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India is a very vast
nation geographically; it forms the meeting ground between the East
and the West and hence an important destination to conduct trade
with the Western nations. This point in particular, attracted many
a foreign invaders to lay hands over this nation - known for her
rich culture, wealth as well as tradition. India has always seen
a variety of religions taking birth in different parts of the country
an as a result, a natural tolerance grew for different groups following
different religion types. However, as evil follows good, rifts took
birth too. And one has been seeing bloodshed over matters of religious
bias time and again.
India has seen a variety
of rulers including Persians, Greeks, Chinese nomads, Arabs, Portuguese,
British and other raiders all of whom conquered over the local Hindu
kingdoms who invariably survived their depradations, living out
their own sagas of conquest and collapse.
All the while, these
local dynasties built upon the roots of a culture well established
since the time of the first invaders, the Aryans. The discovery
of India's most ancient civilization literally happened by accident.
In the mid-1800's, British engineers who were busy constructing
a railway line between Karachi and Punjab, found ancient, kiln-baked
bricks along the path of the track. This discovery was however treated
as a little more than curiosity unless archaeologists later revisited
the site in the 1920's and determined that the bricks were over
5000 years old.
Close on heels came the
discovery of two important cities: Harappa on the Ravi river, and
Mohenjodaro on the Indus. The civilization that laid the bricks,
one of the world's oldest, was known as the Indus. People belonging
to this creed were highly sophisticated and had a written language.
Dating back to 3000 BC, they originated in the south and moved north,
building complex, mathematically-planned cities. Some of these towns
were almost three miles in diameter and contained as many as 30,000
residents. These ancient municipalities had granaries, citadels,
and even household toilets. In Mohenjodaro, a mile-long canal connected
the city to the sea, and trading ships sailed as far as Mesopotamia.
At its height, the Indus civilization extended over half a million
square miles across the Indus valley river, and though it existed
at the same time as the ancient civilizations of Egypt and Sumer,
it far outlasted them.
As far as the history
of invaders is concerned, the first group to invade India were the
Aryans, who came from the north in about 1500 BC. They were primarily
warriors and conquerors. They brought along with them strong cultural
traditions that still remain in force till date. They spoke and
wrote in a language called Sanskrit, which was later used in the
first documentation of the Vedas.
The Aryans lived along
the Indus and introduced themselves to the caste system thus sowing
the seeds of Indian religions. They inhabited the northern regions
for about 700 years, then moved further south and east when they
started developing iron tools and weapons. Eventually, they settled
in the Ganges valley and built large kingdoms throughout a greater
part of northern India.
It was in 500 B.C. that
Persian kings Cyrus and Darius decided upon expanding their reign
eastward and conquered the ever-prized Indus Valley. However, the
Persian influence was marginal as compared to that of the Aryans.
This happened because Persians could occupy the Indian land for
only a period of 150 years. Compared to the Aryans, the Persian
influence was marginal, perhaps because they were only able to occupy
the region for a relatively brief period of about 150 years.
The Greeks in turn conquered
the Persians under leadership of Emperor Alexander, who swept through
the country as far as the Beas River, where he defeated king Porus
backed by an army of 200 elephants in 326 BC. The tireless, charismatic
conqueror wanted to extend his empire even further eastward, but
his own troops (undoubtedly exhausted) refused to continue.
Alexander returned home,
leaving behind garrisons to keep the trade routes open. While the
Persians and Greeks subdued the Indus Valley and the northwest,
Aryan-based kingdoms continued developing in the East. In the 5th
century BC, Siddhartha Gautama founded the religion of Buddhism,
a profoundly influential work of human thought still espoused by
many worldwide.
Next in line came the
king known as Chandragupta who swept back through the country from
Magadha (Bihar) and conquered his way well into Afghanistan. This
was the beginning of one of India's greatest dynasties, the Maurya
dynasty. The leadership and foresight of the great king Ashoka (268-31
BC), hrlped the Mauryan empire conquer almost the entire subcontinent,
extending as far as Mysore in the south. When Ashoka conquered Orissa,
however, his army shed so much blood that the repentant king gave
up warfare forever and converted to Buddhism. As dedicated a missionary
as a king he was, Ashoka spread Buddhism to a greater part of central
Asia. His rule marked the zenith of glory of the Maurya empire,
that collapsed only a century afer the death of the mighty emperor.
Things began changing
a little after the demise of the Maurya dynasty when regions under
the Mauryan dynasty began breaking into smaller parts belomging
to different dynasties. The Greeks returned in 150 BC and conquered
Punjab, and by this time Buddhism was becoming so influential that
the Greek king Menander became a Buddhist himself. The local kingdoms
enjoyed relative autonomy for the next few hundred years, occasionally
fighting (and often losing to) invaders from the north and China,
who seemed to come and go like the monsoons. Unlike the Greeks,
the Romans never made it to India, preferring to expand west instead.
Chandragupta II founded
the Imperial Gupta dynasty in 319 AD. He conquered the entire north
and consolidated the entire area into his empire. He spread his
roots in the south of India too to as far as the Vindya mountains.
When the reign of the Gupta clan came to an end, a golden age of
six thriving and separate kingdoms ensued, and at this juncture
some of the most incredible temples in India were constructed in
Bhubaneshwar, Konarak, and Khahurajo. It was time of relative stability,
and cultural developments progressed on all fronts for hundreds
of years, until the dawn of the Muslim era.
Arab traders started
visiting the western coast ever since 712, but it wasn't until 1001
that the Muslim world began to make its impact felt. In that year,
Arab armies swept down the Khyber pass and hit like a storm. Under
the leadership of Mahmud of Ghazi, they raided just about every
other year for 26 years. They returned home each time, leaving behind
their trail in the form of some ruined cities, decimated armies,
and probably a very edgy native population. Then they more or less
vanished behind the mountains again for nearly 150 years, and India
once again went paved way with destiny.
But the Muslims knew
India was still there, waiting with all its riches. They returned
in 1192 under Mohammed of Ghor, and this time they meant to stay.
Ghor's armies laid waste to the Buddhist temples of Bihar, and by
1202 he had conquered the most powerful Hindu kingdoms along the
Ganges. When Ghor died in 1206, one of his generals, Qutb-ud-din,
ruled the far north from the Sultanate of Delhi, while the southern
majority of India was free from the invaders.
Turkish kings ruled the
Muslim acquisition until 1397, when the Mongols invaded under Timur
Lang (Tamerlane) and ravaged the entire region. One historian wrote
that the lightning speed with which Timur Lang's armies struck Delhi
was prompted by their desire to escape the stench of rotting corpses
they were leaving behind them. Islamic India fragmented after the
brutal devastation Timur Lang left in Delhi, and it was every Muslim
strongman for himself.
This however changed
in 1527, when the Mughal (Persian for Mongol) monarch Babur came
into power. Babur was a ruler of his kind. He hailed from Kabul
and loved poetry, gardening and so on. He even wrote cultural treatises
on the Hindus he conquered, and took notes on local flora and fauna.
Afghan princes in India asked for his help in 1526, and he conquered
the Punjab and quickly asserted his own claim over them by taking
Delhi.
This sowed the roots
of the Mughal dynasty, whose six emperors would comprise most influential
of all the Muslim dynasties in India. Babur died in 1530, leaving
behind Humayun who was absolutely unlike the father. Humayun's own
son, Akbar, however, would be the greatest Mughal ruler of all.
Unlike his grandfather, Akbar was more warrior than scholar, and
he extended the empire as far south as the Krishna river.
Akbar had a certain level
of religious tolerence and got married to a Hindu princess, thus
establishing a tradition of cultural acceptance that would contribute
greatly to the success of the Mughal rule. And the Mughal reign
saw many a leaders change seat as time elapsed. In the year 1605,
Akbar was succeeded by his son Jahangir, who passed the expanding
empire along to his own son Shahjahan in 1627.
Shah Jahan left behind
the colossal monuments of the Mughal empire though he spent much
of his time subduing Hindu kingdoms to the south. The monuments
included among others the Taj Majal (the tomb of his favorite wife),
the Pearl Mosque, the Royal Mosque, and the Red Fort. Shah Jahan's
campaigns in the south and his flare for extravagant architecture
increased taxes thus bringing distress to his subjects. Due to the
prevailing conditions, his own son imprisoned him, seeking power
for himself in 1658.
Aurungzebe was very
unlike his predecessors and wanted to eradicate indigenous traditions,
thus, his intolerance prompted fierce local resistance. Though he
expanded the empire to include nearly the entire subcontinent, he
could never totally subdue the Mahrathas of the Deccan, who resisted
him until his death in 1707.
In this pretext, the
legendary figure of Shivaji, a symbol Hindu resistance and nationalism.
Aurungzebe's three sons disputed over succession, and the Mughal
empire crumbled, just as the Europeans were beginning to flex their
own imperialistic muscles.
Next in turn were the
Portuguese, who had traded in Goa as early as 1510, and later founded
three other colonies on the west coast in Diu, Bassein, and Mangalore.
In 1610, the British chased away a Portuguese naval squadron, and
the East India Company created its own outpost at Surat. This small
outpost marked the beginning of a remarkable presence that lasted
for as long as 300 years and eventually dominated the entire subcontinent.
As the British started
gaining power, they began to compete with the Portuguese, the Dutch,
and the French. Through a combination of outright combat and deft
alliances with local princes, the East India Company gained control
of all European trade in India by 1769. A seemingly impossible task,
it was done through a highly effective and organized system called
the Raj.
Treaties and agreements
were signed with native princes, and the Company gradually increased
its role in local affairs. The Raj helped build infrastructure and
trained natives for its own military, though in theory they were
meant for India's own defense. In 1784, after financial scandals
in the Company alarmed British politicians, the Crown assumed half-control
of the Company, beginning the transfer of power to royal hands.
In 1858, a rumor spread
among Hindu soldiers that the British were greasing their bullets
with the fat of cows and pigs, the former sacred animals to Hindus
and the latter unclean animals to Muslims. A year-long rebellion
against the British ensued. Although the Indian Mutiny was unsuccessful,
it prompted the British government to seize total control of all
British interests in India in 1858, finally establishing a seamless
imperialism.
The British Raj that
entered India as traders gradually expanded their rule and grew
in power so much so that the princely states of the country saw
their native leaders only as nominal heads. The British had gained
control of the country by viewing it as a source of profit. Infrastructure
had been developed, administration established, and an entire structure
of governance erected.
The British needed a
heavy manpower that they sought from India. However, Indian personnel
were never allowed any authority in the jobs they earned. They British
wanted the reigns of power to be solely under their control. The
Indians didn't appreciate this much, and as the 20th century dawned
there were increasing movements towards self-rule. Along with the
desire for independence, tensions between Hindus and Muslims had
also been developing over the years. The Muslims had always been
a minority, and the prospect of an exclusively Hindu government
made them wary of independence; they were as inclined to mistrust
Hindu rule as they were to resist the Raj.
Then came in 1915, Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi, calling for unity between the two groups in an
astonishing display of leadership that would eventually lead the
country to independence. Gandhian views on non-violence, his impact
on the people nationwide and his ability to gain independence through
a totally non-violent mass movement made him one of the most remarkable
leaders the world has ever known. He practised what he preached
wearing homespun clothes to weaken the British textile industry
and orchestrating a march to the sea, where demonstrators proceeded
to make their own salt in protest against the British monopoly.
Indians gave him the
name Mahatma, or Great Soul. The British promised that they would
leave India by 1947. But independence came at great cost. While
Gandhi was leading a largely Hindu movement, Mohammed Ali Jinnah
was represented the Muslim group called the Muslim League. Jinnah
advocated the division of India into two separate states: Muslim
and Hindu, and he was able to achieve his goal. When the British
left, they created the separate states of Pakistan and Bangladesh,
and violence erupted when stranded Muslims and Hindu minorities
in the areas fled in opposite directions. It took only a a few weeks,
to kill as many as in the course of the greatest migration of human
beings ever in the history of this world.
At that point of time,
Gandhiji was ageing and as he couldn't see innocent lives being
lost for a wrong cause he vowed to fast until the violence stopped;
it did when his health faced serious threat. At the same time, the
British returned and helped restore order. Excepting Kashmir, which
is still a disputed area (and currently unsafe for tourists), the
division reached stability.
India's history since
independence has been marked by disunity and intermittent periods
of virtual chaos. In 1948, on the eve of independence, Gandhi was
assassinated by a Hindu fanaticand Jawarhalal Nehru, became the
first Prime Minister of free India. After Nehru, India has seen
the leadership of many a leaders, some powerful, some subtle, and
so on.
However, what is worth
a mention is the fact that India as a country has progressed though
slowly and in the present we can boast of producing some of the
best software professional brains that this world has.
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