Hindus of Hindustan : a civilizational journey / Meenakshi Jain
Material type:
- 9788173056819
- 294.5350 JAI-M
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 200 | General Stack (For lending) | 294.5350 JAI-M (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | INR 995.00 | Available | 47844 |
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294.5350 CHA-R Religion, tradition, and ideology : pre-colonial South India | 294.535 GUE-M Ganga : in search of the sorce / | 294.5350 JAI-M Vasudeva Krishna and Mathura / | 294.5350 JAI-M Hindus of Hindustan : a civilizational journey / | 294.535 KIS-K Holy Ganga / | 294.5350 VAR-A 108 Vishnu temples : architectural splendour, spiritual bliss / | 294.5350954 MAT-B Amma, take me to the Dargah of Salim Chishti / |
Notwithstanding the views of a section of historians and literati, spiritual, religious, and cultural continuity in India goes back many millennia. Identification with, and adoration of, the land was expressed in the sixty-three verses long Prithvi Sukta of the Atharva Veda, described as the first “national song” in the world. Veneration of the land remained a recurrent theme in sacred literature.
Kautilya, in the Arthasastra, articulated the ideal of political unification, when he said that from the Himalayas to the seas, the land should have one ruler. That ideal was accompanied by a consciousness of cultural union.
Evidence of continuity of religious beliefs and motifs could be traced to the late Upper Palaeolithic (c. 9000-8000) site of Baghor I (Sidhi district, Madhya Pradesh), to the celebrated Indus Valley Civilization, and well thereafter.
Rulers of foreign origin, who ruled over parts of the north-western regions for significant periods, wholly immersed themselves in the spiritual traditions of the land. Ancient lawgivers facilitated the assimilation of foreign groups within the capacious embrace of Indian civilization. Things took a dramatically new turn with the advent of a new group of invaders in the eighth century CE.
The book highlights the underlying features of Indian civilization, that were manifest from its founding moments, and that remained unchanged over the millennia.
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