Gupta Era Gold Coin
Continued from Idea of India - 1
The Golden Age
After the Mauryan Empire fell to the vagaries of time, weak successors and rise of feudal overlords,
For a while, this slide towards feudal chaos was stemmed by
the rise of a new Indian Imperial dynasty – Guptas who ruled over the
Indo-Gangetic plain between 320- 550 A.D. A strong unitary empire which
promoted trade, the arts, science, medicine, astronomy and scholarship in
general, gave rise to what later historians have described as a `Golden Age’,
helping weld better, people still divided by fault-lines of caste, creed,
language towards “Indianness”.
It was never truly a political pan-Indian empire of the kind
that the Mauryans were able to establish. However, this empire of the North was
in some ways even better in carrying forward the idea of India by influencing
not only those within its boundaries but also the smaller though powerful
kingdoms of the Deccan as well as lands far away to the East. Exporting abroad India ’s thoughts, culture and religions and
projecting to these countries, the idea of an India ,
which for many in South East Asia became a
role model.
Sometime soon after Christ died, one of his apostles, St Thomas , was said to have landed in Southern
India , probably in a spice trading Dhow, to spread the word of
Jesus. Islam, was another religion not born in the sub-continent, borne again by
spice traders who travelled across the Indian Ocean
with the Monsoon winds, to the Malabar shores. Christianity and Islam preached
an egalitarian society different from the caste ridden Hindu four-fold’, created by religious and
social orthodoxy which abandoned the Early Vedic principle that caste would
determined by a man’s choice of profession
and instead turned into a rigid, divisive hereditary status in society. Both found roots in South
India , and were in turn `Indianised’ with adherents bringing in
Indian traditions into the rituals surrounding the new faiths.
Even before Thomas, Jews, had been visiting India
as traders and some had settled down as refugees and émigrés. Followers of
another religion, Zorastrianism, fled Iran after their faith was banished
there in the 10th century A.D. Both Zoroastrianism and Judaism were not proselytising religions, but
their adherents rapidly Indianised, adopting Indian customs, dress and
languages, over the centuries.
To come back to the Guptas, repeated invasions by Huns, who
were plundering almost every civilisation in Europe and Asia ,
near bankruptcy from a rash of military campaigns coupled with fiscal
profligacy saw the empire crumble and replaced again by a feudal order of
regional satraps who constantly jostled for influence and power among each
other. Trade suffered, scholarship was constricted, yet `Indianness’ flourished
as people moved long distances to survive the turbulent times, carrying with
them unitary cross currents amidst rising regionalism. Bengal
was ruled by Sena rulers, who claimed descent from military adventurers from
the Karnatic. `Gaud’ (Bengali) Brahmins travelled to dominate parts of North
India, Kannauji (from Kannauj in modern Uttar Pradesh) Brahmins and Kayasthas travelled
east to dominate Bengal’s society, Rajputs travelled long distances to grace
courts in Bihar and Orissa, to give a few examples of intra-Indian migrations
which despite the divisiveness of the times, helped promote unitary tendencies
in Indian culture and society.
Reform movements within the main religion of the country – Hinduism
– also tended to be pan-Indian, carrying with it not only religious messages but
also `One India’ stories. The Adi Shankaracharya (788-822 A.D) from Kalady in modern Kerala,
travelled the length and breadth of India to not only take his theological
message but also to unite people culturally. This man, often called the St Thomas Aquinas of
Indian thought, unified two seemingly different disparate philosophical doctrines
– Atman and Brahman, and through a brilliant debating tour of the country unified
warring sects within the Hindu-fold and re-established the Vedic foundations of
the religion.
But that was perhaps not his biggest contribution to India - The
four Mathas he set up in four parts
of the sub-continent brought rare socio-cultural unity at a time when the land
was riven by feudal overlords at constant war with each other, bent on creating
sub-nationalism. His disciples ran these mathas
and took the message of `One India’ to Himalayan principalities in the north,
through a Matha at Joshimath in Garwhal,
in the rich western coast through a Matha
at Dwarka in Gujarat, to the eastern kingdoms through a Matha at Puri and to the powerful South
through a Matha at Sringeri in the Karnataka.
7 comments:
Fantastic piece! If only our history teacher could have made history this simple to us! Sigh.. Of all these rulers/leaders and dynasties..which one do you think is most memorable?
Elizabeth, all dynasties had their good points and their bad ones, highs and lows, but of the emperors we have had, I would single out two - Ashoka and Akbar as men who deserve the addendum people at large have given them - the Great. They were truly rulers who were secular, ruled in an inclusive fashion, with minds which were able to conceive projects which would help not only their generation but those which came afterwards.
Except that pan-Indian identity as a political unity might not have been that strong till the later parts of the nineteenth century. Personal opinion only.
But fantastic piece. Without an iota of doubt. Would love to quote from here :-)
You have a point Muntasir, but the realisation that they were all Indians (Bharatiyas, whatever) was there, and thats what I am trying to bring out withi schoolish narration of history.:)
@Muntasir - Also if your read part 1 of this essay (there is a link at the begining) you will find that India was a united political entity even before Christ, projecting its soft power (culture, religion, trade) to South East and East Asia. Something we are trying to replicate today.
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