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Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

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Page 1: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Cities of the Indus ValleyChapter 3 Section 1

Mr. Marsh

Columbus North High School

Page 2: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Which of the following two water bodies influenced early Indian civilization?

A. Yellow and Yangzi rivers

B. Indus and Ganges rivers

C. Arabian and Mediterranean seas

D. Tigris and Euphrates rivers

Page 3: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

The Finding of the Indus Valley

• The Indus Valley Civilization was discovered in 1922

• Little is known about the Civilization

• First Cities in the Indus Valley were developed around 2500 BC

Page 4: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Geography of the Subcontinent

• Three Major Regions– Northern Plain

– Dry Triangular Deccan

– Coastal Plains

Page 5: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Indus Valley Civilization

• First Civilization was founded around 2500 BC– Present day Pakistan

• Lasted for around 1000 years

• No records have been found to name kings, queens, tax records, etc…

Page 6: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Well Planed Cities

• Harappa• Mohenjo-Daro (moh HEHN joh DAH roh)

– Both Cities where laid out in large rectangular blocks.

– Grid Pattern– All houses built uniform– Modern plumbing systems– Uniform weights and measure

Page 7: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

What evidence suggests that the Indus Valley cities had a well-organized

government?

A. well-planned cities

B. writings on stone seals

C. records left by kings

D. statues of goddesses

Page 8: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Farming and Trade

• First to cultivate cotton, and weave fibers into cloth– Farming was driving by two major things

• Melting snow from the Himalayan Mountains (Northern Plain)• Summer Monson Rains (Coastal Plains)

• Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea allowed the Indus people to trade with those of Mesopotamia– Contact with Sumer lead to the development of writing

in the Indus Valley

Page 9: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Religious Beliefs

• All based on speculation by archeologist

• Polytheistic– Mother Goddess, the source of creation

– Sacred Animals• Believed to be the major reason for Indian beliefs

towards cattle

Page 10: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Decline and Disappearance

• By 1750 BC the civilization began to decline

• No real evidence on why– Theories include

• Volcanic eruption which blocked the Indus river causing the valley to flood

• Earthquake• Tsunami• Overuse of natural resources

Page 11: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Disappearance

• Scholars believed by 1500 BC the final blow was given

• Nomadic newcomers known as Aryans– Arrived from Southern Russia– Horses, superior weapons…

Page 12: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

The Indus River and "lower town"

Page 13: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Lower Town:

Page 14: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Lower Town:

Page 15: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Lower Town:

Page 16: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Great Bath and Granary

Page 17: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Great Bath, SD Area, looking north

Page 18: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Corbelled Drain exiting the Great Bath

Page 19: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

What is this?

Page 20: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Kingdoms of the GangesChapter 3 sec. 2

Mr. Marsh

Columbus North High School

Page 21: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Aryans

• Indo-European group that migrated across Europe and Asia in search of water and food– Nomadic tribe

• Most of what is known about the Aryans has come from the Vedas – Collection of prayers, hymns and religious teachings

• Time period became known as the Vedic Age

Page 22: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

During the Vedic age, the Aryans changed

A. from nomads to farmers.

B. from warriors to merchants.

C. from servants to rulers.

D. from farmers to nomads.

Page 23: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Aryan Society

• People were divided by occupation not income

• Three Basic Groups– Brahmins or priests– Kshatriyas (kuh SHAT ree yuhz) warriors– Vaisyas (vis yhuz) herders, farmers, artisans

and merchants• Warriors were seen as the highest tier but with

time Brahmins claimed they were the only ones that could please the gods

Page 24: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Aryan Society Cont’

• Felt superior to the Dravidians (the people they conquered)

• Dravidians and non-Aryans became the fourth group, known as Sudras (soo druhz)

• With time class divisions came to reflect social and economic status a much more complex system known as “castes”– You are born into your castes and you can not

change that status

Page 25: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Aryan Religious Beliefs

• Polytheistic– Gods and goddesses of fire, earth, wind, sun, moon,

war, etc….– Also had animal gods and goddesses

– With time a notion of a single spiritual power beyond the gods developed called “’Brahman”

– Move toward mysticism• Spiritual truth through meditation

– Religions that emerged after the Vedic age reflected the impact of mysticism

Page 26: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Expansion and Change

• As Aryans conquered they mingled and took from other civilizations, soon they gave up the nomadic way of life for farming

• Aryans begin to settle the Ganges basin by 800 B.C.– Tribal wars began over territories between Aryan

tribes– By 500 B.C. a new Indian Civilization had emerged– Indian people had developed a written language,

Sanskrit • Vedas start to be written

Page 27: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Epic Literature

• Even with written language the Oral tradition stayed a mainstream with the Aryans

• Two major epic poems were kept in Oral context– Mahabharata (muh HAH bah rah tuh)– Ramayana (rah MAH yuh nuh)

Page 28: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Mahabharata

• 100,000 versus

• Epic battles between the Aryans

– One episode Bhagavad-Gita (BUGH un vuhd GEE tuh) reflects important Indian religious beliefs about the immortality of the soul and the importance of duty

Page 29: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Ramayana

• Major moral lesson is the role of men and women– Men- taught the model of virtue – Women- loyal and obedient to her husband

Page 30: Cities of the Indus Valley Chapter 3 Section 1 Mr. Marsh Columbus North High School

Looking Ahead

• Aryan religion develops into two of the worlds largest religions– Hinduism and Buddhism