Religion and Formation of Social Classes
- In spite of the existence of towns, the ancient Indian civilization was not as urban as the ancient civilizations of Greece and Rome.
- In comparison with western cultures religion exercised far stronger influence in India. Every field of ancient Indian life- economy, policy, art, literature -was strongly influenced by religion.
- Religion influenced the formation of social classes in India in a peculiar way. In other societies the duties and functions of social classes were fixed by law which was largely enforced by the state.
- But in India varna laws enjoyed the sanction of both the state and religion and were supposed to have been laid down by divine agencies.
- In the course of time varnas or social classes and jatis or castes came to be regarded hereditary in the eyes of law and religion.
- All this was done to ensure that vaisyas produce and pay taxes and sudras serve as labourers so that brahmanas act as priests and kshatriyas as rulers.
- The lower order worked hard in the firm belief that they would deserve a better life in the next world or birth which lessened the intensity and frequency of tensions and conflicts between those who actually produced and those who lived off the producers mainly priests, princes, officials etc.
- Hence the necessity for exercising coercion against lower orders was not so strong in India. What was done by slaves in ancient Greece and Rome under the threat of whip was done by vaisyas and sudras out of conviction formed through brahmanical indoctrination.
Philosophical Systems
- Ancient India is considered famous for its contribution to philosophy and spiritualism. But the Indians also developed a materialistic view of the world.
- In the six systems of philosophy which the Indians created we find elements of material philosophy in the sankhya system of Kapila who was born around 580 B.C.
- The sankhya system doesn't recognise the existence of God. According to it the world has not been created by god but by nature and the world and human life are regulated by natural forces.
- Materialistic philosophy received the greatest impetus from Charvaka, who lived in about 6th century B.C. His philosophy is called lokayata and argues that what is not experienced by man through his sensual organs does not really exist.
- The Indians thus developed both the idealistic as well as the materialistic systems of philosophy.
Crafts
- The Indian craftsmen were great experts in dyeing and making various kinds of colours which were so shining and beautiful that the beautiful paintings of Ajanta and Ellora are still intact.
- Similarly Indians were great experts in the art of making steel. The Indian steel was exported to many countries of the world and came to be called wootz in later times.
Polity
- In political Organisation India was the only country after Greece to practice some kind of democracy.
- In India most of the rulers practiced religious tolerance and stressed that the wishes of the followers of the other religions should be respected.
Science and Mathematics
- In ancient times religion and science were inextricably linked together.
- Astronomy made great progress in the country because the planets came to be regarded as Gods and their movements began to be closely observed.
- The science of grammar and linguistics arose because the ancient brahmanas stressed that every Vedic prayer and every mantra should be recited with meticulous correctness.
- In the 4th century B.C. Panini systematized the rules governing Sanskrit and produced a grammar called the Ashtadhyayi.
- In the field of mathematics the ancient Indians made three distinct contributions the notation system, the decimal system and the use of zero.
- The earliest epigraphic evidence for the use of decimal system is in the beginning of 5th century A.D., which was adopted by the Arabs and who spread it in the Western World.
- The famous mathematician Aryabhata (A.D. 476-500) was acquainted with it.
- Zero was discovered by Indians in about the second century B.C. And the Arabs learnt and spread it to Europe.
- As far as Algebra is concerned both Indians and Greeks contributed to it, but in the Western Europe its knowledge was borrowed not from the Greeks but from Arabs who learnt it from Indians.
- In 2nd century B.C., Apastamba describes acute angle, obtuse angle and right angle. Aryabhata produced the rule for finding the area of triangle which led to origin of trigonometry.
- The most famous work of this time is the Suryasiddhanta, the like of which is not found in contemporary ancient East.
- The most renowned scholars were Aryabhata and Varahamihira. The book of Aryabhata is called the Aryabhatiya.
- Varahamihira's well known work is called Brihatsamhita, which belongs to 6th century A.D. It stated that earth rotates around sun and moon around earth.
- The Indian dyers invented lasting colours and they discovered the blue colour.
Medicine
- The earliest mention of medicines is in the Atharva Veda.
- In post-Maurya period India produced 2 famous scholars of Ayurveda, Susruta and Charaka.
- In Susrutasamhita he describes the method of operating cataract, stone diseases and several other ailments and laid emphasis on diet and cleanliness in treatment of diseases.
- Charaksamhita is like a encyclopaedia of Indian medicine and describes various types of fever, leprosy, hysteria and tuberculosis.
- The book is useful not only for the study of Indian medicine but also for that of ancient Indian flora and chemistry.
Art and Literature
- The ancient Indian masons and craftsmen produced beautiful works of art. The Monolithic pillars erected by Asoka was famous for their shining polish, which matches with the polish on NBP ware.
- In Ajanta which contains as many as 30 cave temples is known as birthplace of Asian art and most of them belong to Gupta times.
- The focal point for the spread of spread of Indian art into Afghanistan and the neighbouring part of Central Asia was Gandhara where it fused with Central Asian and Hellenistic Art to form Gandhara Style Art.
- Similarly temples constructed in South India served in some ways as the models for the construction of temples in South-East Asia.
- In field of education we may refer to the huge monastic establishment of Nalanda which attracted students not only from India but also from Tibet and China.
- In the field of literature the Indians produced the Rig Veda which is the earliest specimen of Indo-Aryan literature and on the basis of which an attempt has been made to determine the nature of Aryan culture.
- In Gupta times the works of Kalidasa , whose play Abhijnanasakuntalam has been translated into all the important languages of the world.