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Indian
history can be roughly divided into the 6 periods
of Ancient India, Medieval India, the years
of the Company, colonial times as part of The
Raj, the struggle for Independence and finally,
post-Independence. India, the geopolitical entity
as she stands today is a post-Independence phenomenon.
It was as recently as "the stroke of the
midnight hour" on 15th August 1947 when
Nehru pronounced her "tryst with destiny"
that India woke "to life and freedom".
One of
man’s oldest civilizations was the settlement
at the Indus Valley. The degree of sophistication
that archaeologists found in their settlements
almost belies the fact that these people lived
almost 4000 years ago. The civilization had
meticulously planned cities; streets met at
right angles, the sewage system puts present
day India to shame, and the tools and large
granaries show that they knew more than a thing
or two about agriculture. Seals of the Indus
Valley have on them the only ancient script
that is yet to be deciphered. The most important
Indus Valley cities of Harappa and Mohenjodaro
are in present day Pakistan.
The
civilization died out in the 1500 BC. The reasons
are a still a matter of contention and they
range from the coming of the central Asian Aryan
tribes to the changing of the course of the
Indus River. While both these are true, it’s
difficult to ascertain that these are what brought
the end of the Dravidian civilization in the
Indus valley. By 300 BC the previously nomadic
Aryans had settled down in the region of north
India. They had brought with them Sanskrit,
a member of the Indo-European family of languages
akin to Latin and Greek. They also brought the
spoken literature of the Hindu life-philosophy,
horse-driven chariots and a social system of
caste differentiation.
The
following millennium saw the waxing and waning
of empires. In the north the great dynasties
were those of the Mauryas (300-200 BC) during
which period Buddhism received royal patronage,
and the Guptas during whose reign the subcontinent
is said to have enjoyed a "golden period"
(300-500 AD). The intervening period had new
settlers like the Shakas and Kushanas forming
lesser kingdoms in the area around the Ganges.
The influence of these Aryan kingdoms rarely
reached the south. Regional dynasties like the
Andhras, Cheras, Pandyas and Cholas ruled kingdoms
in the south of the Deccan Plateau and lower
down the peninsula. When unable to withstand
the pressures of central Asian invaders the
Gupta Empire crumbled, the north got divided
into strong regional kingdoms (except for a
brief period from 606 to 647 under the poet
king Harshavardhan). This was the time that
the Rajputs grew to prominence in the west.
Within
300 years of being founded in the 7th century,
Islam had reached the western parts. But it
wasn’t until the coming of Turkish-Afghan
raiders like Mahmud of Ghazni (997 to 1030 AD)
and Muhammad Ghauri (in 1192) that Islam made
significant inroads to the heart of north India.
The first Muslim empire was set up by a general
of Ghauri’s, Qutb-ud-din Aibak, which
is when the Delhi Sultanate came into being.
The temptation of privileges extended to the
faithful, and Hinduism’s own severe caste
system made many convert.
The
Delhi Sultanate was ridden with internal strife
and saw no less than 5 dynasties come to power
between 1206 and 1526. In 1526 a young Central
Asian warlord who had already captured Kabul,
set his eyes on the vast land that lay to the
south. Tales of riches had reached his ears
and Babur, descendent of Genghis Khan and Timurlane
made good his ancestral legacy by defeating
the Sultanate’s armies in the Battle of
Panipat.
In a
land of oppressive heat, and such a variety
of people that he could hardly make sense of
it, Babur founded the Mughal dynasty. Babur
began the work of bringing the delicate patterns
of Islamic art, the detailed craft of miniature
painting, the severe symmetry of formal garden
craft to Delhi. Till Aurangzeb, the 6th king
of the dynasty, the Mughals had a liberal policy
of religious tolerance and that helped them
weave together a largely stable and tight knit
kingdom that spanned a larger territory than
any previously had. It was a time of plenty
and emperors like Jehangir (1605-1627) and Shah
Jehan (1628-1657) could focus their attentions
on art, architecture and culture. It was the
time when the Taj Mahal was built, as was the
Red Fort, and the coffers contained the Koh-i-Noor
and the ruby and emerald studded Peacock Throne.
Aurangzeb’s religious zeal won him widespread
resentment. The Mughal Empire began unravelling,
unable to withstand the Maratha chieftain Shivaji’s
guerrilla warfare. The last really effective
Mughal king was Bahadur Shah (1707-1712). After
him Mughal power and prestige declined steadily.
The
first British East India Company officials landed
in India in 1602. Eventually their interests
ceased to be purely mercantile as they assumed
more political roles. After the Revolt of 1857,
the Crown took over the reigns and India officially
came to be a part of the vast British Empire.
The Raj settled into ruling this vast dominion
and did so till in 1947 when the country was
handed back to the leaders of the freedom movement.
Gandhi and Nehru led the largely non-violent
movement from the front with the backing of
Congress and the entire nation. However, partly
because of the British ‘divide-and-rule’
policy and internal contradictions in the national
movement itself, a communal divide came to be.
When India finally achieved freedom, it was
combined with the trauma of partition and the
formation of Pakistan.
Nehru
became the first Prime Minister of India on
15th August 1947 at the head of a Congress government.
The Congress hegemony ended in the late 60s,
but it came to power intermittently through
the 70s and 80s. The Nehru legacy was strong
enough to make both his daughter Indira (who
declared the infamous internal Emergency), and
grandson Rajiv, Prime Minister. In the 90s the
era of coalition politics had begun and democracy
had come of age.
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