150 likes | 523 Views
Ch.4 Emergence of Empire: Mauryan India. Chandragupta Asoka Administration Religion Society. Introduction. First unified empire in India Numerous sources of information Literature: Megasthenes’ Indica Kautilya’s Arthasastra Numerous Buddhist texts Numerous inscriptions of Asoka.
E N D
Ch.4 Emergence of Empire: Mauryan India Chandragupta Asoka Administration Religion Society
Introduction • First unified empire in India • Numerous sources of information • Literature: Megasthenes’ Indica • Kautilya’s Arthasastra • Numerous Buddhist texts • Numerous inscriptions of Asoka
Chandra Gupta • The origin of Chandragupta or Maurya clan are not clearly known. • As a child he was brought up by his mother • He was discovered in the forests by Chanakya- author of Arthasastra (the first political compendium of India) • He gathered forces around him from the tribal republics at the borders
His conquests • Succeeded in 321 B.C.E- to establish his own empire • His conquests began from borderlands- did not directly attack the Nanda empire • He defeated the Greek Garrison in the North West- the treaty included his marriage to Selucus’s daughter and the territories in the North West (Afghanisthan) • Exchange of Envoys: Megasthenes lived for many years in Pataliputra- Mauryan capital
Bindusara • Towards the end of his life, he is converted to Jainism and performed the Jain Sullekhana (starvation to death) • Bindusara succeded in 297 B.C.E • Also known as Amitraghata (Gk. Amitrochates • Diplomatic relations with Antiochus I • Campaigns in South India
Asoka 272 B.C.E • Asoka conquered the only territory that was not included in the empire- Kalinga • He issued numerous rock edicts placed in various placed in his kingdom • Written in Brahmi script- deciphered by James Princep in 1837 • Converted to Buddhism • 3rd Buddhist council held at Pataliputra • Buddhist missions to various countries • Greeks, southeast Asia, Tibet • Srilanka- sent his deughter and son as Buddhist missionaries
It is Asoka’s personal involvement with Buddhism that inspired him towards the welfare state ideal and humanistic rule which was emulated by later rulers. Asoka is remembered for his righteous rule. • Buddhism in South and Southeast Asia owes its origin to Asoka. The Theravada Buddhist countries such as Srilanka and other Southeast Asian countries received Theravada Buddhism due to the enthusiastic support of Asoka for the Buddhist Sangha.
Asoka and Personal practice & Buddhist Sangha • Scripture • Pilgrimage • Construction of stupas • Sangha • Purification of Sangha • Third Buddhist Council • Missionaries
Administration • Agrarian economy- taxation of village resources was the primary source of income for the empire • Clearing the forests for cultivation: war captives were used • Ownership of land- individuals and king • Irrigation- Girnar- water reservoir was constructed to provide water for irrigation
Guilds: crafts and artisans • Localization and hereditary nature of occupations • Several occupations listed in taxation records: Weaving, liquor, slaughterhouses, ships, cows, gold, goldsmiths, forest produce • Large standing army • Technically four castes- but numerous castes groups are known • Megasthenes- classes them as 7 castes • Philosophers, farmers, soldiers, herdsmen, artisans, magistrates and councillors.
Centralized bureaucracy- king traveled extensively in the kingdom- in touch with people and local officials • A clear administration for the first time • Treasurer and Chief Collector controlled the revenue from the center- • Salaries for officials- not land grants • State maintained public works: roads, irrigation canals, mining, rest houses
Kingdom is divided into 4 provinces- directly governed by the princes of the Royal family. • Punishment with fines- but capital punishment known from this period • Asoka’s dharma- proclamations- on how one should conduct oneself
Demise of the empire • Asoka died 232 B.C.E. • North west Bactrian Greeks- also known as Indo-Greeks by 180 B.C.E • The first experiment with centralized empire has ended- Do you think it really ended- or do you see any unity continue in Indian civilization?
Further Questions • Scholarly views on Asoka • What happened to Buddhism, his policies, welfare state after Asoka? What is his legacy? • Did India stay united or split up into smaller states? • What was the status of women? • Other religions of this period. • Indo-Greek relations. • Internal polity and other foreign relations.