| Specifications |
| Publisher: Encyclopaedia Britannica (India) Pvt Ltd, Delhi | |
| Author Nonica Datta | |
| Language: English | |
| Pages: 308 (with B/W Illustrations) | |
| Cover: PAPERBACK | |
| 24 cm x 19 cm | |
| Weight 600 gm | |
| Edition: 2003 | |
| ISBN: 8179910679 | |
| HBP657 | |
| Statutory Information |
| Delivery and Return Policies |
| Returns and Exchanges accepted within 7 days | |
| Free Delivery | |
| Delivery from: India |
The rwo volumes, Indian History: Ancient and Medinal and
Indian History: Maders, the newest additions to Encyclopædia Britannica's
growing library of ropical reference works and the second set on India, the
first being the Students be developed and published by Encyclopædia Britannica
(India) Pvt. Ltd. The focus of the volumes, if indeed such a huge subject can
be called a focus, is the bistory of India from the Palaeolithic period to the
twentieth century, Even a quick place the Overview in each book shows that
Indian history is as rich and varied as the history of any civilization can
possibly be. To do it justice, a combination of conte and rich detail is
required. This combination defines Indian Hidery Andent and Medieval and Indian
History: Modern.
The Indian History volumes are part of a rich tradition of
high-quality reference book publishing by Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Encyclopædia Britannica itself is the oldest continuously published
encyclopaedia in the English language. The first edition appeared in Edinburgh,
Scotland, from 1768 to 1771. The current 15 edition, available in both print
and electronic form, is often called the world's most authoritative reference
work. Versions of Encyclopædia Britannica are also published in Japanese, Chinese,
Korean, Polish, Hungarian, and Greek; related encyclopaedias exist in French,
Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian. In addition, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.,
publishes encyclopaedias and other reference works for children and students.
Meticulous editorial standards govern the development of all Encyclopædia
Britannica publications.
As Indian History: Ancient and Medieval and Indian History:
Modern go to press, deep gratitude is owed to the scholars who contributed to
or reviewed the contents Kumkum Roy, Vijaya Ramaswami, Nonica Dutta, and Ralph
M. Nicholas, who is also author of the Preface. Their generous assistance and
feedback are most appreciated. Thanks also to the editors of Encyclopædia
Britannica (India) for bringing Indian History into being. Encyclopædia
Britannica is proud to present the two volumes to you, our readers.
History is normally presented to readers in chronological
order. The discipline of writing history was developed in considerable part
from the chronicles of pre-modern Europe. These chronicles, which were always
records of influential people, told what happened in royal courts, papal
palaces, battlefields, and such influential arenas. Chronicles attempted to
relate those events more or less in the order in which they occurred. While the
ostensible purpose of chronicles was to record events, sensible record keepers
usually sought to flatter their employers and to aggrandize the institutions
they served. Thus, the sometimes random succession of events became, in
chronicle form, a connected narrative and vehicle for extolling the qualities
of the central figure.
Trying to find meaning in the things that happen in a month,
or a year, a lifetime, or a century is a familiar exercise till today. There is
a deeply rooted human propensity to want to find order in everything, including
nature and history. In the writing of history, the search for order has often
forced some sort of mould on the events of the past. There are many examples of
such forcing. Marxists, or historical materialists, have found a succession of
class conflicts driving human society in a single direction, toward the
resolution of all contradictions. The religious traditions derived from ancient
Israel take a view of history as the progressive revelation of a divine
purpose. American history has been interpreted as an unfolding of
"manifest destiny", in which the advance of European colonization
from the Atlantic to the Pacific coasts and the advance of America's world
influence were interpreted as an inevitable process. The truth of the past is
always more complicated and usually more interesting than the histories
produced by these and other theories.
Perhaps because of their preoccupation with the organization
of events in time, when Western historians attempted to work their arts on the
history of India, they very often resorted to references to
"timeless" or "immemorial traditions". The classical Hindu
theory of the organization of time in very long cycles, kajha, divided into
yuges of progressively shorter duration marked by increasing disorder, was
interpreted to mean that Hindus did not believe in history. A cyclical
conception of time was thought to mean that people found no direction (or
purpose) in history, or that they did not think that history is a story of
human progress.
Even a cursory examination of the events of the last century
makes it plain that human progress, however it is defined, is by no means
inexorable, and the direction of history, if there is one, is not any kind of
straight line. It was the civilization of Europe and North America that gave
the world two world wars, poison gas, the murder of six million Jews, nuclear
bombs, racial segregation, and the war in Vietnam. After these experiences, the
willingness of many to believe that history is characterized by some form of
progress or a divine plan for the improvement of humanity has diminished.
In the latter part of the twentieth century, Indian
historians began to exercise an increasing influence on the way historians
around the world interpret the facts of the past. Although no one nation or
region of the world will "own" the twenty-first century, it is very
likely that Indian writing of history will occupy a central place in the
intellectual firmament. Part of the reason for this shift is, importantly, the
increasing importance of Indian intellectuals and scholars on the world scene.
However, an equally significant reason is that world history appears different
when seen from India than from Europe or North America, as also from elsewhere
in Asia. One characteristic of the writing of history by modern Indian authors
is a willingness to face a reality that is not always pleasing. They have told
the stories of poor and oppressed people, and of caste and communal conflicts,
as an integral part of history, and as facts that must be faced if India's
commitment to egalitarian, secular democracy is to be realized.
India is a nation of nations. If it had come to political
independence in nineteenth-century Europe, it might have emerged as fifteen
separate countries that tolerated linguistic and religious diversity more
poorly than does modern India most of the time. Arriving at its "tryst
with destiny" in the middle of the twentieth century, with a commitment to
egalitarian democracy and a pluralistic constitution, India has given rise to a
generation of historians and social scientists whose research and writing is sought
after throughout the world for insights into the nature and development of
modern societies.
Indian history Ancient and Medieval
Indian history does not tell just one story. On the one
hand, it tells the very different stories of "Punjab, Sindhu, Gujarat,
Maratha, Dravida, Utkala, and Banga"- the very distinct linguistic and
cultural regions of India. On the other, it tells the story of the arrival and
establishment of the Aryas, Hunas, Afghans, Turks, and Mughals, Parsis,
Christians, and Jews. It would be misleading to try to construct a master
narrative out of all of these diverse episodes. Although the eras of pre-colonial
unification of the subcontinent under Ashoka and, two millennia later, under
Akbar, are seen as deeply significant moments, they are also exceedingly rare
ones. The welding together of a democratic Indian nation after 1947 is a
brilliant historical achievement that was accomplished by a conjunction of
Indian intellectual power, and a commitment to democracy born out of Western
education and experience.
This book is constructed around the recognition of the many
stories that together constitute that history. The volume begins with an
authoritative overview of the period it covers. However, the larger part of the
text contains a series of discrete entries that examine the specific periods,
places, and people that go together to make up Indian history. These articles
can be read in any order and put together in various patterns to help
understand historical episodes or social processes in India. The overview
articles provide an orientation to a long time period, but the individual
entries are rich sources of detailed information about the many histories that
have figured in the making of India, as we know it today.
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