About the Book
Book 1: Introductory
Book 2: Culture in
Transition
Book 3: Early Historic
Societies: 6th Century B.C. to 4th Century A.D.
Book 4:
Early Medieval Societies
Book 5:
Medieval Society-1
Book 1: Introductory
History is a continuous process of a dialogue
between the present and the past, the historian and her/his sources. It is this
basic process that allows an interpretative process to happen. Thus the issue
of context then takes a primacy in such a dialogue. In the introductory bloc we
thus begin the process with the first basic premise of any historical dialogue,
the sources of history.
The first unit of block one deals with the
reconstruction of the ancient society with specific reference to the sources of
history. The emphasis in this unit is on sources. The pertinent question in the
entire write up is with regard to the nature of the source. What is or rather
what constitutes a source is one of the most discussed issues in debates over
what is history.
As E.H. Carr has argued, a source is what a
historian can make out to be. Given such a wide-ranging framework, it indeed
becomes important to deal with what constitutes a source of history in a
precise manner. The sources of history are rather well known, and they range
from the epigraphy and numismatics to archaeology and texts. The moot question
really is as to how to interpret the source and from which perspective. It is
this issue that has been dealt with extensively in the first unit with regard
to the sources mentioned above. The contested territory in the field of history
is the interpretative regime, the various strands of interpretations that
constitute a historical write-up. Though all the history is interpretative, the
question of context cannot be left aside; historical interpretation cannot be
left in the domain of total relativity. Thus we can now decisively question the
colonial interpretation of our past as well as the historical interpreting of
the same by some obscurantist forces. This is so because the historical
interpretation is a serious endeavor where the interpretative regime has to be
grounded in the multicausal contemporary evidence. The first unit deals with
all those issues.
We then move on to the realm of the neolithic
'revolution', the domestication of the plants and animals and away from the
original affluent society that the hunting gathering stage was to the early
farming societies. It is a misconception perpetuated by the colonial
anthropology that equated the 'tribal' society with the hunting and gathering
stage of the evolution of the society. As Professor Shereen Ratnagar has aptly
argued that this stage of society is reached only with the domestication of
plants and animals and the beginning of settlements, an event that has been
linked to the emergence of what IS now known as the 'tribal' society.
Pastoralism has been a neglected field of study
in the South Asian context. This lack of interest however is slightly offset in
the context of the pre and proto-historical phases of our past. Pastoralisni
refers to that segment of society that is totally dependent for its food on its
herds. We do get evidences of pastoralism in the pro to historic stage of our
past, but a lot needs to be done in that area. We also need to understand that
pastoralism and agriculture are not to be posited as binary opposites,
rather both together constitute a subsistence regime, where one may be a
predominant element. That pastoralism is an important element that influenced
the unfolding of the past to the present is something that cannot be denied.
The Harappan culture constitutes the first wave
of Urbanization in the sub-continent. It was truly a Bronze Age culture.
Excavations at Mohanjodaro, Harappa, Lothal, Kalibangan and many other sites
have unfolded the complex nature of the society and polity of the Harappan
phase. The distinctive sense of the culture can be analyzed in the form of the
uniform systems of weights and measures and the consolidated nature of
artifacts that constituted the truly mature Harappan phase.
Book 2: Culture in Transition
This Block contains the following four units:
Unit 1 Societies reflected in vedic literature: Kinship, Varna and Jari, ritual forms of
property, ideology and social structure;
Unit 2 Iron age
cultures;
Unit 3 Socio-religious ferment in north-India:
Buddhism and Jainism; and
Unit 4 Emergence of
Buddhist central and peninsular India.
The first phase of urbanization comes to an end
with the decline and the transformation of the Harappan culture. This also marks
the phase of the beginnings of the early history. We do still rely on the
archaeological sources here, but now we get the textual sources, the Rigveda
and a host of the Vedic literature, the epics and the early Buddhist and Jain
sources along with the first epigraphic data and the inscriptions of the
Mauryan king Asoka. This Block covers the timeline that starts with almost 1500
BC and ends around the third century AD. It also locates the beginning of the
second phase of urbanization in the Indian Subcontinent and the emergence of
powerful thought processes. The Vedic, Buddhist and the Jain
streams in the Indian social context. It oversees the transformation of
a lineage society into a state system and then the emergence of the imperial
domains. It in effect also analyses the transformation of a society from its
'tribal' phase to a more complex caste based system. It also looks at the
transformations of chalcolithic cultures to iron age.
However, the term iron-age can be controversial as the advent of metal and its
use mayor may not herald the beginning of a transformative processes. Finally, this Block analyses the' emergence of Buddhism and Jainism
as two extremely important and powerful forces in the Indian subcontinent.
The first Unit in the Block gives an overview
of the society as reflected in the textual sources. However the Unit also
considers the archaeological sources and does attempt a logical link between
the two. This Unit discusses the nature of society from around 1500 BC to about
800 BC in terms of social structures, religious forms, economy and polity. It
further analyses the vedic literature in terms of the
nature of the sources as well the historical information that can be culled out
of it. The gradual transformative processes of a society from
being cattle pastoralists to a more settled life of an agrarian economic base
is also described. The various lineage groups vying with each other was a hallmark of the so-called 'tribal society' of that
period. We get to learn the conflicts and their resolutions, and the way the
society was reflected in the sources both textual and archaeological. The unit
also touches on the issue of the 'aryans', a linguistic term and a problem that
cannot be resolved easily.
The next unit is about the' iron age'. In the
context of early India, the use of iron is linked to an argument regarding the
change-in the lineage society itself and that it, amongst other things paved
the way for the early state formation in the gangetic valley and ushered in the
second phase of urbanization in the sub continent. This unit discusses the
spread, use and implications of the same in the context of the 'iron age' in
India. It looks at a period that is dated from about 1000 BC to about 100 AD.
It is in this timeline that the iron technology spreads in the sub-continent
and peninsular India. One major point made in the unit is the weak link between
the technology and the state, as opposed to the Bronze Age. We also need to
understand that the so-called 'iron age' has been questioned in terms of the
use and spread of technology itself.
Book 3: Early Historic Societies: 6th Century B.C. to 4th
Century A.D.
This block deals with a conglomeration of
themes. We hope to illustrate the nature of early historic societies through
them. The first unit i.e. Unit 8 deals with what is called the second
urbanisation in India. It seeks to familiarise you with the nature of this
urbanisation and show you how in this process merchants and artisans emerged as
distinct social groups. The unit will also cover the process of formation of
guilds as distinct organisation of merchants, artisans and craftsmen, which
emerged in this period. We will also show you how the caste system accommodated
different groups, which came up in this period and strengthened itself. Unit 9
deals with the vexed question of Chaityas and Viharas and their interaction
with tribal groups. It examines the general social milieu within which Chaityas
and Viharas get established. Then it investigates the notion of a tribe.
Finding evidence of the interaction with tribes insufficient it posits that we
need greater commitment to research to find such linkages. The Unit 10 on early
Tamil society takes us southwards and examines the Tamil region and its
cultures in some detail. It brings out the valuable evidences of Hero stones to
highlight the importance of the cult of hero worship in the early historical
society in the Tamil region. Unit 11 focuses on the diverse practices of
marriage by comparing the Vedic and the Buddhist sources. How the practice of
Marriage was influenced by the changing notions of Vama and Jati is further
examined in this unit.
Book 4: Early Medieval Societies
This Block deals with the story of the move
towards Early Medieval Societies. We start with the transition of Early
Medieval Societies and the related debates. The question of Urban Decline is
discussed with the help of views of different scholars on this theme. The next
two Units deal with proliferation and consolidation of castes and jatis in this
period and with the question of religion in society. The discussions take into
account varieties of local developments. The meta-generalisations are treated
with a healthy questioning attitude in these Units and the regional and local
is brought into focus.
Book 5: Medieval Society-1
The village in India has always been the focus
of various social, political, economic and academic discussions. It has been
usually perceived that the clue to the understanding of Indian society lies in
the village. The centrality of villages in Indian history can be seen in the
administrative reports of the colonial administrators, political philosophy of
Mahatma Gandhi, the pragmatic reports of early government officers' and
writings of various sociologists, anthropologists and historians. The
discussions have been usually on the themes of village community, system of
land tenures, structure of landed relations and rights and the nature of rural society, The ideas of the Indian village that we come across
in these writings are varied:
a) Indian villages are seen as idyllic
communities, characterized by brotherhood and equality. The idea of village
solidarity and collectiveness is strongly embedded in the rural society.
b) Indian villages are self-sufficient and are not
dependant on any kind of economic interactions with the outside world.
c) The villages are characterized by static,
unchanging rural societies and the changes outside the village boundaries have
no effect within the village. Therefore, the village is an isolated unit and inward
looking.
d) The village has been primarily a revenue
extracting unit. for the state. Therefore, the
relationship between the village and the state is based on the mechanisms of
surplus extraction only.
However, the various inscriptions, records, and
documents of the vi lIage and the state in the
pre-rnodern period clearly reflect the complex nature of the village and the
rural society. The rural society was not only sensitive to the changes within
the village, it was also responding and reacting to the changes and
developments outside the village, the larger milieu in which it was situated.
Neither was it self-sufficient, interactions were taking place beyond the
village boundaries with the neighbouring as well as far off villages on an
extensive scale. Various studies have termed the villages as "little
communities" having constant interaction with "greater
communities" and both are considered to be necessary for each other's
existence. Social inequity and not equality was the characteristic feature of
the village society. The relations between the rural classes
was based upon caste, class, and power structures,' primarily related to
land, and thus creating a complex agrarian hierarchy, that was both
complementary and contradictory.
In this Block we will discuss the rural society
and its various aspects and what do they reflect on the nature of the village
itself in the medieval period. The subject matter of this Block will revolve
around:
1) Historiography on the nature of village, rural
society and the village community
2) Village Community
3) Characteristics of the rural society
4) Rural society in North India
5) Rural society in Deccan
6) Rural society in South India
We will try to analyse various components
within these themes to present you an outline of the rural society and village
community in medieval India.
Contents
|
Block 1 Introductory |
|
UNIT 1 |
Reconstructing Ancient Society with Special
Reference to Sources |
7 |
UNIT 2 |
Hunting-Gathering, Early Farming Society,
Pastoralism |
16 |
UNIT 3 |
Harappan Civilization and Other Chalcolithic
Cultures |
26 |
|
Block 2 Cultures in Transition |
|
UNIT 4 |
Societies Represented in Vedic Literature |
5 |
UNIT 5 |
Iron Age Cultures |
14 |
UNIT 6 |
Socio-Religious Ferment in North India:
Buddhism and Jainism |
24 |
UNIT 7 |
Emergence of Buddhist Central and Peninsular
India |
33 |
|
Suggested Readings |
42 |
|
Block 3 Early Historic Societies: 6th Century B.C. To
4th Century A.D. |
|
UNIT 8 |
Urban Classes: Traders and Artisans,
Extension of Agricultural Settlements |
5 |
UNIT 9 |
Chaityas, Viharas and their Interaction with
Tribal Groups |
13 |
UNIT 10 |
Early Tamil Society - Regions and their
Cultures and Cult of Hero Worship |
19 |
UNIT 11 |
Marriage and Family Life, Notions of
Untouchability, Changing Patterns in Varna and Jati |
33 |
|
Suggested Readings |
42 |
|
Block 4 Early Medieval Societies |
|
UNIT 12 |
Transition to Early Medieval Societies |
5 |
UNIT 13 |
The Problem of Urban Decline: Agrarian
Expansion, Land Grants and Growth) If Intermediaries |
13 |
UNIT 14 |
Proliferation and Consolidation of Castes and
Jatis |
20 |
UNIT 15 |
Religion in Society |
27 |
|
Suggested Readings |
38 |
|
Block 5 Medieval Society-1 |
|
|
Historiography of the Rural Society |
5 |
UNIT 16 |
Village Community |
9 |
UNIT 17 |
Rural Society: North India |
17 |
UNIT 18 |
Rural Society: Peninsular India |
31 |
|
Suggested Readings |
50 |
About the Book
Book 1: Introductory
Book 2: Culture in
Transition
Book 3: Early Historic
Societies: 6th Century B.C. to 4th Century A.D.
Book 4:
Early Medieval Societies
Book 5:
Medieval Society-1
Book 1: Introductory
History is a continuous process of a dialogue
between the present and the past, the historian and her/his sources. It is this
basic process that allows an interpretative process to happen. Thus the issue
of context then takes a primacy in such a dialogue. In the introductory bloc we
thus begin the process with the first basic premise of any historical dialogue,
the sources of history.
The first unit of block one deals with the
reconstruction of the ancient society with specific reference to the sources of
history. The emphasis in this unit is on sources. The pertinent question in the
entire write up is with regard to the nature of the source. What is or rather
what constitutes a source is one of the most discussed issues in debates over
what is history.
As E.H. Carr has argued, a source is what a
historian can make out to be. Given such a wide-ranging framework, it indeed
becomes important to deal with what constitutes a source of history in a
precise manner. The sources of history are rather well known, and they range
from the epigraphy and numismatics to archaeology and texts. The moot question
really is as to how to interpret the source and from which perspective. It is
this issue that has been dealt with extensively in the first unit with regard
to the sources mentioned above. The contested territory in the field of history
is the interpretative regime, the various strands of interpretations that
constitute a historical write-up. Though all the history is interpretative, the
question of context cannot be left aside; historical interpretation cannot be
left in the domain of total relativity. Thus we can now decisively question the
colonial interpretation of our past as well as the historical interpreting of
the same by some obscurantist forces. This is so because the historical
interpretation is a serious endeavor where the interpretative regime has to be
grounded in the multicausal contemporary evidence. The first unit deals with
all those issues.
We then move on to the realm of the neolithic
'revolution', the domestication of the plants and animals and away from the
original affluent society that the hunting gathering stage was to the early
farming societies. It is a misconception perpetuated by the colonial
anthropology that equated the 'tribal' society with the hunting and gathering
stage of the evolution of the society. As Professor Shereen Ratnagar has aptly
argued that this stage of society is reached only with the domestication of
plants and animals and the beginning of settlements, an event that has been
linked to the emergence of what IS now known as the 'tribal' society.
Pastoralism has been a neglected field of study
in the South Asian context. This lack of interest however is slightly offset in
the context of the pre and proto-historical phases of our past. Pastoralisni
refers to that segment of society that is totally dependent for its food on its
herds. We do get evidences of pastoralism in the pro to historic stage of our
past, but a lot needs to be done in that area. We also need to understand that
pastoralism and agriculture are not to be posited as binary opposites,
rather both together constitute a subsistence regime, where one may be a
predominant element. That pastoralism is an important element that influenced
the unfolding of the past to the present is something that cannot be denied.
The Harappan culture constitutes the first wave
of Urbanization in the sub-continent. It was truly a Bronze Age culture.
Excavations at Mohanjodaro, Harappa, Lothal, Kalibangan and many other sites
have unfolded the complex nature of the society and polity of the Harappan
phase. The distinctive sense of the culture can be analyzed in the form of the
uniform systems of weights and measures and the consolidated nature of
artifacts that constituted the truly mature Harappan phase.
Book 2: Culture in Transition
This Block contains the following four units:
Unit 1 Societies reflected in vedic literature: Kinship, Varna and Jari, ritual forms of
property, ideology and social structure;
Unit 2 Iron age
cultures;
Unit 3 Socio-religious ferment in north-India:
Buddhism and Jainism; and
Unit 4 Emergence of
Buddhist central and peninsular India.
The first phase of urbanization comes to an end
with the decline and the transformation of the Harappan culture. This also marks
the phase of the beginnings of the early history. We do still rely on the
archaeological sources here, but now we get the textual sources, the Rigveda
and a host of the Vedic literature, the epics and the early Buddhist and Jain
sources along with the first epigraphic data and the inscriptions of the
Mauryan king Asoka. This Block covers the timeline that starts with almost 1500
BC and ends around the third century AD. It also locates the beginning of the
second phase of urbanization in the Indian Subcontinent and the emergence of
powerful thought processes. The Vedic, Buddhist and the Jain
streams in the Indian social context. It oversees the transformation of
a lineage society into a state system and then the emergence of the imperial
domains. It in effect also analyses the transformation of a society from its
'tribal' phase to a more complex caste based system. It also looks at the
transformations of chalcolithic cultures to iron age.
However, the term iron-age can be controversial as the advent of metal and its
use mayor may not herald the beginning of a transformative processes. Finally, this Block analyses the' emergence of Buddhism and Jainism
as two extremely important and powerful forces in the Indian subcontinent.
The first Unit in the Block gives an overview
of the society as reflected in the textual sources. However the Unit also
considers the archaeological sources and does attempt a logical link between
the two. This Unit discusses the nature of society from around 1500 BC to about
800 BC in terms of social structures, religious forms, economy and polity. It
further analyses the vedic literature in terms of the
nature of the sources as well the historical information that can be culled out
of it. The gradual transformative processes of a society from
being cattle pastoralists to a more settled life of an agrarian economic base
is also described. The various lineage groups vying with each other was a hallmark of the so-called 'tribal society' of that
period. We get to learn the conflicts and their resolutions, and the way the
society was reflected in the sources both textual and archaeological. The unit
also touches on the issue of the 'aryans', a linguistic term and a problem that
cannot be resolved easily.
The next unit is about the' iron age'. In the
context of early India, the use of iron is linked to an argument regarding the
change-in the lineage society itself and that it, amongst other things paved
the way for the early state formation in the gangetic valley and ushered in the
second phase of urbanization in the sub continent. This unit discusses the
spread, use and implications of the same in the context of the 'iron age' in
India. It looks at a period that is dated from about 1000 BC to about 100 AD.
It is in this timeline that the iron technology spreads in the sub-continent
and peninsular India. One major point made in the unit is the weak link between
the technology and the state, as opposed to the Bronze Age. We also need to
understand that the so-called 'iron age' has been questioned in terms of the
use and spread of technology itself.
Book 3: Early Historic Societies: 6th Century B.C. to 4th
Century A.D.
This block deals with a conglomeration of
themes. We hope to illustrate the nature of early historic societies through
them. The first unit i.e. Unit 8 deals with what is called the second
urbanisation in India. It seeks to familiarise you with the nature of this
urbanisation and show you how in this process merchants and artisans emerged as
distinct social groups. The unit will also cover the process of formation of
guilds as distinct organisation of merchants, artisans and craftsmen, which
emerged in this period. We will also show you how the caste system accommodated
different groups, which came up in this period and strengthened itself. Unit 9
deals with the vexed question of Chaityas and Viharas and their interaction
with tribal groups. It examines the general social milieu within which Chaityas
and Viharas get established. Then it investigates the notion of a tribe.
Finding evidence of the interaction with tribes insufficient it posits that we
need greater commitment to research to find such linkages. The Unit 10 on early
Tamil society takes us southwards and examines the Tamil region and its
cultures in some detail. It brings out the valuable evidences of Hero stones to
highlight the importance of the cult of hero worship in the early historical
society in the Tamil region. Unit 11 focuses on the diverse practices of
marriage by comparing the Vedic and the Buddhist sources. How the practice of
Marriage was influenced by the changing notions of Vama and Jati is further
examined in this unit.
Book 4: Early Medieval Societies
This Block deals with the story of the move
towards Early Medieval Societies. We start with the transition of Early
Medieval Societies and the related debates. The question of Urban Decline is
discussed with the help of views of different scholars on this theme. The next
two Units deal with proliferation and consolidation of castes and jatis in this
period and with the question of religion in society. The discussions take into
account varieties of local developments. The meta-generalisations are treated
with a healthy questioning attitude in these Units and the regional and local
is brought into focus.
Book 5: Medieval Society-1
The village in India has always been the focus
of various social, political, economic and academic discussions. It has been
usually perceived that the clue to the understanding of Indian society lies in
the village. The centrality of villages in Indian history can be seen in the
administrative reports of the colonial administrators, political philosophy of
Mahatma Gandhi, the pragmatic reports of early government officers' and
writings of various sociologists, anthropologists and historians. The
discussions have been usually on the themes of village community, system of
land tenures, structure of landed relations and rights and the nature of rural society, The ideas of the Indian village that we come across
in these writings are varied:
a) Indian villages are seen as idyllic
communities, characterized by brotherhood and equality. The idea of village
solidarity and collectiveness is strongly embedded in the rural society.
b) Indian villages are self-sufficient and are not
dependant on any kind of economic interactions with the outside world.
c) The villages are characterized by static,
unchanging rural societies and the changes outside the village boundaries have
no effect within the village. Therefore, the village is an isolated unit and inward
looking.
d) The village has been primarily a revenue
extracting unit. for the state. Therefore, the
relationship between the village and the state is based on the mechanisms of
surplus extraction only.
However, the various inscriptions, records, and
documents of the vi lIage and the state in the
pre-rnodern period clearly reflect the complex nature of the village and the
rural society. The rural society was not only sensitive to the changes within
the village, it was also responding and reacting to the changes and
developments outside the village, the larger milieu in which it was situated.
Neither was it self-sufficient, interactions were taking place beyond the
village boundaries with the neighbouring as well as far off villages on an
extensive scale. Various studies have termed the villages as "little
communities" having constant interaction with "greater
communities" and both are considered to be necessary for each other's
existence. Social inequity and not equality was the characteristic feature of
the village society. The relations between the rural classes
was based upon caste, class, and power structures,' primarily related to
land, and thus creating a complex agrarian hierarchy, that was both
complementary and contradictory.
In this Block we will discuss the rural society
and its various aspects and what do they reflect on the nature of the village
itself in the medieval period. The subject matter of this Block will revolve
around:
1) Historiography on the nature of village, rural
society and the village community
2) Village Community
3) Characteristics of the rural society
4) Rural society in North India
5) Rural society in Deccan
6) Rural society in South India
We will try to analyse various components
within these themes to present you an outline of the rural society and village
community in medieval India.
Contents
|
Block 1 Introductory |
|
UNIT 1 |
Reconstructing Ancient Society with Special
Reference to Sources |
7 |
UNIT 2 |
Hunting-Gathering, Early Farming Society,
Pastoralism |
16 |
UNIT 3 |
Harappan Civilization and Other Chalcolithic
Cultures |
26 |
|
Block 2 Cultures in Transition |
|
UNIT 4 |
Societies Represented in Vedic Literature |
5 |
UNIT 5 |
Iron Age Cultures |
14 |
UNIT 6 |
Socio-Religious Ferment in North India:
Buddhism and Jainism |
24 |
UNIT 7 |
Emergence of Buddhist Central and Peninsular
India |
33 |
|
Suggested Readings |
42 |
|
Block 3 Early Historic Societies: 6th Century B.C. To
4th Century A.D. |
|
UNIT 8 |
Urban Classes: Traders and Artisans,
Extension of Agricultural Settlements |
5 |
UNIT 9 |
Chaityas, Viharas and their Interaction with
Tribal Groups |
13 |
UNIT 10 |
Early Tamil Society - Regions and their
Cultures and Cult of Hero Worship |
19 |
UNIT 11 |
Marriage and Family Life, Notions of
Untouchability, Changing Patterns in Varna and Jati |
33 |
|
Suggested Readings |
42 |
|
Block 4 Early Medieval Societies |
|
UNIT 12 |
Transition to Early Medieval Societies |
5 |
UNIT 13 |
The Problem of Urban Decline: Agrarian
Expansion, Land Grants and Growth) If Intermediaries |
13 |
UNIT 14 |
Proliferation and Consolidation of Castes and
Jatis |
20 |
UNIT 15 |
Religion in Society |
27 |
|
Suggested Readings |
38 |
|
Block 5 Medieval Society-1 |
|
|
Historiography of the Rural Society |
5 |
UNIT 16 |
Village Community |
9 |
UNIT 17 |
Rural Society: North India |
17 |
UNIT 18 |
Rural Society: Peninsular India |
31 |
|
Suggested Readings |
50 |