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Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1
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Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Dec 30, 2015

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Page 1: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500

Chapter 6.1

Page 2: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

The Geography of India

• India is a subcontinent– Large landmass– Smaller than a

continent– Part of the continent

of Asia

Page 3: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Mountains, Plains, and Rivers

Page 4: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Mountains

• Himalayas– Tallest mountain range in the world– Contains Mt. Everest

• Tallest mountain peak in the world• 29,000 feet tall (5.5 miles)

Page 5: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Mountains

• Hindu Kush– Border India to the northwest

Page 6: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Plains

• Fertile plains at the foot of the mountains– Owe rich soil to 3

great rivers• Indus River• Ganges River• Brahmaputra River

– Rivers provide farming, transportation, trade

Page 7: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Rivers

• Indus River-major river in Asia

• Flows through Pakistan

• Fed from glaciers in Himalayas

Page 8: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Ganges

• Located in plains of northern India

• Holy River of Hinduism

• For most of its course it is a wide and sluggish stream, flowing through one of the most fertile and densely populated regions in the world. Despite its importance, its length of 1,560 miles (2,510 km) is relatively short compared

with the other great rivers of Asia or of the world.

Page 9: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Brahmaputra• major river of Central and South Asia.

• It flows some 1,800 miles (2,900 km) from its source in the HIMALAYAS to its confluence with the GANGES (GANGA) RIVER,

• For most of its length, the river serves as an important inland waterway; it is not, however, navigable between the mountains of Tibet and the plains of INDIA.

• In its lower course the river is both a creator and a destroyer—depositing huge quantities of fertile

alluvial soil but also causing disastrous and frequent floods.

Page 10: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Landforms

• Along west coast, fertile lands

• Inland are two chains of mountains

• Between mountains Deccan Plateau

Page 11: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Monsoons

• Monsoons-seasonal winds – Winter-monsoons blow cold, dry air from

Himalaya east to west– Summer-warmer land temperatures cause the

winds to change direction. Winds blow west to east-bring warm, wet air and pouring rains

Page 12: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

The Indus Valley Civilizations

• About 5,000 years ago, nomads settled in Indus River

• Modern day Pakistan

• Spread over western India and Pakistan

Page 13: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Mohenjo-Daro

• 2600 BC and 1900 BC• 35,000 residents• Streets paved with tan colored bricks• Houses made with oven-baked bricks

Page 14: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Harappa

• Wells supplied water

• Every house had one indoor bathroom

• Wastewater flowed outside city walls

• Houses had garbage chutes

Page 15: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

What was life like?

• Palaces and temples were enclosed in a fortress– Shows importance of

religion and government

– Farming villages– Grew rice, barley,

wheat, peas and cotton

– Merchants traveled to Mesopotamia to trade

Page 16: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Aryan Migrations and Settlements

• Around 1900 B.C. people abandoned Indus River Valley Civilizations

• Archaeologists found several causes– Severe drought– Earthquakes– Floods– Aryans migrated to India

Page 17: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

The Indo-Europeans

• Aryans were not a race or ethnic group

• Part of a language family-group of similar languages

• Lived in central Asia

• Aryans moved to India

Page 18: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Aryans

• Mixed with people from India

• Lived in tribes– Tribe led by raja or prince– Had no written language

• Developed a written language called Sanskrit– Gave people a way to record sales, trade, land

ownership, poems, hymns, stories, prayers– Sacred texts known as Vedas

Page 19: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

What were the Varnas?

• India is divided into four social classes

• People were members of the varna into which they were born

• Bramins-priests

• Kshatriyas-warriors

• Vaisyas-commoners

• Sudra-manual workers

Page 20: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Ancient Indian Society

Page 21: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Caste System

• Varna system is known as a caste system– People remain in caste for life– Untouchables

• Lowest level of society• They did work that Indians would not do

– Collecting trash– Skinning animals– Carrying dead bodies

Page 22: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

Untouchables

Page 23: Ancient India 3000B.C. to A.D.500 Chapter 6.1. The Geography of India India is a subcontinent –Large landmass –Smaller than a continent –Part of the continent.

• Indian men had more rights than women

• Males inherited property

• Boys had a guru-teacher

• Parents arranged marriages

• Boys often married in their teens

• People could NOT get divorced