TNSCERT 6 HISTORY UNIT 5
5.VEDIC CULTURE IN NORTH INDIA AND MEGALITHIC CULTURE IN SOUTH INDIA
VEDIC AGE
- period between 1500 BCE - 600 BCE
- began with the arrival of Aryans
WHO WERE THE ARYANS?
- semi nomadic pastoralists, came from Central Asia
- speaking Indo-Aryan language
- did cattle rearing, also practised slash and burn agriculture
- During Rig Vedic times - the Aryan homeland was Punjab [Sapta Sindhu - the land of seven rivers]
- 1000 BCE - settled in Indo-Gangetic plain
SOURCES
VEDIC LITERATURE
- classified into Shrutis and Smritis
- SHRUTIS - eternal, means listening (or unwritten)
- comprise 4 vedas (Rig, Yajur, Sama, Atharva) Brahamanas, Aranyakas, Upanishads
- National Motto - Satyameva Jayate (Truth alone triumphs) is taken from Mundaka Upanishad
- SMRITIS - not eternal, means definite and written literature, teachings on religion such as Ithihasas, Puranas, Tantras, Agamas
- material remains from archaeological sites in Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan
VEDIC CULTURE
POLITY AND SOCIETY
- Kinship-based
- kula - basic unit of the polity, head - kulapati
- village (Grama), head - Gramani
- Group of villages - Vis, head - Vishayapati
- Rajan (king) and several tribal kingdoms (Rashtras) were [Bharatas, Matsyas, Puras]
KING
- Purohit (Chief Priest), Senani (the army chief) to assist the king
- King's power limitied by assemblies - Vidhata, Sabha [a council of elders], Samiti [assembly of people] and Gana
- Of these Vidhata, (the tribal assembly) was the oldest
- Hereditary kinship began to emerge
- Later Vedic period - Janas amalgamated to form Janapadas
- The importance of Samithi and Sabha diminished and the Vidhata completely disappeared
- Bali was a voluntary contribution of the people to the King (a tax - 1/6 of the agricultural produce or cattle for a person)
- The Kuru and Panchala kingdoms flourished
- large cities like Ayodhya, Indraprastha and Mathura also emerged
- Patriarchal
- Early Vedic society had 3 divisions [vis - general public, warrior class - kshatriyas, priestly class - Brahmanas]
- Later a rigid four-fold varna system developed (with skilled labourers - sudras)
- vedic age is evidenced by good number of texts(not adequate amount of material evidence)
STATUS OF WOMEN
- Women enjoyed some freedom earlier
- child marriage and sati unknown
- no bar on the remarriage of widows, no right to property
- later Vedic period - status of women declined
- Polygamy became common, widow remarriage was not encouraged
- Education was also denied
ECONOMIC LIFE
- occupation - pastoralism and agriculture
- main occupation - cattle rearing
- carpenters, chariot makers, potters, smiths, weavers and leather workers were there
- Ochre Coloured Pottery - attributed to this period
- Horses, cows, goats, sheep, oxen and dogs domesticated
- staple crop - Yava (barley)
- no mention of wheat or cotton in the Rig-Veda
- later period - they tamed elephants
- pottery - Painted Grey Ware Culture
- crops of wheat, rice and barley cultivated
- Barter system (exchange of goods) was prevalent
- They used Nishka, Satmana (gold coins), Krishnala (silver coins) for business transactions
RELIGION
- earlier worshipped Prithvi (earth), Agni (fire), Vayu (wind), Varuna (rain), Indra (Thunder)
- lesser female deities like Aditi (goddess of eternity) and Usha (appearance of dawn)
- Yajna centered, Idol worship - not yet come into existence
- lateron Indra and Agni lost their importance, Prajapathi (the creator), Vishnu (the protector), Rudra (the destroyer) became prominent
EDUCATION
GURUKULA SYSTEM OF EDUCATION
- The students received education through oral tradition meaning rote learning, and were required to memorise everything.
- The subjects of the study included the four Vedas, Ithihasas, Puranas, grammar, logic, ethics, astrology, maths and military science.
- Only Dvijas could be Shishyas. No women could have formal education
AGE-BASED ASHRAMAS
- Brahmacharya (Student Life)
- Grihastha (Married Life)
- Vanaprastha (Going to the forest to meditate)
- Sanyasa (Leading a life of an ascetic so as to attain Swarga
CONTEMPORARY CULTURE IN SOUTH INDIA AND TAMIL NADU
- Vedic period coincided with Chalcolithic cultures (chalco - copper)
- Though Chalcolithic culture was contemporary to mature Harappan phase, continued to exist
- later Vedic culture in north India and the Iron Age in south India belong to the same period.
- Towards the end of Iron Age, people stepped into what is known as Megalithic Culture (600 BCE and CE 100)
- Megalithic Period in ancient Tamilakam synchronised with the pre Sangam period
- The Black and Red Ware Pottery became the characteristic of the Megalithic period
MEGALITHIC IRON AGE IN TAMIL NADU
- Megalith is derived from Greek, (‘Megas’- great, ‘lithos’- stone)
- Using big stone slabs built upon the places of burial is known as Megalith
SOME OF THE MEGALITHIC IRON AGE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES IN TAMIL NADU
ADICHANALLUR - THOOTHUKUDI DISTRICT
- artefacts unearthed were Urns (large pottery jars), pottery of various kinds (Red Ware, Black Ware), iron implements, daggers, swords, spears and arrows, some stone beads and a few gold ornaments
- Bronze objects representing domestic animals and wild animals like tiger, antelope and elephant have been unearthed
KEEZHADI - SIVAGANGAI DISTRICT
- ASI excavated an ancient town dating to Sangam Age in Keezhadi village at Tirupathur taluk
- Excavations have produced evidence for brick buildings, and well laid – out drainage system
- Tamil – Brahmi inscription on pottery, beads of glass, carnelian and quartz, pearl, gold ornaments and iron objects, shell bangles, ivory dice have been unearthed
- In 2017, ASI sent two samples of these for Radio carbon dating to Beta Analytic, Florida, USA.
- They dated samples as 200 BCE
- Finds – Grave goods, glass beads (in red, white, yellow, blue and green), iron swords, pottery with Tamil Brahmi scripts, pots filled with rice, semi-precious metals such as quartz, carnelian, bangles made of glass and shell
- Iron sickle, pike, pot and tip of ploughs - the practice of rice cultivation in Tamil Nadu
PAIYAMPALLI - VELLORE DISTRICT
- Finds –Iron artefacts, along with Megalithic Black and Red Ware Pottery
- Evidence for iron smelting, dated 1000 BCE
KODUMANAL - ERODE DISTRICT
- identified with the Kodumanam of Pathitrupathu
- More than 300 pottery inscriptions in Tamil –Brahmi have been discovered
- Archaeologists have also discovered spindles, whorls (used for making thread from cotton) and pieces of cloth, along with tools, weapons, ornaments, beads, particularly carnelian
- Menhir found at burial site is assigned to the Megalithic period
MEGALITHIC MONUMENTS IN TAMIL NADU
- Megalithic system of burial - the dead body was placed in a big pot along with burial goods
- Dolmens - Megalithic tombs made of two or more upright stones with a single stone lying across the burial site
- Megalithic Dolmens - Veeraraghavapuram village (Kanchipuram district), Kummalamaruthupatti (Dindigul district), and in Narasingampatti, (Madurai district)
Great summarisation
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