CH 7 Sec 2 - Trade Spreads Indian Religions and Culture PDF
CH 7 Sec 2 - Trade Spreads Indian Religions and Culture PDF
CH 7 Sec 2 - Trade Spreads Indian Religions and Culture PDF
Mahayana
Theravada
stupa
Brahma
Vishnu
Shiva
Kalidasa
Silk Roads
SETTING THE STAGE The 500 years between the Mauryan and Gupta
empires was a time of upheaval. Invaders poured into India, bringing new ideas
and customs. In response, Indians began to change their own culture.
TAKING NOTES
By 250 B.C., Hinduism and Buddhism were Indias two main faiths. (See Chapter
3.) Hinduism is a complex polytheistic religion that blended Aryan beliefs with
the many gods and cults of the diverse peoples who preceded them. Buddhism
teaches that desire causes suffering and that humans should overcome desire by
following the Eightfold Path. Over the centuries, both religions had become
increasingly removed from the people. Hinduism became dominated by priests,
while the Buddhist ideal of self-denial proved difficult for many to follow.
A More Popular Form of Buddhism The Buddha had stressed that each per-
son could reach a state of peace called nirvana. Nirvana was achieved by rejecting the sensory world and embracing spiritual discipline. After the Buddha died,
his followers developed many different interpretations of his teachings.
Although the Buddha had forbidden people to worship him, some began
to teach that he was a god. Some Buddhists also began to believe that many
people could become Buddhas. These potential Buddhas, called bodhisattvas
(BOHdihSUHTvuhz), could choose to give up nirvana and work to save
humanity through good works and self-sacrifice. The new ideas changed
Buddhism from a religion that emphasized individual discipline to a mass religion that offered salvation to all and allowed popular worship.
By the first century A.D., Buddhists had divided over the new doctrines. Those
who accepted them belonged to the Mahayana (MAHhuhYAHnuh) sect. Those
who held to the Buddhas stricter, original teachings belonged to the Theravada
(THEHRuhVAHduh) sect. This is also called the Hinayana (HEEnuhYAHnuh)
sect, but Theravada is preferred.
These new trends in Buddhism inspired Indian art. For example, artists carved
huge statues of the Buddha for people to worship. Wealthy Buddhist merchants
who were eager to do good deeds paid for the construction of stupasmounded
stone structures built over holy relics. Buddhists walked the paths circling the
stupas as a part of their meditation. Merchants also commissioned the carving of
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cave temples out of solid rock. Artists then adorned these temples with beautiful
sculptures and paintings.
A Hindu Rebirth Like Buddhism, Hinduism had become remote from the people.
By the time of the Mauryan Empire, Hinduism had developed a complex set of sacrifices that could be performed only by the priests. People who werent priests had
less and less direct connection with the religion.
Gradually, through exposure to other cultures and in response to the popularity
of Buddhism, Hinduism changed. Although the religion continued to embrace hundreds of gods, a trend toward monotheism was growing. Many people began to
believe that there was only one divine force in the universe. The various gods represented parts of that force. The three most important Hindu gods were Brahma
(BRAHmuh), creator of the world; Vishnu (VIHSHnoo), preserver of the world;
and Shiva (SHEEvuh), destroyer of the world. Of the three, Vishnu and Shiva were
by far the favorites. Many Indians began to devote themselves to these two gods. As
Hinduism evolved into a more personal religion, its popular appeal grew.
(KAHleeDAHsuh). He may have been the court poet for Chandra Gupta II.
Kalidasas most famous play is Shakuntala. It tells the story of a beautiful girl who
falls in love with and marries a middle-aged king. After Shakuntala and her husband are separated, they suffer tragically because of a curse that prevents the king
from recognizing his wife when they meet again. Generations of Indians have continued to admire Kalidasas plays because they are skillfully written and emotionally stirring.
Southern India also has a rich literary tradition. In the second century A.D., the
city of Madurai in southern India became a site of writing academies. More than
2,000 Tamil poems from this period still exist. In the following excerpt from a
third-century poem, a young man describes his sweetheart cooking him a meal:
PRIMARY SOURCE
There dwells my sweetheart, curving and lovely,
languid of gaze, with big round earrings,
and little rings on her tiny fingers.
She has cut the leaves of the garden plantain
and split them in pieces down the stalk
to serve as platters for the meal.
Her eyes are filled with the smoke of cooking.
Her brow, as fair as the crescent moon,
is covered now with drops of sweat.
She wipes it away with the hem of her garment
and stands in the kitchen, and thinks of me.
ANONYMOUS TAMIL POET, quoted in The Wonder That Was India
194 Chapter 7
Drawing
Conclusions
Why did the
changes in
Buddhism and
Hinduism make
these religions
more popular?
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900
Number of new movies
produced in 2000
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
India
United
States
Japan
Hong
Kong
France
Drawing
Conclusions
What achievements by Indian
mathematicians are
used today?
advance of science. Because sailors on trading ships used the stars to help them
figure their position at sea, knowledge of astronomy increased. From Greek
invaders, Indians adapted Western methods of keeping time. They began to use a
calendar based on the cycles of the sun rather than the moon. They also adopted a
seven-day week and divided each day into hours.
During the Gupta Empire (A.D. 320 to about 500), knowledge of astronomy
increased further. Almost 1,000 years before Columbus, Indian astronomers proved
that the earth was round by observing a lunar eclipse. During the eclipse, the
earths shadow fell across the face of the moon. The astronomers noted that the
earths shadow was curved, indicating that the earth itself was round.
Indian mathematics was among the most advanced in the world. Modern numerals, the zero, and the decimal system were invented in India. Around A.D. 500, an
Indian named Aryabhata (AHRyuhBUHTuh) calculated the value of pi () to four
decimal places. He also calculated the length of the solar year as 365.3586805
days. This is very close to modern calculations made with an atomic clock. In
medicine, two important medical guides were compiled. They described more than
1,000 diseases and more than 500 medicinal plants. Hindu physicians performed
surgeryincluding plastic surgeryand possibly gave injections.
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ph
Charax
R.
Persepolis
Persian
Gulf
ng
Harmozia
ARABIA
EGYPT
Pattala
Omana
Barbaricum
es
R.
Luoyang
120E
Ch'ang-an (Xian)
Taxila
g
an
Ji . )
g
R
a n ze
Ch ngt
a
CHINA
(Y
Ga
Aelana
tes
Herat
PERSIA
u s R.
Eu
Gaza
R.
80E
R.
Ecbatana
Ctesiphon
ra
Alexandria
gH
an
Hu e l l o w
(Y
Merv
nd
40E
T i g ris
Antioch
Tyre
Caspian
Sea
To Rome
Pataliputra
Nanhai
(Guangzhou)
GUPTA EMPIRE
Tropic
of Cancer
Barygaza
Red
Sea
Adulis
KINGDOM
OF
AKSUM
Trade route
Products traded
Arabian
Sea
Cane
B ay of
B e ngal
Muziris
0
0
Sopatma
500 Miles
Oc Eo
Takkola
1,000 Kilometers
Cloth
Grains
Ivory
Metal
Precious stones
Silk
Slaves
Spices
Timber
Tortoise shell
0 Equator
1. Movement Since people usually trade for goods they do not make themselves, which
products were most likely to travel from Gupta India to Arabia?
2. Movement How far did trade goods travel to get from Luoyang in China to Alexandria
in Egypt?
India and regions as distant as Africa and Sumeria began more than 4,000 years
ago. Trade expanded even after the Mauryan Empire ended around 185 B.C.
Overland Trade, East and West Groups who invaded India after Mauryan rule
ended helped to expand Indias trade to new regions. For example, Central Asian
nomads told Indians about a vast network of caravan routes known as Silk Roads.
These routes were called the Silk Roads because traders used them to bring silk
from China to western Asia and then on to Rome.
Once Indians learned of the Silk Roads, they realized that they could make great
profits by acting as middlemen. Middlemen are go-betweens in business transactions. For example, Indian traders would buy Chinese goods and sell them to
traders traveling to Rome. To aid their role as middlemen, Indians built trading stations along the Silk Roads. They were located at oases, which are fertile spots in
desert areas.
Sea Trade, East and West Sea trade also increased. Traders used coastal routes
around the rim of the Arabian Sea and up the Persian Gulf to bring goods from
India to Rome. In addition, traders from southern India would sail to Southeast
Asia to collect spices. They brought the spices back to India and sold them to
merchants from Rome. Archaeologists have found hoards of Roman gold coins in
southern India. Records show that some Romans were upset about the amount of
gold their countrymen spent on Indian luxuries. They believed that to foster a
healthy economy, a state must collect gold rather than spend it.
196 Chapter 7
Hypothesizing
How might
the Asian trade
routes have spread
Indian sciences
and math to other
civilizations?
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2
1
INDIA
Analyzing Causes
Why would
dangerous conditions make bankers
charge higher
interest on loans
for trade?
SECTION
ASSESSMENT
TERMS & NAMES 1. For each term or name, write a sentence explaining its significance.
Mahayana
Theravada
stupa
Brahma
Vishnu
Shiva
Kalidasa
Silk Roads
MAIN IDEA
Trade
INTERNET ACTIVITY
Use the Internet to research Indian trade today. Then prepare a chart
listing the type of goods bought and sold and the trading partner for
each type.
INTERNET KEYWORD
India trade