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India’s First Civilizations Chapter 6, Section 1, page 194.

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Presentation on theme: "India’s First Civilizations Chapter 6, Section 1, page 194."— Presentation transcript:

1 India’s First Civilizations Chapter 6, Section 1, page 194

2 Chapter 6, Section 1 Objectives After this lesson, students will be able to: – describe how the climate and geography of India influenced the rise of civilization there. – explain how the Aryans conquered India and introduced new ideas and new technologies. – explain the caste system introduced by the Aryans.

3 The Land of India – page 195 subcontinent – large landmass that is part of a continent but distinct from it other important features: – the Himalaya Mountains – Ganges and Indus Rivers – Deccan Plateau – monsoons

4 The Land of India – page 195 monsoon – winds that blow one way in the summer and another way in the winter

5 The Land of India – page 195

6 India’s First Civilization – page 196 first Indian civilizations grew up near the Indus River – farmers and traders

7 Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro – page 196 Harappa – The Harappans were a peaceful people who farmed and traded with their neighbors. – advanced city planning including indoor toilets and garbage collection

8 Harappan Society – page 197 religion and politics closely connected? trade thrived one rare item: weapons decline – c. 1750 B.C. – tectonic shifts → earthquakes/floods? – soil exhaustion

9 The Aryans Invade – page 198

10 Aryans – nomadic herders who were expert horsemen – invaded Indus River Valley c. 1500 B.C. – eventually conquered everything short of the southern tip of India

11 The Aryans Bring Change – page 199 Aryan changes – iron plow – Sanskrit – written language developed by the Aryans – rajas – princes who led Aryan tribes

12 The Aryans Bring Change – page 199

13 Society in Ancient India – page 199 caste – a social group that someone is born into and cannot change – determines a person’s job, social group, and even marriage – Aryans used it to help control the people who outnumbered them

14 Society in Ancient India – page 199 pariahs – “untouchables,” who do work Indians consider unclean

15 The Role of Men and Women – page 201 men valued more than women by society – only boys could go to school or be educated gurus – teachers to boys from high caste families – arranged marriages (90% even today) – divorce not allowed; men could take a second wife if a couple could not have children – suttee – practice of high-caste women leaping into the cremation fires of their husbands refusing to do so was shameful

16 Chapter 6, Section 1 Questions 1.What makes India a subcontinent? 2.What is a monsoon? 3.What evidence suggests that the Harappans were probably a peaceful people? 4.How did the Aryans use the caste system to control the people they conquered? 5.What does the practice of suttee say about the relative values of men and women in ancient Indian culture?

17 Hinduism and Buddhism Chapter 6, Section 2, page 202

18 Chapter 6, Section 2 Objectives After this lesson, students will be able to: – explain how Hinduism grew out of the ancient beliefs of the Aryans. – describe why a new religion, Buddhism, appealed to many in India and other parts of Asia.

19 Hinduism – page 203 Hinduism – grew from a mixture of Aryan beliefs and those of the Harappans – all life considered sacred – third largest religion in the world

20 Hinduism – page 203 Hinduism – extremely complex – thousands of gods and goddesses; considered to be different parts of one universal spirit – the Brahman the Upanishads – ultimate goal for the soul is to be reunited with Brahman

21 Hinduism – page 204 Hinduism – reincarnation – the belief that a soul must pass through many lives to reach the Brahman – dharma – meaning “divine law,” that requires people to perform the duties of their caste – karma – the consequences of how a person lives his or her life

22 Who Is the Buddha? – page 205 Buddhism – founded by Siddhartha Gautama – Gautama was a prince who witnessed suffering. – decided to meditate on why people suffer – became known as the Buddha, means “Enlightened One ” – became popular because it rejected the caste system

23 Buddhism – page 205 Buddhism – religion that believes that the only way to stop suffering is to stop desire – Four Noble Truths – the heart of Buddha’s teaching 1.Life is full of suffering. 2.People suffer because they desire worldly things and self- satisfaction. 3.The way to end suffering is to stop desiring things. 4.The only way to stop desiring things is to follow the Eightfold Path.

24 Buddhism – page 206 The Eightfold Path 1. Know and understand the Four Noble Truths. 2. Give up worldly things and don’t harm others. 3. Tell the truth, don’t gossip, and don’t speak badly of others. 4. Don’t commit evil acts, like killing, stealing, or living an unclean life. 5. Do rewarding work. 6. Work for good and oppose evil. 7. Make sure your mind keeps your senses under control. 8. Practice meditation as a way of understanding reality.

25 Buddhism in Southeast Asia – page 206 Theraveda – “teachings of the elders”; Buddha seen as a teacher – not a god Mahayana – Buddha is seen as a god – theocracy – government by religious leaders

26 Chapter 6, Section 2 Questions 1.Explain how Hinduism developed. 2.What is reincarnation? 3.Who founded Buddhism? 4.What is the difference between an oligarchy, a democracy, and a theocracy?

27 India’s First Empires Chapter 6, Section 3, page 209

28 Chapter 6, Section 3 Objectives After this lesson, students will be able to: – describe how the Mauryan dynasty built India’s first great empire. – explain how the Gupta empire reunited much of northern India. – list the important contributions in literature, mathematics, and science made by the Mauryan and Gupta empires.

29 The Mauryan Dynasty – page 210 setup: Alexander’s invasion of and withdrawal from India Chandragupta Maurya founded the Mauryan Empire – achievements include a centralized government and a postal system

30 The Mauryan Dynasty – page 210 Asoka – rejected violence; first great Buddhist king – religious tolerance – stupas – Buddhist shrines have the shape of a dome or mound

31 The Gupta Empire – page 213 Chandragupta founded the Gupta Empire, during which the golden age of Indian culture came. – Hinduism was made the official religion.

32 Indian Literature and Science – page 214 Indian poetry – literature stresses dharma – Vedas – ancient hymns and prayers for religious ceremonies – epic: Mahabharata – longest poem in any written language Bhagavad Gita – (“Song of the Lord”) speaks of doing one’s duty

33 Indian Math and Science – page 215 important Indian contributions to math : – developed the idea of zero and a symbol for it – developed the symbols for the numerals 1-9 that we use today – invented mathematical algorithms (steps to solve a problem), which computer programmers use to tell computers what to do

34 important Indian contributions to science: – astronomy – mapped movement of the stars, the earth was round, the earth revolves around the sun – idea of atoms – medicine – could set broken bones and perform operations (even plastic surgery) Indian Math and Science – page 215

35 Chapter 6, Section 3 Questions 1.Name two achievements of the Mauryan Empire. 2.What is a stupa? 3.During which empire did the golden age of Indian culture come? 4.Name two ways that the Indians contributed to computer science.


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