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India Subcontinent. Home of 3 modern nations India, Pakistan, Bangladesh Geography Mountains Himalayas World tallest mountain range Hindu Kush Rivers Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputra Monsoons Seasonal winds- twice a year. Harappan Civilization. Harappa Mohenjo-Daro
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India Subcontinent • Home of 3 modern nations • India, Pakistan, Bangladesh • Geography • Mountains • Himalayas • World tallest mountain range • Hindu Kush • Rivers • Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputra • Monsoons • Seasonal winds- twice a year
Harappan Civilization • Harappa • Mohenjo-Daro • Excellent example of urban planning • Streets laid out in grid pattern • Streets cross each other at right angles • Uniformity in cities suggest that a strong central government existed.
Very advanced • Indoor bathrooms • Sewer systems • Advanced farming techniques • Trade establish with areas as far as Mesopotamia • Lack of surviving written records • Only clues from artifacts
Religion • Polytheism • Religious beliefs center on strong concern for fertility
Disappearance • 1500 BCE Harappan civilization vanished • Reason why unknown • Possibly from • floods • Invaders • Overgrazing of land • In Mohenjo-Daro ruing give signs of violence • Found remains of 38 people who had never been buried
Aryans • Aryans • Led by rajah • Economy based on cattle • No written language • Epics passed down in native language called Sanskrit
Vedas • Holy books “books of Knowledge” • Poems, legends and religious rituals collected by priest. • basis of Aryan religious practices • Since few artifacts or structures left by Aryans, Vedas are very important • Rig-Veda • Oldest of Vedas • World oldest religious text still used today
500 BC varnas divided into smaller groups called jati • Formed according to occupations. • Examples shoemakers, potters, farmers etc. • Each jati had own rules for diet, marriage and social class. • Lived in separate neighborhoods • Did not mix socially with others
Europeans would later name varna and jati the caste system • Within system people are ranked • Born into a group and could not change • Only marry within the group • Rules not the same for all groups
Pariahs • Later group outside the varna and jati • Did work that was considered unclean • Example skinning animals and tanning hides • Sometimes called “outcastes or untouchables” • Lived outside villages and shunned by most
Vedas outlined the dharma • Duties of the males in each varna • Members were urged to do their duty
Hinduism • One of the oldest religions • About 1500 B.C.E. • Began in India • Not based on teachings of one person • Does not have a holy book • Based on different beliefs and practices found in Vedas and epics • Gave birth to Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism • Tolerance and diversity • "Truth is one, paths are many“ • “There is only one God, but endless are his aspects and endless are his names” • “We are not human beings having spiritual experiences;We are spiritual beings having a human experience!”
Hindu Scriptures • Upanishads 900-950 BCE • Essay and poems that outline Hindu spirituality • Emphasize simplicity • Inner development of individual • Methods for spiritual improvement • Yoga • Puranas • Popular tales about gods and heroes • Sutras • Moral teachings • Laws of Manu • Support caste system
Religious and Literary Text • Mahabharata • Grand epic– 90,000 stanzas • Longest poem in world? • About great war between 2 royal houses • Bhagavad-Gita • Song of the Lord • Lectures on moral duty • Ramayana
Complex religion of many gods • Three most important are • Brahma ( the Creator) • Vishnu (the Preserver) • Siva (the destroyer)
Believed in reincarnation • Rebirth of the soul • Cycle of rebirth determine by Karma • How a person lives their lives determine what form the person will take in the next life
Cycle of reincarnation continues until person has reached spiritual perfection. • Ultimate aim is moksha • Release from pain and suffering of rebirth • To achieve moksha you must: • Be committed to prayer • Religious rituals • Strict self denial • Rejection of all worldly possessions
Out of this develop the practice of nonviolence toward all living things called ahimsa • Requires believers to protect humans, animals (even insects) and plants
What are the spiritual practices of Hinduism? • Yoga—seeking union with the divine: • Guru—a spiritual teacher, especially helpful for Jnana and Raja yoga • Bhakti Yoga—worship, seeking union with the divine through loving devotion to manifest deities • In the home (household shrines) • In the temples (priests officiate)
Why did Hinduism spread? • Satisfy rules of conduct of life • Incorporated previous religion • Caste system- hope for better life next time
How does Hinduism direct life in this world? • Respect for all life – vegetarian • Human life as supreme: • Four “stations” of life (Caste) – • priests & teachers, nobles & warriors, merchant class, servant class • Four stages of life – • student, householder, retired, wandering philosopher • Four duties of life – • pleasure, success, social responsibilities, religious responsibilities (moksha)
Impact of Hinduism • Religion as well as a social system • Born into caste– • If unhappy because you had not follow the dharma and you will have it worse in the next life • Explains why most quietly accept their station in life. • Social mobility not possible in this life but maybe the next.
Hinduism close identification with caste system and its customs have prevent the acceptance of Hinduism in other parts of the world • In recent years modern Hindu are beginning to rebel against the structure of the caste system
Jainism • Based on Hinduism but rejected • sacrifices • rigid Hindu social divisions • Great believers of ahimsa • Became involved in commerce rather than farming • Commerce led to great wealth and influence
Buddhism • Originated in India • Similar to Judaism and Hinduism • All are tied to culture • Not evangelical movement trying to change civilizations • Challenges the social hierarchy of India • No caste system • One of several religious movements in 500 BCE • Early form was less a religion than a philosophy
Buddhism • Founded by Siddhartha Gautama • Raised in luxury but question why people suffered and how suffering could be ended • Begin to share his “enlightenment” with others. • Friends called him Buddha or Enlightened One
Four Noble Truths • All people suffer and know sorrow • People suffer because their desires bind them to the cycle of rebirth • That people could end their suffering by eliminating their desires • Could eliminate desire by following the Eightfold Path
Eight-fold Path • Know the truth • Resist evil • Say nothing to hurt others • Respect life • Work for the good of others • Free their minds of evil • Control their thoughts • Practice meditation
By avoiding extremes of following Eightfold Path a person could attain Nirvana. • A state of freedom from the cycle of rebirth • Not a place, like heaven but a state of extinction • A person would be in a state of oneness with universal
Buddha rejected the varna system • Taught that a person’s place in life depended on the person, not on the person’s birth. • Regardless of caste, anyone could attain enlightenment
The essence of Buddhism • The “middle way of wisdom and compassion.” • The 3 jewels of Buddhism: • Buddha, the teacher. • Dharma, the teachings. • Sangha, the community.
Division of Buddhism • Theravada • Established in Southeast Asia and South Asia • Remains fairly close in practices to original teachings of Buddha • Focus on wisdom and meditation • Regard Buddha as simply a teacher • Goal: is to become a “Buddha” or “Enlightened One”
Mahayana • Dominant in China, Korea, and Japan • Encourage worship of Buddha as a divine being and savior • Buddhism “for the masses” • Goal: Not just individual escape from the wheel, but the salvation of all humanity through self-sacrifice of those enlightened few • Today only a few in India are Buddhist. Most of the population are Hindus followed by Muslims, Jains and Christians
Zen Buddhism • Seeks sudden enlightenment through meditation, arriving at emptiness • Use of meditation masters • Beauty, art, and aesthetics, such as gardens & calligraphy • Tibetan Buddhism • Developed in Tibet in the 7c CE. • A mix of Theravada and Mahayana • Include Lamas, like the Dalai Lama
Why did Buddhism spread? • Acceptance of men and women from all ranks of society • Religious communities of monks and nuns • Located along trade routes– provide lodging for traders • Merchants carried doctrines along Silk Road • Blended with Confucianism • Belief of bodhisattvas • Ordinary people reach nirvana through mediation • Asoka
Impact of Buddhism • Because Buddhism reject caste system, it strongly appealed to members of lower rank • Because Buddhism is not attached to underlying social structure it can apply to almost anyone, anywhere. As consequence it spread rapidly to other cultures through Asia • Spread via trade routes as Asia cultures interwine
Hinduism Buddhism Caste system Animal sacrifice • The Middle Way (Eightfold Path) • Four Noble Truths Both Reincarnation Cyclical view of history Belief in a state of enlightenment (Hindu moksha, Buddhist nirvana
Maurya Empire • 321- 185 BCE • Founder Chandragupta Maurya • Will united Aryan kingdoms into a civilization after depart of Alexander the Great • Strong centralized—efficient bureaucracy • Promoted trade and communication • Roads connect with Silk road
Asoka • First followed philosophy of waging war to expand his power • Will decided to follow the Buddha teachings of nonviolence and peace to all beings. • Will issued Rock Edicts • Stone pillars that were inscribe with new policies throughout the empire • Urged religious tolerance
Empire will be very powerful because • Trade • Silk, cotton, elephants • Mesopotamia and eastern Roman Empire • Military • With Asoka death, the empire will decline rapidly due to economic problems and pressure of attacks in the Northeast.
Gupta Empire • 320-550 CE • United North India for the first time • Rule not centralized as much as Mauryan • Allowed local rulers to maintain authority if submit to Gupta leaders • Known as India’s Golden Age
Firm supporters of Hinduism • Enforcement of Caste system • Women lost rights • Under total control of men • Sati- practice of widow throwing herself on the funeral pyre • Buddhism tolerated • Increasing urban society
Chandragupta II • Gupta will reach its height during his rule • Came to power through marriage not war • Considered to be the greatest of Gupta emperors • Remember for • Heroic conquest • Reducing taxes • Giving people more freedom • Increasing size of empire • Increasing trade between India and Mesopotamia
Learning • Major advancements as Gupta empire welcome scholars into the empire • Mathematics • Major advances in developing principles of algebra • Explain concept of infinity • Invented concept of zero • Invented decimal system • Arabic numerals • Value of pi to the 4th place • developed by Aryabhata
Astronomy • Proved earth round 1,000 years before Columbus • Calculated the length of solar year • Medicine • Set bones, performed operations, inoculation of smallpoxs and invented hundreds of medical instruments • Medical guides • Classified more than 1,000 diseases • Describe more than 500 medical plants
500 Healing plants Id 1000 Disease Classified Kalidasa Printed medical Guides Literature Plastic surgery Medicine Gupta Solar Calendar inoculations C- sections Astronomy Mathematics Decimal System Earth is Round Concept of Zero Pi = 3.1416
Trade • Will spread Gupta advancements with extensive trade with other civilizations • Caravan route called Silk Road • Will act as the middleman in the silk trade • Effects of trade • Rise of banking in India • Spread of culture • Spread of Hinduism and Buddhism
Items Traded Spices Silk Rice & wheat Cotton Goods Horses Spices Gold & Ivory Gold & Ivory Cotton Goods