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History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

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Hinduism in the Subcontinent
15
History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21
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Page 1: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

History of South Asia

Chapters 20 and 21

Page 2: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Religions of South AsiaReligions of South Asia

Page 3: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Hinduism in the Hinduism in the SubcontinentSubcontinent

Page 4: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Ancient India (pg 591)• Indus River Valley Civilization was the 1st

civilization that we know of in this region. (2500 BC- 1700 BC around the Indus River (Pakistan)

• Agrarian, taking advantage of fertile riverbanks. Many small cities developed: Two were Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. Had well built homes, public buildings, and canals brought water to needed areas.

• Mystery of why it died out (1 theory was climate change/drought, another by invasion)

Page 5: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Aryans (pg 592)• 1700 BC Aryans came from Russia through

Hindu Kush (Khyber Pass). They intermarried the IRV people, creating a unique culture.

• Aryans spoke Sanskrit and were more nomadic than the IRV people. They brought with them new technology, animals, and ideas.

• Aryans discovered Iron ore in Ganges River plains, thus developed tools to farm. Started settling down! And developed iron weapons. Kept them the dominate culture

• Mixture of IRV people and Aryan beliefs = Hindu. The Vedas is the holy book of Hindu

Page 6: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Hinduism• Hinduism has grown to

become the world's third largest religion, after Islam and Christianity. It is the dominant religion in India, Nepal, and among the Tamils in Sri Lanka.

• Hinduism is generally regarded as the world's oldest organized religion with roots to the Indus Valley Civilization (4000-2200 BC)

Ancient Path

Page 7: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Origins of HinduismOrigins of HinduismAlthough Hinduism is considered a Although Hinduism is considered a polytheisticpolytheistic religion religion

by most, strictly speaking, Hinduism is a by most, strictly speaking, Hinduism is a henotheistichenotheistic religion. A henotheistic religion recognizes a single religion. A henotheistic religion recognizes a single deity (god), but recognizes other gods and goddesses deity (god), but recognizes other gods and goddesses as facets or forms of the supreme god. as facets or forms of the supreme god. (The god is (The god is reincarnated into other gods) reincarnated into other gods)

Hindus believe in Hindus believe in reincarnationreincarnation. This is . This is the transfer of one's soul after death into the transfer of one's soul after death into another body. This produces a continuing cycle another body. This produces a continuing cycle of birth, life, death and rebirth through their of birth, life, death and rebirth through their many lifetimes.many lifetimes.

NirvanaNirvana is Hindu “heaven” where you live in eternal is Hindu “heaven” where you live in eternal peace and don’t have to be reincarnated. You get peace and don’t have to be reincarnated. You get there by living a perfect life on earth.there by living a perfect life on earth.

Page 8: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Hindu Beliefs• Karma is the sum of ones good and bad deeds. Karma

determines how you will live your next life. Through pure acts, thoughts and devotion, one can be reborn at a higher level. Eventually, one can achieve “enlightenment.”

Bad deeds can cause a person tobe reborn as a lower level, or even as an animal. The unequal distribution of wealth, power, and suffering are seen as the result of one's previous acts, both in this life and in previous lives. People are born into a Caste (social class) and it determines job,

marriage, and friends. Belief that people are NOT equal.

VideoVideo intro

Page 9: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

The Caste System

Video

Page 10: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

The Caste

System

• Brahmins (the priests and academics)

• Kshatriyas (rulers, military) • Vaishyas (farmers, landlords,

and merchants) • Sudras (peasants, servants, and

workers in non-polluting jobs). • The outcasts who did not

belong to one of the castes. They worked in what are considered polluting jobs. They were untouchable by the four castes, and so they were simply called the Untouchables. Now this former caste is called Dalit.

Page 11: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

The Ganges River and Hinduism• The Ganges River is considered sacred.• It is believed that dipping in the Ganges will

wash away one’s sins, and throwing one’s ashes in the Ganges after death may improve one’s next life.

• Devout Hindus make pilgrimages to bathe in the Ganges and to meditate on its banks.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QFNKdMSl2A0&feature=fvw Video LinkVideo Link

Page 12: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Maurya Dynasty• Maurya empire (1st empire 324-185 BC) • Emperor Ashoka unified the gov’t. Built a

palace of stone and religious Hindu monuments. (video)

• Ashoka expanded his empire across the sub- continent. He was horrified at the death he saw. He then vowed it would be his last war- converted to Buddhism and promoted peace.

• Principals for a just government and how to live a morale life were carved in stone across empire. He urged people to learn about other religions to learn tolerance for others. He encouraged loyalty, self control, kindness, etc.

Page 13: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Gupta Dynasty 320-500 AD (pg 595)• Most Gupta rulers were Hindu, but both Hindu

and Buddhism was practiced.• Created sculptures and paintings of Hindu gods

and goddesses that you see today and built Buddhist temples.

• Sanskrit became dominate language• Developed concept of 0 and the numbers we

use today (Europeans called it Arabic). 1,2,3, were first written by the Gupta dynasty.

Page 14: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

India as Crossroads• India became the halfway point of trade

between Europeans, Middle East traders, Chinese, and SE Asians. Traded spices, silks, etc. Hindu and Buddhism spread out of India, Islam spread into India via Muslim traders. CULTURAL DIFFUSION!

• Also, people fleeing Mongol invasions in China crossed Himalayans and settled in India. CULTURAL DIFFUSION!! (Mongols never invaded due to Himalayas.)

Page 15: History of South Asia Chapters 20 and 21. Religions of South Asia.

Illustrations and information courtesy of:Illustrations and information courtesy of: http://www.tcnj.edu/~bezio2/occupation.html http://www.engagedpage.com/gandhi.html http://www.dummies.com/WileyCDA/DummiesArticle/id-2074,subcat-POLITICS.html http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/islam/history/mughal/index.shtml http://www.picturesofplaces.com/Asia/ http://www.religioustolerance.org/var_rel.htm http://sifyimg.speedera.net/sify.com/cmsimages/News/Itihaas/13386500_1_babur.jpg http://fog.ccsf.edu/~jcarpent/sl02core104print.htm http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/pathways/blackhistory/india/india_europeans.htm http://www.webindia123.com/history/MEDIEVAL/mughal%20period/mughal2.htm http://miniatures.de/img/ancients-4/dba-army-154-mongols.jpg http://www.tourism-in-india.com/travel-by-themes/cultural-tours-india-tourism.html http://www.edgarlowen.com/a43cw.html http://www.anthroarcheart.org/tblb58.htm http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/cultural/religion/hinduism/history.html http://www.cyberling.dk/bangladesh/0_crowded_street.html http://individual.utoronto.ca/farhan/farhan.ca/photos.html http://www.amrita-it.com/india/dia/dia1.htm http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Indian%20Mutiny http://www.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,1101621130,00.htmlhttp://www.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,1101621130,00.html http://www.photokunst.com/gandhi.htmlhttp://www.photokunst.com/gandhi.html http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~ssen/Snapshots1.jpghttp://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~ssen/Snapshots1.jpg http://www.essex.ac.uk/review/97_98/rights.htmlhttp://www.essex.ac.uk/review/97_98/rights.html http://archives.cnn.com/2000/ASIANOW/south/08/04/india.kashmir.massacres/http://archives.cnn.com/2000/ASIANOW/south/08/04/india.kashmir.massacres/

india.kashmir.gifindia.kashmir.gif http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/807751.stmhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/807751.stm


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