Surya
12th October 2005, 09:00 PM
[tscii:4639f832a3]N[/tscii:4639f832a3]ote to The Admin/Moderators and Hubbers:
This thread wasn't created to offend anyone in any way shape or form. This is just another Chapter in India's History as is Ramayan or Mahabharath. This thread shouldn't offend the people of any community. I am not creating this thread with any malicious idea to defame any community or it's people. There will be no derogatory references directed at any community in this thread. Every word in this thread is clearly factual and nothing is opinionated. Please let this thread stand.
After All the discription of this section does say: Indian History & Culture: for discussing various aspects of history of our country and people. :)
The Title: The Legacy of Chatrapathy Shivaji Maharaj!
Before we get into Chatrapathi Shivaji, we should also analyze the root for the cause, and the Era before Shivaji, which led him to do the things he did. We will start with a glance of Bharath before Islamic or British influence, and the Kings before the Chatrapathi. Starting with an overview of India, and Mohamud of Ghazni, the first Invader in thousands of years.
Chapter 1: A Start of an Era.
Key Dates for this chapter:
AD 998 – Mohamud is crowned the King of Ghazni.
AD 1000 – 1027 Invasions of Mahmud of Ghazni.
Chapter 1A: Bharathavarsha, and her Glorious Culture – a Glance:
The people of Bharath (Present day India) had lived in various parts of the Subcontinent under various Kings. They practiced a religion knows as Sanatan Dharm, which is now known as Hinduism. The religion, which laid emphasis on truth and tolerance, became a way of life with the people who followed the scriptures and the various rituals prescribed in them. They came to accept their present lot that they ascribed to their good or bad deeds of their previous birth and firmly believed that their future depended on their sins of commission and omission of the present life. (Karma.) The fertile lands yielded plenty of produce and there was peace and prosperity in the country. It was also a time when Communications were not at all developed. News traveled slowly; if it did. What reached the listener was not necessarily an account of what actually happened. It was what the various people who heard it thought might have occurred. With such a state of communications, it was to be expected that the Indian sub-continent was too large a landmass to be ruled centrally by one authority and follow one set of laws. The population should have been practicing different religions, customs and traditions. But it was not so. Despite long distances separating the people, difficulties of terrain and variations of Climate, the country was considered as one not only geographically, but also culturally and spiritually. Spiritually it was one land, it was the land of the inhabitants who were knows as Hindus. After the name of the river Sindhi-the Indus. The Hindus made it a point to visit numerous places of pilgrimage all over the sub-continent. The religion of the people had its base in the 4 Vedas which were written much before 1500 BC. Vedic hymns sang the praises of truth, beauty and the eternal law. They were intensely religious and yet rhythmic and melodious. The fundamental laws of religion as enunciated by the hymns were truth, eternal order, consecration, austerity, prayer and ritual. To get more on Hinduism, and its philosophies, and the culture of the Indians you can take a quick glance at some of the other threads in this section.
Philosophy had also prospered greatly in Bharath. The earliest Greek thinkers are traced to the sixth century BC. Pythagoras lived during this period. Socrates died in BC 399. Philosophy was then in its infancy in the west. By this time it had fully matured in India. The Hindu who was taught to worship idols since the ancient times came to accept the divinity of God that he worshipped as also the God or Gods worshipped by men of other denominations. For the Gita told him that sincere devotees of other God in fact worshipped his God – Lord Krishna. Thus he became extremely tolerant of other religions and other forms of worship.
Upto 1000 AD, there were a few foreign invasions of the subcontinent. But they were not such consequence as to make a permanent impact on the culture of the people. The Hunas come in the 6 th century, and were thrown out. The Arabs conquered Sindh in the 8th century but this was a frontier episode. They were soon overrun and whosoever was left became part and parcel of the land.
The peaceful, prosperous life of the inhabitants of India was given a rude Jolt in 1000 AD. This is where Mahmud of Ghazni enters play.
Chapter 1B: Mahmud of Ghazni – A glance:
Mahmud was crowned as King in 998 AD, in Ghazni. He was a Turk and the first to raid India. In many kingdoms in the Middle Eastern region, one of the most repeated things people hear about is the wonder of India, her culture, and most of all…her wealth. When described about India's wealth, Mahmud didn't waste any time. He gathered his humongous army and headed for India. He crawled through the Khyber Pass (as the later invaders would) and headed for India. He wrecked such havoc and destruction as had never been known before. The destroyed and murdered not caring if they were warriors, Kings, civilians, men, women or children. His men raped women, forced unwilling marriages on many and committed barbarities that defy description. He burnt and looted whole cities, captured or killed hundreds, turned thousands to slaves, and enforced his religion on them back in Ghazni. The Turks fought through unlawful acts, which the Hindus had not seen before. The Hindus only fought according to the just laws of warfare, which was instructed in their religious texts. The new tactics of total barbarity, total destruction, and unethical murder of defenseless Civilians was new to the Indians. Mahmud of Ghazni destroyed numerous holy temples including those at Mathura, and Somnath, which need special notice.
The Pilgrimage for Lord Shiva at Somnath was held in the hearts of the Hindus as one of the most important Pilgrimages in the world. According to Al Kasnivi, an Arab Historian 10,000 villages belonged to the temple, A mountain of wealth was inside which consisted of gold, diamonds, rubies, and jems. These were the offerings from the civilians, and did not include the ones from the Kings! The temple hired 1000 priests who chanted Vedic hymns 60 minutes an hour, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and year round. 500 singers and dancers were employed by the temple to entertain the devotees. 1000's of valuable gold statues (Vigrahas) rested inside the temple walls. Early writers describe the temple tower (Gopuram) as touching the skies. A Temple of this magnitude located on the shoreline of Gujarat seemed like a piece of heaven, and drastically boosted the spiritual devotion of it's visitors. During auspicious days, one hundred thousand Hindus (1 lakh) visited the temple with ecstatic devotion from all over the subcontinent. Note: this was a thousand years ago, when the population of Bharath wasn't nearly what it is now . The wealth of the Somnath temple had reached the ears of the Mahmud. He headed to Southern Gujarat with his terrifying; ruthless army thinking it was going to be as easy as taking candy from a baby. When he got there, he said, "So this is the rich temple?" and continued forward to be astonished by the number of people who opposed him. Mahmud looked at his Officers. "Hurry up and get rid of these jokers." He said as his army shot off with their weapons, at the crowed like and unleashed army of hyenas running at a group of defenseless cows. They hacked and they hacked and they hacked. But the people just kept coming. Note: These people are not warriors, these people are not kings, these people are just defenseless civilians who have not received any sort of training in combat, who don't have any weapons to fight with. Early writers claim that the civilians were using broomsticks, and tree branches as weapons, to fight the barbaric army, which were riding on cavalry, heavily armored, well equipped, and also well trained . The Turk army continued to murder, as new waves of people gave their lives. Swords dug into the chest of defenseless Hindu men, and women. Children were no exception either. After several hours of massacre, the Turk army stood with nothing in their way to satisfy their greed. Al Kasvini, an Arab Historian, describes that the Ocean had turned red from the unthinkable bloody massacre at Somanthapuram, Gujarat. The death toll of Hindus in this massacre is more than the unbelievable toll of 50,000. Mahmud of Ghazni raced into the temple walls to find the wealth, which mesmerized him, and took him almost to insanity. He ran from one place to another, with his eyes wide open, and his smile from one ear to the other, not being able to digest the amount of gold, diamonds, and Rubies, he eyes were seeing. After a few minutes of greed driving him insane, he ordered his army to start looting. As his army ran to the mountains of gold, and diamonds. Mahmud's vision was inside the alter, (Gharbagraha) where a Shiva lingam was seen standing in mid air, with no foundation to sit it on. He was mesmerized, and confused. He grabbed a wooden spear and walked into the alter with his eyes fixed on the lingam. He raised his spear and waved it under the lingam…nothing. He waved it above and around the lingam to see if it was somehow tied to the pillars surrounding it…nothing. After a few minutes of utter disarray, his confusion swiftly became anger. "Ahh!!" he yelled as he strikes the lingam with his spear. The lingam doesn't move. Frustrated by his helplessness, he orders his army to do whatever it takes to get the lingam down. The soldiers do everything they can, but fail. One soldier strikes the North East pillar with his spear until it collapses, when it does, the NE side of the Lingam lowers down. Everyone stops. Mahmud stares at the lingam as he approaches it. “Demolish this pillar!” He orders pointing to the North Western pillar. The soldiers do as their told. The NW side of the lingam lowers down as well. Mahmud now flabbergasted order for all pillars surrounding the lingam to be brought down. The Indians had used magnetic pillars to make the lingam stand in mid air, knowledge of this magnitude to completely new to barbaric invaders. After all of the pillars were destroyed, the lingham landed on the stone floor with a thud! Mahmud of Ghazni picks it up with the help of a few of his soldiers and carries it out. When they bring the Magnetic Lingam out, he breaks it open into pieces in curiosity, to see if there was anything in it to make it float in mid air. After his disappointment, Mahmud hauls it home along with thousands of diamonds, gems, and 8 tons of Gold ALONE! This doesn't include the diamonds, and the rubies which he stole also. A battleship, which is also known as a floating city weighs only 85 tons. And the amount of gold stolen from Somanath Shiva Temple weighed 8 tons!! You can imagine the magnitude of stolen goods he took back to his home land. The lingam which had taken thousands of Abhishegams, and grand pujas, which had Sacred Vedic Hymns chanted to it every second of the day, now, today rests as a series stepping stones for a Palace in Afghanistan. If anyone wants to get into the tourist site, they have to step on the Lingam from the grandest Shivan temple at Somanathapuram.
After Mahmud of Ghazni left, life continued on in Bharath. But no one forgets the bloddy massacre of 50,000 hindus in Somanathapuram. Sadly, Ghazni would be looked on as a mild invader, when compared to the unthinkably barbaric future that Bharath will come to suffer from future invasions.
To Be Continued…
This thread wasn't created to offend anyone in any way shape or form. This is just another Chapter in India's History as is Ramayan or Mahabharath. This thread shouldn't offend the people of any community. I am not creating this thread with any malicious idea to defame any community or it's people. There will be no derogatory references directed at any community in this thread. Every word in this thread is clearly factual and nothing is opinionated. Please let this thread stand.
After All the discription of this section does say: Indian History & Culture: for discussing various aspects of history of our country and people. :)
The Title: The Legacy of Chatrapathy Shivaji Maharaj!
Before we get into Chatrapathi Shivaji, we should also analyze the root for the cause, and the Era before Shivaji, which led him to do the things he did. We will start with a glance of Bharath before Islamic or British influence, and the Kings before the Chatrapathi. Starting with an overview of India, and Mohamud of Ghazni, the first Invader in thousands of years.
Chapter 1: A Start of an Era.
Key Dates for this chapter:
AD 998 – Mohamud is crowned the King of Ghazni.
AD 1000 – 1027 Invasions of Mahmud of Ghazni.
Chapter 1A: Bharathavarsha, and her Glorious Culture – a Glance:
The people of Bharath (Present day India) had lived in various parts of the Subcontinent under various Kings. They practiced a religion knows as Sanatan Dharm, which is now known as Hinduism. The religion, which laid emphasis on truth and tolerance, became a way of life with the people who followed the scriptures and the various rituals prescribed in them. They came to accept their present lot that they ascribed to their good or bad deeds of their previous birth and firmly believed that their future depended on their sins of commission and omission of the present life. (Karma.) The fertile lands yielded plenty of produce and there was peace and prosperity in the country. It was also a time when Communications were not at all developed. News traveled slowly; if it did. What reached the listener was not necessarily an account of what actually happened. It was what the various people who heard it thought might have occurred. With such a state of communications, it was to be expected that the Indian sub-continent was too large a landmass to be ruled centrally by one authority and follow one set of laws. The population should have been practicing different religions, customs and traditions. But it was not so. Despite long distances separating the people, difficulties of terrain and variations of Climate, the country was considered as one not only geographically, but also culturally and spiritually. Spiritually it was one land, it was the land of the inhabitants who were knows as Hindus. After the name of the river Sindhi-the Indus. The Hindus made it a point to visit numerous places of pilgrimage all over the sub-continent. The religion of the people had its base in the 4 Vedas which were written much before 1500 BC. Vedic hymns sang the praises of truth, beauty and the eternal law. They were intensely religious and yet rhythmic and melodious. The fundamental laws of religion as enunciated by the hymns were truth, eternal order, consecration, austerity, prayer and ritual. To get more on Hinduism, and its philosophies, and the culture of the Indians you can take a quick glance at some of the other threads in this section.
Philosophy had also prospered greatly in Bharath. The earliest Greek thinkers are traced to the sixth century BC. Pythagoras lived during this period. Socrates died in BC 399. Philosophy was then in its infancy in the west. By this time it had fully matured in India. The Hindu who was taught to worship idols since the ancient times came to accept the divinity of God that he worshipped as also the God or Gods worshipped by men of other denominations. For the Gita told him that sincere devotees of other God in fact worshipped his God – Lord Krishna. Thus he became extremely tolerant of other religions and other forms of worship.
Upto 1000 AD, there were a few foreign invasions of the subcontinent. But they were not such consequence as to make a permanent impact on the culture of the people. The Hunas come in the 6 th century, and were thrown out. The Arabs conquered Sindh in the 8th century but this was a frontier episode. They were soon overrun and whosoever was left became part and parcel of the land.
The peaceful, prosperous life of the inhabitants of India was given a rude Jolt in 1000 AD. This is where Mahmud of Ghazni enters play.
Chapter 1B: Mahmud of Ghazni – A glance:
Mahmud was crowned as King in 998 AD, in Ghazni. He was a Turk and the first to raid India. In many kingdoms in the Middle Eastern region, one of the most repeated things people hear about is the wonder of India, her culture, and most of all…her wealth. When described about India's wealth, Mahmud didn't waste any time. He gathered his humongous army and headed for India. He crawled through the Khyber Pass (as the later invaders would) and headed for India. He wrecked such havoc and destruction as had never been known before. The destroyed and murdered not caring if they were warriors, Kings, civilians, men, women or children. His men raped women, forced unwilling marriages on many and committed barbarities that defy description. He burnt and looted whole cities, captured or killed hundreds, turned thousands to slaves, and enforced his religion on them back in Ghazni. The Turks fought through unlawful acts, which the Hindus had not seen before. The Hindus only fought according to the just laws of warfare, which was instructed in their religious texts. The new tactics of total barbarity, total destruction, and unethical murder of defenseless Civilians was new to the Indians. Mahmud of Ghazni destroyed numerous holy temples including those at Mathura, and Somnath, which need special notice.
The Pilgrimage for Lord Shiva at Somnath was held in the hearts of the Hindus as one of the most important Pilgrimages in the world. According to Al Kasnivi, an Arab Historian 10,000 villages belonged to the temple, A mountain of wealth was inside which consisted of gold, diamonds, rubies, and jems. These were the offerings from the civilians, and did not include the ones from the Kings! The temple hired 1000 priests who chanted Vedic hymns 60 minutes an hour, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and year round. 500 singers and dancers were employed by the temple to entertain the devotees. 1000's of valuable gold statues (Vigrahas) rested inside the temple walls. Early writers describe the temple tower (Gopuram) as touching the skies. A Temple of this magnitude located on the shoreline of Gujarat seemed like a piece of heaven, and drastically boosted the spiritual devotion of it's visitors. During auspicious days, one hundred thousand Hindus (1 lakh) visited the temple with ecstatic devotion from all over the subcontinent. Note: this was a thousand years ago, when the population of Bharath wasn't nearly what it is now . The wealth of the Somnath temple had reached the ears of the Mahmud. He headed to Southern Gujarat with his terrifying; ruthless army thinking it was going to be as easy as taking candy from a baby. When he got there, he said, "So this is the rich temple?" and continued forward to be astonished by the number of people who opposed him. Mahmud looked at his Officers. "Hurry up and get rid of these jokers." He said as his army shot off with their weapons, at the crowed like and unleashed army of hyenas running at a group of defenseless cows. They hacked and they hacked and they hacked. But the people just kept coming. Note: These people are not warriors, these people are not kings, these people are just defenseless civilians who have not received any sort of training in combat, who don't have any weapons to fight with. Early writers claim that the civilians were using broomsticks, and tree branches as weapons, to fight the barbaric army, which were riding on cavalry, heavily armored, well equipped, and also well trained . The Turk army continued to murder, as new waves of people gave their lives. Swords dug into the chest of defenseless Hindu men, and women. Children were no exception either. After several hours of massacre, the Turk army stood with nothing in their way to satisfy their greed. Al Kasvini, an Arab Historian, describes that the Ocean had turned red from the unthinkable bloody massacre at Somanthapuram, Gujarat. The death toll of Hindus in this massacre is more than the unbelievable toll of 50,000. Mahmud of Ghazni raced into the temple walls to find the wealth, which mesmerized him, and took him almost to insanity. He ran from one place to another, with his eyes wide open, and his smile from one ear to the other, not being able to digest the amount of gold, diamonds, and Rubies, he eyes were seeing. After a few minutes of greed driving him insane, he ordered his army to start looting. As his army ran to the mountains of gold, and diamonds. Mahmud's vision was inside the alter, (Gharbagraha) where a Shiva lingam was seen standing in mid air, with no foundation to sit it on. He was mesmerized, and confused. He grabbed a wooden spear and walked into the alter with his eyes fixed on the lingam. He raised his spear and waved it under the lingam…nothing. He waved it above and around the lingam to see if it was somehow tied to the pillars surrounding it…nothing. After a few minutes of utter disarray, his confusion swiftly became anger. "Ahh!!" he yelled as he strikes the lingam with his spear. The lingam doesn't move. Frustrated by his helplessness, he orders his army to do whatever it takes to get the lingam down. The soldiers do everything they can, but fail. One soldier strikes the North East pillar with his spear until it collapses, when it does, the NE side of the Lingam lowers down. Everyone stops. Mahmud stares at the lingam as he approaches it. “Demolish this pillar!” He orders pointing to the North Western pillar. The soldiers do as their told. The NW side of the lingam lowers down as well. Mahmud now flabbergasted order for all pillars surrounding the lingam to be brought down. The Indians had used magnetic pillars to make the lingam stand in mid air, knowledge of this magnitude to completely new to barbaric invaders. After all of the pillars were destroyed, the lingham landed on the stone floor with a thud! Mahmud of Ghazni picks it up with the help of a few of his soldiers and carries it out. When they bring the Magnetic Lingam out, he breaks it open into pieces in curiosity, to see if there was anything in it to make it float in mid air. After his disappointment, Mahmud hauls it home along with thousands of diamonds, gems, and 8 tons of Gold ALONE! This doesn't include the diamonds, and the rubies which he stole also. A battleship, which is also known as a floating city weighs only 85 tons. And the amount of gold stolen from Somanath Shiva Temple weighed 8 tons!! You can imagine the magnitude of stolen goods he took back to his home land. The lingam which had taken thousands of Abhishegams, and grand pujas, which had Sacred Vedic Hymns chanted to it every second of the day, now, today rests as a series stepping stones for a Palace in Afghanistan. If anyone wants to get into the tourist site, they have to step on the Lingam from the grandest Shivan temple at Somanathapuram.
After Mahmud of Ghazni left, life continued on in Bharath. But no one forgets the bloddy massacre of 50,000 hindus in Somanathapuram. Sadly, Ghazni would be looked on as a mild invader, when compared to the unthinkably barbaric future that Bharath will come to suffer from future invasions.
To Be Continued…