Topics
Themes in Indian History Part 1
Bricks, Beads and Bones The Harappan Civilisation
Bricks, Beads and Bones: the Harappan Civilisation
- Introduction to Harappan Civilisation
- Subsistence Strategies
- Mohenjodaro: a Planned Urban Centre
- Tracking Social Differences
- Finding Out About Craft Production
- Strategies for Procuring Materials
- Seals, Script, Weights
- Ancient Authority
- The End of the Civilisation
- Discovering the Harappan Civilisation
- Problems of Piecing Together the Past
Kings, Farmers and Towns: Early States and Economies
- Prinsep and Piyadassi
- The Earliest States
- An Early Empire
- New Notions of Kingship
- A Changing Countryside
- Towns and Trade
- Back to Basics - How Are Inscriptions Deciphered?
- The Limitations of Inscriptional Evidence
Kings, Farmers and Towns Early States and Economies (c.600 BCE 600 CE)
Themes in Indian History Part II
Themes in Indian History Part III
Kinship, Caste and Class: Early Societies
- The Critical Edition of the Mahabharata
- Kinship and Marriage: Many Rules and Varied Practices
- Social Differences: Within and Beyond the Framework of Caste
- Beyond Birth Resources and Status
- Explaining Social Differences: a Social Contract
- Handling Texts Historians and the Mahabharata
- A Dynamic Text
Kinship, Caste and Class
Thinkers, Beliefs and Buildings: Cultural Developments
- A Glimpse of Sanchi
- The Background: Sacrifices and Debates
- Beyond Worldly Pleasures: the Message of Mahavira
- The Buddha and the Quest for Enlightenment
- The Teachings of the Buddha
- Followers of the Buddha
- Stupas
- “Discovering” Stupas the Fate of Amaravati and Sanchi
- Sculpture
- New Religious Traditions
- Can We “See” Everything?
Thinkers, Beliefs and Buildings Cultural Developments (c. 600 BCE 600 CE)
Through the Eyes of Travellers Perceptions of Society (c. tenth to seventeenth centuries)
Through the Eyes of Travellers: Perceptions of Society
- Al-biruni and the Kitab-ul-hind
- Ibn Battuta’s Rihla
- Francois Bernier - a Doctor with a Difference
- Making Sense of an Alien World Al-biruni and the Sanskritic Tradition
- Ibn Battuta and the Excitement of the Unfamiliar
- Bernier and the “Degenerate” East
- Women Slaves, Sati and Labourers
Bhakti - Sufi Traditions: Changes in Religious Beliefs and Devotional Texts
- A Mosaic of Religious Beliefs and Practices
- Poems of Prayer Early Traditions of Bhakti
- The Virashaiva Tradition in Karnataka
- Religious Ferment in North India
- New Strands in the Fabric Islamic Traditions
- The Growth of Sufism
- The Chishtis in the Subcontinent
- New Devotional Paths Dialogue and Dissent in Northern India
- Reconstructing Histories of Religious Traditions
Bhakti-Sufi Traditions Changes in Religious Beliefs and Devotional Texts (c. eighth to eighteenth centuries)
An Imperial Capital Vijayanagara
- The Discovery of Hampi
- Rayas, Nayakas and Sultans
- Vijayanagara - the Capital and Its Environs
- The Royal Centre
- The Sacred Centre
- Plotting Palaces, Temples and Bazaars
- Questions in Search of Answers
An Imperial Capital : Vijayanagara (c. fourteenth to sixteenth centuries)
Peasants, Zamindars and the State: Agrarian Society and the Mughal Empire
- Peasants and Agricultural Production
- The Village Community
- Women in Agrarian Society
- Forests and Tribes
- The Zamindars
- Land Revenue System
- The Flow of Silver
- The Ain-i Akbari of Abu’L Fazl Allami
Peasants, Zamindars and the State Agrarian Society and the Mughal Empire (c. sixteenth seventeenth centuries)
Colonalism and The Countryside Exploring Official Archives
Kings and Chronicles: the Mughal Courts
- The Mughals and Their Empire
- Production of Chronicles
- The Painted Image
- The Akbar Nama and the Badshah Nama
- The Ideal Kingdom
- Capitals and Courts
- The Imperial Household
- The Imperial Officials
- Beyond the Frontiers
- Questioning Formal Religion
Colonialism and the Countryside: Exploring Official Archives
- Bengal and the Zamindars
- The Hoe and the Plough
- A Revolt in the Countryside the Bombay Deccan
- The Deccan Riots Commission
Rebels and The Raj 1857 Revolt and its Representations
Rebels and the Raj: 1857 Revolt and Its Representations
- Pattern of the Rebellion
- Awadh in Revolt
- What the Rebels Wanted
- Repression
- Images of the Revolt
Mahatma Gandhi and The Nationalist Movement Civil Disobedience and Beyond
Colonial Cities: Urbanisation, Planning and Architecture
- Towns and Cities in Pre-colonial Times
- Finding Out About Colonial Cities
- What Were the New Towns Like?
- Segregation, Town Planning and Architecture: Madras, Calcutta and Bombay
- What Buildings and Architectural Styles Tell Us
Framing The Constitution The Beginning of a New Era
Mahatma Gandhi and the Nationalist Movement: Civil Disobedience and Beyond
- A Leader Announces Himself
- The Making and Unmaking of Non-cooperation
- The Salt Satyagraha a Case Study
- Quit India
- The Last Heroic Days
- Knowing Gandhi
Understanding Partition: Politics, Memories, Experiences
- Some Partition Experiences
- A Momentous Marker
- Why and How Did Partition Happen?
- The Withdrawal of Law and Order
- Gendering Partition
- Regional Variations
- Help, Humanity, Harmony
- Oral Testimonies and History
Framing the Constitution: the Beginning of a New Era
- A Tumultuous Time
- The Vision of the Constitution
- Defining Rights
- The Powers of the State
- The Language of the Nation
Estimated time: 35 minutes
CBSE: Class 12
Key Points: The Critical Edition of the Mahabharata
- The Critical Edition of the Mahabharata project began in 1919 under V. S. Sukthankar.
- Scholars collected and compared Sanskrit manuscripts from different regions of India.
- Verses common to most manuscripts were selected to prepare the standard text.
- The project took 47 years and resulted in over 13,000 pages, including variants.
- Regional variations reveal how the text evolved through diverse social and cultural traditions.
CBSE: Class 12
Key Points: Kinship and Marriage – Many Rules and Varied Practices
| Aspect | Key Idea | Sources/Evidence | Examples/Terms | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Family and kinship | Families differed in size and relations | Historical analysis | Kula, jnati, kinfolk | Shows social diversity |
| Patriliny | Descent traced through males | Mahabharata, Rigveda | Father → son succession | Basis of power and inheritance |
| Elite families | Focus on royal lineages | Epics, inscriptions | Kauravas–Pandavas | Political legitimacy |
| Marriage rules | Marriage regulated social order | Dharmasutras, Manusmriti | Kanyadana, exogamy | Control over alliances |
| Forms of marriage | Eight types recognised | Manusmriti | “Approved” and “condemned” forms | Social norms debated |
| Gotra system | Regulated marriage choices | Brahmanical texts | Same gotra marriage banned | Lineage purity |
| Women and naming | Identity linked to fathers/mothers | Inscriptions, metronymics | Gotami-puta, Vasithi-puta | Insight into women’s status |
CBSE: Class 12
Key Points: Social Differences: Within and Beyond the Framework of Caste
| Aspect | Varna System | Basis | Examples/Evidence | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Social hierarchy | Four varnas | Birth-based | Brahmana, Kshatriya, Vaishya, Shudra | Not followed uniformly |
| Brahmana role | Top position | Religious authority | Vedas, rituals, teaching | Power often contested |
| Kshatriya status | Rulers and warriors | Political power | Kings, warfare, justice | Non-Kshatriya kings existed |
| Vaishya role | Producers and traders | Economy-based | Trade, agriculture, pastoralism | Social mobility limited |
| Shudra position | Service providers | Assigned occupation | Serving higher varnas | Single occupation imposed |
| Jatis | Many sub-groups | Occupation and region | Weavers, goldsmiths, guilds | Too complex for varna model |
| Outside caste | Excluded groups | Non-Brahmanical life | Nishadas, forest dwellers | Labeled as mlechchhas |
CBSE: Class 12
Key Points: Beyond Birth: Resources and Status
| Aspect | Key Idea | Evidence/Source | Who Benefited | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Draupadi episode | Women treated as property in practice | Mahabharata story | Men (husbands) | Shows limited rights of women |
| Inheritance rules | Property divided among sons only | Manusmriti | Male heirs | Women excluded from inheritance |
| Stridhana | Gifts at marriage belonged to women | Dharmashastras | Upper-class women | Limited financial security |
| Men acquiring wealth | Many ways: work, conquest, gifts | Manusmriti | Men of higher varnas | Greater social power |
| Women acquiring wealth | Mainly gifts and marriage | Manusmriti | Women | Dependent on male relatives |
| Varna and wealth | Wealth linked to varna and occupation | Brahmanical texts | Brahmanas, Kshatriyas | Social inequality justified |
| Alternative views | Wealth could override varna | Buddhist texts | Wealthy Shudras | Birth not always decisive |
CBSE: Class 12
Key Points: Explaining Social Differences: A Social Contract
- Buddhists explained social differences through the idea of a social contract, not divine order.
- Early humans were believed to live in peaceful equality, taking only what they needed from nature.
- Social conflict arose due to greed, violence, and selfish behaviour among humans.
- Kingship emerged when people collectively chose a ruler (mahāsammata) to maintain order.
- Taxes were seen as payment for services provided by the king, showing human agency in institutions.
CBSE: Class 12
Key Points: Handling Texts: Historians and the Mahabharata
| Aspect | What historians examine | Key details | Examples from Mahabharata | Historical significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Language | Language used in the text | Sanskrit mainly; other versions in Prakrit, Pali, Tamil | Sanskrit epic vs regional retellings | Shows elite vs popular audiences |
| Nature of text | Type of content | Narrative stories and didactic sections | War stories, moral lessons, Bhagavad Gita | Helps separate social values from storytelling |
| Authorship | Who composed the text | Oral compositions by sutas; later written by Brahmanas | Traditionally attributed to Vyasa | Indicates multiple authors over time |
| Date and growth | When text evolved | Composed c. 200 BCE–400 CE; expanded to nearly 100,000 verses | Growth from 10,000 verses | Reflects long historical development |
| Itihasa | Meaning of the text | Literally “thus it was”; not strict history | Kurukshetra war narrative | Mix of memory, legend and imagination |
| Archaeology | Material evidence | Excavations compared with text | Hastinapura excavations by B.B. Lal | Helps test historical plausibility |
| Interpretation | Multiple explanations | Same event explained differently | Draupadi’s marriage (polyandry) | Shows texts reflect changing social ideas |
CBSE: Class 12
Key Points: A Dynamic Text
- The Mahabharata continued to grow beyond its Sanskrit version over centuries.
- The epic was composed and transmitted in several regional languages.
- Local stories and traditions were gradually incorporated into the text.
- The central narrative was retold differently across regions and periods.
- Episodes inspired sculpture, painting, drama, dance and other performing arts.
