Around
3000 BC, one of the world's oldest civilisations flourished in India.
Excavations in the north-western region have uncovered well-planned
cities like Mohenjodaro, Harappa and Lothal as well as dockyards for
sea-borne trade.
From around 2000-1500 BC, nomadic Indo -
Aryan groups came to settle in Northern India.
Aside from the horse, they introduced the worship of fire. From nomads
to settled agriculturists, the Aryans developed village communities.
Hinduism was at a very nascent stage and Sanskrit, from which many
modern Indian languages are derived, developed alongside Dravidian,
Sino-Tibetan, and munda languages. The Vedas, Upanishads and epics -
Ramayana and Mahabharata - are the major works dating back to those
ancient times.
Social and intellectual ferment in the 6th century BC led thinkers like
Mahavira and Gautama Buddha to seek and offer alternate paths - Jainism
and Buddhism.
When the Greek ambassador Megasthenes visited India, in the 3rd century
BC, the north was consolidated into one great empire under Chandragupta
Maurya. His grandson, Ashoka the great (268-231 B.C.), was deeply
affected by the bloodbath on the battlefield, and chose to practice and
disseminate the Buddhist philosophy of non-violence in India and abroad.
Between 320 and 480 AD, often referred to as the Golden Age of the
Guptas, India saw the flowering of art, culture, literature and science.
Scholarly treatises on subjects ranging from medicine and mathematics to
astronomy and even love (the famed Kamasutra) were written.
Qutub-ud-din Aibak laid the foundation of Muslim rule in India in the
13th century. The Tughlaqs and Lodis succeeded the Aibaks. In the 16th
century, Babur founded the Mughal empire which reached its zenith with
his grandson Akbar (1562-1605) the Great. Another ruler, Shahjehan, is
famous for building the magnificent Taj
Mahal.
The 17th century brought the Europeans, with the British, French, Dutch
and Portuguese setting up trading posts. Soon commercial interests
combined with political ambitions to produce a power struggle among the
Europeans. The Battle of Plassey in 1757 was decisive, with the British
gaining supremacy over the others.
British rule gave rise to national aspirations which resulted in the
First War of Independence in 1857. Though brutally suppressed, it marked
the beginning of a struggle led by the Indian National Congress, founded
in 1885. Finally, on August 15, 1947, India gained independence. On 26th
January 1950, it became a republic.