Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Rivalries in history

-----Rivalries in history-----

Cities, States, Kingdoms, and Superpowers have always competed with one another for dominance and power. 

From the origins to 1 AD

I have not included India in this list, for I have already given an account in one of my older posts


Early dynastic Mesopotamia (2800-2200 BCE) : The city-states of Sumer : Ur, Uruk, Lagash, and Kish became warring states

Early dynastic Egypt (3000-2700 BCE) : Upper Egypt (Nile Valley) and Lower Egypt (Nile Delta) fought wars, with one king wearing the blue crown and the other, white crown. 

  Minoa Vs Myceane (2500-1420 BCE) : Two civilisations sprouted south of Greece in the Mediterranean and Myceane displaced the Minoan civilisation of Crete.
Egypt Vs Hyksos (1700-1500 BCE) : From the North, the Hyksos attacked Egypt and brought a period called the 'Second Intermediate Period'.

Egypt Vs Hittites (1600-1000 BCE) : From the North-East frontiers of Egypt, the Hittites attacked from Hatti and disrupted the rule of the Egyptian Pharoahs.

Assyria Vs Babylon  (900-700 BCE) : Assyria and Babylonia, both in Mesopotamia fought wars against one another.


Assyria Vs Media (620-600 BCE) : The bitter hatred between the Medians of Iran and Assyrians of Northern Mesopotamia brought them into conflict until Cyaxares of Media went into alliance with Babylon and other powers. Assyria finally fell and Babylonian Chaldeans took their place.

Neo-Babylonians (Chaldeans) Vs Media (625-550 BCE) : For a short period, Babylonia was the most powerful empire and Media was also ruled by powerful kings.

Media Vs Persia (590-550 BCE) : Cyrus the Great, Grandson of Astyages of Media defeated his grandfather in a siege and hence built the largest Empire ever seen till then.

Persia Vs Greek States (500-330 BCE) : During Emperor Darius's reign, the Persians tried invading Greece.  A result was the Battle of Marathon. Later, during Xerxes' reign, the Persians attacked Greece again and the Battles of Thermopylae and Salamis resulted in Persian defeat. During the time of Alexander the Great, he swore to destroy the Persian Empire and at Gaugamela, finally Darius III was defeated.


Athens Vs Sparta (430-404 BCE) : After the Battles with Persia, due to cultural differences the Classical Athenians and the War-like Spartans went to constant aggression and this conflict caused the Peloponnesian Wars finally causing the decline of the Golden Age of Athens.

Warring states of China (480-221 BCE) : After the fall of the Zhou dynasty in China, the Warring States period began with seven states consistently fighting for dominance. This ended when Qin Shi Huangdi conquered and unified China.


Romans Vs Carthaginians (264-146 BCE) : Romans rose in prominence and power. They were checked by the Carthaginians in Northern Africa and Western Asia. There was bitter rivalry for a century. Hannibal rose to prominence as a military leader during these conflicts known as the Punic Wars.

Romans Vs Macedonians (214-148 BCE) : With Rome rising, the Greek Antigonid rulers of Macedon fought wars against Rome by forming alliances with the Carthaginians and the Seleucids. The Macedonian wars happened simultaneously with the Seleucid and Carthaginian Wars.

Romans Vs Seleucids (192-188 BCE) : From Asia Minor to Persia, after the death of Alexander, the Seleucid Empire rose with Parthia to its east and North and the Roman territory in the West. Romans and Seleucids came to a direct combat in which they built alliances until finally Asia Minor fell to Rome.

Parthians Vs Seleucids (239-129 BCE) : From the East, there was a strong rivalry with the Parthians to the Seleucids,  The Seleucid Empire came to be held by the Parthians. This was majorly due to their being pushed away by competition in India.

Plebians Vs Patricians (509-27 BCE) : During the Roman Republic, two Consuls were elected, one from the Common sections of the society called Plebians, and the other- the aristocracy called the Patricians. This rivalry finally exploded with Marius and Sulla, the Plebian and Patrician representatives.


Romans Vs the Barbarians (throughout Roman History) : Though the Romans could dominate the Mediterranean, they could not control Northern and Eastern Europe an area raided by countless groups of unrelated people loosely called Barbarians. This conflict intensified during Caesar's Gallic Wars.

Events kept gaining importance from this period. So rivals increased in number and the atrocities due to rivalries were also very high. 










Sunday, April 5, 2015

Fates of human societies

This write-up you see below is entirely based on what I've learnt from the book 'Guns, Germs, and Steel: Fates of Human Societies' authored by Jared Diamond. 



When we look at World History as World History, we usually come across Eurasian History from Scandinavia in the North to Egypt in the South; Ireland (Sometimes all the way from Iceland) in the West to China in the East, but that's not all. There's more in the world. We usually ignore South East Asia and Far East in Asia; most of Africa; the whole of Americas (and Greenland if there is any history); Australasia, Oceania, and Polynesia. Why is this so? You might say that there isn't enough significant history. That's not true. It's not they who wrote history books over the last 25 centuries but we the Eurasians (I am an Indian). Why didn't they? They were not developed enough, which is precisely why the Maori (Australian Natives) or Malians could not invade England or France while the Vice versa happened. Guns, Germs and steel developed in Eurasia and these took over the rest of the world. WHY?



We need to understand the background. Homo Sapiens started out as mere naked (or may be not) Hunter-gatherers foraging for food, eating all that they find. It is clear that they originated from East Africa. Humans originated around 7 Million BC in Eastern Africa, reached Indo-China by around 1 Million BC, Central Europe around 500,000 BC. The migration retarded and eventually came to a halt at this point because of the Ice ages. People could not reach Russia due to low temperatures, minimal clothing and lack of apparatus to produce clothes. After the fall of the last Ice-Age, people migrated north and reached Russia (around 20,000 BC). From the eastern tip of the continent they entered Americas through the Bering Strait (which was frozen then). By 11,000 BC people were in Mesoamerica, and by 10,000 BC, they were in the Southern tip of South America. Antarctica was never colonized, and it still isn't. 



Coming to Greenland, due to freezing temperatures, they could reach here only around 2000 BC. 


We still have a large part of the world untouched, they are Far East, and South East Asia; Oceania, Australasia; and Polynesia and the Pacific. People first settled in South Asia and developed a proto-culture. 




When humans reached the Americas and Oceania, many large mammals (similar to those in the Old World) died off leaving behind only some predators, and small animals. Having said that, we can proceed to how the fates were determined. For civilisation to develop, a proper social organisation must be fabricated, for which people must settle at some part of the world, which means that they should be able to satisfy their needs despite becoming stagnant. One of the most important resources is food. People started out as hunter-gatherers. If they had to settle at a specific place, they first had to have a reserve of food. It could be managed by storing or by producing food themselves. People from some parts of the world started practising agriculture, which was not a foreseen conscious decision. 



When some men ate fruits and spit out the seeds or egested them, they observed new crops so it turned evident that crops could be grown manually. There were no plants 'fixed' to be grown as crops initially. Every plant grew in the forest while some of them seemed tastier and easier to grow. So by unconscious experimentation some wild plants came out of the wild and became crops. After some crops were cultivated, some had more desirable qualities than the others like taste, larger seeds, larger leaves, etc. As a result plants were artificially selected to survive on this planet. Due to climatic conditions, soil, and water supply, some wild plants had the abilities to grow into crops. There are very few places that had plants for growing into crops: The fertile crescent, China, Mesoamerica and Eastern USA. Some other places that had chances were Sahel, Ethiopia, New Guinea, Andes, and the Amazon. Due to topographic conditions, from the Fertile Crescent, food went Northwards to South Eastern Europe and Eastward to the Persian Gulf and subsequently, India. These areas were also highly habitable so there were people to practise agriculture. From China, food traveled East, West, and South thus filling Asia with food production. 




Agriculture cannot be practised with good soil alone. Tools and more importantly animals are required. Yet, food production started in all the above mentioned areas but at later phases. Coming to animals, their domestication is similar to the practice of agriculture. Large omnivorous mammals or relatively smaller carnivorous animals were required for domestication. One of the most important qualities is their Social nature. Social animals which followed their leader tend to follow humans also, so a majority of animals were eliminated. Animals must also be peaceful or at least calm over their peer beasts. Size was also an important factor. Mighty animals like Rhinoceroses, elephants, and giraffes in Africa could not be domesticated. Due to such reasons, Alpaca, Llama and Vicunas could be domesticated in the Andes. Dromedary Camels across the Middle East, Bactrian Camels in Gobi, Reindeer in the extreme northern hemispheres were domesticated. The major domestic animals were however the goat, cow, pig, and sheep that were domesticated around 2000 KM around the fertile crescent. This qualified all the conditions and they could live in the surrounding 2000 Km. Another unique group of animals which only Eurasians had access to were horses, that originated from Siberia. Peoples from other continents could neither gain them nor select organisms to create such powerful creatures. 



Unlike hunter-gatherers, who hunted down animals and ate them, the farmers used the wool, skin, milk, and horns of these. They used them for labour and ate them at the end raising the level of civilisation. There is another interesting factor that affected the growth of continents. While the Americas, and Africa were North-South Oriented, Eurasia is East-West oriented or horizontally oriented which means large sections of land fall near the same latitude, that is, they have similar climates. So, a given set of species of plants and animals can adapt a larger area, thus a larger portion gets domesticated. In Americas and Africa, within a small region there were varying terrains, and climates so crops and animals could not travel far and wide, due to which large human populations was confined to a small area and rest of the continent was sparse.


                                  


Now that the basic requirements are discussed, we need to see aspects of civilisation. We shall see how writing rose, systems of governance grew, social order was built, science and technology was expanded, and how diseases were born. 


Though we usually associate diseases with death, they actually supported the rise of Eurasia in the Americas and Africa. Diseases killed Native Americans more in number than the swords, guns, and horses of the English, French, and Spanish. As better practitioners of agriculture and farming, Europeans were in direct contact both physically, and socially with animals. This relation developed earlier in Eurasia than in the other parts of the world.  In Eurasia, areas were far more denser. So germs and microbes could easily get transferred to communes in and around human bodies. Men became disease-carrying vectors. Over time, these Eurasians also turned more-or-less resistant and immune to certain diseases. Once they set foot on foreign soil, the native population who were not resistant died adding to the supremacy of the Europeans. 

One thing that the rest of the world did not know during imperial ages but Europe knew was writing. Though they could emboss things, we had tonnes of books, rich literature and intellect. Again, this was not a conscious move. Sumeria, one of the world's first civilisations in Mesopotamia for administrative purposes invented a form of art used as a kind of shorthand. Slowly this writing seeped into every section of the society. However as there was no need in other regions of Eurasia, there was art but no writing. Writing rose in several parts of Eurasia slowly but the the major breakthrough was the invention of the alphabet by the seafaring Phoenician peoples, who introduced it to Greece. The Greek alphabet was modified by the Romans. In other continents, there was no necessity, so no writing. 

Coming to inventions, it is really hard to explain because, most of them happened by accident breaking the frontiers of the usual phrase 'Necessity is the mother of invention'. 

The last subject is social organisation. First hunter-gatherers had no relation between one another. Slowly a symbiotic relationship developed building small bands of people. Bands developed into a tribe where each band was an integral unit. When food was foraged or hunted down people knew not where store all the food together so they developed a system in which they had a chief who took care of the people and resources. By this time agriculture had also started. However in the first chiefdoms, the chiefs were no more than responsible civilians. Once it became clear that the chiefs had more resources, they were exalted and turned despotic. As populations grew, new problems arose. When 20 people lived at a place, they had 190 different possible relations also meaning 190 chances of quarrel and fight. When 2000 people lived together, there were 1999000 chances of quarrel. As many people would be related to the two who quarrel the quarrel can be resolved but in large populations, less number of people are closely related. So conflicts are harder to resolve so a person or institution should be seen as supreme so power of chief rose and he became king and kingdoms were born with armies fighting marauders and resolving internal conflicts. Social eventually became complex. These changes occurred later in the Americas but by the time Europeans had entered America, Europe was in far more advanced stages. 

Hence, the guns, germs, and steel of our continents beat those of the "primitive" ones (not really). 

Saturday, April 4, 2015

10 Years after 10th Grade


I have a jungle in front of me that has many entrances into it. The jungle is colourful in some places,
Dark in others, animate in some regions, inanimate in others, but
Beauty is ornamental to it. I know it is beautiful. Each part of the jungle has its own treasure to give me, but the paths into the jungle are few. A few with levelled grass, and a few muddy, and others rough.

I know all of these take me into the jungle. The grassy one might not take me to the lush quadrant. The muddy one might not take me to a swamp. The rough might not take me to the rocks. When I know, that all are beautiful, and I, I alone like one alone above the others, why should I follow the mandate of the path?

10 years after 10th, I will be what I want to be. 




How great is Subhas Chandra Bose

India's most known freedom fighter, infact the world's most famous advocate of peace and Non  Violence is undoubtedly MK Gandhi and people around the globe recognise Jawaharlal Nehru as next in the list. This is primarily because Gandhiji loved Nehru as a son more than his four biological sons and also because Nehru represented India for its first 17 years as its First Prime Minister.  One person was close to becoming this, however they could not be close enough as they competed, ironically his idealogies were so similar to Nehru's and both wanted to make a Socialist Nation after its independence, but the latter could not live long enough to do that and he was Subhas Chandra Bose.
He was born on January 23, 1897 in Cuttack. He was the younger brother of Sarat Chandrabose. His mother was pious Hindu, so was he. He loved his motherland above himself, his mother, and god. He used to tell his mother that it was on that chunk of land that god set his foot so many times to rid the world of evil and establish Dharma. His father loved Bose so much that he was protective and too cautious when it came to him. This father tried to stop Bose from writing the Civil Services Examination because it was so called 'unconventional' job. Bose went to London and prepared for it. He expected that he had not met his expectations, but the reality was that the reality was beyond expectations. He stood third in the whole of mainland UK and India. He topped in several subjects including Sanskrit. Soon after he joined he returned back to India as a response to a call from a man who shared Bose's first love, Chittaranjan Das.
Chittaranjan Das resembled Gopal Krishna Gokhale in a very interesting aspect. India received Gandhi in 1915 after a call from Gokhale and it got Bose in 1921 after a call from CR Das, the former from South Africa, and the latter from England. After coming to India, he emerged as a national leader, though he started out as the man of Bengal, enjoying the favouritism of CR Das and Gurudev Tagore himself. He worked as the mayor of Calcutta representing the Swaraj Party. He went to the Mandalay jail just like Bal Gangadhar Tilak.
Fast forwarding a little, we see Subhas Chandrabose as the sword of Mahatma Gandhi. The biggest part of his life was the Haripura session of 1938. As an associate of Nehru, he presided the Indian National Congress. Here he gave highly radical speeches speaking of a socialist model which Gandhiji himself was against. He put nation before himself and openly proclaimed that independence was his sole goal. For a pacifist like Gandhi, India was only a part of humanity so there was a clear tension within the congress. After the session within a few months in 1939, Subhas Chandrabose found himself contesting another election for the Tripuri session after requests from several of his supporters. Senior Congress members requested Abul Kalam Azad to contest but he kept away from this affair keeping in mind the problems that would arise within the Congress. So, Pattabhi Sitaramayya from Andhra contested against Bose and Bose won again. Bose became the 52 nd president of the Congress and this event in his life changed him.
Part II continues in the next article.....
Part II of my earlier article.....

Subhas Chandrabose lost all support from within the party, so he went on to establish the Forward bloc, an organisation with radical ideas. The activities of the bloc upset everybody, including the British Police force. So, Bose was arrested. Here he suffered with sickness so he was set free. He was nearly helpless and he took a life-changing decision, one that no one would prefer. He met his nephew Sisir Kumar Bose and traveled to the frontiers of India. There he picked the name 'Ziaduddin Muhammed' and entered Afghanistan whose immediate neighbour was the USSR. USSR had signed a non-aggression pact with Germany, that had just started World War II. He decided to join hands with the Axis, and their leader, the Fuhrer, Adolf Hitler. From Afghanistan's Italian embassy, he was led into Moscow, then into Rome of Italy, also an Axis Power. There, he was called Orlando Mazzotta. Once in Rome, he found himself in mainland Europe. He finally reached Germany.
Bose as Orlando Mazzotta



There he met the Indian British Soldiers and tried to join them into the Indian legion. He also met Adolf Hitler who only agreed with his ambition but offered no support.  He also met Heinrich Himmler, who admired him and his religion. However, it was proved to be of no use. For the last time in his life, he met his wife Emilie Shenkl and their new-born daughter, Anita Bose. In 1943, he boarded the U-boat (German submarine) U-180 and with the Indian legion traveled to Far Asia, a major Axis stronghold. His original plan was to take a Sikh, Muslim, Hindu, and Christian along with him in his U-boat. It was captained by Werner Musemberg. Due to spatial constraints, he took his closest companion Abid Hasan with him. His U-boat stopped in Madagascar, where he switched to another submarine which took him all the way to Singapore, that had fallen to Japanese control.
Bose with Captain



He then met Hideki Tojo, of Germany who offered help to the Legion. South East Asia was advantageous to Bose in several ways. It was under Japanese influence. It had just been liberated from British forces, so there was clear opposition towards the British. The people could be convinced easily, one reason being the number if Indians who had left their native land as emigrants. He requested Indians to work for their nation and the legion grew into an army and it was the right time to revive the Indian National Army, which had been founded by Mohan Singh. In this Army, he named brigades after Congress leaders, Gandhi, Nehru, and Azad. He wanted women to participate in his struggle for freedom. So he created a 'Rani of Jhansi' regiment captained by Captain Lakshmi Sehagal.
Captain Lakshmi and Bose


Abid Hasan
He went to Burma after it won independence from the British. There he planned to give his army a legitimate status and to do that he made the unimaginable true, and the impossible possible. He created the 'Provisional Government of India' and a cabinet for it.  He worked just one night and made the inaugural speech of his cabinet. However staying up in nights was not new to him. All he required were a peg of scotch, some cigarettes, many papers and books. In fact, Abid Hasan once said that he could say how long Bose had stayed up by counting the number of cigarette stubs.
He chose Tagore's Jana Gana Mana as its National Anthem. He adopted the flag of the INC, dropped the Charkha, and replaced it with a pouncing tiger, symbolizing Tipu Sultan, the tiger of Mysore.  Western Media called him a 'Fascist', a word that he hated. What they actually meant was his aggressive nature. The irony here was the fact that the government did not have a territory to boast of and yet, both Japan and Germany recognised  the Provisional government as a legitimate body. To give it a territory, Japan gave Bose charge of Andaman.



flag
Bose, with the slogan 'Chalo Delhi' aimed to march towards Delhi and uproot the Union Jack and establish Bharat supremacy. However, their forces were stopped near North Eastern India. Though he could relaunch the failed operations, the WWII that ended prevented him from making further plans. He found no point in Staying outside India, so he boarded the plane towards his motherland and it crashed in Taipei. India lost one of its bravest and greatest sons.


Chalo Delhi

Ancient and Medieval Historical rivalry in India

Rivalry in India

War is nearly synonymous to rivalry. India taught both War and Peace to the world. Here we have the history of Rivaling states in Ancient and Medieval India. Rivalry here means serious Envy, hunger, anger, and competition. 

 I can't really tell you all these are true. I've just listed down all those that came to my mind. 


1. Sudas-Anu: Sudas was a kingdom in North Western India. It guarded Bharatvarsh (the subcontinent) during an ancient crisis. It fought against 9 other kingdoms led by its rival, the Anu. This is mentioned in the Rig Veda. 



2. Avanti - Magadha:  Avanti in Madhya Desa and Magadha in Eastern India were two of the most powerful kingdoms in 6th Century BCE India. They were warring states. King Sishunaga of Magadha defeated Avanti. 

3. Post Mauryan struggles: After the fall of the Mauryan Empire, several kingdoms rose in their place but none of them could get as powerful as the Mauryan Empire. So, there was definitely some amount of Vacuum, so to fill this many nomadic tribes entered India including the Parthians, and Bactrians from Persia; and Sakas, and Kushanas from China. They kept warring in India for control over the subcontinent. This continued till the rise of the Gupta empire.


 


4. Gupta - Huna : After the Guptas rose to power, there was opposition from the west in the form of Hunas who controlled many cities of the Guptas. Toramana became the leader of the Hunas after the Second Gupta ruler. The Guptas pinched into the heart of India and the Guptas became weaker. Interestingly, the Chinese Han rule also weakened. Finally, under the ruler of Skanda Gupta, the Hunas were permanently driven away.



5. Pushyabhuti - Gauda: The Pushyabhuti dynasty of Sthanisvara(Tanesar) originated from the Gupta line through complicated systems. The King of Pushyabhuti was Prabhakaravardhana who had two sons, Harsha Vardhana and Rajyavardhana. This dynasty was related to both the second Gupta line and the Maukharis of Kanyakubja (Kanauj). Rajyavardhana's wife Rajyasri belonged to the Maukharis so the Pushyabhutis and Maukharis allied. The envious kings of the Guptas kidnapped Rajyasri and became foes of this alliance. The Guptas allied with Shashanka of Gauda(Bengal). So the alliances went into constant rivalries and war. After long tension, Harsha became Emperor of North India. 



6. Pallava - Chalukya - Rashtrakuta: Pallavas dominated the Peninsula soon after the demise of the Satavahanas. This continued till the rise of Chalukyas who started competing with Pallavas from 6th Century AD. This rivalry was unrivaled for about 300 years. Rashtrakutas, another dynasty broke away from the Chalukyas and started supporting the Pallavas. This went on till about early 9th Century after which only the Rashtrakutas survived with extinct Empires being reborn from the Tamil Region and the Rashtrakutas extended their control to Northern and Central India. 
  
Mahabalipuram, temple complex of Pallavas
Badami, Chalukya

7. Pala - Gurjara-Pratihara - Rashtrakuta: After the death of Harsha, Kanauj was the most important city in the Subcontinent. Many empires tried to assert their dominance over Kanauj. In Bengal, the Pala Empire rose after Shashanka's death. In the west, the Gurjara Pratiharas rose to power and in the South, Rashtrakutas were powerful. The struggle between the three parties were called the Tripartite Struggle of Kanauj and in 8th Century, Dhruva Dharavarsha of Rashtrakuta dynasty defeated the other two kings, but the frontiers still remained dynamic. 



8. Chola - Pandya - Chera: The struggle was called the Muventar in Tamil. While the Cholas were centred around Uraiyur and Tanjavur; the Pandyas were centred around Madurai. The Cheras were almost entirely within the Malabar Coast. These were ancient group of Kingdoms which in 3rd-5th Century contributed to the Sangam Literature. They rose back in around 9th Century. Around 10th Century, the Cholas were in their peak under the rule of Raja Raja and Rajendra. In 13th Century, the Cholas lost their empire to the Pandyas amd within a century all three empires fell. 


9. Ghori - Chauhan : This struggle involved majorly two people and two parties. The brave warrior Prithviraj Chauhan, the Chauhan King and Mohammed Ghori of Ghurid Empire. The First battle of Tarain ended with defeat of Ghori while the second with the execution of Prithviraj. This event changed Indian history causing Muslim invaders to settle permanently in Hindustan.


10. Yadava - Kakatiya : These two kingdoms in the Deccan were in constant conflict with one another, and the conflict ended when Warangal and Devagiri were annexed by the Delhi Sultans.



11. Mughal - Rajput : Being ardent Hindus, the Rajputs defended India from Arab, Afghan, and Turk rule several times. Even when Muslims held Empires here, they frequently went to war. Rajput clans include Solanki, Chahman (Chauhan), Parmar, and Pratihar. They fought with Ghoris, Mamluk, Khilji, Tuqlaq, Sayyids, and Lodis. When the Mughals established their rule, the Rajputs fought with Babur, Humayun, as well as Akbar. We know very well about the wars between Maharana Pratap and Akbar.
Maharana Pratap
Akbar



12. Suri - Mughal : During reigns of Humayun, and Akbar, the Suris, Adil Shah and Sher Shah fought wars with them. Sher Shah Suri also disturbed the rule of Humayun, and Akbar re-established the Mughal supremacy.


13. Vijayanagara - Portuguese : In 1498, Vasco Da Gama landed in India in Calicut of Malabar Coast. The Malabar and Konkan coasts were controlled by the Saluva Kings of Vijayanagara Dynasty. While the Portuguese plundered towns and converted captives into Christians, the Canarese Kings along with Keralite Kings quelled these attacks.



Aurangzeb
14. Mughal - Maratha : Shivaji established the Maratha Empire to protect Hindustan from the Mughals and this caused weaking of the Mughal Empire during the regime of Aurangzeb, one of the most despotic conservative Mohammedan ruler. This rivalry was very crucial in Indian history.
Shivaji
15. Sikh - Mughal : Another rival of Aurangzeb was Guru Gobind Singh, the 10th Guru of the Sikhs. He worked with similar motives as Shivaji.
Guru Gobind Singh


After a lot of wars, under Aurangzeb, the British lost large territories. After his death in 1707, the British gained power and the modern era started.


Turns of History

TURNS OF HISTORY

History is a very interesting subject. History has its own pace and phase. However, some events changed the pace and phase of the ever-flowing stream of history. This is an attempt to recall such events till 1000 AD. 


The River Valley Civilisations: Egypt, Sumer, Harappan, and later, Assyrian, Median, and Babylonian pour life into the region between Turkey and India.


Abraham and the founding of Judaism : Abraham founded Judaism and gave a religion to the Middle East.

 Destruction of Jerusalem: Emperor Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon destroyed the Israelites' home aborting the dawn of a world Empire.


Exodus: Jews return to Canaan from Egypt led by Moses. Judaism finds a home again.


Battle of Marathon : Europe finally wins over its mother, Asia. Civilisation comes to peak in Europe with Greece as its cradle.


Alexander the Great : He unified Western civilisation and forced it into a single umbrella changing all frontiers. His death broke the world into fragments that shaped the world: Lysimachid, Cassandrian Empire, Ptolemaic Egypt, Antigonid Empire, Seleucid Persia. 


Qin Empire: Qin Shi Huang Di founds the Qin Empire by unifying confederacies in China. Another part of the world becomes notably important. 


 Buddha and Asoka: Buddha gave light to Asia and offered an alternative to the world in cultural terms. Ashoka, as an India Emperor helped in propagating this religion.


Migration of Etruscans: Amid the Civilisation of the Greeks, the Etruscans with their language Latin form confederacies in Italy, founding the Kingdom of Rome. Rome outshines Greece turning the Spotlight to Italy.


Caesar aspires to become Dictator: The Republic State and the Senate are destroyed by Julius Caesar, an ambitious commander; paving the path to the formation of the Roman Empire.


Cleopatra: Due to the alliance of Cleopatra with Caesar, and his ally, Antony, Rome exerts control over Egypt, and subsequently the whole of Middle East. 


Second Triumvirate: Octavian, Mark Anthony, and Lepidus ruled jointly. Octavian killed the other two to give rise to the Roman Empire. 


Birth of Jesus of Nazareth: A man was born in the Roman Province of Judea. He was destined to resolve the problems of the Jews, thus forming a new religion, currently, the one with the most adherents, Christianity. He was however crucified by the Roman authorities after complaints from Jews.


Post Mauryan Conflict in Central Asia and North India: After the Fall of the Mauryan Empire, the Sunga, Shatavahana, Kanva, Kharavela kingdoms rose in India's interiors. In its frontiers, to add competition, Kushanas and Sakas from China  and Central Asia competed with the Pahlavas of Persian Parthia. There was constant rivalry. This led to the fall of all three states.




Rise of Sassanids: Under Ardeshir, the Pahlavas were defeated and the Zoroastrian Sassanid Empire rose in its place and for 4 centuries it was the sole dynasty in Persia. It prevented expansion of Roman Empire. 


Roman Empire splits: Roman Emperor Diocletian split up the Roman Empire into East and West and established Co-Emperors under him. This facilitated growth of the Mid-East.  



Capital shifted: Under Constantine, the Capital of the Roman Empire was shifted from Rome to Byzantium. This led to constant deterioration of the West and growth of the West.


Christianity made state religion: Under Theosodius, Christianity became state religion. 


The scourge of God: Attila the Hun becomes the chief of the Huns. The Huns under Attila vandalize Europe and Europe goes into its dark ages.






Fall of Guptas:After the Guptas fell in India, there was vacuum formed in Interior of India and outside India, this changed boundaries of Central Asia and Persia.


Prophet Muhammad: Prophet Muhammad was born in Arabia. He founded a new Abrahamic religion named Islam, which believes in no other God but God(Allah). It's holy book was Quran. The former holy spot of Kaaba of the Arabs still remained holy to the Muslims. As a duty, every Muslim must embark upon Hajj, a journey to Mecca. Muslims had to and must do Namaz five times a day from their station facing Mecca.





Caliphates: After Muhammad's death, the whole Islamic community fell into a chaotic situation. They did not know who would save them. So they chose Abu Bakr as a Khalifa, or the leader of the faithful, followed by three other rightly-guided Khalifas(Rashidun), Umar, Uthman, and Ali Ibn Abi Talib.Under the first two Caliphs, there was widespread conquest in the middle East. This was a competition to Christianity.


Ummayads: After assassination of the fourth Caliph, Ali. There was a confusion among Muslims, so the power shifted from Arabia to Damascus in Syria. The family of Uthman(The third Caliph), founded a power, the Ummayads. It was under the Ummayad reign that took Islam to its peaks. Islam was the most popular religion all the way from Persia to Egypt and Libya.  





Abbasides: However, the Ummayads' power also deteriorated. With this as the backdrop, the descendants of Abbas (Muhammad's uncle) founded their Caliphate, shifting the Capital to Baghdad. This event was important because this event helped in further expanding Islam into the East.


Moors in Europe: The greatest threat to Europe were for a period, the Arab Moors. Muslims through Northern Africa and Morocco entered Spain and invaded it and sought to expand throughout Europe. Their invasion was stalled in Tour of France.





Islam in India: Muhammad Qasim and later of Muhammad of Ghazni invaded India and Islam entered India. 


Franks occupy Europe: Charlemagne occupied large amounts of Europe in order to revive a Pan-European State like the Roman Empire. Unlike the Romans, these people adhered to the Church and were identified as a legitimate state. Pope Leo presented Charlemagne the crown of 'Holy Roman Emperor'. The Holy Roman Empire did not receive efficient leaders for a century.





Holy Roman Empire: King Otto was the king of the Teutons. He ascended the throne of the Holy Roman Empire and from that point, Europe gained power again. 


England starts to emerge: King Alfred, Anglosaxon King of Wessex defended England from Viking attacks hence empowering England with Political power, name, and fame.


Europeans in America: Leif Erikson of Scandinavia traveled to Greenland and Canada establishing bases there. 






* There is a major drawback in this article because there is limited mention of China, and no mention of Korea, Japan, Far East Nations, and the new world. It has, for me, seemed difficult to involve events from these parts.