The Aryans and the Vedic Age
The Aryans are said to have entered India
through the fabled Khyber pass, around 1500 BC.
They intermingled with the local populace, and
assimilated themselves into the social framework.
They adopted the settled agricultural lifestyle
of their predecessors, and established small
agrarian communities across the state of Punjab.
The Aryans are believed to have brought
with them the horse, developed the Sanskrit
language and made significant inroads in to the
religion of the times. All three factors were to
play a fundamental role in the shaping of Indian
culture. Cavalry warfare facilitated the rapid
spread of Aryan culture across North India, and
allowed the emergence of large empires.
Sanskrit is the basis and the unifying factor
of the vast majority of Indian languages. The
religion, that took root during the Vedic era,
with its rich pantheon of Gods and Goddesses, and
its storehouse of myths and legends, became the
foundation of the Hindu religion, arguably the
single most important common denominator of
Indian culture.
The Aryans did not have a script, but they
developed a rich tradition. They composed the
hymns of the four vedas, the great
philosophic poems that are at the heart of Hindu
thought. As the Nobel Laureate, Rabindranath
Tagore expressed it, "The hymns are a poetic
testament of a people's collective reaction to
the wonder and awe of existence....A people of
vigorous and unsophisticated imagination awakened
at the very dawn of civilisation to a sense of
inexhaustible mystery that is implicit in
life."
A settled
lifestyle brought in its wake more complex forms
of government and social patterns. This period
saw the evolution of the caste system, and the
emergence of kingdoms and republics. The events
described in the two great Indian epics, the
Ramayana and the Mahabharata, are thought to have
occurred around this period. (1000 to 800 BC).
The Aryans were divided into tribes which had
settled in different regions of northwestern
India. Tribal chiefmanship gradually became
hereditary, though the chief usually operated
with the help of advice from either a committee
or the entire tribe. With work specialisation,
the internal division of the Aryan society
developed along caste lines. Their social
framework was composed mainly of the following
groups : the Brahmana (priests), Kshatriya
(warriors), Vaishya (agriculturists) and Shudra
(workers). It was, in the beginning, a
division of occupations; as such it was open and
flexible. Much later, caste status and the
corresponding occupation came to depend on birth,
and change from one caste or occupation to
another became far more difficult.

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