History of India - Wikipedia
History of India - Wikipedia
History of India - Wikipedia
Paleolithic
Neolithic
Mohenjo-daro, one of the largest Indus cities. View of the site's Great Bath, showing the surrounding
urban layout.
:
Dholavira, a city of the Indus Valley civilisation, with stepwell steps to reach the water level in
artificially constructed reservoirs.[48]
Three stamp seals and their impressions bearing Indus script characters alongside animals: "unicorn"
(left), bull (center), and elephant (right); Guimet Museum
:
After the collapse of Indus Valley
civilisation, the inhabitants of the Indus
Valley civilisation migrated from the river
valleys of Indus and Ghaggar-Hakra,
towards the Himalayan foothills of Ganga-
Yamuna basin.[53]
An early 19th century manuscript in the Devanagari script of the Rigveda, originally transmitted orally
with fidelity[66]
Janapadas
:
Late Vedic era map showing the boundaries of Āryāvarta with Janapadas in northern India, beginning
of Iron Age kingdoms in India – Kuru, Panchala, Kosala, Videha
City of Kushinagar in the 5th century BCE according to a 1st-century BCE frieze in Sanchi Stupa 1
Southern Gate.
Sanskrit epics
The Mahajanapadas were the sixteen most powerful and vast kingdoms and republics of the era,
located mainly across the Indo-Gangetic plains.
Maghada dynasties
Maurya Empire
Maurya Empire
The Mauryan carved door of Lomas Rishi, one of the Barabar Caves, c. 250 BCE.
Sangam period
:
Shunga Empire
:
Shunga Empire
East Gateway and Railings, Shunga art, 1st Royal family, 1st
Bharhut Stupa, 2nd century BCE. century BCE. century B.C.
Ancient vina West Bengal.
Satavahana Empire
:
Satavahana Empire
Silk Road and Spice trade, ancient trade routes that linked India with the Old World; carried goods
and ideas between the ancient civilisations of the Old World and India. The land routes are red, and
the water routes are blue.
Gupta Empire
:
Gupta Empire
Vakataka Empire
Kamarupa Kingdom
Pallava Empire
The Shore Temple (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) at Mahabalipuram built by Narasimhavarman II.
Empire of Harsha
Chalukya Empire
Rashtrakuta Empire
Gahadavala dynasty
Rohtasgarh Fort
Pala Empire
:
Excavated ruins of Nalanda, a centre of Buddhist learning from 450 to 1193 CE.
Cholas
Delhi Sultanate
:
The Delhi Sultanate reached its zenith under the Turko-Indian Tughlaq dynasty.[244]
Vijayanagara Empire
Vijayanagara Empire
Other kingdoms
The Dasam Granth (above) was composed by Sikh Guru Gobind Singh.
Mughal Empire
:
Mughal Empire
A map of the Mughal "The Taj Mahal is the jewel of Muslim art in
Empire at its greatest India and one of the universally admired
geographical extent, masterpieces of the world's heritage."
c. 1700 CE UNESCO World Heritage Site declaration,
1983.[319]
Maratha Empire
Maratha Empire
Sikh Empire
European exploration
Indian Renaissance
:
Famines
World War I
World War II
:
Literacy in India grew very slowly until independence in 1947. An acceleration in the rate of literacy
growth occurred in the 1991–2001 period.
:
Independence and partition (c.
1947–present)
Historiography
In recent decades there have been four
:
main schools of historiography in how
historians study India: Cambridge,
Nationalist, Marxist, and subaltern. The
once common "Orientalist" approach, with
its image of a sensuous, inscrutable, and
wholly spiritual India, has died out in
serious scholarship.[432]
See also
Adivasi
Early Indians
List of Indian periods
Economic history of India
History of India (1947–present)
Foreign relations of India
Indian maritime history
Linguistic history of India
Military history of India
Outline of ancient India
Taxation in medieval India
:
The Cambridge History of India
Timeline of Indian history
Traditional games of India
References
Notes
Citations
Sources
Printed sources
Further reading
General
Historiography
Primary
Online resources
Quotations
from
Wikiquote
Resources
from
Wikiversity
Data from
Wikidata
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