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DR. MD. NEYAZ HUSSAIN ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR & HOD PG DEPARTMENT of HISTORY MAHARAJA COLLEGE, VKSU, ARA (BIHAR) Kalhana Is an Important Historian in Indian History
M.A HISTORY , SEM-3, PAPER CC:10 DR. MD. NEYAZ HUSSAIN ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR & HOD PG DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY MAHARAJA COLLEGE, VKSU, ARA (BIHAR) Kalhana is an important historian in Indian history. Probably, the best known history of India was produced by Kalhana, a Brahamana of Kashmir. He was the son of Kanpaka, a minister of King Harsha of Kashmir. Kanpaka is referred in Rajatarangini as dvarapati or the Lord of the Gates ; commander of the frontier troops. Kalhana was born in Parihaspura now known as Paraspore in the Baramulla district of Jammu & Kashmir. The 12th century A.D. this Kashmiri poet, wrote ‘Rajatarangini’- the river of kings which has been of great value for the study of the history of Kashmir. He started his work in 1148 A.D. and completed it within two years. For this work he used different sources. His access to minute details of contemporary court intrigues was almost direct: his father and uncle were both in the Kashmir court. Regarding the events of the past, Kalhana’s search for material was truly fastidious . He delved deep into such model works as the Harshacharita and the Brihat- samhita epics and used with commendable familiarity the local rajakatha s (royal chronicles) and such previous works on Kashmir as Nripavali by Kshemendra, Parthivavali by Helaraja, and Nilamatapurana . He made a critical study of the earlier works on the history of Kashmir. He displayed surprisingly advanced technical expertise for the time in his concern for unconventional sources. He looked up a variety of epigraphic sources relating to royal eulogies, construction of temples, and land grants; he studied coins, monumental remains, family records, and local traditions. -
The Hephthalite Numismatics
THE HEPHTHALITE NUMISMATICS Aydogdy Kurbanov 1. Introduction Arabic – Haital, Hetal, Heithal, Haiethal, Central Asia and neighbouring countries have a Heyâthelites. In Arabic sources the Hephtha- very old and rich history. A poorly-studied and in- lites, though they are mentioned as Haitals, tricate period of this region is the early medieval are sometimes also refered to as Turks. period (4th - 6th centuries AD). During this time, In the 4th - 6th centuries AD the territory of Cen- “The Great movement of peoples”, the migration tral Asia included at least four major political en- of nomadic peoples (Huns) from Asia to Europe, tities, among them Kushans, Chionites, Kidarites, took place. In South and Central Asia, great em- and Hephthalites. Discussions about the origins pires existed, including Sasanian Iran, Gupta and of these peoples still continue. Ideas vary from some small states. Across Central Asia, mysteri- the Hephthalites considered as part of the Hun ous new peoples appeared: the Hephthalites, the confederation to different other origins. It is also Kidarites and the Chionites, among others. Their uncertain whether the Hephthalites, the Kidarites origins are still debated. Some scholars suppose and the Chionites had a common or different ori- that they were part of a Hun confederation, while gins – that is, are they three branches of the same others suppose they had different origins. ethnic group or are they culturally, linguistically, Generally, the early research on the Hephthalites and genetically distinct from one another? was based only on written sources. They were The Hephthalites are well represented in their mentioned for the fi rst time in AD 361 at the siege coins. -
Compendium of World History Volume 2
COMPENDIUM OF WORLD HISTORY VOLUME 2 A Dissertation Presented to The Faculty of the Ambassador College Graduate School of Education In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy by Herman L. Hoeh 1963 1966, 1969 Edition TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Chapter I Early History of Germany Antiquity of the German Reich Germans Shape World Affairs The Answer Found Did the Assyrians Invade Europe? What Did Assyrians Look Like? Why Germans Call Themselves "Deutschen" What Language Did They Speak? Semitic by Race, Not Language Chapter II The Ancient Kings of the Germans The Early Settlers of Europe Kings of Ancient Germany Chapter III Abraham in Early European History Europe's Early History Suppressed Abraham in the Austrian Chronicle Chapter IV Jews Gain Power in Danube Civilization Jewish Kings from Austrian Chronicle End of Jewish Predominance Chapter V The Conquests of Odin and Danish History What the History of Denmark Reveals The Genealogy of Dan I "Hu the Mighty" The Kings of Denmark Denmark Enters Roman History Christianity Introduced on the Throne Chapter VI Scotland -- Key to History of New World What Historians Claim First Major Settlement Line of Judah in Scotland Earliest History of Scotland Early Line of Scottish Kings Kings of Cruithne Continued Chapter VII They Crossed the Atlantic The Little Ice Age Whites Did Not Become Indians American Indian Tradition Enter Votan Early Time of Migration Chronology of Mexico The History of Toltecs at Tullan The City-State of Culhaucan The Chichimecs at Texcoco -
Huna Origin of Gurjara Clans डा
डा. सशु ील भाटी Huna origin of Gurjara Clans (Key words- Gurjara, Huna, Varaha, Mihira, Alkhana, Gadhiya coin, Sassnian Fire altar) Many renowned historian like A. M. T. Jackson, Buhler, Hornle, V. A. Smith and William crook Consider the Gurjaras to be of Huna stock. The way in which inscriptions and literature records frequently bracket Gurjaras with the Hunas suggests that the two races were closely connected. There are evidences that the Gurjaras were originally a horde of pastoral nomads from the Central Asia whose many clans have Huna origin. Numismatic Evidences- Coins issued by Hunas and Gurjaras have remarkable similarity. In a way coins issued by Gurjaras are continuation of Huna coinage. Coins issued by Hunas and Gurjaras are characterized by motif of ‘Iranian fire altar with attendants’ and are copies of coins issued by Iranian emperors of Sassanian dyanasty. The inferences of Huna’s connection with Gurjaras is strongly supported by numismatic evidences. V. A. Smith has presented these evidences in his paper “The Gurjaras of Rajputana and Kannauj’ in these words, “The barbaric chieftains who led the greedy hordes known by the generic name of Huna to the plunder of the rich Indian plains did not trouble to invent artistic coin dies, and were content to issue rude imitations of the coinage of the various countries subdued. After the defeat of the Persian king Firoz in 484 A.D., the Huns chiefly used degraded copies of the Sassanian coinage, and in India emitted extensive series of coins obviously modelled on the Sassanian type, and consequently classified by numismatists as Indo-Sassanian. -
Era Abberations by Kalhan in Rajatarangini
ERA ABBERATIONS BY KALHAN IN RAJATARANGINI Brigadier Rattan Kaul {A gift to my dearest toddler Grandson; TRISHAY} Rajatarangini – Style, Sources and General Contents From an early date ancient historical themes, whether in Bharatvarsha or in Kashmir, were mainly a framework for the display of all subtle poetic art and rhetoric’s, which constituted the characteristic object of ancient Kavya’s {Sanskrit Poetry}. Almost all the historical Kavya’s {Caritas} which have been found deal with the exploits of the poet’s princely patrons or latter’s immediate predecessors, the contents and style depended on courtly patronage. Kalhan’s Rajatarangini, for history of Bharatvarsha in general and of Kashmir in particular, represents a class of Sanskrit composition, Kavya, in form but with a scope and aim widely different from that of the Caritas. It offers a connected narrative of various Kings, dynasties, which ruled or presumed to have ruled Kashmir from the earliest possible period down to his own time. The narrative begins with invoking of Hara {Shiva} in the form of Ardhanarisvara, representing Shiva’s union with Parvati {Verse 1 and 2 Book {Taranga} 1}, legends representing earliest popular traditions, history and beliefs of Aryan Saraswat Brahmins of Kashmir, followed by narrative of later Kings, in chronological order, taken from old records, manuscripts, treatises and details recorded with personal experience as living witnesses of his own time. Many events, details, anecdotes before composition of Rajatarangini would have definitely come from relations, word of mouth and as Kalhan himself accepts from {Translated}; “ Eleven works of former scholars containing the chronicles of Kings, I have inspected, as well as the opinions of the Sage Nila {Verse 14 Taranga 1}”. -
Unit 6 the Rise of Guptas: Economy, Society and Polity*
Trade Networks and UNIT 6 THE RISE OF GUPTAS: ECONOMY, Urbanization SOCIETY AND POLITY* Structure 6.0 Objectives 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Antecedents 6.3 Political History of the Guptas 6.4 Administration 6.5 Army 6.6 Economy 6.7 Society 6.8 Culture under the Guptas 6.9 Decline of the Guptas 6.10 Summary 6.11 Key Words 6.12 Answers to Check Your Progress Exercises 6.13 Suggested Readings 6.0 OBJECTIVES After reading this Unit, you will learn about, political conditions in India at the beginning of the fourth century CE; expansion and consolidation of the Gupta empire; order of succession of the Gupta rulers and their military exploits; administration, economy, society and culture under the Guptas; and the decline of the Guptas. 6.1 INTRODUCTION In this Unit, you will become familiar with the political history of the Gupta period. Compared to the pre-Mauryan and Mauryan periods, the number of ruling families had increased considerably in the post-Mauryan period. This means that (i) more and more areas were experiencing the emergence of local states; these states which may have been small were represented by local ruling families, (ii) when large state structures arose these small local states either lost their separate existence or they continued as subordinates within larger areas. One such large state structure which began to emerge from the beginning of the fourth century CE was that of the Guptas. In this Unit, we will look at the political, social and economic aspects of the Gupta period. We will focus on changes which were taking place in this period and which greatly changed the character of post-Gupta polity and society. -
The Coins and History of Toramāṇa Pankaj Tandon Boston, MA, USA1
The Coins and History of Toramāṇa Pankaj Tandon Boston, MA, USA1 At a recent seminar,2 Michael Bates made an impassioned plea to abandon the practice of always attempting to classify coins as issues of specific political authorities and to allow for the fact that coinages are frequently highly specific to location. This paper on the coins of Toramāṇa in Michael’s honor illustrates how these two phenomena can coexist: coins can be the issues of a specific political authority and yet can be highly localized, as the political authority seeks to conform to local traditions in order to encourage the uninterrupted flow of commerce. Over a century ago, J. F. Fleet (1889) published in the journal Indian Antiquary a paper with exactly the same title as the present one. Fleet knew of only two coins of Toramāṇa, both silver drachms of the Gupta madhyadeśa type (Göbl 1967, type 119; here, Figure 1). His reconstruction of a skeleton history of this king was based not so much on coins as on several known inscriptions. According to this skeleton history, Toramāṇa started his career somewhere in northwest India, probably Punjab, perhaps as early as the year 460 CE, gathered strength there, and eventually advanced (probably in the last decade of the fifth century) into central India where he established his rule in the area around Eran. He must have died some years later, say around the year 510 or 515, because we find that his son Mihirakula was defeated by the Aulikara king Yaśodharman some years thereafter. 1 An early version of this paper was presented at the Ninth Annual B.D. -
The Hephthalites: Archaeological and Historical Analysis
THE HEPHTHALITES: ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL ANALYSIS Written by AYDOGDY KURBANOV PhD thesis submitted to the Department of History and Cultural Studies of the Free University, Berlin 2010 Supervisors: PD Dr. N. Boroffka Prof. Dr. R. Bernbeck Members of Commission: Prof. Dr. S. Hansen Prof. Dr. S. Pollock Dr. H.-J. Nüsse The date of the examination: 12.02.2010 TO MY PARENTS “The information coming from remote countries and foreign languages are subject to corruption and misunderstanding and, moreover, concerning very ancient time. So we do not know what is certain. (Thus) it is impossible to decide (the origin of the Hephthalites)” Wei Jie (7th century AD) C O N T E N T S 1. Introduction 2. Research history and methodic problems 2.1. Research history 2.2. Methodic problems 3. Archaeological sites and materials 4. Numismatics 5. Written sources 6. A history of the Hephthalites 6.1. Origins 6.2. Military history & wars 6.3. Socio-political structure and state 6.4. Linguistics 6.5. Religion 6.6. Change of ethnic identity Literature Illustrations ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Many people have helped me during the work on my PhD thesis. I would like to thank first of all PD Dr. N. Boroffka for enormous help in editing and proofreading the draft version, for his patience and comments, and Prof. R. Bernbeck who helped to bring this work into its current form. I am very grateful to Prof. S. Hansen for his advice and particularly for the conditions of work in the Eurasia Department of the German Archaeological Institute, which offered me good possibilities to finish this thesis. -
The Hephthalite Empire* B
ISBN 978-92-3-103211-0 Origins 6 THE HEPHTHALITE EMPIRE* B. A. Litvinsky Contents Origins ......................................... 138 Political and military history .............................. 141 Conquests in Gandhara and northern India ....................... 144 The Hephthalites of Central Asia ............................ 146 Social structure and administration ........................... 147 Religious life and polyandry .............................. 150 Language and scripts .................................. 151 Towns .......................................... 152 Architecture ....................................... 153 Art and crafts ...................................... 154 Origins From the mid-fifth to the mid-sixth century Central Asia was ruled by the Hephthalite tribes. There are many gaps in our knowledge of the origin of the Hephthalites and the for- mation of their state, the first difficulty being that they are given different names in the var- ious sources. In Chinese sources the name of the dynasty is I-ta (a variant of I-tien, ancient *iep-t’ien) and their king bears the name Yen-tai-i-li-t’o (ancient *Yeptalitha).1 In Syriac sources they are called eptalit,aβdel; in Greek-language sources, Aβδελαι, Eφθαλιται; ¯ . in Armenian sources, hep’t‘al; in Middle Persian sources, eft¯ al¯ , and also hyon¯ ; in Arabic * See Map 3. 1 Enoki, 1959,p.7. 138 © UNESCO 1996 ISBN 978-92-3-103211-0 Origins 2 sources, hait.al; and in New Persian sources, het¯.al¯ . Another name for them is Chinese Hua. According to Balcami, the etymology of the word ‘Hephthalites’ is as follows: ‘in the language of Bukhara’, it means ‘strong man’.3 In Khotanese Saka a similar word exists, meaning ‘brave, valiant’. The legends on Hephthalite coins are in the Bactrian script. They feature a Bactrian title, XOAHO, for the ruler together with another Bactrian title, šao. -
Hans Bakker: Monuments of Hope, Gloom, and Glory in the Age of the Hunnic Wars. 50
Monuments of Hope, Gloom, and Glory 24th J. Gonda Lecture 2016 1 Monuments of Hope, Gloom, and Glory 24th J. Gonda Lecture 2016 © 2017 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Some rights reserved. ϐ License, Attribution 3.0 Netherlands. To view a copy of this licence, visit: http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/nl/ Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences ǤǤͳͻͳʹͳǡǦͳͲͲͲ T +31 (0)20 551 0700 F +31 (0)20 620 4941 [email protected] www.knaw.nl pdf available on www.knaw.nl Illustration cover: Photo courtesy British Museum, BM 1963,1210.1. Preferred citation: Hans Bakker (2017). Monuments of Hope, Gloom, and Glory in the Age of the Hunnic Wars. 50 years that changed India (484–534). Amsterdam, J. Gonda Fund Foundation of the KNAW. ISBN 978-90-6984-715-3 2 Hans Bakker Monuments of Hope, Gloom, and Glory In the Age of the Hunnic Wars 50 years that changed India (484 – 534) 24th J. Gonda Lecture 2016 Acknowledgements A photograph taken in Gouda in 1906 shows Jantje Gonda at the age of one, or thereabouts (Plate 1). The photo had been given to me by Annette Bieringa-Gonda, a niece of Jan Gonda, on the occasion in 1997 when I gave the inaugural address of the Gonda Chair, a professorship to which I had been elected a year earlier. The Gonda Chair had been endowed to the University of Groningen by the J. Gonda Fund Foundation, which administers Gonda’s bequest to the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences since 1992. -
10.1: Literature: Sanskrit, Pali, Prakrit and Tamil 10.2: Scientific and Technical Treatises Author: Dr
Subject: History Lesson: Cultural development Course Developers : 10.1: Literature: Sanskrit, Pali, Prakrit and Tamil 10.2: Scientific and technical treatises Author: Dr. Shonaleeka Kaul Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of Delhi 10.3: Understanding Indian art: changing perspectives Author: Dr. Parul Pandya Dhar Associate Professor, Department of History, University of Delhi 10.4: Art and architecture: patronage 10.5: The Mauryan phase: monumental architecture, stone sculpture and terracottas Author: Dr. Snigdha Singh Associate Professor, Miranda House, University of Delhi 10.6: The early stupa: Sanchi,Bharhut, Amaravati and Nagarjunakonda 10.7: The rock-cut cave: Western Ghats, Udayagiri and Khandagiri 10.8: Sculpture: regional styles (up to c. 300 CE): Gandhara, Mathura and Amaravati Author: Dr. Devika Rangachari Post-Doctoral Fellow, Department of History, University of Delhi, and writer 10.9: Rock cut caves: architecture, sculpture, painting 10.10: Temple architecture, c. 300 - 750 CE 10.11: Ancient Indian sculpture, c. 300 - 700 CE Author: Sanjukta Datta Ph.D Scholar, Department of History, University of Delhi Language Editor: Veena Sachdev Production Editor: Ashutosh Kumar Assistant Professor, Lady Shri Ram College, University of Delhi NOTE: The dates in modern historical writings are generally given according to the Christian calendar. In recent years, the use of AD (Anno Domini) and BC (Before Christ) has to some extent been replaced by BCE (Before Common Era) and CE (Common Era). Both usages are acceptable, -
BLOCK 2 GUPTAS and POST-GUPTA STATE and SOCIETY India : 200 BCE to 300 CE
BLOCK 2 GUPTAS AND POST-GUPTA STATE AND SOCIETY India : 200 BCE to 300 CE 92 Trade Networks and UNIT 6 THE RISE OF GUPTAS: ECONOMY, Urbanization SOCIETY AND POLITY* Structure 6.0 Objectives 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Antecedents 6.3 Political History of the Guptas 6.4 Administration 6.5 Army 6.6 Economy 6.7 Society 6.8 Culture under the Guptas 6.9 Decline of the Guptas 6.10 Summary 6.11 Key Words 6.12 Answers to Check Your Progress Exercises 6.13 Suggested Readings 6.0 OBJECTIVES After reading this Unit, you will learn about, political conditions in India at the beginning of the fourth century CE; expansion and consolidation of the Gupta empire; order of succession of the Gupta rulers and their military exploits; administration, economy, society and culture under the Guptas; and the decline of the Guptas. 6.1 INTRODUCTION In this Unit, you will become familiar with the political history of the Gupta period. Compared to the pre-Mauryan and Mauryan periods, the number of ruling families had increased considerably in the post-Mauryan period. This means that (i) more and more areas were experiencing the emergence of local states; these states which may have been small were represented by local ruling families, (ii) when large state structures arose these small local states either lost their separate existence or they continued as subordinates within larger areas. One such large state structure which began to emerge from the beginning of the fourth century CE was that of the Guptas. In this Unit, we will look at the political, social and economic aspects of the Gupta period.