290 likes | 1.07k Views
Post-Classical India. Political History. Modern Indian states. Political History. I. Post-Classical A. Kingdom of Harsha (606-648) 1. occupied northern India a. Magadha, Kashmir, Sind, and Gujarat 2. Devout Buddhist, but
E N D
Political History Modern Indian states
Political History I. Post-Classical A. Kingdom of Harsha (606-648) 1. occupied northern India a. Magadha, Kashmir, Sind, and Gujarat 2. Devout Buddhist, but tolerant of other faiths. 3. Forged alliances with local rulers. 4. After his death, the empire returned to decentralization. Kingdom of Harsha
Political History II. Regional Kingdoms A. Kingdoms in North & South 1. Region not unified 2. small regional kingdoms were standard B. Large Kingdoms (Delhi Sultanate, Chola, & Vijayanagar) Decentralised • 1. no centralized bureaucracy • 2. lots of regional autonomy for states
Foreign & Maritime Trade Lateen Sails • Trade extended from Africa to Melaka (Malaysia) & China • Indian port cities (Cambay, Calicut) become major marketplaces (emporia) • Dhow (India) & Junk (China) primary vessels • religion, culture diffused across Indian Ocean • replaces Silk Road as major trade conduit Chinese junk
Monsoons • Monsoons -- Seasonal rains followed by drought • necessitated irrigation programs -- esp. in South • North had established irrigation dating to Harappan • Monsoon currents & winds dictated maritime trade • Merchants traveled to minimise time in port cities • Indian cities become hub of Asian Maritime trade -- esp.. Cambay • Cities developed foreign quarters for merchants (ex. Chinatown in SF)
Agriculture & Demographic Changes South India • few rivers, undeveloped hydro-technology • dams, reservoirs, canals • costs agricultural output • food population • population urbanization • Formation of guilds necessitate restructuring of the caste system
Internal Trade & Temple life • expansion of internal trade • regional specialisation • goods made in one region traded in other parts of India • $$$ from trade & agriculture $$$ devoted to religion & temple construction • power of temples (social, economic & political) • size of land & #people working temple lands • similar to Medieval monasteries in Europe Brihadeswarar temple
Specialization & Caste • urbanisation specialization • new occupations for artisans, merchants, peasants guilds • Problem caste not equipped to handle diverse occupations • develope sub-caste (jatis) w/in the varna • new occupations = jatis • jatis organised hierarchically w/in varna • non-Hindu in occupations absorbed into jatis • strengthened caste in S. India Caste withjatis
Production & Trade • Monsoons regimented maritime trade • affected weather patterns in South • Irrigation & impact of agricultural goods • restructuring of caste • internal trade & influence of Temples • foreign maritime trade • ChinaMelaka India Africa & E. Asia Dhow in modern India
Diffusion of Belief Systems Islam & the Sind • Umayyad Arabs extend empire to Sind (modern Pakistan & Afghanistan) • later under Abbasid control • largely self-governing tribute state • Rapid spread of Islam into region • merchants & Sufi mystics • some conflict between Hindu & Muslims Sufi Kwajad Khidr traveling to bring the words of the Prophet to India
Social I. The Spread of Islam A. military force 1. Arab conquest of Sind-711 2. impact of conquest B. merchants to region - gradual 1. north more than south a. why? 2. impacted society & caste a. how?
Social C. migrations of 10th century 1. Turkish speaking peoples from Central Asia 2. Mahmud of Ghazni a. nature of invasion b. impact on Buddhism c. degree of success http://wps.pearsoncustom.com/wps/media/objects/2426/2484749/chap_assets/flash/ch7/index.html
Mahmud & the Ghazni Turks • Ghazni Turks invade India (1001-27) from Caspian Sea • led by Mahmud • come to plunder temples & palaces • devout Muslims • intolerant to other religions • destroyed Buddhist & Hindu temple • not popular • later develops into Delhi Sultanate Mahmud receives gift of a robe from the Abbasid caliph
Merchants & Islam • Merchants bring Islam to coastal India • influential in Gujurat & coastal cities like Cambay • Turkish migrations & invasions bring Islam • Anatolia, Caspian & Aral Sea Persian merchants dining (Ajanta Caves)
Delhi Sultanate (1206-1526 C.E. ) • Period of greatest Muslim expansion in India • use of jizya spurred conversion by many Hindu & Buddhists to Islam • Controlled N. India • little central authority • no perm. bureaucracy • relied on regional Hindu kings to keep power in north • heavy resistance from C. India • many Sultans fell to assassins
Southern India -- Hindu thru & thru • Chola Kingdom-most prominent (850-1267C.E.) • expanded into Sri Lanka & SE Asia (Burma, Thailand, Cambodia) • De-centralised w/regional autonomy • local rulers expected to collect taxes & maintain order • Vijayanagar Empire (1336-1565 C.E.) • brothers converted from Islam to Hinduism • De-centralised rule • religious tolerance Shiva Mural from Vijayanagar Temple
Hindu & Islamic Interaction • Southern India (Chola) most dynamic • spread of major movements from South North • Temple life & influence greater • major religious thinkers • Cult of Vishnu & Shiva • Hindu thought -- Shankara & Ramanunja • Kabir & bhakti - reconciling Islam & Hinduism
Hinduism & Devotional Cults • importance of Buddhism • Hinduism & Islam replace • devotional cults in Hinduism • promised salvation, esp.. Vishnu & Shiva • Vishnu - preserver • Shiva - fertility & destroyer • Originally in south moves north • Shankara - Shiva devotee • life is illusion, beyond senses • must rely on logic to understand God • Ramanuja - Vishnu devotee • personal relationship w/God paramount Chola-Cosmic Vishnu with 18 Arms Chola-Dancing Shiva
Islam & the Bhakti Movement • Islam appeals to lowers castes & harijan • Sufi mystics most effective missonaries • allowed elements of old faiths to continue (syncretism) • stressed piety & devotion attractive to devotional Hindu • Bhakti movement eliminate distinction btw. Islam & Hinduism • Guru Kabir Vishnu, Shiva, Allah=one, universal deity • Like Sufism, Bhakti movement promoted values to bridge differences Kabir -- Blind Poet, Weaver & Guru of Bhakti movement
Diffusion of Indian Society in SE Asia • Indian influence in SE Asia • Funan & Angkor • Islam in SE Asia • Melaka Angkor Wat (Cambodia) -- Devas Vasuli & Asparas (Indian deities). Shows distinct Indian influence
Portage across Isthmus of Kra to India to India Collected tolls from passing ships India as a model in SE Asia • Indian merchants common in SE Asia since 4th century B.C.E. • Local rulers adopt Indian political & cultural traditions • Indian model of kingship • sponsor Hinduism, later Buddhism • eschewed caste system • Funan (c. 2nd-6th century) • used Sanskrit & adopted Hinduism • Srivijaya (c. 670-1025 C.E.) • powerful navy - used to collect taxes from passing ships
Angkor (889-1431 C.E.) • Largest kingdom in SE Asia • capital Angkor Thom • Embraced Buddhism • still retained ancient deities • Built temples incorporating Hindu & Buddhist elements (Angkor Thom & Angkor Wat) • Khmer abandon Angkor after Thai invasions in 15th century Angkor Thom -- Temple entrance
Islam in SE Asia (13th-16th century) • Muslim merchants from India most common transmitters • some from Persia & Arabia • Sufi missionaries • Local converts often Hinduism, Buddhism &/or kept local deities • Melaka-once pirate state, forms powerful legitimate state. • ruling elite converts to & sponsors expansion of Islam • control of seaways eases expansion of Islam to Sumatra, Java & north to the Philippines Putrajaya Mosque - Melaka (Malaysia)
Summary of Postclassical India • Major Trade & Cultural centre for Asia • connects Africa & W. Asia w/China • Regional Kingdoms De-centralised • N. IndiaMuslim rule & Influence • S. IndiaHindu rule & Influence • spreads to North syncretism (bhakti movement) • Diffusion of Indian culture & politics to SE Asia • Funan & Angkor Syncretic fusion of local & Indian religions • SE Asia control trade btw. China & India • Melaka controlled trade, charged tolls • Conversion to Islam sponsored expansion