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Ancient India

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Ancient India had a long-lived civilization and culture. It covered several countries including India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh.

Map showing the largest extent of the Mauryan Empire in dark blue.
Map showing the largest extent of the Mauryan Empire in dark blue.

The Indus Valley Civilization flourished from about 2600 BCE to 1900 BCE. It marked the beginning of the urban civilization on the subcontinent. It was centred on the Indus River and its tributaries. The civilization is famous for its cities that were built of brick, had a road-side drainage system and multi-storied houses.

During the Maurya dynasty founded in 321 BCE most of the Indian subcontinent was united under a single government for the first time. Ashoka the Great who in the beginning sought to expand his kingdom, then followed a policy of ahimsa (non-violence) after converting to Buddhism. The Edicts of Ashoka are the oldest preserved historical documents of India, and under Ashoka Buddhist ideals spread across the whole of East Asia and South-East Asia. Gupta an important ruler during the Gupta period was also known as wise and noble person.

[change] Main events

[change] Chronology

Standing Buddha, ancient region of Gandhara, northern Pakistan, 1st century CE, Musée Guimet.
Standing Buddha, ancient region of Gandhara, northern Pakistan, 1st century CE, Musée Guimet.
  • 3000 BC – 1000 BC: Harappan civilization
  • 2000 BC - C1500 BC: Advent of Indo-Aryan peoples (see Indo-Aryan migration for discussion)(It is now disputed that an invasion by any race called ARYANS ever happened. The issue is yet to be sorted in a satisfactory manner)
  • 1500 BC – 600 BC: Composition of the Vedas and the Brahmana
  • 700 BC – 300 BC: Composition of the Upanishads
  • 527 or 526 BC: Death of Mahavira, the historical founder of Jainism
  • Late 6th century: Darius, the Persian king, conquers parts of Ancient India
  • 486 BC: Death of Buddha; Chinese tradition records 483 BC
  • 400 BC: Panini composes first Sanskrit grammar
  • 4th century BC – 4th century BC: Composition of the Ramayana and the Mahabharata
  • 327 BC – 25 BC: Alexander the Great invades India.
  • 321 BC – 181 BC: Chandragupta Maurya founded Gupta dynasty
  • 300 BC: Megasthenes (Greek ambassador) visits the Maurya king
  • 300 BC: Composition of the Arthashastra, though some scholars date the work to 100 AD
  • 268 BC – 233: BC Reign of Ashoka the Great
  • 185 BC – 75 BC: Shunga dynasty reigns over central India
  • 2nd century BC – 3rd century BC: Buddhism and Jainism influences in India at its peak
  • 1st Century BC – 1st century AD: Shakas, Parthians and Kushana invade India
  • 1st Century BC – 2nd Century AD: Satavahana rule
  • 58 BC – 57 BC: Vikrama Samvat era begins
  • 78 AD: Beginning of the Shaka era
  • 1st – 3rd century: Reign of the Kushan dynasty; first depiction of Jaina tirthankara and muti-armed Hindu deities
  • 4th-5th century: Vaktaka rule over central India and the Deccan
  • 4th - 6th century: Gupta period in northern and central India
  • 500 AD: Ajanta completed
  • 5th – 7th century: Spread of Vaishnavism, especially Krishan cult; emergence of worship of local deities; emergence of Tantrism
  • 5th – 6th century: Invasion of Huns
  • 6th century: Kalachuri dynasty rules the western coast of India
  • 6th - 8th century: Pallava dynasty in southern India; rock-cut architecture begins in the south; temple building flourishes at Mamallapurama and Kanchipuram
  • 6th-10th century: Tamil devotional poetry
  • 7th – 8th century: Decline of Buddhism in northern India; revival of Hinduism
  • 7th – 10th century: Rashtrakuta dynasty rules over northern part of the Deccan
  • Early 8th century: Arab merchants settle on the coast of Sindh (currently, a part of Pakistan) and the Indian state of Gujarat
  • 8th – 12th century: Pala dynasty rules in Bihar, Bengal and large part of eastern India
  • 788 – 820 AD: Life of Adi Shankaracharya
  • 1984 - chemical explosion in Bhopal kills thousands of people


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