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Early Civilizations in India Chapter 3 Section 1.

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Presentation on theme: "Early Civilizations in India Chapter 3 Section 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Early Civilizations in India Chapter 3 Section 1

2 Mountains, Rivers and Plains Himalaya – Far north mountain range in India Ganges River – South of the Himalayas Indus River Valley – dry plateau that forms the backbone of modern day Pakistan Deccan Plateau – hilly and dry in the interior Eastern and Western Coasts are lush plains

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4 Seasonal wind pattern June through September winds come from the South and Southwest October through February winds blow from the north to the northeast

5 Harappa and Mohenjo Daro Cities were carefully planned  Main streets ran in a north south direction  Walled neighborhoods with narrow lanes separated the row of houses  Houses formed a grid pattern  Public wells  Bathrooms featured an advanced drainage system Wastewater flowed out to drains located under the streets then was carried to sewage pits beyond the city walls  Chutes took household trash from houses to street level garbage bins

6 Indus River Valley Civilizations ending is a mystery Gradual decay, floods, earthquakes, change in the course of the river Arrival of the Aryans Lived in tribal groups and had a strong warrior tradition Gradually moved eastward across India and gradually took over the Indus River Valley people

7 A New Way of Life North – wheat, barley and rice South – grain, vegetables, cotton, pepper, ginger and cinnamon Writing  Sanskrit – Indo-European language Vedas – early writings that tell of small kingdoms throughout India

8 Daily Life in Ancient Family was the basic unit in society Grandparents, parents, and children lived under the same roof Patriarchal  Oldest male had legal authority  Inherit property Children  Marriages were arranged Parents would support their daughters until marriage and then pay a dowry to the family of the man she married

9 Daily Life Suttee  Dead were placed on heaps of material called pyres which were set on fire  The wife was required to throw herself on her dead husband’s flaming pyre  If she did not she was held in disgrace

10 Aryans believed Society was divided into 4 varnas Top Level = Brahmins (priests) 2 nd Level = Kshatriyas (warriors) 3 rd Level = Vaisyas (commoners) 4 th Level = Sudras (peasants or servants) 5 th Level = Unmentionables Caste System Born into a caste and it determined what occupation you could have, who to marry, and what groups they could socialize with  Lowest level in Indian society were the Untouchables who were given menial tasks

11 Hinduism Believed in the existence of a single force in the universe = Brahman Yoga  Leave behind earthly life and join Brahman in a kind of dreamless sleep Most ordinary Indians could not relate to this ideal and came to have a number of human like gods and goddesses  Brahma – the creator  Vishnu – the preserver  Shiva – the destroyer

12 Principles of Hinduism Reincarnation  Rebirth  Gives hope to people especially those in the lower castes Karma  “what goes around comes around”  Dharma Requires people to do their duty which depends on their status in society

13 Buddhism Siddhartha Gautama – founder of Buddhism  Raised in luxury and at age 16 he married a princess and began to raise a family  At age 20 he noticed people suffering from illness, death and old age Decided to spend his life seeking the cure for human suffering  Practiced self denial but it took him very close to death  Turned to meditation and met enlightenment and his teachings became Buddhism

14 Principles of Buddhism Siddhartha denied the reality of the material world  Believed human sufferings were caused by their attachments to things in this world Nirvana – ultimate reality Four Noble Truths  Ordinary Life is full of suffering  This suffering is caused by our desire to satisfy ourselves  The way to end suffering is to end desire for selfish goals to see others as extensions of ourselves  The way to end desire is to follow the Middle Path

15 Middle Path Eightfold Path 1. Right view – know the 4 noble truths 2. Right intention – Need to know what we want 3. Right Speech – Speak truth and well of each other 4. Right Action – Do not: Kill, steal, like, unchaste, drugs or alcohol 5. Right Livelihood – Work that uplifts us and others 6. Right effort – Do not give up 7. Right Mindfulness – Keep our minds in control of our senses 8. Right Concentration – meditate to see the world in a new way


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