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Chapter 3 India

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Title: Chapter 3 India


1
Chapter 3 - India
  • AP World

2
The Framework for Indian History Geography and
a Formative Period
  • Geography (including the mountainous northern
    region and agricultural regions along the Indus
    and Ganges Rivers) and climate were major
    influences on Indian civilization.
  • The Aryan culture, which dominated India after
    the fall of the Indus River Valley civilization,
    also played a formative role. Among other
    things, the Aryans brought the rudiments of the
    caste system.
  • The Vedas, the Mahabharata, the Ramayana, and the
    Upanishads formed the basis of a great Aryan
    literary tradition.

3
Patterns in Classical India
  • Two major empires formed at the crucial periods
    in classical Indian history, the Mauryan and,
    later, the Gupta.
  • The Greek conquest of the Indus and the exchange
    of ideas with the Mediterranean basin and
    southwest Asia influenced the rise of the Mauryan
    dynasty.
  • Chandragupta Maurya was the first Mauryan ruler,
    and Ashoka the greatest. Ashoka expanded the
    empire and promoted Buddhism.
  • The Guptas arose after a period of nomadic
    invasions, and created a long period of political
    stability.

4
Political Institutions
  • Regionalism and political diversity dominated
    classical Indian political life, so central
    authority was relatively weak
  • The increasingly complex caste system promoted
    public order the way more conventional government
    structures did in many other cultures

5
Religion and Culture
  • Hinduism and Buddhism were integral parts of
    classical Indian life. They had great influence
    on the arts and sciences, and both tended to
    promote religious tolerance.
  • Hinduism is a polytheistic faith that gradually
    became more complex. It stresses reincarnation,
    the shallowness of worldly concerns, and dharma,
    the moral path.
  • Buddhism, founded by Siddhartha Gautama in the
    6th century B.C.E., scorned caste and the
    material world in favor of self control and the
    Eightfold Path to nirvana.
  • By the last centuries B.C.E., the Indian
    civilization developed a written language, built
    cities, and produced art and literature, and
    nurtured two of the great world religions.
    Artistic patterns linked to religion and a
    significant scientific tradition developed.

6
Economy and Society
  • Dominated by the caste system, India developed
    extensive internal commercial and international
    maritime trade. However, Indias economy
    remained essentially agricultural.
  • Family life combined patriarchy with an emphasis
    on mutual emotional support.

7
Indian Influence
  • Classical India had an enormous effect on other
    parts of the world. India emerged as the center
    of an Eurasian trade system, a source of great
    wealth and a means of exporting Indian culture
    abroad

8
China and India
  • China and India offer important contrasts in
    political emphases, social systems, and cultures
  • They also resembled each other in seeking to
    build stable structures over large areas and in
    using culture to justify social inequality

9
1
  • Compare and contrast the classical civilizations
    of India and China

10
  • Both had cultural variety
  • Radically different organizing forces India
    caste system, China Confucian-influenced
    political structures
  • Hinduism produced a sensual, otherworldly, and
    monolithic religious atmosphere in India, while
    the more secular Confucianism and Daoism competed
    for the attention of China.
  • Each had an agriculturally-based economy, while
    merchants were valued in India and looked down on
    in China.
  • Even in science and mathematics, Indians were
    more theoretical while the Chinese emphasized
    practical findings
  • Perhaps the greatest similarity between the two
    cultures was the dominance of men in both India
    and China

11
2
  • Trace the patterns of early Indian history

12
  • Indias great diversity within and among
    religions, peoples, and political forms had its
    roots in Aryan dominance. Tight levels of social
    control, introduced by the Aryans, contributed to
    the development of the caste system. In
    addition, Indias geographic position between the
    other great societies of the East and West
    encouraged trade and other forms of cultural
    mixing.

13
3
  • Assess the influence of Indian culture on the
    rest of the world

14
  • In many ways, the Indian region was the most
    active link among several cultures. Buddhism
    became a bigger influence outside of India than
    inside. Indian artistic and architectural styles
    affected southeast Asia as well. Indian stories
    like Sinbad the Sailor were passed on to Arabs
    and then to Europeans. Probably the most
    universal effect was the introduction of Arabic
    numerals, today the worlds standard form of
    expressing mathematics.

15
4
  • Trace the development of the caste system

16
  • As new social groups had been added to the tribal
    social order of early Aryan invaders, the
    patterns of social stratification entered into a
    religiously sanctioned hierarchy of social groups
    based partially on occupation and how polluting
    the occupation was.

17
5
  • Compare Buddhism and Hinduism

18
  • Buddhism rejected the brahmin-dominated caste
    system and the idea that the Vedas were divinely
    inspired teachings that should be accepted as the
    ultimate authority.
  • Buddhism also believed in introspection and
    self-mastery as opposed to ritual, which was the
    very heart of Hindu dominance.
  • Buddhism was inclusive to everyone, even women,
    in the teachings of how to reach nirvana.

19
6
  • What features of Indian and Chinese geography
    help explain each areas social patterns?

20
  • As settlements spread from the Indus region and
    Himalayan foothills to the plains of the Ganges
    River system, republics and religious skeptics
    gave way to kings and powerful brahmins who
    dominated the caste system.

21
7
  • Compare the caste system with the organization of
    Chinese and Greek society.

22
  • Both Chinese and Greek society had social
    stratifications. However, they differed from the
    caste system in how the class decisions were made
    as well as how many and how strictly they were
    enforced. The caste system was a more rigid form
    of the organizations of Chinese and Greek society.

23
8
  • Compare the political implications of Hinduism
    and Confucianism

24
  • Confucius stressed that the welfare of the people
    should be the concern of the emperor. In return,
    the people should be respectful of the status.
    In Hinduism, the caste system rules with brahmins
    on the top.

25
9
  • Compare the family structures of India and China

26
  • In India, the higher class could afford to house
    extended families like those in China. Indian
    families that were poor could only afford to
    house the immediate, or nuclear, family.

27
10
  • Trace the development of Ashokas leadership
    approach

28
  • His original approach to ruling was to conquer
    and enlarge his empire. But after he witnessed
    the horrible sufferings in Orissa, he converted
    to Buddhism and began to serve his people and
    promote their welfare.
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