When
Gupta disintegration was complete, the classical patterns of
civilization continued to thrive not only in the middle
Ganga Valley and the kingdoms that emerged on the heels of
Gupta demise but also in the Deccan and in South India,
which acquired a more prominent place in history. In fact,
from the mid-seventh to the mid-thirteenth centuries,
regionalism was the dominant theme of political or dynastic
history of South Asia. Three features, as political
scientist Radha Champakalakshmi has noted, commonly
characterize the sociopolitical realities of this period.
First, the spread of Brahmanical religions was a two-way
process of Sanskritization of local cults and localization
of Brahmanical social order. Second was the ascendancy of
the Brahman priestly and landowning groups that later
dominated regional institutions and political developments.
Third, because of the seesawing of numerous dynasties that
had a remarkable ability to survive perennial military
attacks, regional kingdoms faced frequent defeats but seldom
total annihilation. Peninsular
India was involved in an eighth-century tripartite power
struggle among the Chalukyas (556-757) of Vatapi, the
Pallavas (300-888) of Kanchipuram, and the Pandyas (seventh
through the tenth centuries) of Madurai. The Chalukya rulers
were overthrown by their subordinates, the Rashtrakutas, who
ruled from 753 to 973. Although both the Pallava and Pandya
kingdoms were enemies, the real struggle for political
domination was between the Pallava and Chalukya
realms. Despite
interregional conflicts, local autonomy was preserved to a
far greater degree in the south where it had prevailed for
centuries. The absence of a highly centralized government
was associated with a corresponding local autonomy in the
administration of villages and districts. Extensive and
well-documented overland and maritime trade flourished with
the Arabs on the west coast and with Southeast Asia. Trade
facilitated cultural diffusion in Southeast Asia, where
local elites selectively but willingly adopted Indian art,
architecture, literature, and social customs. The
interdynastic rivalry and seasonal raids into each other's
territory notwithstanding, the rulers in the Deccan and
South India patronized all three religions--Buddhism,
Hinduism, and Jainism. The religions vied with each other
for royal favor, expressed in land grants but more
importantly in the creation of monumental temples, which
remain architectural wonders. The cave temples of Elephanta
Island (near Bombay, or Mumbai in Marathi), Ajanta, and
Ellora (in Maharashtra), and structural temples of
Kanchipuram (in Tamil Nadu) are enduring legacies of
otherwise warring regional rulers. By the mid-seventh
century, Buddhism and Jainism began to decline as sectarian
Hindu devotional cults of Shiva and Vishnu vigorously
competed for popular support. Although
Sanskrit was the language of learning and theology in South
India, as it was in the north, the growth of the bhakti
(devotional) movements enhanced the crystallization of
vernacular literature in all four major Dravidian languages:
Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, and Kannada; they often borrowed
themes and vocabulary from Sanskrit but preserved much local
cultural lore. Examples of Tamil literature include two
major poems, Cilappatikaram (The Jewelled Anklet)
and Manimekalai (The Jewelled Belt); the body of
devotional literature of Shaivism and Vaishnavism--Hindu
devotional movements; and the reworking of the
Ramayana by Kamban in the twelfth century. A
nationwide cultural synthesis had taken place with a minimum
of common characteristics in the various regions of South
Asia, but the process of cultural infusion and assimilation
would continue to shape and influence India's history
through the centuries.
Library of Congress Country StudyThe
Southern Rivals
Library of Congress Country Study
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