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SOCIAL STUDIES CHAPTER 4 NOTES: ANCIENT INDIA

 

SECTION 1: India’s Geographic Setting

 

I. Map and Introduction

 

-The land of India is separated from the rest of the world by a great wall.

 

-Rising along India’s northern border, the wall is nearly 1500 miles long and nearly

 five miles high.

 

-This great barrier is the Himalayas, the highest mountain range in the world. 

 

II. India’s Geographic Setting

 

-India juts out from Asia into the Indian Ocean.

 

-India is a subcontinent, or a large landmass that juts out from a continent.

 

-For centuries, geography limited the contact the people of the Indian subcontinent

had with the rest of the world.

 

-The Himalaya and the Hindu Kush mountain ranges separate India from the rest of

Asia.

 

-The Bay of Bengal, the Indian Ocean, and the Arabian Sea limit contact with lands to

the east and west.

 

-India’s climate is dominated by the monsoons, strong winds that blow across the

 region at certain times of the year.

 

-From October to May, the winter monsoon blows from the northeast, spreading dry

air across the country.

 

-In the middle of June, the wind blows in from the Indian Ocean. This summer

 monsoon picks up moisture from the ocean. It carries rains that drench the plains

 and river valleys daily.

 

-The people of India depend on summer monsoons to provide life-giving rain.

 

-Although the mountains separate India from other lands, they do have openings.

 

-Passes through the Hindu Kush mountain range have served as highways for

migration and invasion.

 

-Great rivers begin in the mountains.

-The Indus River crosses the Himalayas and empties into the Arabian Sea.

 

-The Ganges River flows from the Himalayas into the Bay of Bengal.

 

-Fed by melting snow and rain, the Indus and Ganges rivers cut through the

mountains. They flow across northern India and make farming possible in the river

valleys.

 

III. Life in the Indus River Valley

 

-From the rich soil of the Indus valley, early farmers harvested a surplus of wheat

and other grains. This led to a growth in the population.

 

-As a result, some villages grew into cities.

 

-From around 2500 to 1500 B.C., well-planned cities flourished in the valleys.

 

-Two such cities were Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro, both located in present-day

Pakistan.

 

-Mohenjo-Daro was the larger of the two cities, and it lay along the banks of the

Indus River. 

 

-The ruins of Mohenjo-Daro show how carefully the city was planned. To help

protect it from floods, the city was built above ground level.

 

-Homes and workshops made up one side of the city. Public buildings stood on the

other side.

 

-The city’s high point served as a citadel or fortress.

 

-Mohenjo-Daro had a drainage system. Clay pipes ran under the brick streets. They

carried waste from homes and public buildings away from the city.

 

-Outside the city, canals ran along the Indus River, which often flooded. The canals

helped to control flooding by catching overflow from the river.

 

-In Mohenjo-Daro, merchants and artisans sold their wares from shops that lined

 the streets. Traders came from as far away as Mesopotamia to buy and sell

 precious goods.

 

-The language of the people is still a mystery.

 

-The form of government and the religion of Mohenjo-Daro are also unknown.

 

 

-For some unknown reason, around 2000 B.C., Indus valley farmers began to

abandon their land.

 

-Between 2000 and 2500 B.C., newcomers from the north entered the valley. These

 newcomers eventually gained power throughout the region.

 

IV. A New Culture Arises

 

-The newcomers called themselves Aryans, which in their language meant “noble”

 or “highborn.”

 

-They migrated from their homelands in central Asia. For several centuries, waves of

  these nomadic herders swept into India.

 

-The Aryans drove horse-drawn chariots that overwhelmed the enemy’s

 slow-  moving foot soldiers and settled populations.

 

-Gradually, a new Aryan culture developed. This culture combined the traditions of

 the original inhabitants with ideas and beliefs brought by the newcomers.

 

-This new culture first developed in the northern Indus valley. Gradually, it spread

 into the Ganges valley to the east, where people also adopted the Aryan language.

 

-By about 800 B.C., the people of northern India had learned to make tools and

 weapons out of iron. With iron axes, the people cleared areas of the thick rain forest

 of the northeast. There they built farms, villages, and even cities.

 

-Most of what we know of early Aryan life comes from religious books called Vedas,

 which means “knowledge.”

 

-The Vedas tell us that the earliest Aryans were herders and warriors who lived in

 temporary villages.

 

-The Aryans organized their society around three classes.

 

-Aryan priests, called Brahmans, performed religious services and composed hymns

 and prayers.

 

-Ranked below them was a class of warriors and nobles.

 

-Next came the artisans and merchants.

 

-Gradually, a low-ranking fourth class was formed. It was made up of farm workers, laborers, and servants.

 

-By 500 B.C., there was a strict division of classes called the caste system.

 

-Under the caste system, people always had to stay in the caste of their parents.

 

-Since people could not leave their caste, they did the same work that their parents

 did.

 

SECTION 2: HINDUISM IN ANCIENT INDIA

 

I. The Beginnings of Hinduism

 

-As Aryan culture mixed with India’s existing cultures, new ideas and beliefs became

 part of the Vedas. From this blending of ideas and beliefs, came one of the world’s

 oldest living religions, Hinduism. 

 

-As Hinduism developed over 3,500 years, it absorbed beliefs from other religions.

 

-Hindus believe that since people are very different, they need many different ways

 of approaching god.

 

-Hinduism is one of the world’s major religions, and a way of life for more than 850

 million people in India today.

 

-Hinduism has no one single founder, but Hindus have many great religious

 thinkers.

 

-Hindus worship many gods and goddesses. However, they believe in one single

 spiritual power called brahman, which lives in everything.

 

-Hindus believe there is more than one path to the truth.

 

-The gods and goddesses of Hinduism stand for different parts of brahman.

 

-The most important Hindu gods are Brahma, the Creator; Vishnu, the Preserver;

 and Shiva, the Destroyer.

 

-Hindu gods take many different forms, called avatars. An avatar is the

 representation of a Hindu god or goddess in human or animal form.

 

-Hindu teachings say that Brahma was born from a golden egg. He created earth and

 everything on it. He is not as widely worshipped as Vishnu and Shiva.

 

-Hindus believe that Vishnu is a kindly god who is concerned with the welfare of

 humans.

 

-Unlike Vishnu, Shiva is not concerned with human matters. He is very powerful and

 is responsible for both the creative and destructive forces of the universe.

 

-Hindu gods have their own families. Many Hindus worship Shiva’s wife, the goddess

 Shakti who is both a destroyer and creator, both kind and cruel.

 

II. The Teachings of Hinduism

 

-One of the Hindu religious texts is the Upanishads. Upanishad means “sitting near a

 teacher.” Much of the Upanishads is in the form of questions by pupils and

 responses by teachers.

 

-One important idea in the Upanishads is reincarnation, or rebirth of the soul.

 

-Hindus believe that when a person dies, the soul is reborn in the body of another

 living thing.

 

-Hindus believe that every living thing has a soul.

 

-According to Hindu belief, the actions of a person in this life affect his or her fate in

 the next. Good behavior is always rewarded. Bad behavior is always punished.

 

-If a person leads a perfect life, he or she may be freed from this cycle of death and

 rebirth. As a result, the person’s soul become one with brahman.

 

-To become united with the one spirit and escape the cycle of death and rebirth, a

 person must obey his or her dharma.

 

-Dharma is the religious and moral duties of each person.

 

-In Hinduism, it is a man’s duty to protect the women in his family, and it is the

 ruler’s duty to protect his subjects.

 

-Another important idea of Hinduism is ahimsa or nonviolence. To Hindus, people

 and living things are part of brahman and must be treated with respect. For that

 reason, many Hindus do not eat meat and try to avoid harming living things.

 

III. The Practice of Hinduism

 

-Because Hinduism teaches that there is more than one path to truth, it allows its

 followers to worship in various ways.

 

-Hindus believe yoga exercises help free the soul from the cares of this world. In this

 world, the soul may unite with brahman.

 

-In fact, the word yoga means “union.”

 

 

-For the Hindu, there are many yogas that may be used as a path to brahman.

 Physical activity is one yoga. Another is the yoga of selfless deeds. By learning the

 sacred writings, a Hindu practices the yoga of knowledge. And by honoring a

 personal god, a Hindu follows the yoga of devotion.

 

-Hindus worship in public by praying and performing rituals in temples.

 

-They also show privately at home often at a home altar.

 

SECTION 3: THE BEGINNINGS OF BUDDHISM

 

I. Introduction

 

-According to Buddhist tradition, a young Hindu prince named Siddhartha Gautama

 lived a life of luxury in his palace. He was surrounded by beauty and youth and

 never witnessed old age, sickness, or death.

 

-At around age 30, he traveled outside the palace walls and witnessed sickness and

 death. This suffering and death troubled him greatly. He wondered why there was

 so much pain and misery in the world. He gave up his wealth, his family, and his life

 of ease in order to find the causes of human suffering.

 

-What he discovered after seven years of wandering, led to the beginnings of a major

 world religion: Buddhism

 

II. The Buddha and his Teachings

 

-As Gautama traveled in the 500s B.C., he sought answers to his questions about the

 meaning of life.

 

-At first, Gautama studied with Hindu philosophers, but their ideas could not satisfy

 him. He could not accept the Hindu belief that only priests could pass on

 knowledge.

 

-Gautama decided to stop looking outwardly for the cause of suffering. Instead, he

 tried to find understanding within his own mind through meditation.

 

-Buddhist tradition says that that Gautama fasted and meditated under a fig tree.

 After forty-nine days he believed that he finally understood the roots of suffering.

 

-For the next forty-five years, Gautama traveled across India and shared his

 knowledge. Over the years, he attracted many followers. His followers called him

 the Buddha or “Enlightened One.”

 

-Buddhism teaches people to follow the Eightfold Path also called the Middle Way.

 By following this path, a person avoids a life of extreme pleasure or extreme

 unhappiness.

 

-The Buddha believed that selfish desires for power, wealth, and pleasure cause

 humans to suffer. By giving up selfish pleasures, a person can become free from

 suffering.

 

-To overcome selfish desires, Buddhists must learn to be wise, to behave correctly,

 and to develop their minds.    

 

-They must tell the truth at all times.

 

-People should also avoid violence and the killing of any living thing.

 

-If people follow the Buddha’s path, their suffering will end. They will eventually

 find nirvana, or lasting peace. By reaching nirvana, people will be released from the

 cycle of reincarnation.

 

-Buddhism also taught that all people are created equal. Anyone, could follow the

 path to nirvana, regardless of his or her social class.

 

-Like other religions, Buddhism has priests. Although monastery life is difficult,

 people of any social class can work to become a Buddhist priest or monk.

 

III. Buddhism Inside and Outside India

 

-After the Buddha’s death, his teachings spread all over India. But the Buddha’s

 teachings did not last long in the land of his birth. Instead, Hinduism gradually

 regained favor among those in power.

 

-Meantime, Hinduism had developed in ways that made it more appealing to the

 lower classes. Over time, Buddhism died out almost completely in India.

 

-During those years when Hinduism and Buddhism coexisted in India, a number of

 basic ideas came to be shared by both.

 

-Both Hindus and Buddhists accept the idea that it is wrong to harm other living

 creatures. Both value nonviolence and believe in dharma and the cycle of rebirth.

 

-Some Hindus came to honor the Buddha as a reincarnation of the god Vishnu. But

 because Buddhists do not embrace the sacred texts of Hinduism, most Hindus do

 not worship the Buddha as an avatar.

 

-Buddhism was accepted by millions of people in other lands.

 

 

 

-It took root first in China, where the ideas of the Buddha became mixed with those

 of other Chinese thinkers. Millions of Chinese became Buddhists, and Buddhists

 monasteries in China became centers of religious thought.

 

-From China, Buddhism spread to Korea and Japan.

 

-Today, Buddhism is part of the cultures of such countries as Japan, the Koreas,

 China, Tibet, and Vietnam.

 

 

SECTION 4: THE MAURYA EMPIRE

 

I. The Rise of the Maurya Empire

 

-Around 321 B.C., a new ruler came to the throne of a kingdom in northeastern

 India. Within thirty-five years, the tiny kingdom had grown into the giant Maurya

 Empire.

 

-Chandragupta Maurya founded India’s Maurya Empire.

 

-Chandragupta had been born to a poor family and sold into slavery at a young age.

  But later when he became king, Chandragupta enjoyed luxuries from all parts of

  Asia.

 

-India was made up of a number of warring states before Chandragupta came to

 power. Strong and ruthless, Chandragupta’s armies overthrew kingdoms along the

 Ganges River. Turning west, the armies advanced into the Indus River valley. In

 only a few years, Chandragupta’s power extended over most of northern and

 central India.

 

-Chandragupta was guided by the basic belief that a ruler must have absolute power.

 

-Chandragupta commanded a huge army. The army also had a herd of 9,000 war

 elephants, which struck fear into the hearts of opponents.

 

-Under Chandragupta, the empire enjoyed great economic success. Most of its

 wealth came from farming.

 

-However, as his rule continued, Chandragupta became fearful for his life. He feared

 being poisoned and slept in a different room every night to ward off assassins.

 

-One story says that toward the end of his life, Chandragupta left the throne to his

 son and became a monk in southern India. Fasting and praying, he starved himself

 to death.

 

-Although his rule was harsh, Chandragupta used his wealth to improve his empire.

 -New irrigation systems brought water to farmers.

 

-Forests were cleared, and more food was produced.

 

-Government officials promoted crafts and mining.

 

-A vast network of roads made it easier for Maurya traders to exchange goods with

 foreign lands.

 

-Chandragupta’s leadership brought order and peace to his people.

 

II. Asoka’s Leadership

 

-Chandragupta passed the leadership of the Maurya Empire on to his son.

 

-After the son died in 273 B.C., Chandragupta’s grandson, Asoka, gained power.

 

-Asoka, whose name means “without sorrow,” further expanded Chandragupta’s

 empire.

 

-By the end of his lengthy rule in 232 B.C., Asoka had built the greatest empire India

 had ever seen.

 

-For more than thirty-five years, Asoka rules an empire that included much of the

 Indian subcontinent.

 

-Early in his rule, Asoka led his army south into the state of Kalinga.

 

-In about 261 B.C., he won a bloody battle in which thousands of people were

 injured or died. The great slaughter at Kalinga was a turning point in Asoka’s life.

 He was filled with sorrow over the bloodshed. He gave up war and violence. He

 freed his prisoners and restored their land. Later, he chose to convert to Buddhism .

 

-Asoka practiced and preached the teachings of the Buddha.

 

-He did not allow the use of animals for sacrifices. He gave up hunting.

 

-Asoka thought of his people as his children and was concerned about their welfare. He had hospitals built and even had wells dug every mile beside the roads so that travelers and animals would not go thirsty.

 

-Asoka was also concerned with his people’s moral and spiritual life. To carry the Buddha’s message throughout his vast empire, Asoka issued writings of moral advice. His advice and laws were carved on stone pillars about forty feet high.

 

-Asoka practiced religious tolerance toward the Hindus.

 

-During his rule, many of the Buddha’s teachings became part of Hinduism. Buddhism grew under Asoka.

 

-At the time of Asoka’s death, India was united as never before.

 

-After his death, however, the great Maurya Empire declined.

 

-Without his strong leadership, his territories became divided. Small states began fighting with one another.

 

-Several centuries of invasion and disorder followed.

 

-It took almost 600 years before India was united again.

 

III. The Influence of India’s Physical Geography

 

-India has been influenced by its physical geography in many ways. First, the

  Himalayas cut India off from the rest of the ancient world. However, invaders

  entered India through the passes of the Hindu Kush Mountains to conquer and

  settle the land.

 

-Two great river systems cut through the Himalayas and carried melting snow to the              

   plains.

 

-The Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea limited contact with lands to the east and

   west.

 

-Monsoons dominate the climate and bring rains that create fertile farmlands.  

 

-The Indus River Valley contained fertile soil for farming. Well-planned cities

  flourished there.

 

IV. The Rule of Chandragupta and Asoka

 

-Both were strong rulers who brought order and peace to their people.

 

-In the early years of his rule, Asoka was warlike like his grandfather.

 

-They were different because Asoka eventually embraced Buddhism and became

  concerned about his people’s welfare. Chandragupta, on the other hand, ruled

  harshly.

 

 

Chandragupta used his powerful army to conquer kingdoms and build his empire.

He brought order and peace to his people.

Asoka issued writings of moral advice to his people, established laws that required people to treat each other with humanity, spread Buddhism by sending out missionaries, united India, treated his subjects like his children, and built hospitals and wells because he cared about them.

 

 

V. The Maurya Empire and India’s Golden Age.   

 

-Many believe that the Maurya Empire marked India’s Golden Age for several

  reasons.

 

-foreign trade developed during the reign of Chandragupta, the emperor used his

  wealth to improve the empire by clearing forests, creating a network of roads, and

  producing more food.

 

-Also due to Asoka’s concern for his people which led to the construction of

  hospitals and the toleration of other religions.