Here is the notes from NCERT Class 6 History Chapter 9 – “Traders, Kings and Pilgrims”.
Trade and traders
- South India was famous for gold, spices, especially pepper, and precious stones.
- In the Roman Empire, Pepper is known as black gold.
- traders carried many of these goods to Rome in ships, across the sea, and by land in caravans.
- sailors took advantage of the monsoon (South-west monsoon) winds to cross the seas more quickly.
- Roman gold coins have been found in south India.
New kingdoms along the coasts
- The southern half of the subcontinent is marked by a long coastline, and with hills, plateaus, and river valleys.
- Chiefs and kings who controlled the river valleys and coasts became rich and powerful.
- Sangam poems mention the muvendar (tamil word meaning three chiefs).
- These are the Cholas, Cheras, and Pandyas (2300 years ago in southern india).
- The chiefs did not collect regular taxes.
- They demanded and received gifts from the people.
- Two important city: Puhar or Kaveripattinam, the port of the Cholas, and Madurai, the capital of the Pandyas.
Satavahanas dynasty
- Around 200 years later a dynasty known as the Satavahanas became powerful in western India.
- Important ruler: Gautamiputra Shri Satakarni.
- An inscription composed on behalf of his mother, Gautami Balashri.
- He and other Satavahana rulers were known as lords of the dakshinapatha (route leading to the south).
The Silk Route
- Silk Route: A network of trade routes connecting India, China, Central Asia, and Europe.
- Chinese silk was in great demand in Rome and other parts of the world.
- Traders carried silk from China to India and then further west.
- Kushanas (around 2000 years ago) controlled parts of the Silk Route.
- Famous ruler: Kanishka.
- Important city: Peshawar and Mathura.
- Important for the spread of Buddhism.
Silk production
- Techniques of making silk were first invented in China around 7000 years ago.
- Raw silk has to be extracted from the cocoons of silk worms, spun into thread and then woven into cloth.
The Spread of Buddhism
- The most famous Kushana ruler was Kaniska (1900 years ago).
- Kanishka organized the Fourth Buddhist Council.
- Ashvaghosha, a poet composed a biography of the Buddha, the Buddhacharita (Sanskrit).
- Two major forms of Buddhism emerged:
- Hinayana: Followed Buddha’s original teachings.
- Mahayana: Believed in Buddha as a god; introduced idol worship.
- Bodhisattvas: persons who had attained enlightenment.
- Bodhisattvas became very popular, and spread throughout Central Asia, China, and later to Korea and Japan.
Pilgrims
- Pilgrims are people who travel to religious places.
- Famous Chinese pilgrims who visited India:
- Fa Xian
- Xuan Zang
- I-Qing
- They visited Buddhist centers like Nalanda, Bodh Gaya, Sarnath, and wrote about Indian culture and life.
The Beginning of Bhakti
- Bhakti Movement: Devotion to a personal god (Bhagavan or Bhagavati).
- Bhakti Comes from the Sanskrit term bhaj meaning ‘to divide or share.’
- Stressed individual devotion and love towards God, rather than rituals.
- Devotees could choose their deity (Vishnu, Shiva, Durga, etc.).
- According to this system of belief, if a devotee worships the chosen deity with a pure heart, the deity will appear in the form in which he or she may desire.
- Anybody, whether rich or poor, belonging to the so-called ‘high’ or ‘low’ castes, man or woman, could follow the path of Bhakti.
- The idea of Bhakti is present in the Bhagavad Gita, a sacred book of the Hindus, which is included in the Mahabharata.
Hindu
- The word ‘Hindu’, like the term ‘India’ is derived from the river Indus.
- It was used by Arabs and Iranians to refer to people who lived to the east of the river, and to their cultural practices, including religious beliefs.
Christianity
- About 2000 years ago, Christianity emerged in West Asia.
- Jesus Christ was born in Bethlehem, which was then part of the Roman empire.
- Christ’s teachings were that He was the Saviour of the world. He also taught people to treat others with love and trust others, just as they themselves wanted to be treated.
- spread through West Asia, Africa and Europe.
- The first Christian preachers came from West Asia to the west coast of the subcontinent within a hundred years of Christ’s death.
- The Christians of Kerala, known as Syrian Christians because they probably came from West Asia, are amongst the oldest Christian communities in the world.