Lehs3ps PDF
Lehs3ps PDF
Lehs3ps PDF
THEMES IN
INDIAN HISTORY
PART III
2015-16(21/01/2015)
ISBN 81-7450-651-9 (Part I)
81-7450-753-3 (Part II)
First Edition 81-7450-770-1 (Part III)
July 2007 Sravana 1929
Reprinted ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
February 2008 Magha 1929
q No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or
January 2009 Pausa 1930 transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
January 2010 Magha 1931 recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the publisher.
November 2010 Kartika 1932 q This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade, be lent,
re-sold, hired out or otherwise disposed of without the publisher’s consent, in any
March 2013 Phalguna 1934 form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published.
November 2013 Kartika 1935 q The correct price of this publication is the price printed on this page, Any revised
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FOREWORD
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iv
Director
New Delhi National Council of Educational
20 November 2006 Research and Training
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DEFINING THE FOCUS OF STUDY
What defines the focus of this book? What does it seek to do? How
is it linked to what has been studied in earlier classes?
In Classes VI to VIII we looked at Indian history from early
beginnings to modern times, with a focus on one chronological
period in each year. Then in the books for Classes IX and X, the
frame of reference changed. We looked at a shorter period of time,
focusing specifically on a close study of the contemporary world.
We moved beyond territorial boundaries, beyond the limits of nation
states, to see how different people in different places have played
their part in the making of the modern world. The history of India
became connected to a wider inter-linked history. Subsequently in
Class XI we studied Themes in World History, expanding our
chronological focus, looking at the vast span of years from the
beginning of human life to the present, but selecting only a set of
themes for serious exploration. This year we will study Themes in
Indian History.
The book begins with Harappa and ends with the framing of the
Indian Constitution. What it offers is not a general survey of five
millennia, but a close study of select themes. The history books in
earlier years have already acquainted you with Indian history. It is
time we explored some themes in greater detail.
In choosing the themes we have tried to ensure that we learn
about developments in different spheres – economic, cultural, social,
political, and religious – even as we attempt to break the boundaries
between them. Some themes in the book will introduce you to the
politics of the times and the nature of authority and power; others
explore the way societies are organised, and the way they function
and change; still others tell us about religious life and ritual
practices, about the working of economies, and the changes within
rural and urban societies.
Each of these themes will also allow you to have a closer look at
the historians’ craft. To retrieve the past, historians have to find
sources that make the past accessible. But sources do not just reveal
the past; historians have to grapple with sources, interpret them,
and make them speak. This is what makes history exciting. The
same sources can tell us new things if we ask new questions, and
engage with them in new ways. So we need to see how historians
read sources, and how they discover new things in old sources.
But historians do not only re-examine old records. They discover
new ones. Sometimes these could be chance discoveries.
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TEXTBOOK DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
CHIEF ADVISOR
Neeladri Bhattacharya, Professor, Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
ADVISORS
Kumkum Roy, Associate Professor, Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
Monica Juneja, Guest Pr ofessor, Institut Furgeschichte, Viennna, Austria
TEAM MEMBERS
Jaya Menon, Associate Professor, Department of History, Aligarh Muslim
University, Aligarh, UP (Theme 1)
Kumkum Roy (Theme 2)
Kunal Chakrabarti, Professor, Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi (Theme 3)
Uma Chakravarti, Formerly Associate Professor in History, Miranda House,
University of Delhi, Delhi (Theme 4)
Farhat Hassan, Associate Pr ofessor, Department of History,
Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, UP (Theme 5)
Meenakshi Khanna, Associate Professor in History, Indraprastha College,
University of Delhi, Delhi (Theme 6)
Vijaya Ramaswamy, Professor, Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi (Theme 7)
Rajat Datta, Pr ofessor, Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi (Theme 8)
Najaf Haider, Associate Professor, Centre for Historical Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi (Theme 9)
Neeladri Bhattacharya (Theme 10)
Rudrangshu Mukherjee, Executive Editor, The Telegraph, Kolkata (Theme 11)
Partho Dutta, Associate Professor, Department of History, Zakir Hussain College
(Evening Classes), University of Delhi, Delhi (Theme 12)
Ramachandra Guha, freelance writer, anthropologist and historian,
Bangalore (Theme 13)
Anil Sethi (Theme 14)
Sumit Sarkar, Formerly Professor of History, University of Delhi, Delhi (Theme 15)
Muzaffar Alam, Professor of South Asian History,
University of Chicago, Chicago, USA
C.N. Subramaniam, Eklavya, Kothi Bazar, Hoshangabad
Rashmi Paliwal, Eklavya, Kothi Bazar, Hoshangabad
Prabha Singh, P.G.T. History, Kendriya Vidyalaya, Old Cantt.,
Telliarganj, Allahabad, UP
Smita Sahay Bhattacharya, P.G.T. History, Blue Bells School,
Kailash Colony, New Delhi
Beeba Sobti, P.G.T. History, Modern School, Barakhamba Road, New Delhi
MEMBER-COORDINATORS
Anil Sethi, Pr ofessor, DESS, NCER T, New Delhi
Seema Shukla Ojha, Assistant Professor, DESS, NCER T, New Delhi
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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CONTENTS
Foreword iii
Defining the Focus of Study v
How to Use This Book xi
PART III
T HEME TEN 257
COLONIALISM AND THE COUNTRYSIDE
Exploring Official Archives
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x
T HEME ONE
BRICKS, BEADS AND BONES
The Harappan Civilisation
T HEME T WO
KINGS, FARMERS AND TOWNS
Early States and Economies
(c. 600 BC E -600 CE)
T HEME T HREE
KINSHIP, CASTE AND CLASS
Early Societies
(c. 600 BCE -600 CE)
T HEME FOUR
THINKERS, BELIEFS AND BUILDINGS
Cultural Developments
(c. 600 BC E -600 CE)
T HEME FIVE
THROUGH THE EYES OF TRAVELLERS
Perceptions of Society
(c. tenth to seventeenth century)
T HEME SIX
BHAKTI-SUFI TRADITIONS
Changes in Religious Beliefs
and Devotional Texts
(c. eighth to eighteenth century)
T HEME SEVEN
AN IMPERIAL CAPITAL: VIJAYANAGARA
(c. fourteenth to sixteenth century)
T HEME EIGHT
PEASANTS, ZAMINDARS AND THE STATE
Agrarian Society and the Mughal Empire
(c. sixteenth-seventeenth centuries)
T HEME NINE
KINGS AND CHRONICLES
The Mughal Courts
(c. sixteenth-seventeenth centuries)
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How to use this book
This is the last part of Themes in Indian History.
R Each chapter is divided into numbered sections and
subsections to facilitate learning.
R You will also find other material enclosed in boxes.
These contain:
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(b) those with the caption Ü Discuss... which are not for evaluation
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