their throne. He was assisted by the brilliant
Brahmin statesman, Chanakya, with whose help he established a vast empire which
was spread all across India until Kabul (in present day Afghanistan).
The best known Mauryan emperor was Emperor Ashoka, Chandragupta's grandson.
During his reign, only the southern tip of India and Kalinga (now Orissa) was
not a part of the Mauryan empire. After a victorious but devastating battle at
Kalinga, in which thousands of people were slaughtered, he was deeply shocked
and distressed. He adopted non-violence and became a Buddhist. His creed
advocated non-violence and vegetarianism which certainly influenced the Hindus,
the majority of whom do not eat meat anymore. The Ashoka pillar at Sarnath has
been adopted by India as its national emblem and the Dharma Chakra on the Ashoka
Pillar adorns the National Flag.
Fifty years after Ashoka's death, the Mauryan empire disintegrated and faded
away. North India was in a state of confusion, however in the South the Andhra
kings became powerful and they reached northward, occupying the holy city of
Ujjain. Later India was again invaded by the Greeks and their interaction with
Indian cultures gave rise to the Greco-Buddhist art. According to many
historians, image worship in India came from Greece. India was later invaded by
the Scythians who established what is now known as Gujarat.
The fourth century was the age of the Guptas who ruled over India for 150 years,
during which the established a powerful and widespread empire, completing the
Mauryan design of unity and consolidated the whole of India under the governance
of a centralized state. This period, the Gupta period, is often termed as the
Golden Age of the arts in ancient India. Its emperors were responsible for an
incredible flourishing of Indian art, literature and learning. They created
schools and universities where learning and cultural & scientific developments
were encouraged. The great university of Nalanda was established during this
time. The Puranas, the Panchtantra Tales, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata were
rewritten and edited during this time. Kalidasa, the great Sanskrit poet and
playwright, wrote his famous Shakuntala at the court of Chandragupta
Vikramaditya. Bharata's Natyashastra, the great treatsie on the dance, music and
theatre traditions of India was written during this period.
The Guptas were defeated by the White Huns in the sixth century. A barbarous
tribe, they were quickly defeated by another tribe, the Gurjaras, who settled in
Rajasthan and Gujarat. India soon turned into a fragmented nation with dozens of
small states. In 606 AD, Harshvardhana dominated much of North India and
proclaimed himself Emperor of Five Indias. Amongst the more important dynasties
after Harshvardhana are the Pratihara, ancestors of todays Rajputs. In the South
the scene was different with the Pallavas, of present day Tamil Nadu, and the
Chalukyas, fighting each other to gain control. After them, the Cholas ruled for
over 500 years and dominated the whole of the east coast to Ceylon (now Sri
Lanka). It was during this period that arts, crafts, painting and architecture
achieved a summit of perfection.
Indians were avid travellers and settled in distant lands. The Cholas encouraged
and organized expeditions through which the religion and culture of the land was
carried beyond India's borders. The ancient name for Java is Yava Dvipa, the
Island of Millet - the Indian word for millet is Java. Cambodia was once called
Kambhoja, named after the Indian city in ancient Gandhara in today's Kabul
region. The epic, Ramayana, is a part of mythology of Thailand and Indonesia,
Balinese and Thai dance forms are of Indian origin.
At this time, India was largely fragmented with
the Cholas ruling over the South, Palas over Bihar and Bengal by the Sena
dynasty. Prithviraj Chauhan was the flamboyant ruler of Delhi, who despite
routing the Afghans in 1191, is largely remembered as the most romantic king in
Indian history. He fell in love with the daughter of his most bitter rival,
Jaichandra, and carried her off despite the opposition. A year later, Muhammad
Ghur returned and in the battle that ensued, Prithviraj lost his life and the
battle. Ghur's lieutenant, Qutb-uddin Aibak later ruled India and founded
India's first Muslim ruling dynasty. He ruled over India for fourteen years,
consolidating his power by annexing the territories of Delhi and eventually
defeating Jaichandra. His son-in-law constructed the famous Qutb Minar, a mosque
and minaret, in his memory.
The Delhi Sultanate, as it was known, was ruled by the Kiljis, and then the
Tughlaqs. An eccentric ruler, Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq decide that Delhi was unsafe
as a capital and transferred the entire city to Dualatabad, a good thousand
miles south of Delhi. He had to come all the way back again because the people
were unhappy with the change. he introduced copper coins but failing to control
counterfeit coinage, had to give up on the scheme. Most of his experiments ended
in a disaster and by the time he died, he had lost most of the India he had
conquered.
After his death, the Sultanate was in a disarray and it lost all its power. It
was then that Timur of Samarkahand chose to invade India. A barbarian, he
butchered people mercilessly but fortunately returned as quickly as he came. The
Tughlaqs tried to make a comeback but were ousted by the Sayyids who were then
defeated by the Lodis. Sikander Lodi was peace-loving man and a poet and a
musician. He spent most of his life making improvements to his territories.
At the battle of Panipat, Babar, the Mughal, defeated the last of the Lodis.
Panipat was a major battlefield where India defended itself against many
invaders: the Afghans, the Mughals and the British. Babar laid the foundation of
the Mughal empire that ruled India for nearly 350 years until 1857. Babar's
grandson Akbar fought many battles to prove he was fit to be king. His closest
neighbors, the Sisodia and the Rajputs of Mewar, remain un cowed despite the
fact that Akbar took their stronghold at Chittor. A terrible battle, every man
went to his death in defending his kingdom, all the women performed the rite of
jauhar (collective death by fire) to protect their honor. During his reign,
Akbar achieved a political unification of nearly the whole of India by frequent
annexations and matrimonial alliances. A liberal at heart, he married the
princess of Amber, a Rajput. His grandson was Shah Jahaan, who is famous for
building the Taj Mahal at Agra. However he spent most of the last years of his
life imprisoned by his son, Aurangzeb.
A fanatic anti-Hindu, Aurangzeb destroyed temples replacing them with mosques
and banned Hindus from celebrating their festivals. having a talent to alienate
everybody, he re-imposed jizya, tax on unbelievers, that had been abolished by
Akbar. Many Hindus bowed to Islam to avoid this exorbitant tax. His fighting
with the Rajputs and Marathas cost him much. The great Maratha leader, Shivaji,
gave Hindus the much needed faith in themselves. He constantly fought the
Mughals, the Portuguese and the British. The nascent nationalism of the Marathas
acted as a magnet for the Hindu rulers who joined the fight against the Mughals
in the Deccan. Later on, the Marathas posed a significant threat to the British
supremacy.
Aurangzeb's lack of political diplomacy soon disintegrated the Mughal empire led
to the rule of Nadir Shah, the Persian invader. After plundering India, he left
with all the wealth of Delhi. The last of the Mughal, Bahadur Shah, lived his
reign as a prisoner of the British who had by then assumed control in Delhi.
India was then ruled by the Portuguese, the Dutch, the French and the English.
The British ruled over all of India and divided India into governable districts,
reorganized the Indian administrative system, created India railway system
(which remains the largest in the world today), improved the postal system, and
undertook major public works.
In 1857, Indian soldiers in the British army revolted in what is called the
Revolt of 1857 and succeeded in bringing together all of the princely states and
civilians against the British. This is largely believed to be India's first war
of independence. Mangal Pandey, a lone but brave dissident, fired at his
officers in a move that was then considered insignificant. This led to mutinies
all over India and soldiers marched to Delhi and proclaimed Bahadur Shah as the
Emperor of India. In retrospect, had the Indians been better organized they
could have easily driven out the British. However, the mutiny led to great
massacres all over India by the British in which thousands of people lost their
lives. The Revolt of 1857 succeeded in shaking the British complacency and
making the considerably less secure and arrogant. The Queen's Proclamation in
1858 assured the rights of people and princes of India and guaranteed religious
non-interference.
The Revolt managed to sow the seeds of national consciousness and the beginnings
of a more organized national movement. In 1915, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi came
onto the scene, calling for unity of the country in an astonishing display of
leadership that would eventually lead the country to independence. The profound
impact Gandhi had on India and his ability to gain independence through a
totally non-violent mass movement made him one of the most remarkable leaders
the world has ever known. He led by example, wearing homespun clothes to weaken
the British textile industry and orchestrating a march to the sea (the Dandi
March), where demonstrators proceeded to make their own salt in protest against
the British monopoly. Indians gave him the name Mahatma, or Great Soul. The
British had to bow down to the calls for independence and they would leave India
by 1947.
Independence came at great cost. While Mahatma Gandhi was for India gaining
independence as a united country, Mohammed Ali Jinnah was fronting a Muslim one
through a group called the Muslim League. Jinnah advocated the division of India
into two separate states: Muslim and Hindu. When the British left, they created
the separate states of Pakistan and Bangladesh, and violence erupted when
stranded Muslims and Hindu minorities in the areas fled in opposite directions.
Within a few weeks, half a million people had died in the course of the greatest
migration of human beings in the world's history. Mahatma Gandhi vowed to fast
until the violence stopped, which it did when his health was seriously
threatened. The irony of this incident is that today India has a far greater
size of Muslim population than Pakistan.
Today, as the world's largest democracy, India is poised to realize its
potential as an international economic power.
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Copyright @ 2003 Durgesh H. Variya