| About
INDIA
Nearly five thousand years back flourished India's first
major civilisation along the Indus River valley. The
twin cities of Mohenjodaro and Harappa now in Pakistan
were ruled by priests and held the rudiments of Hinduism.
These civilisations are known to possess a sophisticated
lifestyle, a highly developed sense of aesthetics, an
astonishing knowledge of town planning and an undecipherable
script language. The Indus civilization at one point
of time extended nearly a million square kilometres
across the Indus river valley. It existed at the same
time as the ancient civilizations of Egypt and Sumer
but far outlasted them. Surviving for nearly a thousand
years the Indus valley civilisation fell to tectonic
upheavals in about 1700 BC, which caused a series of
floods.
The coming of the Aryans around 1500 BC, gave the final
blow to the collapsing Indus Valley civilisation. At
the dawn of Vedic ages the Aryans came in from the North
and spread through large parts of India bringing with
them their culture and religious beliefs. The Four Vedas
or the important books of Hinduism were compiled in
this period
In 567 B.C. the founder of the Buddhist Religion Gautama
Buddha was born. During this time lived Mahavira, who
founded the Jain Religion. The Indian subcontinent is
full of caves and monuments devoted to these religions
and are worth a visit.
Two hundred years later, in the 4th century B.C., Emperor
Ashoka, one of the greatest King of Indian history,
led the Mauryan Empire to take over almost all of what
is now modern India. This great leader embraced Buddhism
and built the group of monuments at Sanchi (a UNESCO
world heritage site). The Ashoka pillar at Sarnath has
been adopted by India as its national emblem and the
Dharma Chakra on the Ashoka Pillar adorns the National
Flag.
They were followed by the Guptas in the north, while
in the south part of India several different Hindu empires,
the Cholas, the Pandyas and the Cheras spread and grew,
trading with Europe and other parts of Asia till the
end of the 1100s.
Christianinty entered India at about the same time from
Europe. Legend has it that St. Thomas the Apostle arrived
in India in 52 A.D. Even earlier than that people of
the Jewish religion arrived on India's shores.
In approximately the 7th century A.D. a group of Zoroastrians,
or Parsees, landed in Gujarat and became a part of the
large mix of religions in India today, each of which
adds its important and distinctive flavour.
In the 15th century Guru Nanak laid the foundation of
the Sikh religion in Punjab.
In 1192, Mohammed of Ghori, a ruler from Afghanistan,
came into India and captured several places in the north
including Delhi. When he went home he left one of his
generals in charge who became the first Sultan of Delhi.
During this time Islam, was introduced into a major
part of Northern India. It may be mentioned that even
before that, just after the period of the prophet, Islam
was brought to the western coast of India by Arab traders
and flourished in what is now Kerala.
The Dehli Sultanate gradually took control of more and
more of North India over the next 200 years, till Timur,
who was called "Timur the Lame" or "Tamberlane"
came from Turkey in 1398 to attack India. He and his
army stole all the valuables that they could carry and
left again, and after that the Delhi Sultanate was never
so strong again. Soon the Mughals, who were from Iran,
came in and took control of the north.
In the meantime south , in 1336, the Hindu Vijayanagar
empire was set up and became very strong.
The Europeans - Portuguese, French, Dutch, Danish and
British - started arriving in the early 1600s. All of
them held territories in India and made friends and
enemies among India's rulers as they got more and more
involved, with the Indian politics, but it was the British
who eventually controlled most of India and finally
made it one of their colonies.
About
RAJASTHAN
According to the Hindu Mythology, the Rajputs of Rajasthan
were the descendants of the Kshatriyas or warriors of
Vedic India. The emergence of the Rajput warrior clans
was in the 6th and 7th centuries. Rajputs ancestry can
be divided into two: the "solar" or suryavanshi-those
descended from Rama, the hero of the epic Ramayana,
and the "lunar" or chandravanshi, who claimed
descent from Krishana, the hero of the epic Mahabharata.
Later a third clan was added, the agnikula or fire-born,
said to have emerged from the flames of a sacrificial
fire on Mt Abu.
It
has been accepted that the Rajputs were divided into
thirty-six races and twenty-one kingdoms. The Rajput
clans gave rise to dynasties like Sisodias of Mewar
(Udaipur), the Kachwahas of Amber (Jaipur), the Rathors
of Marwar (Jodhpur & Bikaner), the Hadas of Jhalwawar,
Kota & Bundi, the Bhattis of Jaisalmer, the Shekhawats
of Shekhawati and the Chauhans of Ajmer.
Early
History
Rajasthan is the north-western region of India, and
has remain independent from the great empires. Buddhism
failed to make substantial inroad here; the Mauryan
empire (321-184 BC), whose most renowned emperor, Ashoka,
Converted to Buddhism in 261 BC, had minimal impact
in Rajasthan, However, there are Buddhist caves and
stupas (Buddhist Shrines) at Jhalawar, in Southern Rajasthan.
Ancient
Hindu scriptural epics make reference to sites in present-day
Rajasthan. The Holy Pilgrimage site of Pushkar is mentioned
in both the Mahabharata and Ramayana.
Emergence
of the Rajputs
The fall of the Gupta Empire, which held dominance in
northern India for nearly 300 years until the early
5th Century, was followed by a period of instability
as various local chieftains sought to gain supremacy.
Power rose and fell in northern India. Stability was
only restored with the emergence of the Gurjara Partiharas,
the earliest of the Rajput (from 'Rajputra', or Sons
of Princes) dynasties which were later to hold the balance
of power throughout Rajasthan.
Whatever
their actual origins, the Rajputs have evolved a complex
mythological genealogy. This ancestry can be divided
into two main branches: the Suryavansa, or Race of the
Sun (Solar Race), which claims direct descent from Rama;
and the Induvansa, or Race of the Moon (Lunar race),
which claims descent from Krishna, Later a third branch
was added, the Agnikula, or 'Fire Born'. These people
claim they were manifested from the flames of a sacrificial
fire on Mt.Abu From these three Principal races emerged
the 36 Rajput clans.
The
Rajput clans gave rise to dynasties such as the Chauhans,
Sisodias, Kachhwahas and Rathores. Chauhans of the Agnikula
Race emerged in the 12th century and were renowned for
their valour. Their territories included the Sapadalksha
kingdom, which encompassed a vast area including present-
day Jaipur, Ranthambore, part of Mewar, the western
portion of Bundi district, Ajmer Kishangarh and even,
at one time, Delhi. Branches of the Chauhans also ruled
territories know as Ananta (in present-day Shekhawati)
and Saptasatabhumi.
The
Sisodias of the Suryavansa Race, Originally from Gujarat,
migrated to Rajasthan in the mid-7th Century and reigned
over Mewar, which encompassed Udaipur and Chittorgarh.
The
Kachhwahas, originally from Gwalior in Madhya Pradesh,
travelled west in the 12th century. They built the massive
fort at Amber, and later shifted the capital to Jaipur.
Like the Sisodias, they belonged to the Suryavansa Race.
Also
belonging to the Suryavansa Race, the Rathore (earlier
known as Rastrakutas) traveled from Kanauj, in Uttar
Pradesh. Initially they settled in Pali, south of present-day
Jodhpur, but later moved to Mandore in 1381 and ruled
over Marwar (Jodhpur). Later they started building the
stunning Meherangarh (fort) at Jodhpur.
The
Bhattis, who belong to the Induvansa Race, driven from
their homeland in the Punjab by the Turks, installed
themselves at Jaisalmer in 1156. They remained more
of less entrenched in their desert Kingdom untill they
were integrated into the state of Rajasthan following
Independence.
for
more information kindly mail to ishak_raj@yahoo.co.in
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