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Since January 2006
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Home arrow Religion arrow Hinduism

Hinduism PDF Print E-mail
2300 years ago.
  • The further development of Buddhism
  • The Hindu Scriptures are added to.
Prior to this time India, which we can take to include Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, was divided into many small city states and rural communities. The main centres were still around the Indus river (now in Pakistan) and the Ganges river valley covering both modern northern India and Bangladesh. Northern territories were very much in the hands of the Aryan race and many of the original Dravids had been pushed to the south and across the sea to Sri Lanka. Tamils (as in Tamil Tigers) are descendants from the Dravids and still speak and write using the old Dravidian Sanskrit roots. These diverse city states were loosely tied together with the common Hindu religion as laid down in the ancient Vega "scriptures"

Vega "Scriptures"
At this time Hindu scriptures were orally passed from one generation to another by professional reciters or singers. It was considered that the act of writing them down might be seen as sacrilegious. In spite of this the "scriptures" had a name the "Vegas" and were divided into three:
  1. Rig Veda: Some 3500 years old. Contains 1028 poems and hymns to be used mainly to accompany a sacrifice.
  2. Brahmanas: About 2500 years old and a commentary on sacrifice and reincarnation.
  3. Upanishads: About 2400 years old and followed much self searching amongst the Hindu sages concerning the uselessness of sacrifice; Contains some 200 prose and verse providing a metaphysical and philosophical commentary on the Vedas and the higher or ultimate God concept of Brahman.
321 BC India effectively adopts Buddhism for 500 years
This was a true milestone in the history of India commenced by the arrival of Alexander the Great as he extended his empire eastwards from its origins in Macedonian Greece. In a short campaign he annihilated any local resistance in the form of local city leaders or warlords. He didn't stop long enough to swap cultural concepts, decided not to leave any significant standing army and headed back west leaving a political and military vacuum.
A young prince Chandragupta Maurya filled this vacuum and created the first pan Indian Empire. His grandson Ashoka came to the throne in 269 BC and extended this Maurya Empire to cover almost the whole of the sub-continent. (India, Pakistan and Bangladesh). After a particularly brutal battle in 260 BC, Ashoka reflected on the cruelty of his world and converted from Hinduism to Buddhism and vowed to live the life prescribed by Buddha of peace and non violence. Indeed Ashoka was the first Indian ruler to travel the length and breadth of the huge country to learn about his subject's difficulties together with spreading the concepts of the Buddhist faith.

Buddhism remained the dominant religion in India until the fall of the Mauryan dynasty in 185 BC. There being no immediate successor, India remained in limbo and open to invasion again for about 500 years that is until the emergence of the Gupta dynasty in the Ganges valley in AD 320.

2000 YEARS AGO
  • The Romans ruled the whole of Europe south of the Rhine and the Danube including England in the west and Israel/Palestine as their eastern front.
  • Buddhists from India expanded eastwards to China and on towards Japan
  • India commenced the period without a strong leader.
  • Persians ruled the lands between Jerusalem and India.
  • Jews persecuted by their Roman rulers produced the founder of Christianity, Jesus
India particularly in the north and east is overrun again and again by peoples from the north and western borders and becomes a cultural melting pot of Hindu and Buddhist followers together with Persian, Greek, Roman and Chinese immigrants and traders. Silk comes from China passes through Mathura near modern day Delhi onwards to the port of Barbaricum near present day Karachi. India exports diamonds, turquoise, indigo and tortoise shell and imports pearls, copper, gold and slaves from the Arab traders and later Muslim Arab traders and their Jewish translators and financial advisers.

The huge Kushana Empire AD 60-225
Another Aryan nomadic tribe, which had settled in the valley of the river Oxus which runs from the Hindu Kush north to the Aral sea, expanded east to the Indus valley and then even further east towards the Ganges. This was the start of the huge Kushana empire covering much of present day northern India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Turkmenistan (110 BC). Their leader Kaniska became a Buddhist. Kushana was to be overrun by the indigenous Guptas.

India returns to Hinduism. AD 320-550
The Gupta dynasty brought a golden age for Hinduism in India for more than 200 years where art, architecture, literature, science, medicine and mathematics flourished. Poets and artists were sponsored and invited to an audience with the Emperor Chandra Gupta 2nd who was the greatest of the Gupta Kings and the ancient, sacred, classic Sanskrit became the official court language. Even though the official religion was Hindu, Buddhist art continued, still to be seen in the Buddhist cave temples in Ajanta in the west of the country.

1500 YEARS AGO
  • India invaded by Mongolian "Huns"
  • The most famous Hindu philosopher is born-Sankara.
Following the fall of the Gupta Dynasty the weakened north of India was attacked by Huns. Huns is the name given to the Mongolian nomadic armies of the time who were roaming Asia in a similar manner to the more famous Genghis Khan but 600 years earlier. However the next 500 years in India saw these raiders being repelled again and again. The country split into three separate states of roughly equal size all following the Hindu religion but permitting Buddhists to live peacefully amongst them. Indeed the Buddhists built a university in their temple at Nalanda on the easterly reaches of the Ganges.

C. 700 AD
(Note this is the time that Mohammed the founder of Islam was born in Saudi Arabia.)
About this time India's most famous philosopher was born, Sankara, who made the largest single contribution to the Hindu religion. Born in Kerala in the far south of India into a high cast Brahmin family, he renounced the comforts of life and travelled the country as a preaching hermit. Some say he was a human manifestation of one of the top three Hindu gods, Shiva. Sankara provided most of the input for the last of the four Hindu scriptures (Vedas) called the Vedanta which is an important commentary on the previous three. He founded the Smarta Brahmin Hindu sect and a number of Hindu monasteries.

Sankara's work underlined the metaphysical nature of the Hindu faith: The world we live in is not real, more like a dream. This is because it is constantly changing. To be real it must never change and this is the ultimate reality or God or in Hindu terms Brahman. Putting this another way; we know when we wake from a dream that indeed we have been dreaming. We have had an experience which is unreal and on waking we regain reality. Sankara said that when we wake we only move to a higher state of reality. To achieve the Absolute Reality (a Western Heaven or a Hindu Release-Moksha) we must move to a higher plain again and this might not be achieved until we die.

1000 YEARS AGO
Hindu and Buddhists live in relative peace, side by side, but are soon to be subjected to Islamic invaders.

At this time in India the two main faiths, Hinduism and Buddhism lived side by side. The larger, Hinduism can be seen as having four branches.
  1. The Yoga elements probably practiced over 3000 years ago by the ancient Dravids
  2. The Philosopher Shankar's views, laid down as commentaries in Vedanta. To these we must add:
  3. The Bhakti or Devotional sect which is main stream Hinduism
  4. Tantric movements. Followers believed that sexual ecstasy was a path towards higher mystic levels.


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