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Introduction: History
Compiled by JuliaSet@ Tilted Mill Community - Powered by vBulletin
Please note that I have not "reinvented the wheel." The following text was gathered in patches, condensed from "Historic India" a Times Life Book. It seemed best, for quick addition, to take much text as it was, to pick and choose the parts which might give a shortened history of the time, and gather enough facts in historic order, while giving a feel for the civilization. The maps are copies from "An Historical Atlas of the Indian Peninsula" by Oxford Uni Press, written by C. Colin Davies.
The land that has accepted such a great variety of unlike immigrants is huge- a peninsula so large that is often called a subcontinent-but few lands have had to reconcile so many different racial strains, so many unlike social patterns and such a sheer multitude of people. By the end of the fourth century BC India's population had already reached 100 million. Many of these people were descendants of invaders: and in later centuries other invaders came to India. Quickly or slowly, all the invaders and all their descendants became parts of the mosaic of historic India.
Many new arrivals came form the Hindu Kush mountain passes. At first they encountered a hilly region of the Punjab. Traveling southeast, they found the land leveling out and saw the vast Indo-Gangetic plain, which sweeps across the subcontinent in a great arc that, like the mountains that lie to the north, measure 2,000 miles from west to east and 150 to 200 miles north to south.
They soon shed their cold weather clothes for a few garments of cotton. Once in the Indo-Gangetic plain, some migrants went southwestward along the Indus River and found themselves in the region call the Sind-- a cul-de-sac that is cut off from India;s heartland by the huge Thar Desert. Luckier ones moved southwestward, on the lush path that lies between the rambling Ganges river and the foot hills of the Himalayas. Continuing south westward, they would arrive at the Bay of Bengal, where the Ganges delta was eventually to provide the great natural ocean harbour of Calcutta.
Traveling south from the plain by an alternate route, some migrants followed the Chambal River to enter a different kind of land. They would be on the Deccan plateau, a harsh, infertile grassland sloping west to east and broken by scrub and clumps of trees.. East and west, at the borders of the Deccan, were more mountain ranges, the Ghats, so called for the passes (ghats) that penetrate them and narrow coastal plains. There the peninsula is shaped like an arrowhead, pointing south to the sea. The migrants who ventured south of the fertile Indo-Gangetic plain, whether just onto the high plateau or all the way to the coast, found themselves in a hostile world. This land was difficult to invade or control, just getting into it was not easy task: a jungle like river valley of the Narmada and a high escarpment, the Vindhya Mountains cut the Deccan off from the Indo Gangetic plain.
Once the invader reached the plateau, they faced new difficulties. The monsoon winds--cool and dry in the winter, drenching in the summer made either farming or herding a risky business. Only some straggling migrants continued southward through the Deccan, for innumerable rivers flowed from west to east across the land--rivers just wide enough to make the prospect of crossing look formidable.
Naturally enough most of the people who entered India at the northwest mt passes stopped north of the Deccan. South of the Deccan the land slopes downward to the sea, forming a low, temperate coastal plain. This is the land of the Dravidian people, whose ancestors were among the earliest migrants to India and whose physical characteristics and social customs still prevail.. Migrants from the north who later came to southern India never out numbered or overwhelmed the Dravidians.
By 1500BC, a long series of invasions had got under way. A main source of new peoples was Central Asia. India was always so strangely vulnerable to invasion, migrating people could come from anywhere and everywhere. From the north and from the west, Indo-Europeans, Persians, Scythians, Huns, Arabs, Turks, Mongols and uncountable others flowed in For thousands and thousands of years, migrants or marauders moved in and wandered to the fertile plains. Always pouring in were completely different kinds of people at completely different levels of culture. There were black and while and yellow races. There were nomads, traders and armies. There were large, refined societies with poets and troubadours, and there were tiny clans of still primitive root-grubbers. India found room for them all.
Hinduism did not absorb these people; it enfolded them. Any group with special customs could be dropped into India and, by living apart, live amicably side by side with those already there. The new group then became a caste of its own.
India's characteristic refusal to act as sort of a social blending-machine has always seemed peculiar to most non-Indian; to many her separation of groups and isolation of people by caste has seemed peculiarly inhuman, but the the caste system might have produced the only reasonable way for India to make an orderly process of growth. While inherently different groups could live their intimate lives distinctively and separately from the others, they could all at the same time contribute their work to the commonweal.
From the right and wildly heterogeneous mixture of people that is India burst repeated explosions of culture. Hindu art, literature and science made truly golden ages of the Mauryan Empire in the third century BC> Some 1200 years later, Muslim tradition, which was influenced but never overwhelmed by Hinduism- created yet another period of glory in the Mughal Empire.
Cultural Exchange Between Iran and India: An Ancient But Lasting Model Of Dialogue Among Civilizations Iran's part in Indian History
Mauryan
In the Mauryan period the vitality of the Indian life is reflected in achievements in stone sculpture, as an art as old as the foundations of Hindus itself. Centuries later, during the Gupta period, the great religious sculpture of India, both Buddhist and Hindu, gave witness to Hinduism at its height. Gupta poetry and drama, written in India's classic Sanskrit language are considered peers of the finest Western literature, and it was Gupta science that the game the world the concept of zero and the so-called Arabic numerals.
In the time of the Mughal empire, India displayed an ability to combine its Hindu culture, which was by then ancient, with that of the Muslims, who for 8 centuries had been moving into the subcontinent. Cultural splendor is not the only product of India's diversity and separateness: political disunity has also been a constant and plaguing result. Hundreds of tiny states--kingdoms, principalities, the holdings of petty nobles-have proliferated to a degree that makes the fragmented Europe of medieval times seem positively monolithic.....
Archaeologists now know that the beginnings of civilization in India are nearly as old as civilization itself. About 4000 BC., soon after the appearance of farming communities in Mesopotamia, men in the northwest corner of India made the great transitionfrom nomadic hunting gathering to agriculture. West of the Indus River, on the hills of Baluchistan and the rim of the Iranian plateau, such men began to settle on the land. By 3000 BC, they had developed a primitive village culture, a culture of farmers who lived in mud huts and practiced the animalistic worship of natural objects and forces.
Then, in a great and unexplained advance, these people developed one of the earliest of the worlds great civilizations. Because the centers of this civilization were first found along the Indus River, some archaeologists call it the Indus Valley Civilization; other call it Harappan Culture, after one of its two capital cities. It flourished mightily for a thousand years from about 2500 BC to about 1500 BC, and then mysteriously disappeared.
This civilization covered a gigantic triangle with sides a thousand miles long. Archaeologists have found remains of more than 50 communities. To these communities came wheat, barely and a variety of fruits and earliest cultivated cotton in the world. The seaports were magnificently equipped: the port of Lothal, on the Gulf of Cambay, contained an enclosed brick shipping dock over 700 feet long, controlled by a sluice gate and capable of loading ships at low and high tides. At such ports Harappan traders dealt in gold and copper, turquoise and lapis lazuli, timber from the slopes of the Himalayas. Harappan ships sailed up the Persian Gulf to Mesopotamia, carrying Indian ivory and cotton to the age old cities of Agade and Ur,in the Tigris-Euphrates Valley. And all of the wealth of farming of the two capitals, the cities of Mojenjo Daro and Harappa.
Both were Masterpieces of urban planning, consisting of a rectangle three miles in circumference, dominated by a fortified citadel as high as a modern five-story building. The citadel, containing a huge granary, a hall for ceremonial assemblies, a public bath which might have been a ritual bath, was apparently the center of government and religion. Below it the city spread out in a rigidly mathematical gridiron patter , with avenues and streets running north and south, east and west. Solidly built brick houses, shops and restaurants lined the streets, with windowless walls facing the streets themselves, entrances on narrow lanes, and rooms graciously arranged around open interior courtyards. Even sanitary arrangements in these buildings, the most elaborate in the world of that time, speak of the sophistication of the Indus Valley technology. Indoor baths and privies were connected by a system of drains and water chutes to sewers running beneath the main streets. Presenting a picture of middle-class prosperity with zealous municipal controls.
In the arts, the people excelled in brilliantly decorated wheel-turned pottery and small, beautifully executed figurines. Mother-Goddess, a seated male divinity, a sacred bull and pipal tree, and imaginative secular figures.. Animals toys, etc.
The richest store of Indus artifacts was assembled by the merchant class for commercial ends.
Hinduism - The Vedic Period
Ravaging the country as they came, nomads put an end to the culture and set the course of all later Indian history. "Aryans", the noble ones, spoke a language used by great masses of barbarians who began to move out of the steppes of Central Asia about 2000 BC. Aryans introduced a pattern of life that was to persist for centuries. Intertribal warfare was common; temporary alliances must have been formed to attack the people of the Indus civilization. For such attacks, the Aryans flung themselves into battle on light, swift, horse-driven chariots, against people who had never seen anything faster than a bullock cart. Even the fortified citadels of the Indus cities succumbed to Aryan sieges.
The Aryans were wandering herdsmen. Their food and clothing came from cattle; cows and bulls were their measure of wealth; and though they eventually took to farming, they continued to feel that a man's dignity lay in his herds rather than in his crops. Such a people could not maintain or even comprehend a complex urban culture. Writing, craftsmanship, arts and architecture, these ornaments and achievements of the Indus Civilization died in Aryan hands. They did leave a great 'artifact', literature of the period which is a collection of religious writing, a set of scriptures. Aryan priests built up an exhaustive record of their religious beliefs and practices., Composed in a complex poetic style already perfected in pre-Indian days. And passed along by memorization and recitation. This record grew slowly for a thousand years. Its four great books, the Vedas, have given their name to that period of Indian history.
The earliest and most important of the four Vedic books, the Rig Veda, consists over a thousand hymns, a heterogeneous collection of prayer, instructions for ritual, incantations, poems on nature, and such secular songs as a gamblers lament of his luck at dice. The other three books, more specialized in content are the Yajur Veda, the Sama Veda, and the Atharva Veda, which consist respectively of technical instructions for the priests, ritual formulas and magic spells. They provide not dates, no dynasties, no wars or peace treaties, no events or series of events that a historian can place in any precise chronology.
The Vedas picture a people of enormous pride, utterly convinced of their own racial and social superiority, for the local peoples of India, the non-Aryans, they had nothing but contempt and overwhelming scorn. These conquered peoples were completely segregated, forced to live in clusters outside the Aryan village boundaries and banned from Aryan religious rites. This also extended to the social order......
Some time after they had learned enough about agriculture to grow crops of their own, the Aryans began to move deeper into India. Their route ran southeast to the middle of the Indo-Gangetic plain, the area of modern Delhi. From there, they probably conquers and colonized their way to the Ganges itself, then followed the river southward to settle the area around Banares (Varanasi). As many as 600 years had passed before the Aryans began to penetrate the Deccan.
During this time the Aryan tribes fought continually against each other and against the original inhabitants. The conquest of new lands and contacts with new people combined to bring profound changes to the Aryan way of life. Wandering tribes settled in small kingdoms; the tribal chiefs, once chosen by their peers, became power-hungry hereditary kings ruling from permanent capitals, And as kingdoms grew in territory and population, and the victors and vanquished fused,, the loose classes of Aryan society became more complex.
The kings claimed rank above all other nobles, the old class of the ordinary tribesmen, once the herdsmen among the original nomadic Aryans, became peaceful farmer, cattle breeders, artisans and tradesmen. Meanwhile the descendants of the non-Aryan peoples became a fourth class.
The greatest change of all took place among the priests, a change not so much of function as of status. In early Aryan society, the Priest class had held the second rank, below the nobles. Now they raised themselves up above the nobles, above the kings who had risen from the nobles class. They accomplished this feat by giving a new importance to religious ritual. They taught that if the rituals were not performed precisely, a catastrophe would ensue.. They became the most important creatures in their universe. Even the kings assented to the glorification to the priesthood.
By an odd coincidence in history, the Sixth Century BC was a century of remarkable intellectual discovery for nearly every ancient civilization. The answers they found in the Sixth Century BC, made India a center of religious creativity. They drew on existing body of sacred teaching, but went beyond these to found an important heterodox sect, Jainism, and a religion of world importance Buddhism, both of which interacted with the older religion of the Brahman priests to catalyze the development of the Hindu religion.
Perhaps so many stimulating ideas arose simultaneously in these far-flung lands because men communicated with one another through trade; perhaps the coinciding genius was due solely to chance. Changing social and economic conditions may have played a role in all these places. In many parts of India at this time the trade and agriculture were thriving, cities were growing, large kingdoms were superseding the rule of old tribal families. The rise of commerce brought height standard of living and with it time to think.
The final and most significant portion of the resulting literature is a collection of philosophical speculations. This portion, begun around 700 BC, and called the Upanishads, contained many of the themes that inspired the originators of Jainism and Buddhism and provided the religious foundation for Hinduism. These too were passed on orally by sages to pupils. The Upanishads probe into the nature of the universe and the human oul, and the relation of each to the other. IN proposing that the human soul is one with the Supreme Spirit, the Brahman priest who composed the Upanishads had in effect, deified mankind.
That idea had far reaching consequence, By the middle of the sixth century, other men besides the Brahmans had begun to engage in philosophical explorations, and when they did, they built on the foundations laid in the Upanishads. New cults were formed, and out of hundreds of cults, two survived to alter Brahman traditions and endure as independed and significant sects. They were Jainism and Buddhism.
Compiled by JuliaSet@ Tilted Mill Community - Powered by vBulletin
Please note that I have not "reinvented the wheel." The following text was gathered in patches, condensed from "Historic India" a Times Life Book. It seemed best, for quick addition, to take much text as it was, to pick and choose the parts which might give a shortened history of the time, and gather enough facts in historic order, while giving a feel for the civilization. The maps are copies from "An Historical Atlas of the Indian Peninsula" by Oxford Uni Press, written by C. Colin Davies.
The land that has accepted such a great variety of unlike immigrants is huge- a peninsula so large that is often called a subcontinent-but few lands have had to reconcile so many different racial strains, so many unlike social patterns and such a sheer multitude of people. By the end of the fourth century BC India's population had already reached 100 million. Many of these people were descendants of invaders: and in later centuries other invaders came to India. Quickly or slowly, all the invaders and all their descendants became parts of the mosaic of historic India.
Many new arrivals came form the Hindu Kush mountain passes. At first they encountered a hilly region of the Punjab. Traveling southeast, they found the land leveling out and saw the vast Indo-Gangetic plain, which sweeps across the subcontinent in a great arc that, like the mountains that lie to the north, measure 2,000 miles from west to east and 150 to 200 miles north to south.
They soon shed their cold weather clothes for a few garments of cotton. Once in the Indo-Gangetic plain, some migrants went southwestward along the Indus River and found themselves in the region call the Sind-- a cul-de-sac that is cut off from India;s heartland by the huge Thar Desert. Luckier ones moved southwestward, on the lush path that lies between the rambling Ganges river and the foot hills of the Himalayas. Continuing south westward, they would arrive at the Bay of Bengal, where the Ganges delta was eventually to provide the great natural ocean harbour of Calcutta.
Traveling south from the plain by an alternate route, some migrants followed the Chambal River to enter a different kind of land. They would be on the Deccan plateau, a harsh, infertile grassland sloping west to east and broken by scrub and clumps of trees.. East and west, at the borders of the Deccan, were more mountain ranges, the Ghats, so called for the passes (ghats) that penetrate them and narrow coastal plains. There the peninsula is shaped like an arrowhead, pointing south to the sea. The migrants who ventured south of the fertile Indo-Gangetic plain, whether just onto the high plateau or all the way to the coast, found themselves in a hostile world. This land was difficult to invade or control, just getting into it was not easy task: a jungle like river valley of the Narmada and a high escarpment, the Vindhya Mountains cut the Deccan off from the Indo Gangetic plain.
Once the invader reached the plateau, they faced new difficulties. The monsoon winds--cool and dry in the winter, drenching in the summer made either farming or herding a risky business. Only some straggling migrants continued southward through the Deccan, for innumerable rivers flowed from west to east across the land--rivers just wide enough to make the prospect of crossing look formidable.
Naturally enough most of the people who entered India at the northwest mt passes stopped north of the Deccan. South of the Deccan the land slopes downward to the sea, forming a low, temperate coastal plain. This is the land of the Dravidian people, whose ancestors were among the earliest migrants to India and whose physical characteristics and social customs still prevail.. Migrants from the north who later came to southern India never out numbered or overwhelmed the Dravidians.
By 1500BC, a long series of invasions had got under way. A main source of new peoples was Central Asia. India was always so strangely vulnerable to invasion, migrating people could come from anywhere and everywhere. From the north and from the west, Indo-Europeans, Persians, Scythians, Huns, Arabs, Turks, Mongols and uncountable others flowed in For thousands and thousands of years, migrants or marauders moved in and wandered to the fertile plains. Always pouring in were completely different kinds of people at completely different levels of culture. There were black and while and yellow races. There were nomads, traders and armies. There were large, refined societies with poets and troubadours, and there were tiny clans of still primitive root-grubbers. India found room for them all.
Hinduism did not absorb these people; it enfolded them. Any group with special customs could be dropped into India and, by living apart, live amicably side by side with those already there. The new group then became a caste of its own.
India's characteristic refusal to act as sort of a social blending-machine has always seemed peculiar to most non-Indian; to many her separation of groups and isolation of people by caste has seemed peculiarly inhuman, but the the caste system might have produced the only reasonable way for India to make an orderly process of growth. While inherently different groups could live their intimate lives distinctively and separately from the others, they could all at the same time contribute their work to the commonweal.
From the right and wildly heterogeneous mixture of people that is India burst repeated explosions of culture. Hindu art, literature and science made truly golden ages of the Mauryan Empire in the third century BC> Some 1200 years later, Muslim tradition, which was influenced but never overwhelmed by Hinduism- created yet another period of glory in the Mughal Empire.
Cultural Exchange Between Iran and India: An Ancient But Lasting Model Of Dialogue Among Civilizations Iran's part in Indian History
Mauryan
In the Mauryan period the vitality of the Indian life is reflected in achievements in stone sculpture, as an art as old as the foundations of Hindus itself. Centuries later, during the Gupta period, the great religious sculpture of India, both Buddhist and Hindu, gave witness to Hinduism at its height. Gupta poetry and drama, written in India's classic Sanskrit language are considered peers of the finest Western literature, and it was Gupta science that the game the world the concept of zero and the so-called Arabic numerals.
In the time of the Mughal empire, India displayed an ability to combine its Hindu culture, which was by then ancient, with that of the Muslims, who for 8 centuries had been moving into the subcontinent. Cultural splendor is not the only product of India's diversity and separateness: political disunity has also been a constant and plaguing result. Hundreds of tiny states--kingdoms, principalities, the holdings of petty nobles-have proliferated to a degree that makes the fragmented Europe of medieval times seem positively monolithic.....
Archaeologists now know that the beginnings of civilization in India are nearly as old as civilization itself. About 4000 BC., soon after the appearance of farming communities in Mesopotamia, men in the northwest corner of India made the great transitionfrom nomadic hunting gathering to agriculture. West of the Indus River, on the hills of Baluchistan and the rim of the Iranian plateau, such men began to settle on the land. By 3000 BC, they had developed a primitive village culture, a culture of farmers who lived in mud huts and practiced the animalistic worship of natural objects and forces.
Then, in a great and unexplained advance, these people developed one of the earliest of the worlds great civilizations. Because the centers of this civilization were first found along the Indus River, some archaeologists call it the Indus Valley Civilization; other call it Harappan Culture, after one of its two capital cities. It flourished mightily for a thousand years from about 2500 BC to about 1500 BC, and then mysteriously disappeared.
This civilization covered a gigantic triangle with sides a thousand miles long. Archaeologists have found remains of more than 50 communities. To these communities came wheat, barely and a variety of fruits and earliest cultivated cotton in the world. The seaports were magnificently equipped: the port of Lothal, on the Gulf of Cambay, contained an enclosed brick shipping dock over 700 feet long, controlled by a sluice gate and capable of loading ships at low and high tides. At such ports Harappan traders dealt in gold and copper, turquoise and lapis lazuli, timber from the slopes of the Himalayas. Harappan ships sailed up the Persian Gulf to Mesopotamia, carrying Indian ivory and cotton to the age old cities of Agade and Ur,in the Tigris-Euphrates Valley. And all of the wealth of farming of the two capitals, the cities of Mojenjo Daro and Harappa.
Both were Masterpieces of urban planning, consisting of a rectangle three miles in circumference, dominated by a fortified citadel as high as a modern five-story building. The citadel, containing a huge granary, a hall for ceremonial assemblies, a public bath which might have been a ritual bath, was apparently the center of government and religion. Below it the city spread out in a rigidly mathematical gridiron patter , with avenues and streets running north and south, east and west. Solidly built brick houses, shops and restaurants lined the streets, with windowless walls facing the streets themselves, entrances on narrow lanes, and rooms graciously arranged around open interior courtyards. Even sanitary arrangements in these buildings, the most elaborate in the world of that time, speak of the sophistication of the Indus Valley technology. Indoor baths and privies were connected by a system of drains and water chutes to sewers running beneath the main streets. Presenting a picture of middle-class prosperity with zealous municipal controls.
In the arts, the people excelled in brilliantly decorated wheel-turned pottery and small, beautifully executed figurines. Mother-Goddess, a seated male divinity, a sacred bull and pipal tree, and imaginative secular figures.. Animals toys, etc.
The richest store of Indus artifacts was assembled by the merchant class for commercial ends.
Hinduism - The Vedic Period
Ravaging the country as they came, nomads put an end to the culture and set the course of all later Indian history. "Aryans", the noble ones, spoke a language used by great masses of barbarians who began to move out of the steppes of Central Asia about 2000 BC. Aryans introduced a pattern of life that was to persist for centuries. Intertribal warfare was common; temporary alliances must have been formed to attack the people of the Indus civilization. For such attacks, the Aryans flung themselves into battle on light, swift, horse-driven chariots, against people who had never seen anything faster than a bullock cart. Even the fortified citadels of the Indus cities succumbed to Aryan sieges.
The Aryans were wandering herdsmen. Their food and clothing came from cattle; cows and bulls were their measure of wealth; and though they eventually took to farming, they continued to feel that a man's dignity lay in his herds rather than in his crops. Such a people could not maintain or even comprehend a complex urban culture. Writing, craftsmanship, arts and architecture, these ornaments and achievements of the Indus Civilization died in Aryan hands. They did leave a great 'artifact', literature of the period which is a collection of religious writing, a set of scriptures. Aryan priests built up an exhaustive record of their religious beliefs and practices., Composed in a complex poetic style already perfected in pre-Indian days. And passed along by memorization and recitation. This record grew slowly for a thousand years. Its four great books, the Vedas, have given their name to that period of Indian history.
The earliest and most important of the four Vedic books, the Rig Veda, consists over a thousand hymns, a heterogeneous collection of prayer, instructions for ritual, incantations, poems on nature, and such secular songs as a gamblers lament of his luck at dice. The other three books, more specialized in content are the Yajur Veda, the Sama Veda, and the Atharva Veda, which consist respectively of technical instructions for the priests, ritual formulas and magic spells. They provide not dates, no dynasties, no wars or peace treaties, no events or series of events that a historian can place in any precise chronology.
The Vedas picture a people of enormous pride, utterly convinced of their own racial and social superiority, for the local peoples of India, the non-Aryans, they had nothing but contempt and overwhelming scorn. These conquered peoples were completely segregated, forced to live in clusters outside the Aryan village boundaries and banned from Aryan religious rites. This also extended to the social order......
Some time after they had learned enough about agriculture to grow crops of their own, the Aryans began to move deeper into India. Their route ran southeast to the middle of the Indo-Gangetic plain, the area of modern Delhi. From there, they probably conquers and colonized their way to the Ganges itself, then followed the river southward to settle the area around Banares (Varanasi). As many as 600 years had passed before the Aryans began to penetrate the Deccan.
During this time the Aryan tribes fought continually against each other and against the original inhabitants. The conquest of new lands and contacts with new people combined to bring profound changes to the Aryan way of life. Wandering tribes settled in small kingdoms; the tribal chiefs, once chosen by their peers, became power-hungry hereditary kings ruling from permanent capitals, And as kingdoms grew in territory and population, and the victors and vanquished fused,, the loose classes of Aryan society became more complex.
The kings claimed rank above all other nobles, the old class of the ordinary tribesmen, once the herdsmen among the original nomadic Aryans, became peaceful farmer, cattle breeders, artisans and tradesmen. Meanwhile the descendants of the non-Aryan peoples became a fourth class.
The greatest change of all took place among the priests, a change not so much of function as of status. In early Aryan society, the Priest class had held the second rank, below the nobles. Now they raised themselves up above the nobles, above the kings who had risen from the nobles class. They accomplished this feat by giving a new importance to religious ritual. They taught that if the rituals were not performed precisely, a catastrophe would ensue.. They became the most important creatures in their universe. Even the kings assented to the glorification to the priesthood.
By an odd coincidence in history, the Sixth Century BC was a century of remarkable intellectual discovery for nearly every ancient civilization. The answers they found in the Sixth Century BC, made India a center of religious creativity. They drew on existing body of sacred teaching, but went beyond these to found an important heterodox sect, Jainism, and a religion of world importance Buddhism, both of which interacted with the older religion of the Brahman priests to catalyze the development of the Hindu religion.
Perhaps so many stimulating ideas arose simultaneously in these far-flung lands because men communicated with one another through trade; perhaps the coinciding genius was due solely to chance. Changing social and economic conditions may have played a role in all these places. In many parts of India at this time the trade and agriculture were thriving, cities were growing, large kingdoms were superseding the rule of old tribal families. The rise of commerce brought height standard of living and with it time to think.
The final and most significant portion of the resulting literature is a collection of philosophical speculations. This portion, begun around 700 BC, and called the Upanishads, contained many of the themes that inspired the originators of Jainism and Buddhism and provided the religious foundation for Hinduism. These too were passed on orally by sages to pupils. The Upanishads probe into the nature of the universe and the human oul, and the relation of each to the other. IN proposing that the human soul is one with the Supreme Spirit, the Brahman priest who composed the Upanishads had in effect, deified mankind.
That idea had far reaching consequence, By the middle of the sixth century, other men besides the Brahmans had begun to engage in philosophical explorations, and when they did, they built on the foundations laid in the Upanishads. New cults were formed, and out of hundreds of cults, two survived to alter Brahman traditions and endure as independed and significant sects. They were Jainism and Buddhism.