From their
original settlements in the Punjab region, the Aryans
gradually began to penetrate eastward, clearing dense
forests and establishing "tribal" settlements along the
Ganga and Yamuna (Jamuna) plains between 1500 and ca. 800
B.C. By around 500 B.C., most of northern India was
inhabited and had been brought under cultivation,
facilitating the increasing knowledge of the use of iron
implements, including ox-drawn plows, and spurred by the
growing population that provided voluntary and forced labor.
As riverine and inland trade flourished, many towns along
the Ganga became centers of trade, culture, and luxurious
living. Increasing population and surplus production
provided the bases for the emergence of independent states
with fluid territorial boundaries over which disputes
frequently arose. The rudimentary
administrative system headed by tribal chieftains was
transformed by a number of regional republics or hereditary
monarchies that devised ways to appropriate revenue and to
conscript labor for expanding the areas of settlement and
agriculture farther east and south, beyond the Narmada
River. These emergent states collected revenue through
officials, maintained armies, and built new cities and
highways. By 600 B.C., sixteen such territorial
powers--including the Magadha, Kosala, Kuru, and
Gandhara--stretched across the North India plains from
modern-day Afghanistan to Bangladesh. The right of a king to
his throne, no matter how it was gained, was usually
legitimized through elaborate sacrifice rituals and
genealogies concocted by priests who ascribed to the king
divine or superhuman origins. The victory of
good over evil is epitomized in the epic Ramayana
(The Travels of Rama, or Ram in the preferred modern form),
while another epic, Mahabharata (Great Battle of
the Descendants of Bharata), spells out the concept of
dharma and duty. More than 2,500 years later, Mohandas
Karamchand (Mahatma) Gandhi, the father of modern India,
used these concepts in the fight for independence (see
Mahatma Gandhi, this ch.). The Mahabharata records
the feud between Aryan cousins that culminated in an epic
battle in which both gods and mortals from many lands
allegedly fought to the death, and the Ramayana
recounts the kidnapping of Sita, Rama's wife, by Ravana, a
demonic king of Lanka (Sri Lanka), her rescue by her husband
(aided by his animal allies), and Rama's coronation, leading
to a period of prosperity and justice. In the late twentieth
century, these epics remain dear to the hearts of Hindus and
are commonly read and enacted in many settings. In the 1980s
and 1990s, Ram's story has been exploited by Hindu militants
and politicians to gain power, and the much disputed
Ramjanmabhumi, the birth site of Ram, has become an
extremely sensitive communal issue, potentially pitting
Hindu majority against Muslim minority (see Public Worship,
ch. 3; Political Issues, ch. 8). Vedic
Aryans
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