22
Ch. 3 India & China Section Two: New Empires in India

Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

  • Upload
    sahkyo

  • View
    34

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India. I. The Mauryan Dynasty. 400 B.C. Persia threatened the Dynasty Alexander the Great invaded in 327 B.C. A. The Founding of the Mauryan Dynasty. Chandragupta Maurya 324 to 301 B.C. Highly centralized & impartial power - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

Ch. 3 India & ChinaSection Two: New

Empires in India

Page 2: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

I. The Mauryan Dynasty

•400 B.C. Persia threatened the Dynasty

•Alexander the Great invaded in 327 B.C.

Page 3: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India
Page 4: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

A. The Founding of the Mauryan Dynasty

•Chandragupta Maurya 324 to 301 B.C.

•Highly centralized & impartial power

•Provinces, ruled by governors

Page 5: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

B. The Reign of Asoka

•Asoka, grandson of Chandragupta Maurya

•*Asoka is considered the greatest ruler in the history of India

•Converted to Buddhism

Page 6: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India
Page 7: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

II. The Kushan Kingdom & the Silk Road

•100 B.C. founded by nomadic warriors, in Afghanistan

•Prospered on trade•Silk Road – a route between the

Roman Empire & China, so called because silk was China’s most valuable product (p. 83)

Page 8: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

The Kushan Kingdom & the Silk Road

•Stretched from the city of Changan in China to Antioch a port city in Syria on the Mediterranean Sea

Page 9: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India
Page 10: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

III. The Kingdom of the Guptas

•Chandragupta & son Samudragupta

•Dominate political force in northern India

Page 11: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India
Page 12: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

The Kingdom of the Guptas

•Faxian, a Chinese Buddhist monk spent years in northern India

•The Gupta Empire actively engaged in trade with China, Southeast Asia & the Mediterranean

•Mines of gold, silver

Page 13: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

Caves

Prince Gautama

Page 14: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

The Kingdom of the Guptas

•Profited from religious trade•Pilgrim – a person who travels to a shrine or other holy place (p.85)

•Invaded by the Huns in 5th century A.D.

Page 15: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

IV. The World of Indian Culture

•Literature, architecture and Science

Page 16: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

A. Literature: A Lasting Legacy

•Vedas, earliest known Indian literature

•Epic poems: Mahabharata & Ramayana

•Recount deeds of great warriors

Page 17: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India
Page 18: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

Literature: A Lasting Legacy

•Most famous poem, Bhagavad Gita

•The Ramayana was an account of the fictional ruler Rama

•Kalidasa most famous Indian author

•The Cloud Messenger

Page 19: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

B. Architecture

•The pillar, marked sites pertinent to the Buddha’s life

•The stupa, burial mounds & held relics

•The rock chamber, carved out of mountainsides

Page 20: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

stupa

http://www.sudarshanaloka.org/images/stupa2.JPG

Page 21: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

http://images.encarta.msn.com/xrefmedia/sharemed/targets/images/pho/000aa/000aab23.jpg

Page 22: Ch. 3 India & China Section Two : New Empires in India

C. Science•Astronomy•Aryabhata, the most famous mathematician

•*Created Algebra•Devised a decimal system of counting in tens

•Introduced the concept of zero