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Kings, Farmers and Towns Early States and Economies (600 BCE - 600 CE)

 


2 Kings, Farmers and Towns Early states and Economies (600 BCE - 600 CE)

Developments Between 1900 BCE and 600BCE( followed by end of

Harapan civilization)

Rigveda was composed (1500 BCE)
Agricultural settlements emerged in Indian subcontinent
Pastoral populations spread in Deccan and further south Megalith culture developed in Central and South India
Emergence of Early states, kingdoms, and empires in India

Megalith culture

Megalith period was followed by stone age Megalith means ‘big stone’
Megalith culture originated in South India

Megalith culture related to new mode of disposal of dead Megalith Grave were encircled with big pieces of stone Megaliths contain skeletons, pottery and iron objects Megalith culture belongs to iron age.

Why 6th century BCE Turning point in Indian History BCE

  1. Rise of Cities in Gangetic region of India started in 6th century

  2. It was second urbanisation in India after Harappan cities

  3. Rise of early states (Mahajanapadas)in India in 6th century BCE

  4. New systems of thought like Buddhism and Jainism emerged in 6th century BCE

  5. Wide use of iron started

  6. Coinage system and trade developed

The Earliest States in India

‘Jana’ to ‘Janapada’
Janapada to Mahajanapada

Time line of Early Political institutions

Mahajanapada to kingdom Kingdom to Empire

Meaning

Jana
Janapada Mahajanapada

: People, clan ,tribe
: Land where jana settled : Large Janapadas

Features of Mahajanapadas

Mahajanapadas were early states or Political institutions in India Some Mahajanapadas were ruled by ‘Raja’s or Kings
Some Mahajanapadas were Oligarchies/republics
Each Mahajanapada had capital city

Mahajanapada had standing army Mahajanapada had bureaucracy

Oigarchy

Ganas or Sanghas-power shared by

number of men)

1. Anguttara Nikaya (Buddist text) 2. Bhagavata Sutra(Jaina text)
3. Vakkya prajapatii(Jaina text)

3 sources refers 16 Mahajanapadas

16 Mahajanapadas

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

Mahajanapada

Anga

Magadha

Vajji

Malla

Kasi

Kosala

Vatsa

Chedi

Kuru

Panchala

Surasena

Matsya

Avanti

Ashmak

Gandhara

Kamboja

Champa

Rajagriha

Vaishali

Kusinara

Kasi

Sravasti

Kousambi

Sothivati

Indraprastha

Capital

Ahichchatra and Kampliya

Mathura

Viratnagar

Ujjaini

Pratisthan/ Paithan

Taxila

Pooncha

Modern location

Bihar,West Bengal

Gaya, patna(Bihar)

Northern Bihar

Deoria and Uttar Pradesh

Varanasi Uttar Pradesh

Awad Uttar Pradesh

Allahabad Uttar Pradesh

Bundelkhand and Jaipur Rajasthan

Meerat and South Estern Haryana

Western Uttar Pradesh

Western Uttar Pradesh

Jaipur Rajastan

Malwa and Madhya Pradesh

Bank of Godavari Maharashtra

Rawalpindi Pakistan

Rajori and Hajra Jammu Kashmir

Dharma Sutras are rules and norms for all social sections including kings written by Brahmanas from 6th century BCE

Dharma sutras

Kingdom of Magadha

  • ➢  Kingdom of Magadha established by 600 BCE

  • ➢  Each Mahajanapada struggled for supremacy from 6th century BCE

  • ➢  Magadha became victorious

  • ➢  Two of India's greatest empires, the Maurya Empire and Gupta Empire,

    originated in Magadha.

First capital of Magadha : Rajgrih (Now in Bihar)
Later capital of Magadha : Pataliputra (modern Patna Bihar)

Rise and Success of Magadha – Causes

1) Magadha was a fertile region

  1. 2)  Availability of iron deposits

  2. 3)  Availability of elephants (used in army)

  3. 4)  Presence of river Ganga and its tributaries(for Communication and transport)

  4. 5)  Strategic location of capitals

    Rajgir (fortifiedandlocatedinthehills)

    Pataliputra(commandingroutesofcommunicationalongtheGanga).

  5. 6)  Powerful and ambitious rulers like Bimbisara,Ajathasatru,and Mahapadma

    Nanda

Important Rulers of Magadha

Bimbisara (544-493 BC)
Ajatha satru (493-461 BC)
Mahapadma Nanda(Nanda dynasty (345–321 BC)
Nanda dynasty overthrown by Chandragupta Maurya

Alexander invaded India in 326 BCE did not attack Magadha due to its strong army

The Mauryan Empire (321 BCE and 187 BCE)

The Mauryan empire established by Chandra Gupta Maurya in 321

BCE
Pataliputra was Mauryan capital The first Empire in India

First Three Mauryan Emperors

  1. 1  Chandra Gupta Maurya

  2. 2  Bindusara

  3. 3  Asoka

(321-298 BCE) (298-272 BCE) (272-232 BCE)

Sources for Mauryan History

  1. 1  Indica written by Megasthanese

  2. 2  Arthashastra of Koutilya

  3. 3  Mudrarakshasa written by Vishaka datta

  4. 4  Buddhist,Jaina,and Puranic literature

  5. 5  Archaeological sources like Inscription, Sculptures and Coins

Features of Asokan inscription

  •   Asoka was the first ruler who inscribed his messages to his subjects and officials on stone rock

  •   Asoka used inscriptions to propagate Dhamma

  •   Asoka’s inscriptions provide information about his career, policies

    and the extent of the empire

  •   Language of Asokan inscriptions : Prakrit

  •   Language of inscriptions in the north west: Aramaic and Greek

  •   Script of Asokan inscriptions commonly used: Brahmi

  •   Script used in north West :Kharoshti

  •   Script used in Afghanistan: Aramaic and Greek

Greatest Mauryan Emperor
He conquered Kalinga [Orissa ] in 261 BCE The Kalinga war caused Asoka great sorrow

Asoka(273-232BCE)

Asoka abandoned the policy of conquest
He adopted measures of peace
‘Bheri ghosha’ replaced by ‘Dharma ghosha’ He became follower of Buddhism

Dhamma policy

‘Dhamma’ is a Prakrit word means Dharma in Sanskrit Dhamma policy was adopted by emperor Asoka
Dhamma was moral and ethical code
Dhamma was not a religious practice

Dhamma was based on Buddhist principle

Dhamma policy initiated to eliminate social and religious tensions

Asoka engraved his views on Dhamma in Rock edicts Respect and obedience to parents, teachers, elders Generosity towards Brahman, ascetics, poor
Treating slaves and servants kindly

Maintaining Religious tolerance
Practising Ahimsa
following truthfulness, morality and Purity

Dharma Mahamatras were special officers to spread the message of Dharma appointed by Asoka

Dharma Mahamatras

Administering the Empire

Five major political centres in the Mouryan empire

1. Pataliputra 2. Taxila
3. Ujjayini
4. Tosali

5. Suvarnagiri

(The capital of Mouryan empire)

(provincial capital) (provincial capital) (provincial capital) (provincial capital)

  •   Uniform administrative system was not possible due to vastness and diversity of empire

  •   Administrative control was strongest in areas around the capital and the provincial centres.

  •   Taxila and Ujjayini being situated on important long-distance trade routes

  •   Suvarnagiri (literally, the golden mountain) was important for tapping the gold mines of Karnataka.

  •   Communication along both land and riverine routes was existed

  •   Journeys from the centre to the provinces could have taken weeks

  •   Asoka also tried to hold his empire together by propagating Dhamma Special officers, known as the Dhamma mahamatra

  •   Megasthenese wrote about officers of state performed various duties including collecting taxes

The Arthashastra lays down minute details of administrative and military organisation including how to capture elephants

Megasthenese mentions a committee with six subcommittees for coordinating military activity.

The First Committee looked after the navy The Second managed transport
The third was responsible for foot-soldiers The fourth for horses

The fifth for chariots
The sixth for elephants.

Mouryan Army

Was the Mauryan empire important or not?

Important empire

India was under colonial rule, and was part of the British empire

There was an empire in early India both challenging and exciting for Indian Historians

  • ✔  Maurya's, stone sculpture were considered to be examples of the spectacular art typical of empires.

  • ✔  Indian historians found the message on Asokan inscriptions very different from that of most other rulers

  • ✔  Nationalist leaders in the twentieth century regarded Asoka as an inspiring national figure

    Not Important empire

  • ✔  Mauryan empire lasted for about 150 years, which is not a very long time.

  • ✔  Mauryan Empire did not encompass the entire subcontinent

  • ✔  Administrative control was not uniform in the empire

  • ✔  By the second century BCE , new chiefdoms and kingdoms emerged in several parts of the subcontinent.

New Notions of Kingship ;Chiefs and kings in the

South

New kingdoms

1)The Cholas,Cheras and Pandyas in Tamilakam

2) The Satavahanas of Western and Central India

3) The Sakas, in the north-western and western parts of the subcontinent

The ancient Tamil country, which included parts of present-day Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh and Kerala

Tamilakam

Tamil Sangam Texts

Early Tamil poems describing chiefs and the ways in which they acquired and distributed resources.

Chiefs and Chiefdoms

A chief is a powerful man whose position may or may not be hereditary. He derives support from his kinsfolk.

  • ➢  His functions may include performing special rituals, leadership in warfare, and arbitrating disputes.

  • ➢  He receives gifts from his subordinates (unlike kings who usually collect taxes) and often distributes these amongst his supporters.

  • ➢  Generally, there are no regular armies and officials in chiefdom

  • ➢  Silappadikaram, an epic written in Tamil describes Senguttuvan visits the

    forest and defeats people and receives gifts

    Divine King

    How Kushan rulers claimed divinity(godlike)

  •   The Kushans (1st century BCE – 1st century CE ), who ruled over a vast kingdom extending from Central Asia to north-west India

  •   The notions of kingship they wished to project are evidenced in their coins and sculpture

  •   Kushans Identified themselves with variety of Gods

  •   Colossal statues of Kushan rulers have been found installed in a shrine

    at Mat near Mathura (Uttar Pradesh) and in a shrine in Afghanistan

  •   Many Kushan rulers adopted the title ‘Devaputra’, or “son of god”

    Gupta Empire (335-455CE)

Sri Gupta
Chandragupta I (319-334)

: : :

Founder of Gupta Empire

Founder of Gupta Era in 319 CE

Conqueror
Allahabad pillarminscription

‘Napoleon of India’ Vikramaditya (title)

Navaratnas in the court visit of Fahien

Samudra Gupta

Chandra Gupta II

(335-375)

(375-415) :

Sources of Gupta history

  •   Literature, coins and inscriptions

  •   Prashastis, composed in praise of kings by poets.

  •   The Prayaga Prashasti (also known as the Allahabad Pillar Inscription) composed in Sanskrit by Harishena, the court poet of Samudragupta.

A Changing Countryside: Popular perceptions of

kings

  • Historians examined the Jatakas and the Panchatantra to know popular perceptions of the King

  • The Jatakas were written in Pali around the middle of the first millennium CE.CE

  • The Gandatindu Jataka describes the plight of the subjects of a wicked king

  • The king went in disguise to find out what his subjects thought about him

  • Each one of them cursed him for their miseries, complaining that they were attacked by robbers at night and by tax collectors during the day.

  • To escape from this situation, people abandoned their village and went to live in the forest.

    Strategies for increasing production

    1) Plough agriculture (River valleys of the Ganga and the Kaveri)

    2) The iron-tipped ploughshare
    (was used to turn the alluvial soil

rainfall.)

in areas which had high

3) Transplantation (used for paddy cultivation in areas where water is plentiful.)

4) Irrigation (wells tanks canals)

In transplantation seeds are first broadcast; when the saplings have grown they are transplanted in waterlogged fields

Transplantation

A gahapati was the owner, master or head of a household

Gahapati exercised control over the women, children, slaves and workers who shared a common residence.

Gahapati

He was also the owner of the resources – land, animals and other things – that belonged to the household.

Sometimes the term was used as a marker of status for men belonging to the urban elite, including wealthy merchants.

  • ➢  The Manusmriti is one of the best-known legal texts of early India, written in Sanskrit and compiled between c. 2nd century BCE and 2nd century CE.

  • ➢  Manusmriti advises the king about the importance of boundary

Manusmriti

Land grants and new rural elites

The policy of kings granting lands to individuals or institutions called land grants

Evidences of land grants starts from first century CE Land grants were recorded in inscriptions.

Some of these inscriptions were on stone

  • ➢  Most inscriptions were on copper plates which were probably given as a record of the transaction to those who received the land.

  • ➢  Land granted to religious institutions or to Brahmanas by kings

  • ➢  Most inscriptions were in Sanskrit and some are local

    languages like Tamil and Telugu

  • ➢  An agrahara was land granted to a Brahmana, who was usually exempted from paying land revenue and other dues and was often given the right to collect these dues from the local people

  • ➢  Land grants were strategy to extend agriculture to new areas.

  • ➢  Kings were losing control over their samantas, they tried to

    win allies by making grants of land.

  • ➢  There were regional variations in the sizes of land donated

  • ➢  There were variations in the rights given to donees (the

    recipients of the grant).

  • ➢  Prabhavati Gupta was the daughter Chandragupta II (c. 375-415 CE ).

  • ➢  She was married into the Vakatakas, who were powerful in the Deccan

  • ➢  According to Sanskrit legal texts, women were not supposed to have independent access to resources such as land.

  • ➢  The inscription indicates that Prabhavati had access to land, which she then granted.

  • ➢  This may have been because she was a queen

  • ➢  It is also possible that the provisions of legal texts were not uniformly implemented

Land grant of Prabhavati Gupta

The Harshacharita

The Harshacharita is a biography of Harshavardhana, the ruler of Kanauj

composed in Sanskrit by his court poet, Banabhatta (c. seventh century CE ).

The history of Pataliputra

  • Pataliputra,began as a village known as Pataligrama.(todays Patna)

  • In the 5thcentury BCE, the Magadhan rulers shifted their capital from

    Rajagriha to this settlement and renamed it.

  • In the 4th century BCE , it was the capital of the Mauryan Empire and one of the largest cities in Asia.

  • Subsequently, its importance declined.

  • When the Chinese pilgrim Xuan Zang visited the city in the 7th century

    CE , he found it in ruins, and with a very small population.

    New cities(from 6th century BCE)

    Many of cities were capitals of Mahajanapadas.
    All major towns were located along routes of communication. Pataliputra was on riverine routes.

Ujjayini was along land routes
Puhar was near the sea coast
Mathura was centre of commercial, cultural and political activity.

Urban populations: Elites and craftspersons

  •   Kings and ruling elites lived in fortified cities.

  •   People who lived in towns are washing folk, weavers, scribes, carpenters, potters, goldsmiths blacksmiths, officials, religious teachers, merchants and kings.

  •   There were Guilds or Shrenis,( organisations of craft producers and merchants)in cities

    Trade in the subcontinent and beyond

  • ✔  From the 6thcentury BCE, land and river and sea routes developed

  • ✔  overland trade extended into Central Asia and beyond

  • ✔  Ports that dotted the coastline – extending across the Arabian Sea to East and North Africa and West Asia, and through the Bay of Bengal to South east Asia and China.

  • ✔  Successful merchants designated as Masattuvan in Tamil and Setthis and Satthavahas in Prakrit

  • ✔  goods traded were – salt, grain, cloth, metal ores and finished products, stone, timber, medicinal plants.

  • ✔  Spices, especially pepper, were in high demand in the Roman Empire

  • ✔  Textiles and medicinal plants, transported across the Arabian Sea to the

    Mediterranean.

    Coins and kings

  • ✔  Punch-marked coins made of silver and copper (6thcentury BCE onwards) were amongst the earliest to be minted and used.

  • ✔  Numismatists have studied coins to reconstruct commercial networks.

  • ✔  Coins were issued by kings.

  • ✔  Merchants, bankers and townspeople also issued some of these

    coins.

  • ✔  The first coins to bear the names and images of rulers were

    issued by the Indo-Greeks
    (The Indo Greeks established control over the north-western

part of the subcontinent 2nd century BCE ).
The first gold coins were issued in 1st century CE by the

Kushans.
Hoards of Roman coins have been found from archaeological

sites in south India.

  • ✔  Tribal republics such as the Yaudheyas of Punjab and Haryana (1stcentury CE) issued coins

  • ✔  The most spectacular pure gold coins were issued by the Gupta rulers.

Numismatics

Numismatics is the study of coins, including visual elements such as scripts and images, metallurgical analysis and the contexts in which they have been found.

A punch-marked coin: is a coin in which symbols were punched or stamped onto the metal surface

Was there economic crisis from 6th century CE

  • ✔  From 6th century CE onwards, there are fewer finds of gold coins

  • ✔  Some suggest that with the collapse of the Western Roman Empire

    long-distance trade declined

  • ✔  Others argue that new towns and networks of trade started emerging around this time.

  • ✔  But coins continue to be mentioned in inscriptions and texts.

  • ✔  Could it be that there are fewer finds because coins were in

    circulation rather than being hoarded?

    The Malabar coast (present-day Kerala)

    Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, work composed by an anonymous Greek sailor (1st century CE )

    “Periplus” is a Greek word meaning sailing around and “Erythraean” was the Greek name for the Red Sea

    This book describes trade activities in Kerala coast

Inscriptions are writings engraved on hard surfaces such as stone, metal or pottery.

They usually record the achievements, activities or ideas of those who commissioned them

It includes the exploits of kings, or donations made by women and men to religious institutions.

The earliest inscriptions were in Prakrit, a name for languages used by ordinary people.

Inscriptions

Epigraphy is the study of inscriptions.

Epigraphy

James Prinsep

  • ➔  James Prinsep was an officer in the mint of the East India Company

  • ➔  He deciphered Brahmi and Kharosthi, in the 1838

  • ➔  These scripts used in the earliest inscriptions and coins

  • ➔  He identified a king referred to as Piyadassi – meaning “pleasant to behold”;as Asoka

How Are Inscriptions Deciphered? Deciphering Brahmi

  •   Most scripts used to write modern Indian languages are derived from Brahmi

  •   From the late 18thcentury, European scholars aided by Indian pandits worked backwards from contemporary Bengali and Devanagari (the script used to write Hindi) manuscripts, comparing their letters with older specimens.

    How Kharosthi was read

  •   Kharosthi was the script used in inscriptions in the north-west

  •   Coins of Indo-Greek kings contain the names of kings written in Greek and

    Kharosthi scripts.

  •   European scholars who could read the former compared the letters.

  •   James Prinsep identified the language of the Kharosthi inscriptions as Prakrit

  •   It became possible to read longer inscriptions as well.

Historical evidence from inscriptions

how epigraphists and historians work?

  • ➢  The name of the ruler, Asoka, is not mentioned in the inscription

  • ➢  Instead titles of ruler used – devanampiya, often translated as “beloved of the

    gods” and piyadassi, or “pleasant to behold”.

  • ➢  The name Asoka is mentioned in some other inscriptions, which also contain these titles.

  • ➢  After examining all these inscriptions, and finding that they match in terms of content, style, language and palaeography, epigraphists have concluded that they were issued by the same ruler.

    Some questions yet to be answered by Historians

  • Would passers-by have stopped to read these inscriptions?

  • Most people were probably not literate.

  • Did everybody understand the Prakrit used in Pataliputra?

  • Would the orders of the king have been followed?

  • The inscription depicting Asokan’s anguish has not been found in the region (Orissa) that was conquered.

The Limitations of Inscriptional Evidence

  • ✔  letters are very faintly engraved

  • ✔  Inscriptions may be damaged or letters missing.

  • ✔  Exact meaning of the words not known

  • ✔  Not all inscriptions have been deciphered, published and translated.

  • ✔  Many inscriptions have not survived the ravages of time.

  • ✔  Only a fraction of what was inscribed available

  • ✔  Politically or economically significant was not necessarily recorded in inscriptions.

  • ✔  Routine agricultural practices and the joys and sorrows of daily existence find no mention in inscription

  • ✔  The content of inscriptions almost invariably projects the perspective of the person(s) who commissioned them.

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