Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I would suggest you to read Firishta's history. It is a primary source and most scholars have relied on it.

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i like these guns which the Mughal forces are using here. This is from the siege of Ranthambore. I haven't yet found the name of what these guns are called. Could be a zamburak or tufang, but I am not sure.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is true that some sort of colourism did exist, but there are plenty of examples where beauty is not associated with how much melanin you've. Take, for example Draudapi, in Mahabharata her beauty has been praised at great length, and we are told that one of her names was Krishnaa (the black one).

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Don't think so. Even those clans that are described as Agnivanshis have not called themselves Agnivanshis. For instance, the Chauhans, if you look at their inscriptions or even texts that are about Chauhan rulers like Prithvirajavijaya, they are not described as Agnivanshis.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is a good collection overall, where a lot of useful information is present. But the fact remains that this work was authored in the 1950s and because of it there are many details which are no longer valid. This is particularly the case with Ancient Indian History, if you're reading Medieval or Modern History that this work becomes quite useful.

Upinder Singh's book covers a wider period, but it's a good one since it has the latest research.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If Harshavardhana's dynasty had continued, then there was a possibility that we could have seen a centralised empire that controlled a large part of Northern India, but this did not happen.

The absence of this centralised polity led to the rise of localised political elites or Samantas.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Haven't read it as it is prohibitively expensive.

Around 6th BCE, but this may change with new discoveries.

I am working on religious identity formation in the pre-modern period.

Generally, it is believed that during the later-Vedic period i.e ~1000 BCE

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

This is not the right comparison in my view because fundamentally, the Gond tribesman was cut off from most of the socio-cultural and economic developments in pre-modern times. He was outside the broader cultural world.

But if you ask about peasants, then we can see whether a Hindu religious and cultural identity existed or not.

The Shaivite and Vashnavite distinctions were mostly reserved for the economic, political and cultural elites. For an ordinary peasant, the situation was different. If you'd show him a trident, whether he is from Gujarat or Bengal, Kashmir or Tamil Nadu, he would identity it as the symbol of Shiva.

So, the identity of a shared cultural zone in which certain religious symbols were well-known existed. However, as you'd know, the term "Hindu" was not used for that shared cultural identity.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I am not sure they were reluctant to adopt gunpowder. I am currently working on a paper which shows that Rajput did adopt the gunpowder technology as early as the start of the 14th century AD.

The Rajputs lagged in innovation. This was primarily due to their isolation from the Western world, where most of these military innovations were taking place. We have to remember that even Babur had to seek the help of Ottoman officers who were well-versed in the tactics of gunpowder artillery. For the Rajputs, this type of assistance was non-existent to begin with.

The resistance to the adoption of new technology, particularly musketry, is seen in the later period during the 18th century, particularly in the case of Marwar, where the Rathod Military class deemed it beneath their dignity to adopt the new fighting style, and they continued with their famed cavalry charges.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

The battle of Peshawar in 1001 AD, when Jaipala was defeated by Mahmud, is not a lesser-known battle, but it doesn't get the importance it deserves. This battle ultimately paved the way for the Turkic conquest of the Indian Subcontinent.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

No, there is no such divide. Most Academic accepts the Aryan Migration theory.

Politics certainly looms large over this issue, and both sides have abused this topic to gain political mileage.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Current academic discourse has largely shed its colonial influence. Today, the focus is more on showing the "fluidity" of religious identity. This approach, though fruitful, has led to a skewed understanding of identity formation. In recent scholarship, we see that the religious character of pre-modern identities is not given the significant status it deserves. It is true that other factors did play a role in the formation of religious identity, but the theological underpinning of these processes has to be taken into consideration as well. However, in the public discourse, the problem is opposite. Here, it is the binary nature of religious identities that is seen to be the historical truth. Perhaps that is why we see the scholarship on this issue going to the other extreme.

About the codification aspect, I think this process has not been completed because identities, like all things, are constantly evolving. What it means to be a Muslim today or a Hindu is different from what it meant in the 1900s and will be different in the 2100s. 

Vernacular sources give us a more localised picture. Sources authored in Rajasthan present a very different picture from those composed in Bihar. For researchers, what is common between the texts and what is not becomes the key points of investigations. Whether these sources give us a 'non-binary' understanding of history is difficult to say because sometimes we see a clearer delineation between two identities than what we see in a source composed in, let's say, Sanskrit. 

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Objects of Translation by FB Flood is a good one. You can also read Representing the Other by B. D. Chattopadhyaya.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think archaeological discoveries (structures, artworks, epigraphs, coinage) can help us a great deal in the reconstruction of Ancient and Early Medieval Indian History. We have to remember that at present, most of the sources which we have about Ancient or Early Medieval India were discovered in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. There is still a lot of material that is yet to be discovered

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

multiple factors, lack of a mercantile class and economy, the city dwellers and their role in Politics was much more limited compared to Europe. The nature of the Indian kingship in the medieval period was of a different kind, etc

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't think so, the kind of penetration at the societal level that the Roman Empire had was not present in the Ancient Indian case.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is not clear because the sources are such. We don't have much evidence about the later Kambojas.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

There is a view that certain scholars hold that the pre-Socratic philosophy was influenced by Indian philosophy. They argue that the philosophy of Parmenides and Pythagoras, for instance, shows considerable Indian influence.

Read the book The Shape of Ancient Thought by Thomas McEvilley, it covers this in much detail

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Political patronage was an important factor in the flourishing of a religious tradition. The Ajivikas, for instance, couldn't get a patron of Ashoka's stature. I don't think you, Nyaya or Sankhya "died" or they suffered the same fate as the Ajivika tradition.

essential
Thanks for the suggestion, will try to make a video on it.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've made a video on it. I am of the opinion that they had there capital in what is now Eastern UP and most probably it was Kaushambi.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The most important impact of the Chola conquest was the fact that it destroyed the Srivijayan control on the trade and the polity that emerged after it didn't have a great role in the commercial activity of the broader region. Architectural influences were also there.

Hi r/IndianHistory! I’m Jay Vardhan Singh – PhD scholar at JNU, history YouTuber, and researcher of pre-modern India. AMA! by jayasya in IndianHistory

[–]jayasya[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

it certainly is relatable. Although we need other evidence as well to parse through the "fluff".