HistoryClass 12

Themes in Indian History I

Part I4 Chapters

Chapter notes

What you'll learn in Themes in Indian History I

A quick revision map of Themes in Indian History I — the core idea and five key takeaways from each chapter. Tap any chapter to read the full NCERT PDF and detailed notes.

01

Bricks, Beads and Bones: The Harappan Civilisation

Chapter 1 covers the Harappan (Indus Valley) Civilisation across three phases from 6000 BCE to 1300 BCE, examining its urban planning, subsistence strategies, craft production, long-distance trade, and how archaeologists have reconstructed its history from material evidence.

  • 1Three phases: Early Harappan (6000–2600 BCE), Mature Harappan (2600–1900 BCE), and Late Harappan (1900–1300 BCE); the Mature phase is the most prosperous urban period
  • 2Five major cities — Rakhigarhi, Mohenjodaro, Harappa, Dholavira, and Ganweriwala — out of more than 2000 sites discovered in the Indian subcontinent
  • 3Mohenjodaro was divided into a walled Citadel (higher, smaller) and a larger Lower Town with a grid-pattern street layout and an estimated 700 wells
  • 4Bricks were standardised across all Harappan settlements: length and breadth were four times and twice the height respectively
  • 5The Harappan script has between 375 and 400 signs, was written right to left, and remains undeciphered; the longest known inscription contains about 26 signs
02

Kings, Farmers and Towns

Chapter 2 covers the emergence of early states, agricultural changes, and urban growth in the Indian subcontinent from c. 600 BCE to 600 CE, tracing developments from the sixteen mahajanapadas through the Mauryan Empire to the Gupta period, using inscriptions, coins, and texts as primary sources.

  • 1James Prinsep deciphered Brahmi and Kharosthi—the scripts used in the earliest inscriptions and coins—in the 1830s (Asokan Brahmi in 1838), identifying the ruler 'Piyadassi' (meaning 'pleasant to behold') as Asoka.
  • 2Sixteen mahajanapadas are mentioned in early Buddhist and Jaina texts; among the most frequently named are Vajji, Magadha, Koshala, Kuru, Panchala, Gandhara, and Avanti. Some were ruled by oligarchies (ganas or sanghas) where power was shared—both Mahavira and the Buddha belonged to such ganas.
  • 3Magadha became the most powerful mahajanapada between the sixth and fourth centuries BCE, aided by productive agriculture, iron mines in present-day Jharkhand, forest elephants, and the Ganga river network; early writers credited ambitious kings—Bimbisara, Ajatasattu, and Mahapadma Nanda.
  • 4The Mauryan Empire, founded by Chandragupta Maurya c. 321 BCE, had five major political centres—Pataliputra, Taxila, Ujjayini, Tosali, and Suvarnagiri—and Asoka used rock and pillar inscriptions to propagate dhamma; special officers called dhamma mahamatta were appointed to spread it.
  • 5Post-Mauryan kingdoms developed new notions of kingship: the Kushanas (c. first century BCE–first century CE) adopted the title devaputra ('son of god') and installed colossal statues in shrines; the Guptas used prashastis (eulogies) such as the Prayaga Prashasti by Harishena to glorify Samudragupta.
03

Kinship, Caste and Class: Early Societies

Chapter 3 of Themes in Indian History Part I examines kinship, caste, and class in early Indian societies (c. 600 BCE–600 CE), using the Mahabharata and texts like the Manusmriti and Dharmasutras as primary sources to reconstruct social norms, marriage practices, the varna system, and the lived realities that often diverged from Brahmanical prescriptions.

  • 1The Mahabharata, running to over 100,000 verses, was composed over approximately 1,000 years from c. 500 BCE and is a key source for understanding early Indian social history.
  • 2The Critical Edition of the Mahabharata was prepared between 1919 and 1966 under V.S. Sukthankar, producing over 13,000 pages; more than half are devoted to regional variations in the text.
  • 3Patriliny — tracing descent from father to son — was reinforced by the Mahabharata's central story and was claimed by most ruling dynasties from c. sixth century BCE onward; Sanskrit texts use kula for family, jnati for the larger kinfolk network, and vamsha for lineage.
  • 4The Dharmasutras and Dharmashastras from c. 500 BCE, and the Manusmriti (c. 200 BCE–200 CE), codified the fourfold varna system and assigned distinct occupations to Brahmanas, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas, and Shudras.
  • 5Satavahana inscriptions (c. second century BCE–second century CE) show that queens retained their father's gotra names rather than adopting their husband's, and that endogamy was practised — contrary to Brahmanical rules prescribing exogamy.
04

Thinkers, Beliefs and Buildings

Chapter 4 of Themes in Indian History Part I examines religious and cultural developments in India from c. 600 BCE to 600 CE, focusing on the rise of Buddhism and Jainism, the compilation of their texts, and the architectural legacy seen in stupas and early temples—using Sanchi as the central case study.

  • 1The mid-first millennium BCE saw thinkers across the world questioning existing traditions; in India, Mahavira and Gautama Buddha challenged Vedic authority and emphasised individual effort for liberation.
  • 2Buddhist teachings were compiled after the Buddha's death (c. fifth-fourth century BCE) at a council at Vesali into the Tipitaka: Vinaya Pitaka (monastic rules), Sutta Pitaka (teachings), and Abhidhamma Pitaka (philosophy).
  • 3Jaina philosophy holds that the entire world is animated; its central principle of ahimsa (non-injury) and five monastic vows shaped Indian ethical thinking broadly.
  • 4Stupas—mounds built over relics of the Buddha—evolved from simple earthen mounds (anda) into complex structures with a harmika, yashti, chhatri, and stone railing; inscriptions record donations from kings, guilds, women, and bhikkhus.
  • 5The Great Stupa at Sanchi survived 19th-century European interest partly because the Begums of Bhopal—Shahjehan Begum (ruled 1868–1901) and Sultan Jehan Begum—funded its preservation, while the stupa at Amaravati was largely dismantled after its discovery in 1796.

More History books

Want offline access with notes & solutions?

Download CBSE Prepmaster for free — includes NCERT solutions, flashcards, mock tests & more.

Download Free App