Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chap 16 Day 1 - India and the Indian Ocean Basin- Aim: How did India’s North and South develop separately? Do Now: PAIR/SHARE – Huns were nomadic herdsmen.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chap 16 Day 1 - India and the Indian Ocean Basin- Aim: How did India’s North and South develop separately? Do Now: PAIR/SHARE – Huns were nomadic herdsmen."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chap 16 Day 1 - India and the Indian Ocean Basin- Aim: How did India’s North and South develop separately? Do Now: PAIR/SHARE – Huns were nomadic herdsmen (pastoralists) terrorized much of Asia and Europe -3 rd through 5 th centuries. 1) Where did the Huns originate? 2) How did the invention of the stirrup give them an advantage?

2 India after the Fall of The Gupta Dynasty Invasion of White Huns from Central Asia beginning 451 CE Gupta State collapsed mid-6 th c. Chaos in northern India –Local power struggles –Invasions of Turkish nomads, absorbed into Indian society King Harsha (r. 606-648 CE) Temporary restoration of unified rule in north India Religiously tolerant –Buddhist by faith Generous support for poor Patron of the arts –Wrote three plays Assassinated, no successor able to retain control

3 Introduction of Islam to Northern India Arabs conquer Sind (north-west India), 711 Sind stood at the fringe of the Islamic world Heterodox population, but held by Abbasid dynasty to 1258

4 Merchants and Islam Arabic trade with India predates Islam- EXPLAIN? Dominated trade between India and the west to 15 th century Established local communities in India –Port city of Cambay Mahmud of Ghazni Leader of the Turks in Afghanistan Raids into India, 1001- 1027 Plunders, destroys Hindu and Buddhist temples –Often builds mosques atop ruins – WHY?

5 The Sultanate of Delhi Consolidation of Mahmud ’ s raiding territory Capital: Delhi Ruled northern India 1206-1526 Weak administrative structure –Reliance on cooperation of Hindu kings 19 out of 35 Sultans assassinated

6 Hindu Kingdoms of Southern India Major states of Postclassical India 600-1600 CE Chola Kingdom, 850-1267 –Maritime power –Not highly centralized Kingdom of Vijayanagar –Mid-fourteenth century - 1565 –Northern Deccan –Originally supported by Sultanate of Delhi –Leaders renounce Islam in 1336 –Yet maintain relations with Sultantate

7 Agriculture in the Monsoon World Spring/summer: rains, wind from south-west Fall/winter: dry season, wind from north-east Seasonal irrigation crucial to avoid drought, famine –Especially southern India Massive construction of reservoirs, canals, tunnels

8 The trading world of the Indian Ocean basin, 600-1600 CE

9 Population Growth in India – Why?

10 Trade and Economic Development in Southern India Indian regional economies largely self- sufficient Certain products traded throughout subcontinent –Iron, copper, salt, pepper Southern India profits from political instability in north Temples and Indian Society More than religious centers – Why? Center of coordination of irrigation, other agricultural work –Some Temples had large landholdings Education providers Banking services

11 Cross-Cultural Trade in the Indian Ocean Basin Trade increases in post-classical period Larger ships –Dhows, junks Improved organization of agricultural efforts Establishment of Emporia –Cosmopolitan port cities serve as warehouses for trade Specialized products developed (cotton, high-carbon steel)

12 Assessment Write a multiple choice question based on earlier notes Switch question with neighbor Share with class


Download ppt "Chap 16 Day 1 - India and the Indian Ocean Basin- Aim: How did India’s North and South develop separately? Do Now: PAIR/SHARE – Huns were nomadic herdsmen."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google