Ancient History Of India

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to ancient India:

  1. Ancient History Of India For Kids
  2. Brief History Of Ancient India
  3. Ancient History Of India Pdf In Bengali

Ancient India is the Indian subcontinent from prehistoric times to the start of Medieval India, which is typically dated (when the term is still used) to the end of the Gupta Empire.[1] Ancient India was composed of the modern-day countries of Afghanistan (some portions), Bangladesh, Bhutan, Burma, India, Nepal and Pakistan.

  • 1General history of ancient India
  • 2Culture in ancient India
  • 4Organizations concerned with ancient India

General history of ancient India[edit]

Periodisation of Indian history[edit]

The web's source of information for Ancient History: definitions, articles, timelines, maps, books, and illustrations.

An elaborate periodisation may be as follows:[2]

  • Indian pre-history including Indus Valley Civilisation (until c. 1750 BCE);
  • Iron Age including Vedic period (c. 1750-600 BCE);
  • 'Second Urbanisation' (c. 600-200 BCE);
  • Classical period (c. 200 BCE-1200 CE);[note 1]
  • Pre-Classical period (c. 200 BCE-320 CE);
  • 'Golden Age' (Gupta Empire) (c. 320-650 CE);
  • Late-Classical period (c. 650-1200 CE);
  • Medieval period (c. 1200-1500 CE);
  • Early Modern (c. 1500-1850);
  • Modern period (British Raj and independence) (from c. 1850).

Indian pre-history[edit]

  • Neolithic Age India
    • Bhirrana Culture (7570-6200 BCE)
    • Mehrgarh culture (c. 7000 – 2500 BCE)
  • Bronze Age India
    • Indus valley civilization (c. 3300 – 1300 BCE)
    • Ahar-Banas culture (c. 3000 - 1500 BCE)

Iron Age (c. 1200 – 272 BCE)[edit]

  • Iron Age India (c. 1200 – 272 BCE)
    • Vedic civilization (c. 1500 – 500 BCE)
      • Black and red ware culture (c. 1300 – 1000 BCE) (c. 1200 – 600 BCE)
      • Northern Black Polished Ware (c. 700 – 200 BCE)
    • Indian Iron Age kingdoms (c. 700 – 300 BCE)
    • Pandyan Kingdom (600 BCE - 1650 CE)

Second Urbanisation[edit]

  • Nanda Empire (425–321 BCE)
  • Maurya Empire (321–184 BCE)
  • Sangam Period (c. 300 BCE – 300 CE)
    • Pandyan Kingdom (c. 600 BCE – 1650 CE)
    • Chera Kingdom (c. 300 BCE – 1102 CE)
    • Chola Kingdom (c. 300 BCE – 1279 CE)
  • Pallava Kingdom (250 BCE – 800 CE)
  • Maha-Megha-Vahana Empire (250s BCE – 5th century CE)
  • Satavahana Empire (230 BCE – 220 CE)
  • Indo-Scythian Kingdom (200 BCE – 400 CE)
  • Kuninda Kingdom (3rd century BCE – 4th century CE)
  • Shunga Empire (185–73 BCE)
  • Indo-Greek Kingdom (180 BCE – 10 CE)
  • Kanva empire (75–26 BCE)
  • Kushan Empire (30–375 CE)

Classical Age[edit]

  • (Middle kingdoms of India)
  • Gupta Empire (240–590 CE)
  • Kadamba dynasty (345–1000 CE)
  • Western Ganga dynasty(350-1000 CE)

Middle Ages (c. 500 – 1500)[edit]

  • Badami Chalukyas (547–742)
  • Rashtrakuta Empire (742–982)
  • Western Chalukyas (983–1185)
  • Chaulukya (c. 944 - 1244)
  • Hoysala Empire (1114–1342)
    • Somanathapura
  • Vijayanagara Empire (1336–1565)

Culture in ancient India[edit]

Art in ancient India[edit]

  • Music in ancient India

Language in ancient India[edit]

  • (Scripts)
Map

Religion in ancient India[edit]

  • History of Hinduism
    • Historical Vedic religion

Science and technology in ancient India[edit]

  • Science and technology in ancient India
  • Indian martial arts
  • Ancient Indian medicine
  • Architecture

Organizations concerned with ancient India[edit]

Museums with ancient Indian exhibits[edit]

  • India
  • United Kingdom

See also[edit]

  • Media related to Ancient India at Wikimedia Commons

Ancient History Of India For Kids

Notes[edit]

  1. ^Different periods are designated as 'classical Hinduism':
    • Smart calls the period between 1000 BCE and 100 CE 'pre-classical'. It is the formative period for the Upanishads and Brahmanism[subnote 1] Jainism and Buddhism. For Smart, the 'classical period' lasts from 100 to 1000 CE, and coincides with the flowering of 'classical Hinduism' and the flowering and deterioration of Mahayana-buddhism in India.[4]
    • For Michaels, the period between 500 BCE and 200 BCE is a time of 'Ascetic reformism',[5] whereas the period between 200 BCE and 1100 CE is the time of 'classical Hinduism', since there is 'a turning point between the Vedic religion and Hindu religions'.[6]
    • Muesse discerns a longer period of change, namely between 800 BCE and 200 BCE, which he calls the 'Classical Period'. According to Muesse, some of the fundamental concepts of Hinduism, namely karma, reincarnation and 'personal enlightenment and transformation', which did not exist in the Vedic religion, developed in this time.[7]

Subnotes

  1. ^Smart distinguishes 'Brahmanism' from the Vedic religion, connecting 'Brahmanism' with the Upanishads.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^Stein 2010, p. 38.
  2. ^Michaels 2004.
  3. ^Smart 2003, p. 52, 83-86.
  4. ^Smart 2003, p. 52.
  5. ^Michaels 2004, p. 36.
  6. ^Michaels 2004, p. 38.
  7. ^Muesse 2003, p. 14.

Sources[edit]

Brief History Of Ancient India

  • Flood, Gavin D. (1996), An Introduction to Hinduism, Cambridge University Press
  • Khanna, Meenakshi (2007), Cultural History Of Medieval India, Berghahn Books
  • Kulke, Hermann; Rothermund, Dietmar (2004), A History of India, Routledge
  • Michaels, Axel (2004), Hinduism. Past and present, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press
  • Misra, Amalendu (2004), Identity and Religion: Foundations of Anti-Islamism in India, SAGE
  • Muesse, Mark William (2003), Great World Religions: Hinduism
  • Muesse, Mark W. (2011), The Hindu Traditions: A Concise Introduction, Fortress Press
  • Smart, Ninian (2003), Godsdiensten van de wereld (The World's religions), Kampen: Uitgeverij Kok
  • Stein, Burton (2010), A History of India, John Wiley & Sons
  • Thapar, Romila (1978), Ancient Indian Social History: Some Interpretations(PDF), Orient Blackswan

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Outline_of_ancient_India&oldid=913445409'

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

Ancient History Of India Pdf In Bengali

  • major treatment
    • In India: History

      The Indian subcontinent, the great landmass of South Asia, is the home of one of the world’s oldest and most influential civilizations. In this article, the subcontinent, which for historical purposes is usually called simply “India,” is understood to comprise the areas of not…

      Read More
  • ancient hospitals
    • In hospital: History of hospitals

      …a chain of hospitals in Hindustan about 230 bce. Around 100 bce the Romans established hospitals (valetudinaria) for the treatment of their sick and injured soldiers; their care was important because it was upon the integrity of the legions that the power of ancient Rome was based.

      Read More
  • Boundary Commission
    • In Boundary Commission

      …were to be divided between India and Pakistan shortly before each was to become independent from Britain. The commission—appointed by Lord Mountbatten, the final viceroy of British India—consisted of four members from the Indian National Congress and four from the Muslim League and was chaired by

      Read More
  • cholera pandemics
    • In cholera: The first six pandemics

      …lethal outbreak occurred in Jessore, India, midway between Calcutta (Kolkata) and Dhaka (now in Bangladesh), and then spread throughout most of India, Burma (Myanmar), and Ceylon (Sri Lanka). By 1820 epidemics had been reported in Siam (Thailand), in Indonesia (where more than 100,000 people succumbed on the island of Java…

      Read More
  • civil rights movements
    • In civil rights: Civil rights movements across the globe

      …activism of the Dalits in India. The Dalits—formerly known as 'untouchables' and now officially designated Scheduled Castes—constitute some one-sixth of the Indian population. However, for centuries they were forced to live as second-class citizens, and many were not even considered to be a part of India’s varna system of social…

      Read More
  • Cold War
    • In 20th-century international relations: South Asia

      …a much larger scale in India, whose population included 250,000,000 Hindus, 90,000,000 Muslims, and 60,000,000 distributed among various ethnic and religious minorities. Between the wars Mohandas Gandhi’s passive-resistance campaigns had crystallized Indian nationalism, which was nurtured in part by the relative leniency of British rule. Parliament set in motion the

      Read More
    • In 20th-century international relations: China, India, and Pakistan

      The Indian subcontinent comprised another system of conflict focused on border disputes among India, Pakistan, and China. Nehru’s Congress Party had stabilized the political life of the teeming and disparate peoples of India. The United States looked to India as a laboratory…

      Read More
  • Hindu-Muslim conflict
    • In Mohammed Ali Jinnah: Early years

      …interest in the affairs of India and in Indian students. When the Parsi leader Dadabhai Naoroji, a leading Indian nationalist, ran for the British Parliament, Jinnah and other Indian students worked day and night for him. Their efforts were crowned with success: Naoroji became the first Indian to sit in…

      Read More
  • independence
    • In 20th-century international relations: The reorganization of the Middle East

      In India, where Britain controlled the fate of some 320,000,000 people with a mere 60,000 soldiers, 25,000 civil servants, and 50,000 residents, the war also sparked the first mass movement for independence. Out of hostility to Britain’s Turkish policies, Islāmic leaders joined forces with Hindus in…

      Read More
  • Mumbai terrorist attacks of 2008
    • In Mumbai terrorist attacks of 2008

      >India.

      Read More
  • Naxalism
    • In Naxalite

      …that have operated intermittently in India since the mid-1960s. More broadly, the term—often given as Naxalism or the Naxal movement—has been applied to the communist insurgency itself.

      Read More
  • new religious movements
    • In new religious movement: India

      The rise of the Arya Samaj and the Brahmo Samaj movements in India in the 19th century was a response to the growing British presence in India and the British challenge to Hindu traditions. These movements paved the way for other NRMs, including Ramakrishna’s…

      Read More
  • Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
    • In Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons

      …undermined by the ability of India and Pakistan to become declared nuclear powers in 1998 without any serious international penalty—and indeed by India establishing its own special arrangements as part of a bilateral deal with the United States in 2008.

      Read More
  • radio broadcasting history
    • In radio: India

      ” Initial Indian broadcasting (from Mumbai and Kolkata) was in English and catered to the small European community and Westernized Indians—while ignoring the mass population. Faced with a rising tide of anti-imperialist sentiment in the country, the colonial government bought these outlets and renamed them…

      Read More
    • In radio: Radio in developing countries

      India had one of the world’s largest radio news organizations, providing more than nine hours a day of news for domestic listeners. UNESCO supported an Indian experiment in radio “farm forum” broadcasts to encourage improved agricultural methods. While the number of transmitters in Asia grew…

      Read More
  • ships and shipping
    • In ship: 17th-century developments

      In India the English contested trading concessions particularly with France and Portugal; in the East Indian archipelago the contest was with the Dutch and the Portuguese; and in China it was with virtually all maritime powers in northern and western Europe. The result was that the…

      Read More
    • In ship: Commercial steam navigation

      …as Siberia, South America, Africa, India, and Australia—had a heavy dependence on river transport.

      Read More
  • Sikh and Hindu fundamentalism
    • In fundamentalism: Sikh fundamentalism

      …independent Sikh state in the Indian province of Punjab. Although images of holy war pervaded their rhetoric, their primary enemy was the Hindu state of India rather than secularism per se. Sikh fundamentalism was thus primarily a nationalistic separatist movement.

      Read More
  • smuggling
    • In smuggling

      British India in the 19th century suffered smuggling of salt between states with different tax rates, while smuggling of all kinds of dutiable goods occurred between Goa and India and between Gibraltar and Spain. In the latter half of the 19th century, smuggling developed in Africa,…

      Read More
  • World War II
    • In World War II: The Chinese front and Burma, 1941–42

      …isolated (except by air), and India was exposed to the danger of a Japanese invasion through Burma.

      Read More

areas of study

  • chronology of history
    • In chronology: Indian

      …systems have been used in India by the Hindus from antiquity. The first requires the years to be reckoned from some historical event. The second starts the reckoning from the position of some heavenly body. The historical system, the more common in modern times, exists side-by-side with Muslim and international…

      Read More
  • epigraphy
    • In epigraphy: Ancient India

      India’s past became anchored in historical time and separable from legend only with the establishment of firm synchronisms with outside data. One such link is the Seleucid embassy of Megasthenes to the Maurya king Chandragupta (Greek Sandrokottos) at Pataliputra (Greek Palimbothra; modern day Patna)…

      Read More
    • In epigraphy: The dating of historical events

      …is “timeless,” as in ancient India; the entire Indian chronology comes to be anchored around the Ashokan inscriptions. Inscriptions also permit a check on the veracity of ancient historians such as Herodotus (dubbed both “father of history” and “father of lies”), as in the case of the Bīsitūn inscription of…

      Read More
  • genealogical study
    • In genealogy: Oral tradition and biblical sources

      In southern India the ruling house of the maharajas of Travancore claimed to trace its descent, direct and unbroken, from the old Cera kings of southern India (referred to as independent sovereigns in one of the edicts of Ashoka, the great Mauryan emperor of the 3rd century…

      Read More
  • sigillography
    • In sigillography: Seals in antiquity

      …have been discovered from ancient India, but the still undeciphered inscriptions on the seals may include personal names, perhaps of merchants, who could have used the seals in much the same ways as their Near Eastern contemporaries, with whom they are known to have had commercial contacts.

      Read More

foreign interactions

Great Britain

  • In Western colonialism: British decolonization, 1945–56

    General elections in India in 1946 strengthened the Muslim League. In subsequent negotiations, punctuated by mass violence, the Congress Party leaders finally accepted partition as preferable to civil war, and in 1947 the British evacuated the subcontinent, leaving India and a territorially divided Pakistan to contend with problems…

    Read More
  • In United Kingdom: Imperialism and British politics

    Yet India, “the brightest jewel in the British crown,” was held not by consent but by conquest. The Indian Mutiny of 1857–58 was suppressed, and a year later the East India Company was abolished and the new title of viceroy was instituted. Imperial control was tightened…

    Read More
  • In United Kingdom: Withdrawal from the empire

    …its demand for self-government was India. The Indian independence movement had come of age during World War I and had gained momentum with the Massacre of Amritsar of 1919. The All-India Congress Party, headed by Mohandas K. Gandhi, evoked sympathy throughout the world with its policy of nonviolent resistance, forcing…

    Read More
  • governor-general
    • In governor-general

      In India the evolution of the office of governor-general was slightly different. In accordance with the provisions of the Regulating Act of 1773, Warren Hastings became the first governor-general. When the rule of the East India Company came to an end and authority passed to the…

      Read More
  • Salt March
    • In Salt March

      …major nonviolent protest action in India led by Mohandas (Mahatma) Gandhi in March–April 1930. The march was the first act in an even-larger campaign of civil disobedience (satyagraha) Gandhi waged against British rule in India that extended into early 1931 and garnered Gandhi widespread support among the Indian populace and…

      Read More
  • Vernacular Press Act
    • In Vernacular Press Act

      India, law enacted in 1878 to curtail the freedom of the Indian-language (i.e., non-English) press. Proposed by Lord Lytton, then viceroy of India (governed 1876–80), the act was intended to prevent the vernacular press from expressing criticism of British policies—notably, the opposition that had grown…

      Read More
  • Aksai Chin dispute
    • In Aksai Chin

      …Kashmir that is claimed by India to be part of the Ladakh area of Jammu and Kashmir state.

      Read More
  • Alp-Arslan
    • In Alp-Arslan

      …in their mountain strongholds in India, whereas against the Qarakhanids of Transoxania, force was used. In the west, where Alp-Arslan was to gain all his glory, he was faced with a more complicated situation. On the one hand, he decided to go to Egypt to crush the Ismāʿīlī Fāṭimid heresy,…

      Read More
  • Bandung Conference
    • In Bandung Conference

      Myanmar (Burma), Ceylon (Sri Lanka), India, and Pakistan—which took place April 18–24, 1955, in Bandung, Indonesia. In all, 29 countries representing more than half the world’s population sent delegates.

      Read More
  • Bhutan
    • In protectorate

      …the kingdom of Bhutan by India, to one that is a masked form of annexation, in the manner of the German protectorate established in Czechoslovakia in March 1939.

      Read More
  • British Empire
    • In British Empire: Origins of the British Empire

      … began establishing trading posts in India in 1600, and the Straits Settlements (Penang, Singapore, Malacca, and Labuan) became British through an extension of that company’s activities. The first permanent British settlement on the African continent was made at James Island in the Gambia River in 1661. Slave trading had begun…

      Read More
  • Cambodia
    • In Cambodia: Ethnic groups

      …exposed to successive waves of Indian influence and, in the 8th century ce, to Indo-Malayan influence, perhaps including immigration from Java. Immigrations of Tai peoples occurred from the 10th to the 15th century, of Vietnamese beginning in the 17th century, and of Chinese in the 18th and 19th centuries.

      Read More
    • In Cambodia: Cultural life

      …Khmer empire owed much to Indian influence, but its achievements also represented original contributions to Asian civilization. The magnificent architecture and sculpture of the Angkor period (802–1432), as seen in the temple complexes at Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom, marked a high point of Khmer creativity. Following the capture of…

      Read More
    • In Cambodia: Funan and Chenla

      Indian influences were the most important in Cambodia’s early history during the first centuries ce, when Chinese and Indian pilgrims and traders stopped along the coasts of present-day Cambodia and Vietnam and exchanged silks and metals for spices, aromatic wood, ivory, and gold. Written sources…

      Read More
  • Central Asia
    • In history of Central Asia: Early eastern peoples

      >India. In its heyday, under Kujula Kadphises (Qiu Juique) during the 1st century ce, this empire extended from the vicinity of the Aral Sea to Varanasi in the Gangetic Plain and southward as far as Nashik, near modern Mumbai. The Kushan were thus able to…

      Read More
  • China
    • In China: Western challenge, 1839–60

      …China trade with traffic in Indian opium. After monopolizing the opium trade in 1779, the East India Company’s government began to sell the drug at auction to private British traders in India, who shipped it to buyers in China. The silver acquired from the sale of opium in China was…

      Read More
    • In China: Readjustment and reaction, 1961–65

      From 1959 to 1962 both India and China, initially as a by-product of the uprising in Tibet, resorted to military force along their disputed border. On Oct. 12, 1962, a week before the Chinese moved troops into disputed border territories, Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru stated that the army was…

      Read More
    • In Tibet: Tibet since 1900

      …1959 intensified China’s disagreements with India, which had given asylum to the Dalai Lama. In 1962 Chinese forces proved the efficiency of the new communications they had established in Tibet by invading northeastern Assam, although they soon withdrew.

      Read More
    • In education: Introduction of Buddhism

      …and sent a mission to India to seek more knowledge and bring back Buddhist literature. Thereafter Indian missionaries as well as Chinese scholars translated Buddhist scriptures and other writings into Chinese.

      Read More
    • In education: The ancient period to the 12th century

      …the civilizations of China and India had a profound effect on both the spiritual life and the education of the Japanese. Toward the 6th century the assimilation of Chinese civilization became more and more rapid, particularly as a result of the spread of Confucianism. Buddhism was also an important intellectual…

      Read More
  • Colombo Plan
    • In Colombo Plan

      …discussions by the governments of India, Pakistan, Ceylon, Australia, New Zealand, and Great Britain. The United States, Japan, and a number of Southeast Asian, East Asian, and Pacific countries joined later. The plan came into full operation in 1951. Its name was changed following the end of participation

      Read More
  • Commonwealth
    • In Commonwealth

      …independence, beginning with that to India in 1947, and required a redefinition of the Commonwealth. In 1947 India and Pakistan became members of the Commonwealth, the first with chiefly non-European populations. In 1948 Burma (Myanmar) became independent and rejected membership. In 1949 India announced its intention to become a republic,…

      Read More
    • In dominion

      India was the first country to enter into such an arrangement, and by the 1990s it had been joined by most of the other Commonwealth nations. See also Commonwealth.

      Read More
  • diplomacy
    • In diplomacy: India

      Ancient India was home to an equally sophisticated but very different diplomatic tradition. This tradition was systematized and described in the Artha-shastra (one of the oldest books in secular Sanskrit literature) by Kautilya, a clever and reputedly unscrupulous scholar-statesman who helped the

      Read More
  • East India Company
    • In East India Company

      …defeat of the Portuguese in India (1612) won them trading concessions from the Mughal Empire. The company settled down to a trade in cotton and silk piece goods, indigo, and saltpetre, with spices from South India. It extended its activities to the Persian Gulf, Southeast Asia, and East Asia.

      Read More
  • Fiji
    • In Fiji: Demographic trends

      …indigenous Fijians were outnumbered by Indians. However, after the government was overthrown in 1987, many Indians fled to Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, and Fijians regained a plurality. With rapid urbanization, especially on the fringes of Suva, came the emergence of squatter settlements and some social problems. The disparities of…

      Read More
    • In Fiji: History

      …promoted the introduction of indentured Indian labourers and investment by an Australian concern, the Colonial Sugar Refining Company, to establish sugar plantations and processing mills. Indian migrants were encouraged to become permanent settlers at the conclusion of their contracts, even though little land was available for sale and the migrants’…

      Read More
  • France
    • In France: Commitment to modernization

      …as well, in North America, India, Africa, and the Caribbean.

      Read More
  • Indonesia
    • In Indonesia: The arrival of Hindu religious conceptions

      but by Brahmans from India who taught Shaivism and the message of personal immortality. Sanskrit inscriptions, attributed to the 5th and 6th centuries, have been found in eastern Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo), a considerable distance from the international trade route, and also in western Java. They reveal that Indian literati,…

      Read More
  • Iran
    • In ancient Iran: The nobles and the nomads

      …drawn toward the conquest of India—Alexander was confronted by two human factors that were of the greatest importance for the future of his empire. The first of these was the powerful local aristocracy of this part of the Achaemenian Empire, which held enormous properties and dominated the indigenous population. The…

      Read More
  • Kashmir region dispute
    • In Kashmir

      …the subject of dispute between India and Pakistan since the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947. The northern and western portions are administered by Pakistan and comprise three areas: Azad Kashmir, Gilgit, and Baltistan, the last two being part of a territory called the Northern Areas. Administered by India…

      Read More
    • In Mohammad Ayub Khan

      …United States began to rearm India after China’s invasion of northern India in 1962, Ayub established close relations with China and received substantial military aid from it. In the meantime, Pakistan’s dispute with India over Jammu and Kashmir worsened, culminating in the outbreak of war in 1965. After two weeks…

      Read More
  • Kenya
    • In Kenya: The Uganda railway and European settlement

      Thousands of Indian labourers were brought into the protectorate to construct the railway. Although most of these labourers returned to India after their contracts were completed, some remained. The opening of the railway encouraged Indian traders who had been living nearer the coast to penetrate farther into…

      Read More
  • Malaysia
    • In Malaysia: Prehistory and the rise of Indianized states

      …century ce, a time when Indian traders and priests began traveling the maritime routes, bringing with them Indian concepts of religion, government, and the arts. Over many centuries the peoples of the region, especially those within the royal courts, synthesized Indian and indigenous ideas, making selective use of Indian models—including…

      Read More
  • Mughal empire and Islamic world
    • In Islamic world: Foundation by Bābur

      When Bābur turned toward northern India, it was ruled from Delhi by the Lodī sultans, one of many local Turkic dynasties scattered through the subcontinent. In 1526 at Pānīpat, Bābur met and defeated the much larger Lodī army. In his victory he was aided, like the Ottomans at Chāldirān, by…

      Read More
  • Myanmar
    • In Myanmar: History

      …trade route between China and India passed through Myanmar’s borders. Merchant ships from India, Sri Lanka, and even farther west converged on its ports, some of which also were the termini of the portage routes from the Gulf of Thailand across the narrow Isthmus of Kra on the Malay Peninsula.…

      Read More
    • In Myanmar: The colonial economy

      …controlled wholesale trade and by Indian and Chinese merchants who controlled retail trade. With land values and rice prices soaring, the Indian moneylenders foreclosed mortgages at the earliest opportunity, especially when the Great Depression disrupted trade.

      Read More
  • Nepal
    • In Nepal: Industry and trade

      …of Nepal’s trade is with India. China and the United States are also trade partners of some significance. Attempts have been made to diversify trade through agreements with such countries as Japan, South Korea, Pakistan, the United States, Germany, Poland, and China. The state trading agency, National Trading Limited, has…

      Read More
    • In Nepal: External relations, 1750–1950

      The British withdrawal from India in 1947 deprived the Ranas of a vital external source of support and exposed the regime to new dangers. Anti-Rana forces, composed mainly of Nepalese residents in India who had served their political apprenticeship in the Indian nationalist movement, formed an alliance with the…

      Read More
  • Pakistan
    • In aggression

      … and Indonesia in 1947, between India and Pakistan in 1948, between Israel and its neighbours in 1949, between Israel, Great Britain, France, and Egypt in 1956, and between Israel, Jordan, and Egypt in 1970. None of these states was at the time declared an aggressor. On the other hand, Japan…

      Read More
    • In Pakistan: The Muslim League and Mohammed Ali Jinnah

      …the Muslim minority in an India dominated by essentially Hindu authority. Declaring Islam was endangered by a revived Hindu assertiveness, Jinnah and the league posited a “two-nation theory” that argued Indian Muslims were entitled to—and therefore required—a separate, self-governing state in a reconstituted subcontinent.

      Read More
    • In Pakistan: Civil war

      …in exile took root in India just across the East Pakistani border.

      Read More
  • Portugal
    • In Francisco de Almeida

      …the first viceroy of Portuguese India.

      Read More
    • In Portugal: Conquest and exploration

      …Africa and the seaway to India. In July 1497 Vasco da Gama set sail with four ships on the first expedition to India. It reached Calicut (Kozhikode) on the southwestern coast of India the following spring, and the survivors made their way back to Lisbon in the autumn of 1499…

      Read More
    • In Portugal: The Salazar regime

      The determination of the Indian government to annex Portuguese India led to a severing of diplomatic relations (August 1955) and to mass invasions of the Portuguese possessions by Indian passive resisters. Portugal disputed but effectively lost the enclaves of Dadra and Nagar Haveli to India (despite a ruling by…

      Read More
  • Southeast Asia
    • In history of Southeast Asia: Influence of China and India

      From India, however, there is no evidence of conquests, colonization, or even extensive migration. Indians came to Southeast Asia, but they did not come to rule, and no Indian power appears to have pursued an interest in controlling a Southeast Asian power from afar, a factor…

      Read More
  • Sri Lanka
    • In Sri Lanka: History

      …way to the island from India, and Indian influence pervaded such diverse fields as art, architecture, literature, music, medicine, and astronomy.

      Read More
    • In Sri Lanka: Peace accord and discord

      …receptive to initiatives by the Indian government. After prolonged negotiations, an accord signed between India and Sri Lanka on July 29, 1987, offered the Tamils an autonomous integrated province in the northwest within a united Sri Lanka. Later that year, Tamil was recognized as an official language (alongside Sinhalese) by…

      Read More
  • Ur
    • In Ur: Succeeding dynasties, 21st–6th century bce

      …had been in touch with India, at least indirectly. Personal seals of the Indus Valley type from the 3rd dynasty and the Larsa period have been found at Ur, while many hundreds of clay tablets show how the foreign trade was organized. The “sea kings” of Ur carried goods for…

      Read More

leaders

  • Alexander the Great
    • In Alexander the Great: Invasion of India

      In early summer 327 Alexander left Bactria with a reinforced army under a reorganized command. If Plutarch’s figure of 120,000 men has any reality, however, it must include all kinds of auxiliary services, together with muleteers, camel drivers, medical corps, peddlers, entertainers, women, and…

      Read More
    • In ancient Greek civilization: The conquest of Bactria and the Indus valley

      India was the objective in 327, though Alexander did not reach the Indus valley until 326, after passing through Swāt Cas from the district of the Kābul River. In 326, at the great Battle of the Hydaspes (Jhelum), he defeated the Indian king Porus in…

      Read More
  • Aurangzeb
    • In Aurangzeb

      …March 3, 1707), emperor of India from 1658 to 1707, the last of the great Mughal emperors. Under him the Mughal Empire reached its greatest extent, although his policies helped lead to its dissolution.

      Read More
  • Bābur
    • In Bābur

      >India. Bābur, a descendant of the Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan and also of the Turkic conqueror Timur (Tamerlane), was a military adventurer, a soldier of distinction, and a poet and diarist of genius, as well as a statesman.

      Read More
  • Bentinck
    • In Lord William Bentinck

      …of Bengal (1828–33) and of India (1833–35). An aristocrat who sympathized with many of the liberal ideas of his day, he made important administrative reforms in Indian government and society. He reformed the finances, opened up judicial posts to Indians, and suppressed such practices as suttee, or widow burning, and…

      Read More
  • Burke
    • In Edmund Burke: Political life

      …his labours, was that of India. The commercial activities of a chartered trading concern, the British East India Company, had created an extensive empire there. Burke in the 1760s and ’70s opposed interference by the English government in the company’s affairs as a violation of chartered rights. However, he learned…

      Read More
  • Clive
    • In Robert Clive

      …service of the British East India Company.

      Read More
    • In United Kingdom: Conflict abroad

      …two most profitable regions of India for European traders. The year 1757, as a consequence, is often cited as the beginning of Britain’s supremacy over India, the start of Calcutta’s significance as the headquarters of the East India Company, and the beginning of the end of French influence on the…

      Read More
  • Cornwallis Island
    • In Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess and 2nd Earl Cornwallis

      …he accepted the governor-generalship of India. Before leaving office on August 13, 1793, he brought about a series of legal and administrative reforms, notably the Cornwallis Code (1793). By paying civil servants adequately while forbidding them to engage in private business, he established a tradition of law-abiding, incorruptible British rule…

      Read More
  • Curzon of Kedleston
    • In Lord Curzon

      …London), British statesman, viceroy of India (1898–1905), and foreign secretary (1919–24) who during his terms in office played a major role in British policy making.

      Read More
  • Dalhousie
    • In James Andrew Broun Ramsay, marquess and 10th earl of Dalhousie

      …Dalhousie Castle), British governor-general of India from 1847 to 1856, who is accounted the creator both of the map of modern India, through his conquests and annexations of independent provinces, and of the centralized Indian state. So radical were Dalhousie’s changes and so widespread the resentment they caused that his…

      Read More
  • Disraeli
    • In Benjamin Disraeli: Second administration

      …Victoria the title empress of India. There was much opposition, and Disraeli would have gladly postponed it, but the queen insisted. For some time his poor health had made leading the Commons onerous, so he accepted a peerage, taking the titles earl of Beaconsfield and Viscount Hughenden of Hughenden, and…

      Read More
  • Gama
    • In Vasco da Gama: The first voyage

      …on the southwest coast of India, was taken aboard. After a 23-day run across the Indian Ocean, the Ghats Mountains of India were sighted, and Calicut was reached on May 20. There da Gama erected a padrão to prove he had reached India. The welcome of the Zamorin, the Hindu…

      Read More
  • Gandhi, Indira
    • In Indira Gandhi

      …(born November 19, 1917, Allahabad, India—died October 31, 1984, New Delhi), politician who served as prime minister of India for three consecutive terms (1966–77) and a fourth term from 1980 until she was assassinated in 1984.

      Read More
  • Gandhi, Mohandas
    • In Mahatma Gandhi

      …India—died January 30, 1948, Delhi), Indian lawyer, politician, social activist, and writer who became the leader of the nationalist movement against the British rule of India. As such, he came to be considered the father of his country. Gandhi is internationally esteemed for his doctrine of nonviolent protest (satyagraha) to…

      Read More
  • Halifax
    • In Edward Frederick Lindley Wood, 1st earl of Halifax

      …he was appointed viceroy of India and raised to the peerage as Baron Irwin. His term of office in India (1925–29) coincided with a period of intense nationalist ferment among Hindus and Muslims alike, but his own deep concern with religious faith (like his father, he was a devout High…

      Read More
  • Hardinge of Penshurst
    • In Charles Hardinge, 1st Baron Hardinge

      …British diplomat and viceroy of India who improved British relations in India and was instrumental in securing India’s support for Great Britain in World War I.

      Read More
  • Lansdowne
    • In Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice, 5th marquess of Lansdowne

      …viceroy of Canada and of India, secretary for war, and foreign secretary.

      Read More
  • Lytton
    • In Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st earl of Lytton

      …Disraeli appointed Lytton governor-general of India. During his service there, Lytton was concerned primarily with India’s relations with Afghanistan. At the time of his appointment, Russian influence was growing in Afghanistan, and Lytton had orders to counteract it or to secure a strong frontier by force. When negotiations failed to…

      Read More
  • Macaulay
    • In Thomas Babington Macaulay, Baron Macaulay: Administration in India

      In 1834 Macaulay accepted an invitation to serve on the recently created Supreme Council of India, foreseeing that he could save from his salary enough to give him a competence for life. He took his sister Hannah with him and reached India at a…

      Read More
  • Mayo
    • In Richard Southwell Bourke, 6th earl of Mayo

      …his service as viceroy of India, where he improved relations with Afghanistan, conducted the first census, turned a deficit budget into a surplus, and created a department for agriculture and commerce.

      Read More
  • Mountbatten
    • In Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten

      …and the last viceroy of India. He had international royal-family background; his career involved extensive naval commands, the diplomatic negotiation of independence for India and Pakistan, and the highest military defense leaderships.

      Read More
  • Nehru
    • In Jawaharlal Nehru

      …first prime minister of independent India (1947–64), who established parliamentary government and became noted for his neutralist (nonaligned) policies in foreign affairs. He was also one of the principal leaders of India’s independence movement in the 1930s and ’40s.

      Read More
  • Northbrook
    • In Thomas George Baring, 1st earl of Northbrook

      …Admiralty (1857–58) and undersecretary for India (1859–61; 1868–72) and for war (1861–66).

      Read More
  • Osman Ali
    • In Osman Ali

      …Ali refused to submit to Indian sovereignty in 1947 when Britain withdrew. Appealing to the special alliance he claimed with the British, he placed his case for the full independence of his state before the United Nations. He rejected an Indian ultimatum that he surrender his authority but, in September…

      Read More
  • Pitt the Elder
    • In William Pitt, the Elder: Leadership during Seven Years’ War

      He seized upon America and India as the main objects of British strategy: he sent his main expeditions to America, to ensure the conquest of Canada, and supported the East India Company and its “heaven-born general,” Robert Clive, in their struggle against the French East India Company.

      Read More
  • Pitt the Younger
    • In William Pitt, the Younger: Pitt’s first ministry, 1783–1801

      Fox’s East India Bill had been defeated, but the problems it was designed to solve remained. Britain’s increased possessions in India made it necessary for the administration there to be supervised by the government rather than be left in the hands of the commercial East India Company.…

      Read More
  • Reading
    • In Rufus Daniel Isaacs, 1st marquess of Reading

      As viceroy of India (1921–26) during a turbulent period of Indian nationalism, Reading increasingly resorted to summary measures, although he preferred conciliation. He imprisoned two Muslim leaders in 1921 and Mahatma Gandhi in 1922. He also used force against the Moplahs (Muslim separatists in the Madras Presidency) and…

      Read More
  • Ripon
    • In George Frederick Samuel Robinson, 1st marquess of Ripon

      …Lord Lytton as viceroy of India in April 1880 on Gladstone’s return to power. Reversing some policies of his predecessor, he ended the Second Afghan War by recognizing ʿAbdor Raḥmān Khan as emir of Afghanistan and by evacuating the Indo-British expeditionary forces from that country in 1881. He liberalized India’s…

      Read More
  • Wellesley
    • In Richard Colley Wellesley, Marquess Wellesley

      … and a commissioner of the India Board of Control.

      Read More