Key Points
| Aspect | Core Idea | Key Term | Explanation | Purpose/Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nature of the world | Impermanence | Anicca | Nothing is permanent; everything changes | Detachment from material life |
| Nature of the self | No permanent soul | Anatta | No eternal self or soul exists | Reduces ego and desire |
| Human suffering | Suffering is universal | Dukkha | Sorrow and pain are part of life | Need to seek liberation |
| Path to liberation | Middle Path | Moderation | Avoids extremes of luxury and severe penance | Mental balance |
| Method of teaching | Reason and persuasion | Ethical conduct | Buddha taught through logic, stories, compassion | Moral transformation |
| Aspect | Key Points | Examples/Terms | Significance | Keywords |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formation of Sangha | Buddha founded a monastic order of monks | Sangha, organisation | Spread and preservation of dhamma | Sangha |
| Monks’ lifestyle | Lived simply; owned minimal possessions | Bowl, alms | Emphasis on renunciation | Bhikkhu |
| Entry of women | Women admitted later through Ananda | Mahapajapati Gotami | Gender inclusion in religion | Bhikkhuni |
| Social background | Followers from all sections of society | Kings, gahapatis, workers | Social equality within sangha | Equality |
| Status within sangha | All members equal after renunciation | Shed caste and wealth | Rejection of social hierarchy | Renunciation |
| Decision-making | Decisions made through discussion and voting | Gana, sangha traditions | Early democratic practices | Consensus |
| Appeal of Buddhism | Focus on ethics, compassion, conduct | Metta, karuna | Attracted common people | Moral conduct |
| Aspect | Description | Purpose | Key Features | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sacred places | Sites linked with Buddha’s life | To commemorate Buddha | Birth, enlightenment, first sermon, nirvana | Lumbini, Bodh Gaya, Sarnath, Kushinagar |
| Reason for building stupas | Relics of Buddha buried | Veneration and worship | Relic mound, symbol of Buddha | Ashoka’s stupas |
| Builders and patrons | Kings, guilds, monks, women | Religious merit (punya) | Donations recorded in inscriptions | Sanchi, Bharhut |
| Structure of stupa | Evolved architectural form | Ritual worship (pradakshina) | Anda, harmika, yasti, chhatra, railing | Great Stupa at Sanchi |
| Ritual practices | Worship by circumambulation | Spiritual merit | Clockwise movement, gateways (toranas) | Sanchi, Amaravati |
| Aspect | Amaravati | Sanchi | Colonial Role | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discovery | Discovered in 1796 by a local raja | Discovered in 1818 by British officials | Early discoveries driven by curiosity, not preservation | Amaravati damaged early |
| Treatment of ruins | Stones and sculptures removed | Largely left in situ | British officials took artefacts to museums | Different preservation outcomes |
| Major actions | Sculptures sent to Madras, Calcutta, London | Plaster-cast copies made instead of removal | Officials like Walter Elliot promoted removal | Amaravati dismantled |
| Scholarly response | H.H. Cole opposed removal but failed | Scholars supported site preservation | Shift in thinking came too late for Amaravati | Sanchi protected |
| Present condition | Reduced to an insignificant mound | Survives as a major Buddhist monument | Conservation policies evolved unevenly | Sanchi preserved, Amaravati lost |
| Sculpture | Description | Examples | Purpose/Meaning | Source/Basis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stories in stone | Sculptures narrate stories rather than decorate | Vessantara Jataka at Sanchi | Teaching moral values like generosity | Jataka tales |
| Symbolic depiction | Buddha shown through symbols, not human form | Bodhi tree, stupa, wheel (dharmachakra) | Represent key events in Buddha’s life | Buddhist tradition |
| Symbols of worship | Objects used as focus of devotion | Stupa, Bodhi tree, footprints | Encourage collective worship | Early Buddhism |
| Popular traditions | Non-Buddhist beliefs merged into art | Shalabhanjika, yakshas, animals | Reflect local beliefs and fertility symbols | Folk traditions |
| Sculptures as sources | Art used to reconstruct history | Sanchi gateways, Amaravati panels | Understand beliefs, society, culture | Archaeology + texts |
|
Aspect |
Mahayana Buddhism |
Bodhisattva Ideal |
Puranic Hinduism |
Temple Tradition |
|
Core change |
Shift from self-effort to idea of a saviour |
Bodhisattvas delay nirvana to help others |
Growth of devotional Hinduism |
Rise of temple worship |
|
Key belief |
Salvation through compassion |
Helping others attain nirvana |
Bhakti (love and devotion to god) |
God worshipped through images |
|
Important figures |
Buddha as saviour figure |
Avalokiteshvara, Manjusri |
Vishnu, Shiva, Durga |
Vishnu, Shiva, Devi |
|
Religious texts |
Mahayana Buddhist texts |
Bodhisattva literature |
Puranas |
Puranas and Agamas |
|
Cultural impact |
Spread of Buddhism across Asia |
Increased compassion and ethics |
Integration of local deities |
Development of temple architecture |
|
Aspect |
What historians see |
Problem faced |
Method used |
Conclusion |
|
Unfamiliar images |
Sculptures of gods with many arms/mixed forms |
Meanings not obvious |
Compare with known traditions |
Images need cultural context |
|
European views |
Compared Indian art with Greek art |
Bias and misunderstanding |
Used familiar standards |
Early interpretations were limited |
|
Text vs image |
Sculptures do not always match texts |
Conflicting interpretations |
Use multiple texts (Puranas, epics) |
No single correct meaning |
|
Mahabalipuram relief |
Large rock-cut sculpture |
Story unclear |
Debate among historians |
Multiple meanings possible |
|
Missing practices |
Daily rituals not recorded |
Incomplete evidence |
Accept gaps in sources |
Visual records show only part of the past |
| Aspect | Details | Key People | Evidence/Source | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Present status | — | Stupas, gateways, sculptures | Major Buddhist centre |
| 19th-century discovery | Studied by Europeans | Alexander Cunningham | Surveys, drawings, inscriptions | Rediscovery of early Buddhism |
| Colonial interest | Attempts to remove artefacts | French and British | Proposal to take eastern gateway | Raised concern for preservation |
| Indian patronage | Protection and funding | Shahjehan Begum, Sultan Jehan Begum | Museum, publications, conservation | Saved Sanchi from damage |
| Present status | Well-preserved monument | Archaeological Survey of India | Restoration work | Key archaeological heritage site |
| Aspect | Time Period | Key Features | Main Thinkers/Texts | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emergence of new ideas | Mid–1st millennium BCE | Rise of philosophical questioning about life and universe | Buddha, Mahavira, Zarathustra, Socrates | Marked a major intellectual turning point |
| Sacrificial tradition | c. 1500–1000 BCE | Collective rituals, prayers for cattle, sons, health | Rigveda | Strengthened ritual authority of priests |
| Change in sacrifices | c. 1000–500 BCE | Household rituals and large royal sacrifices (rajayajna, ashvamedha) | Brahmanas, kings | Linked religion with political power |
| Upanishadic ideas | c. 6th century BCE | Questions on soul, rebirth, karma, ultimate reality | Upanishads | Shift from ritual to philosophical inquiry |
| Debates and discussions | c. 6th century BCE onwards | Public debates in kutagarashalas and groves | Buddhist texts | Encouraged rational thinking and dialogue |
| Aspect | Core Belief | Key Concepts | Practices Emphasised | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Origin of Jainism | Existed before Mahavira | 23 earlier tirthankaras | Mahavira systematised teachings | Ancient religious tradition |
| Central Philosophy | Entire world is living | Ahimsa (non-violence) | Non-injury to all beings | Foundation of Jain ethics |
| Karma and Rebirth | Cycle of birth and rebirth | Karma determines rebirth | Asceticism to escape cycle | Path to salvation |
| Renunciation | Worldly life binds soul | Desire and attachment | Monastic life encouraged | Liberation through renunciation |
| Monastic Vows | Discipline and self-control | Five vows | Non-violence, truth, celibacy, non-possession | Moral ideal for monks & nuns |
| Aspect | Key Person | Main Event | Core Idea | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Birth and Background | Siddhartha Gautama | Born into Sakya clan; royal upbringing | Life initially protected from suffering | Sheltered palace life |
| Encounter with Suffering | Siddhartha | Saw old age, sickness, death, ascetic | Realised impermanence of life | Desire for truth awakened |
| Renunciation | Siddhartha | Left palace and family | Search for meaning beyond pleasure | Life of wandering ascetic |
| Search for Truth | Siddhartha | Tried severe asceticism and meditation | Extremes do not lead to truth | Adopted Middle Path |
| Enlightenment | The Buddha | Attained enlightenment after meditation | Discovery of dhamma (righteous path) | Taught path to liberation |
