Mata Sundri College For Women Department of History 4 Year Undergraduate Programme Discipline Course...

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Mata Sundri College For Women Department of History 4 Year Undergraduate Programme Discipline Course II History of India I (Upto c. 300 BCE)

Transcript of Mata Sundri College For Women Department of History 4 Year Undergraduate Programme Discipline Course...

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Mata Sundri College For Women Department of History 4 Year Undergraduate Programme Discipline Course II History of India I (Upto c. 300 BCE) Slide 2 History Of India I (Upto c. 300 BCE) Part I Slide 3 Syllabus Survey Of Sources and Historiographical Trends: Regions, Environment and People and their Significance for Understanding Early India Paleolithic and Mesolithic Cultures: Sequences and Geographical Distribution, Rock art Advent of Food Production Harappan Civilization: Origin and Extent, Political and Economic organization Art and Religion. Decline and Late Harappan Cultures; Chalcolitihic Cultures outside and Harappan Distribution Zone. Society, Polity, Economy and Religion as reflected in Vedic Literature. The Arya Problem; Iron age Cultures with special reference to PGW and Megaliths. Development from Sixth Centuries BC: rise of Territorial States, emergence of Cities and material Life, new religious movements. Slide 4 Unit One Influence of Geography on History Survey Of Sources and Historiograp hical Trends: Regions, Environmen t and People and their Significance for Understandi ng Early India Slide 5 Himalayan Mountains Nanga Parbat and numerous other mountains of the Himalaya, Karakorum and Hindu Kush provide a continuous source of water for the Indus and its tributaries. These mountain ranges also provided important timber, animal products, and minerals, gold, silver, tin and semiprecious stones that were traded throughout the Indus Valley. These Mountains also served as barrier to cold waves fro Siberia. These mountain ranges served as a security wall for India. Slide 6 Coast The coast of Sindh and Makran have bays and ancient Harappan sites have been located along the coast to the border of modern Iran. These coastal settlements were involved in fishing and trading, using the monsoon winds to travel back and forth to Oman and the Persian Gulf region. Slide 7 Valleys Cedar in Chitral valley is still used to make houses and coffins, following a tradition that dates back to the first Indus cities. Beyond the mountains in the background is the region of Badakhshan, Afghanistan, a source of the deep blue lapis lazuli. This was mined during the Indus period and traded throughout the Indus Valley and to far off Mesopotamia and Egypt. Slide 8 Unit Two: Paleolithic and Mesolithic Cultures: Sequences and Geographical Distribution, Rock art Slide 9 Old And New Stone Age Tools Slide 10 Unit Three: Advent of Food Production A remarkable progress is noticed in human civilization in the Neolithic Age. It is approximately dated from 6000 B.C to 4000 B.C. Neolithic remains are found in various parts of India. These include the Kashmir valley, Chirand in Bihar, Belan valley in Uttar Pradesh and in several places of the Deccan. The important Neolithic sites excavated in south India are Maski, Brahmagiri, Hallur and Kodekal in Karnataka, Paiyampalli in Tamil Nadu and Utnur in Andhra Pradesh. The chief characteristic features of the Neolithic culture arthe practice of agriculture, domestication of animals, polishing of stone tools and the manufacture of pottery. In fact, the cultivation of plants and domestication of animals led to the emergence of village communities based on sedentary life. Slide 11 Origin and Extent, Political and Economic organization Art and Religion. Decline and Late Harappan Cultures; Chalcolitihic Cultures outside and Harappan Distribution Zone. Slide 12 Indus Valley The Harappan culture existed along the Indus River in what is present day Pakistan. It was named after the city of Harappa. Harappa and the city of Mohenjo-Daro were important centers of the Indus valley civilization. This Indus Valley civilization flourished around 4000-1000 B.C. Slide 13 Chronology Ancient Indus Chronology PeriodPhaseYrs. (B.C.E.) 5Late Harappan (Cemetery H)?1700-1300 4Harappan/Late Harappan Transitional1900-?1700 3CHarappan Phasec. 2200-1900 3BHarappan Phasec. 2450-2200 3AHarappan Phasec.2600-2450 2Early Harappan/Kot Diji Phasec. 2800-2600 1A/BEarly Harappan/Ravi Phasec. 3300-2800 Slide 14 Early Harappan-Ravi Phase 3300-2800 BC This distinctive, regional culture which emerged is called Early or Pre-Harappan. Trade networks linked this culture with related regional cultures and distant sources of raw materials, including lapis lazuli and other materials for bead-making. Domesticated crops included peas, sesame seeds, dates and cotton. Domestic animals also used, such as the water buffalo. Mud brick for building. Slide 15 Earliest Phase-Ravi (3300-2800 B.C.) Slide 16 Middle Harappan-Integration Era 2600-1900 BC By 2500 BCE, communities had been turned into urban centers (integration). Six such urban centers have been discovered, including: Harappa, Mohenjo Daro and Dicki in Pakistan, along with Gonorreala, Dokalingam and Mangalore in India. In total, over 1052 cities and settlements have been found, mainly in the general region of the Ghaggar-Florence River and its tributaries. Irrigation used to increase crop production and mud brick structures. Slide 17 Indus Valley-Integration Era Slide 18 Late Harappan-Cemetery H 1700-1300 BC Cremation of human remains. The bones were stored in painted pottery burial urns. This is completely different to the Indus civilization where bodies were buried in wooden coffins. Reddish pottery, painted in black with antelopes, peacocks etc., sun or star motifs, with different surface treatments to the earlier period. Expansion of settlements into the east. Rice became a main crop. Apparent breakdown of the widespread trade of the Indus civilization, with materials such as marine shells no longer used. Continued use of mud brick for building. Slide 19 Major Cities: Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa The cities are well known for their impressive, organized and regular layout. They have well laid our plumbing and drainage system, including indoor toilets. Over one thousand other towns and villages also existed in this region. Slide 20 Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa Slide 21 Cities The similarities in plan and construction between Mohenjo- Daro and Harappa indicate that they were part of a unified government with extreme organization. Both cities were constructed of the same type and shape of bricks. The two cities may have existed simultaneously and their sizes suggest that they served as capitals of their provinces. In contrast to other civilizations, burials found from these cities are not elaborate; they are more simplistic and contain few material goods. Remains of palaces or temples in the cities have not been found. No hard evidence exists indicating military activity, though the cities did contain fortifications and artifacts such as copper and bronze knives, spears, and arrowheads were recovered. Slide 22 Mohenjo-Daro This shows the high western mound made up of a massive mud brick platform and brick houses of the Harappan period ( 2600 to 1900 B. C.). On top of the Harappan structures is a Buddhist period stupa made of mud brick that dates to the first century A.D. Slide 23 The Great Bath The "great bath" is the earliest public water tank. The tank measures approximately 12 meters north-south and 7 meters wide, with a maximum depth of 2.4 meters. Two staircases lead down into the tank from the north and south and small sockets at the edges of the stairs are thought to have held wooden planks or treads. At the foot of the stairs is a small ledge with a brick edging that extends the entire width of the pool. Slide 24 Great Bath Slide 25 Streets At Mohenjo-Daro narrow streets and alleyways are off of the major streets, leading into more private neighborhoods. Many of the brick houses were two stories high, with thick walls and high ceilings to keep the rooms cool in the hot summer months. Slide 26 Wells Private wells were rebuilt over many generations for large households and neighborhoods. This well in DK G area at Mohenjo-daro stands like a chimney because all of the surrounding earth has been removed by excavation. Slide 27 Harappa The high mound at Harappa (Mound AB) is surrounded by a massive mud brick city wall with large square ramparts. One of these eroding ramparts is visible through the underbrush that now covers the site. The flags mark the tomb of a Muslim saint. Slide 28 Harappa Site Slide 29 Granary The "granary" of Harappa is found on Mound F. It is a brick structure that was built on a massive brick foundation over 45 meters north-south and 45 meters east-west. Two rows of six rooms that appear to be foundations are arranged along a central passageway that is about 7 meters wide and partly paved with baked bricks. Each room measures 15.2 by 6.1 meters and has three sleeper walls with air space between them. Slide 30 Well A large public well and public bathing platforms were found in the southern part of Mound AB at Harappa. These public bathing areas may also have been used for washing clothes as is common in many traditional cities in Pakistan and India today. Slide 31 Harappa: Mound E and ET Inside the city is an area that has been identified as a crafts quarter. Large quantities of manufacturing debris have been found in this area indicating the presence of workshops for making stone beads, shell ornaments, glazed faience ornaments, stone tools and possibly even gold working. Slide 32 Mound E Gateway Artists Conception Slide 33 Language The Indus (or Harappan) people used a pictographic script. Some 3500 specimens of this script survive in stamp seals carved in stone, in molded terracotta and faience amulets, in fragments of pottery, and in a few other categories of inscribed objects. In addition to the pictographic signs, the seals and amulets often contain iconographic motifs, mostly realistic pictures of animals apparently worshipped as sacred, and a few cultic scenes, including anthropomorphic deities and worshippers. This material is important to the investigation of the Harappan language and religion, which continue to be major issues. Slide 34 The origins of Indus writing The origins of Indus writing can now be traced to the Ravi Phase (c. 3300-2800 BC) at Harappa. Some inscriptions were made on the bottom of the pottery before firing. This inscription (c. 3300 BC) appears to be three plant symbols. Slide 35 Seals Silver Seal Clay Seals Slide 36 Economy-Trade The Harappan civilization was mainly urban and mercantile. Inhabitants of the Indus valley traded with Mesopotamia, southern India, Afghanistan, and Persia for gold, silver, copper, and turquoise. Slide 37 Trade Gold Disc The central ornament worn on the forehead of the famous "priest-king" sculpture from Mohenjo-daro appears to represent an eye bead, possibly made of gold with steatite inlay in the center. Slide 38 Trade Slide 39 Economy-Agriculture The Mesopotamian model of irrigated agriculture was used to take advantage of the fertile grounds along the Indus River. Earthen walls were built to control the river's annual flooding. Crops grown included wheat, barley, peas, melons, and sesame. This civilization was the first to cultivate cotton for the production of cloth. Several animals were domesticated including the elephant which was used for its ivory. Slide 40 Unicorn This unicorn seal was also discovered during the late 1927-31 excavations at Mohenjo-Daro. One theory holds that the bull actually has two horns, but that these have been stylized to one because of the complexity of depicting three dimensions. However the manufacturing and design process behind seals was so sophisticated that the depiction of three dimensions might not necessarily have been a problem. Slide 41 Artifacts These egg shaped whistles may have been used for music, a tradition that is still present in rural areas of Pakistan and India. Slide 42 Clay Sculpture Slide 43 Figurines Slide 44 Ceramics Slide 45 Copper Copper plate with vertical sides. Slide 46 Ornaments This collection of gold and agate ornaments (see next slide) includes objects found at both Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa. At the top are fillets of hammered gold that would have been worn around the forehead. The other ornaments include bangles, chokers, long pendant necklaces, rings, earrings, conical hair ornaments, and broaches. These ornaments were never buried with the dead, but were passed on from one generation to the next. These ornaments were hidden under the floors in the homes of wealthy merchants or goldsmiths. Slide 47 Ornaments Slide 48 Necklace Necklace from Mohenjo- Daro made from gold, agate, jasper, steatite and green stone. The gold beads are hollow and the pendant agate and jasper beads are attached with thick gold wire. Steatite beads with gold caps serve to separate each of the pendant beads. Slide 49 Burial The body was placed inside a wooden coffin (which later decayed) and entombed in a rectangular pit surrounded with burial offerings in pottery vessels. The man was buried wearing a necklace of 340 graduated steatite beads and three separate pendant beads made of natural stone and three gold beads. A single copper bead was found at his waist. Slide 50 Burial Burial of woman and infant, Harappa. This burial was disturbed in antiquity, possibly by ancient Harappan grave robbers. Besides the fact that the body is flipped and the pottery disturbed, the left arm of the woman is broken and shell bangles that would normally be found on the left arm are missing. The infant was buried in a small pit beneath the legs of the mother. Slide 51 Decline of Harappan Civilization The de-urbanization period of the Harappan Civilization saw the collapse and disappearance of the urban phenomena in the South Asia. The theme for this period is localization. Architectural and ceramic forms changed along with the loss of writing, planned settlements, public sanitation, monumental architecture, seaborne and exotic trade, seals, and weights. Slide 52 Four Theories of decline Archaeologists have offered four explanations for the collapse of the Harappan Civilization. Three are based on ecological factors: intense flooding, decrease in precipitation, and the dessication of the Sarasvati River. The fourth hypothesis is that of the Aryan Invasion, proposed by Sir R. E. Mortimer Wheeler and Stuart Piggott. Fourth largely abandoned in the 1940s in favor of a combination of factors from ecological disasters. Slide 53 Unit Five: Society, Polity, Economy and Religion as reflected in Vedic Literature. The Arya Problem; Iron age Cultures with special reference to PGW and Megaliths. The Vedic Age (1500 BC-600 BC) was precipitated by the migration of the Aryan people from northwestern parts of the indian subcontinent. The Vedic Age saw the development of agricultural activities on a large scale in the upper Gangetic plains of India. This period is known for its nature worship and formation of Hindu religious philosophy. The Vedic Age is also termed as the age of the epics, as the great Indian epics, the Ramayana and Mahabharata, and the Upanishads were written during this time, along with sacred hymns or the Vedas. The latter part of this period saw the rise of small kingdoms and the formulation of the caste system in India. Various Aryan tribes migrated to the Indian subcontinent in large hoards from what is present-day Iran through the famous Khyber Pass. They rapidly spread to the area known as the Saptsindhu (the land of seven rivers), which included eastern parts of present-day Afghanistan, the Punjab (in Pakistan and also in India), and fringes of western Uttar Pradesh. The Aryans soon mingled with the local people and adopted an agrarian way of life after settling down in small, organized communities in northwestern India. The knowledge of horse riding and a powerful cavalry was the main cause of the Aryans spreading rapidly into various regions in India, as they could easily suppress their rivals Slide 54 Unit Six: Development from Sixth Centuries BC: rise of Territorial States, emergence of Cities and material Life, new religious movements Slide 55 Rise of Buddhism and Jainism While disputed, most scholars believe Jainism appeared in the 600s or 500s BCE, and Buddhism in the 500s to 400s BCE Both religions rejected the rituals that had defined and dominated Hinduism Thus, both Buddhists and Jains rejected the concept of dharma to caste; however, both believed in the importance of dharma of virtue and karma Attacks such as these led the Hindu Saints to create the Laws of Manu, and further emphasize the nature of dharma Slide 56 Advantages of opting this paper Holistic knowledge which is not only limited to History. Indian History forms the important components in various competitive examinations such as PCS and UPSC Help develop research skills which will enable her to seek work in in various fields like publishing houses, journalism, NGOs associated with social sectors. This syllabus is framed to enhance the academic knowledge of the subject and will equip the students for a future career in academics especially in school teaching. Continuous study of this option till the fourth year makes one eligible for pursuing post graduation in History in University of Delhi. Slide 57 Thank you