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India
/ History
The cave shelters of Bhimbetka in central India
showcase a historical narrative from the pre-historic
to the historic period. Around 3000 BC, one of
the world's oldest civilizations flourished in
the fertile valley of the river Indus. Excavations
at Mohenjodaro and Harappa point to an evolved
civilization living in well-planned cities. Seals,
as also the existence of a dockyard at Lothal
seem to indicate a sea-borne trade with Mesopotamia.
Around 1500 BC, the Aryan presence is recorded.
Aside from the horse, they introduced the worship
of fire.
From
nomads to settled agriculturists, the Aryans developed
village communities. Hinduism was at a very nascent
stage and Sanskrit, from which most north Indian
scripts are derived, was the prevailing language.
The Hindu epics, the Ramayana and Mahabharata
are products of this period.
Social
and intellectual ferment in the 6th century BC
led thinkers like Mahavira and Gautama Buddha
to seek and offer alternate paths- Jainism and
Buddhism.
When
the Greek ambassador Megasthenes visited India,
in the 3rd century BC, the north was consolidated
into one great empire under Chandragupta Maurya.
His grandson Ashoka the great (268-231 BC), however,
is better known. Deeply affected by the bloodbath
on the battlefield, he chose to practice and preaches
the Buddhist philosophy of non-violence, both
in India and abroad.
Down
south, while the local rulers the Cheras, Cholas
and Pandyas baffled for supremacy, maritime trade
with Rome flourished. St Thomas came to India
in the century AD and established a Christian
community here.
Between
320 and 480 AD, often referred to as the Golden
Age of the Guptas, India saw the flowering of
art, culture, literature and science. Erudite
treatises on subjects ranging from medicine and
mathematics to astronomy and even love (the famed
Kamasutra) were written.
Qutub-ud-din
Aibak of the Slave dynasty laid the foundation
of Muslim rule in India, in the 13's century.
The Tughlaqs and Lodis succeeded the Aibaks. In
the 16th century Babur, established Mughal rule
here. His grandson Akbar (1562-1605) is even now
viewed as a progressive ruler, for he sought in
many ways through administrative systems, art,
culture and even religion to amalgamate disparate
cultures. Physically too, the splintering kingdom
became an empire. Another ruler, Shahjehan, famed
for his immortal creation, the Taj Mahal, took
Mughal glory to its zenith. Aurangzeb was the
last great emperor of the Mughal dynasty.
The
17th century brought the Europeans; with the British,
French, Dutch and Portuguese selling up trading
posts. Soon commercial interests combined with
political aspirations (a process in which the
local rulers played an active part) and a power
struggle ensued. The Baffle of Qutub Minar, New
Delhi Plassey in 1757 was decisive, with the British
gaining supremacy over the others.
British
rule gave India a rail network as also the establishment
of a bureaucracy. However, national aspirations
and the desire for self-determination on the part
of the Indians resulted in the First War of Independence
in 1857. Though brutally suppressed, it marked
the beginning of a struggle in which the Indian
National Congress, founded in 1885, formed the
backbone. Finally, on August 15,1947, India gained
independence, On 26th January, 1950 it became
a republic.
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