Course Objectives : This paper intends to provide an extensive survey of early Indian history to the students and familiarise them with the tools of studying ancient Indian history. The inter-disciplinary approach of the course provides the students a point of beginning from where they can build an understanding of the discipline of history. Spanning a very long period of India’s ancient past – from pre-historic times to the end of Vedic cultures in India – the course dwells upon major landmarks of ancient Indian history from the beginning of early human hunter gatherers to food producers. This course will equip the students with adequate expertise to analyse the further development of Indian culture which resulted in an advanced Harappan civilization. In course of time students will learn about the processes of cultural development and regional variations.
Course Outcomes (CO)
Course |
Learning outcomes (at course level) |
Learning and teaching strategies |
Assessment Strategies |
|
Course Code |
Course Title |
|||
24CHIS 111 |
History of India- I |
CO1- Evaluate the Indian landscape, environment and its impact on the making of India’s History. CO2- Assess the main features of prehistoric and proto-historic cultures CO3-Analyse Neolithic and Chalcolithic cultures, investigating their interactions and exchange patterns CO4- Explain the origins and decline of Harappan Civilization and also understand the polity, society, economy and religious practices during the Harappan period. CO5- Critically reflect on societal, economic, political, and religious practices /in Early Vedic and Later Vedic texts. CO6: Contribute effectively in course-specific interaction
|
Approach in teaching: Interactive Lectures, Discussion, Tutorials, Reading assignments, Power Point Presentation
Learning activities for the students: Self-learning assignments, Effective questions, Seminar presentation, Giving tasks. |
Class test, Semester end examinations, Quiz, Solving problems in tutorials, Assignments, Presentation, Individual and group projects |
[a] Early Indian notions of History
[b] Sources and tools of historical reconstruction.
[c] Changing historiography
[a] Palaeolithic cultures: sequence and distribution; stone industries and other technological
developments
[b] Mesolithic cultures: regional and chronological distribution; new developments in
technology and economy, rock art.
[a] Understanding the regional and chronological distribution of the Neolithic and Chalcolithic Cultures.
[b] Subsistence; patterns of exchange
[a] Origins; settlement patterns and town planning; agrarian base; craft production and trade;
[b] Social and political organization; religious beliefs and practices; art;
[c] The problem of urban decline and the late/post-Harappan traditions
[a] North India (circa 1500 BCE-300 BCE)
[b] Central India and the Deccan (circa 1000 BCE – circa 300 BCE)
ESSENTIAL READINGS
SUGGESTED READINGS
E- Resources:
Reconstructing Ancient Indian History
https://egyankosh.ac.in/bitstream/123456789/64776/1/BLOCK%201.pdf
https://rgu.ac.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Download_604.pdf
https://egyankosh.ac.in/bitstream/123456789/64773/1/Unit1.pdf
https://ddceutkal.ac.in/Syllabus/MA_history/Paper_07_N.pdf
Pre-historic hunter-gatherers
https://egyankosh.ac.in/bitstream/123456789/64775/1/Unit3.pdf
https://egyankosh.ac.in/bitstream/123456789/20129/1/Unit-3.pdf
http://mentors4ias.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Indian-Mesolithic-Cult...
Journal
https://www.iosrjournals.org/iosr-jhss/papers/Vol.27-Issue11/Ser-5/C2711...
The advent of food production
https://egyankosh.ac.in/bitstream/123456789/64778/1/Unit4.pdf
The Harappan civilization