AN HISTORICAL ATLAS OF THE INDIAN PENINSULA

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CIA-RDP08C01297R000200140008-9
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December 22, 2016
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September 19, 2012
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May 1, 1947
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. _ _ _....?????""qt 4/22 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 _ :(0 ;44 '44 .41 1.* `to :44 voi 'ftS"P.41..4k4vai-?11-.11kari- ivag-.11.4? sy AL. a.. at *it ;Itz-46-iii-;*-4,-4,-*At-*-v-itzit.4-iratc/se 0;4? *" C. COLLIN DAVIES *4, 00 ? 0 0 :) 1)) AN HISTORICAL ATLAS OF THE INDIAN PENINSULA BY SECOND EDITION OXFORD ?UNIVERSITY PRESS Rs 3.50 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 - Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 LIST OF MAPS 1. Physical Features. 2. Ancient India c. 500 B.C. 3. Alexander the Great's Asiatic Empire. 4. Alexander's Campaigns in Northern India. 5. Asoka's Empire (250 Lc.). 6. India c. A.D. 150. 7. Ancient Trade Routes between India and the Western World. 8. The Gupta Empire at the Close of the Fourth Century A.D. 9. India in A.D. 640. 10. India at the Close of the Ninth Century A.D. 11. The Conquests of Mahmud of Ghazna. 12. India in 1030. 13. The Chola Empire under Kulottunga I c. 1100. 14. Hindu Expansion in the Archipelago. 15. India in 1236. 16. The Empire of Muhammad bin Tughluq in 1335. 17. India in 1398. 18. India on the Eve of Babur's Invasion (1525). 19. The Portuguese Possessions in the East and the Route to India. 20. The Sultanates of the Deccan and the Hindu Kingdom of Vijayanagar in the Sixteenth Century. 21. India in 1561. 22. The Mughal Empire at the Death of Akbar (1605). 23. The Marathas in 1680. Page III of cover. 24. The Mughal Empire at the End of the Seven- teenth Century. 25. India in the Time of Warren Hastings. 26. India in 1798. 27. The Partition of Mysore in 1799. 28. India in 1805. 29. India in 1836. 30. The Growth of Sikh Power under Ranjit Singh. 31. Sikh Territories at End of First Sikh War - 1846. 32. India at the Close of Dalhousie's Admini- stration. 33. The Absorption of Burma. 34. The North-West Frontier of India (1908). 35. India (1753-1890) showing the Sequence of Territorial Acquisition. 36. Pathan Tribal Distribution on the North- West Frontier. 37. South-West Monsoon.. 38. North-East Monsoon. 39. Mean Annual Rainfall. 40. Aryan Languages. 41. Non-Aryan Languages. 42. Economic Products (Animal and Vegetable). 43. Economic Products (Minerals). 44. Density of Population by Provinces and States (1941 Census). 45. Prevailing Religions. 46. Main Lines of Railway Communication. 47. India in 1939. The Indian Union and Pakistan,' 15 August -1942. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 _ ? AN HISTORICAL ATLAS OF THE INDIAN PENINSULA BY C. COLLIN .DAVIES M.A. (OxoN.), PH.D. (CANTAB.). Fellow of the Royal Historical Society Sarkar gold Medallist of the Asiatic Society Reader in Indian History in the University of Oxford SECOND EDITION OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 INTRODUCTION THE influence of the physiographic environment on the history of a country is nowhere more apparent than in India. In prehistoric.ages desic- cation in Central Asia was one of the causes leading to migrations which profoundly altered the racial distribution of the Indian sub-con- tinent7 Centuries later, within historical times, invasions from the same area affected India's ? political structure. All these migrations and in- vasions added to the heterogeneity of the existing population. According to the orthodox Hindu view the Rajputs are the direct descendants of the Kshatriyas of Vedic India, but this claim is based on questionable genealogies. The Ksha- triyas of ancient India disappear from history and this can probably be explained by invasions from Central Asia which shattered the ancient Hindu polity. It is generally accepted that these invading hordes, such as the Yueh-chi and the Hunas, became rapidly hinduized, and that their leaders assumed Kshatriya rank and were ac- cepted as such. Out of this chaos arose a new Hindu polity with new rulers, and the families of invaders which became supreme were recognized as Kshatriyas or Rajputs. It must not be for- gotten that in later times many chiefs of the so-called aboriginal tribes also assumed the title of Rajput. Before the advent of the European nations by sea India was peculiarly susceptible to invasion through the mountain passes of the north-west. Century after century hordes of invaders swept through these gateways to the Indus and the plains of the Panjab. Persians, Greeks, and Afghans, the forces of Alexander the Great, the armies of Mahmud of Ghazna, the hosts of Timur, Babur, and Nadir Shah, and the troops of Ahmad Shah Durrani, all advanced by these routes, either to found kingdoms and remain as conquerors or to retire leaving in their train plundered cities and devastated plains. The his- tory of invasions from Central Asia proves that neither the mountain ranges of the north-west nor the River Indus presented any real barrier ? to an enterprising general. Nor did they form a good political frontier and serve as a zone of separation, for the kingdoms of the Persians, the Graeco-Bactrians, the Parthians, the Kushan branch of the Yueh-chi, and the Ephthalites or White Huns in many cases stretched from Afghanistan to the plains of India. r The route taken by invaders after crossing the Indus was also dictated by geographical con- siderations. From the strategic background of Afghanistan the path for invaders lay along the lines of least resistance. Checked on the south by the deserts of Rajputana, invading armies were forced to enter the Jumna and Ganges valleys through the narrow bottle-neck between the north-eastern extremity of the desert and the foot of the Himalayas. On three occasions has the fate of Hindustan been decided on the plain Lof Panipat : in 1526, when Babur, the Barlas Turk, defeated Ibrahim Lodi; in 1556, when Akbar crushed the forces of Hemu; and lastly, in 1761, when the Marathas were defeated by Ahmad Shah Durrani. The geographical factor combined with internal decay has been chiefly responsible for this. ? The empires of northern India arose in the fertile basins of the Jumna and Ganges where the country was able to support a teeming popula- tion. This is also apparent in the development of British rule in India. The fact that the French possessions in the Camatic were not rich enough to form the nucleus of an empire was one of the reasons for the failure of Dupleix. Clive and Warren Hastings, on the other hand, were able to exploit the wealth of Bengal and Bihar, and, by means of the subsidiary alliance system, to control the resources of the buffer state of Oudh. A detailed account of the payments made by Bengal to Madras and Bombay will be found in the author's Warren Hastings and Oudh, p. 145. In this connexion it should be noted that Sind, in the eighth century, was neither rich enough nor sufficiently well placed strategically to serve as ? a base from which the Arabs could extend (2) Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 their rule over India. There were, of course, other reasons, such as the decline of the Arab central government and the difficult nature of their line of communications through Baluchi- stan, which prevented the dispatch of adequate reinforcements. In India, as in Europe, the eighth century witnessed the end of the wave of Arab expansion. It is interesting to contrast British policy towards Afghanistan with that adopted on the north-east frontier. While Afghanistan was converted into a buffer state Burma was com- pletely annexed. It would be incorrect to suppose that Burma was annexed solely for economic reasons. The acquisition of the coastal strip of Arakan and Tenasserim, in 1824, partly resulted from the desire to link up Calcutta with Singa- pore. While the annexation of Pegu, in 1852, was an economic asset, Upper Burma remained for many years a liability. The exploitation of the wealth of Burma and the development of its natural resources came much later. It was the barren nature of Afghanistan, and the warlike character of its inhabitants, combined with the Russian advance to the Oxus, which led to its being con?verted into a buffer state. To be an efficient buffer state a country must possess powers of intermediate resistance. These quali- ties were lacking in Burma. One fact emerging from a study of the Central Asian policy of the Mughal emperors and form- ing further proof that distance, combined with poor communications, always defeated the efforts of the Timurids in India, is the extreme difficulty, almost impossibility, of controlling outlying con- quests such as Balkh and Badakhshan from a distant centre like Delhi. In the same way the Deccan policy of the Mughal emperors and of their predecessors, the Sultans of Delhi, was strategically unsound. Aurangzeb, like Muham- mad bin Tughluq before him, found that the Deccan could not be controlled from Delhi. Muhammad bin Tughluq also discovered that it was equally impossible in those days to control -- Hindustan from Deogir. In fact one of the most important lessons of Indian history is that a united India was impossible until the develop- ment of communications after 1857 facilitated centralization. It is often suggested in text-books that the Greek invasion under Alexander gave the im- petus to the foundation of a single sovereignty embracing the greater part of India. This is refuted by the fact that the conception of a universal empire is quite familiar in the Vedic period. The conception of Chakravartin or universal emperor and the implications of the asvamedha sacrifice existed long before Alexan- der's time. The nearest approach to unity in ancient India was under Asoka, but the back- wardness of communications presupposes that there could have been no exaggerated centra- lization. Implicit in the nature of these early empires was the recognition of almost autono- mous powers in the outlying provinces. The difficulty experienced by the central government in its attempts to control the provincial governors will be apparent to all students of Mughal administration. ? The influence of geography upon history is very clearly marked in the case of the Deccan and southern India, which, because of distance and geographical isolation, have a separate his- tory from that of northern India, until the in- trusion of foreign nations by sea. In their struggle with the Maratha confederacy which had the advantage of a commanding strategical position in the centre of India the unity of the scattered ? British settlements was at first secured by control of the sea. It will be evident from the map show- ing the sequence of territorial acquisition that the British, after securing Bihar and Bengal, pro- ceeded to acquire control of the greater part of the coastal districts so as to prevent the access of other powers by sea. It was not until 1849 that the advance to the north-west frontier made the British political frontier coterminous with the geographical. ? The influence of climate upon Indian history has been stressed in the maps dealing with the monsoons, rainfall, and agricultural products. For further details attention is directed to the text describing the various maps. Twenty-five years of teaching and lecturing on Indian history have impressed upon the author the importance of an adequate atlas for the understanding of Indian historical problems. Nothing tends to make a map more confusing than a multiplicity of names and the insertion of (3) Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 unnecessary detail. Care has therefore been , taken to include only those names which are likely to be useful to the student of a particular period or problem. I shall be grateful to all users of this atlas for suggestions for its improve- ment in later editions. I wish to thank the Cambridge University Press for allowing me to reproduce two maps from my Problem of the North-West Frontier. The map of Burma is based on one prepared by OXFORD May 1949 Mr. G. E. Harvey, whose History of Burma is the standard work on that subject. Finally I wish to express my indebtedness to Mr. H. J. Stooke, Librarian of the Indian Institute, for his courtesy in supplying my constant demand for books, and to my colleague Professor Burrow, Professor of Sanskrit in the University of Oxford, for some valuable suggestions in connexion with the maps relating to Ancient India. C. COLLIN DAVIES (4) Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 over 6000 feet. over 18000 feet. Contours drawn at 1200, 3000,Isoo, boor), 9ooc3 )2000 & M000 a. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 r; Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 ANCIENT INDIA c. 500 B.C. THOUGH much valuable research has been done by F. G. Pargiter in his Ancient Indian Historical Tradition (1922) and by H. Raychaudhuri in his Political History of Ancient India (1932), it has been thought inadvisable to include maps based on a knowledge of Vedic, Epic, and Pauranic literature, as history cannot be divorced from chronology. Approximate chronology for nor- thern India begins in the seventh century B.C., for southern India at a much later date. The chronology of India has been built up from the identification of the Sandracottus of the Greek writers with Chandragupta Maurya. The earliest date known for certain in Indian history is the invasion of Alexander the Great in 326 B.C. Rhys Davids in his Buddhist India (1903) has sum- marized the historical information in the Pali texts. In the seventh century B.C. northern India and part of the Deccan were divided into sixteen principalities, the sixteen Mahajanapadas of the Buddhist Anguttara Nikaya. Of southern India nothing definite has come to light, but we may suppose that the traditional Tamil kingdoms were in existence. The sixteen great powers of northern India were: (1) Anga, (2) Magadha, (3) Kasi, (4) Kosala, (5) Vajji, (6) Malla, (7) Chedi, (8) Vatsa, (9) Kuru, (10) Panchala, (11) Matsya, (12) Surasena, (13) Asmaka, (14) Avanti, (15) Gandhara, (16) Kamboja. es) When Buddhism arose there was no paramount power, but the larger kingdoms were beginning to absorb the smaller. The most important king- doms were Magadha, Kosala, Vatsa, and Avanti. Eventually, as we shall see, Magadha was to be- come the paramount power in northern India. In addition to the kingdoms we learn of the existence of republican clans ruled by popular assemblies. In the sixth century B.C. the country to the east of Kosala, between the Himalayas and the Ganges, was the home of the following clans: the Sakiyas, Bulis, Kalamas, Bhaggas, Koliy.as, Moriyas, the Mallas of Pava and Kusinara, the Videhas of Mithila, and the Licchavis of Vesali. Gandhara had been annexed to the Persian empire of Darius which consisted of twenty satrapies. The exact limits of the Indian satrapy cannot be determined, but it probably comprised the Indus valley and parts of the Punjab. It was the richest of the satrapies, paying an annual tribute in gold-dust of 360 Euboic talents, equiva- lent to over a million pounds sterling. Scholars have been unable to identify Kamboja with any certainty. The Nirukta, a text of about 500 B.C., tells us that the speech of the Kambojas differed from ordinary Indian speech, 'referring doubtless to the tribes living north-west of the Indus who bore that name' (Cambridge History of India, vol. i, p. 117). Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 , KURU Indrarrastha Ahchatia T A Sravasti MATSYA PANCHALA vI iALLAS SURASENA Mathura4 KaPlavaetu KOSALA c' 9, Kausambi Prayag CHED I VATSA ASI VI DE HA VaisgU Patal iputra Raiagrlha ANZA MAGADHA AVANT I ? Ujjaln HOJ.AS VIDARBHA MUCAKA ? 0 AS MAKA DAKSHI NA PATHA honadi ANDHRA OCAA ANCIENT INDIA c.500 B.C. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 3 ALEXANDER THE GREAT'S ASIATIC EMPIRE SINCE the great invasions of India before the advent of the European nations took place through the north-western passes it is essential to have some knowledge of the Central Asian background which played such an important part in shaping the destinies of India. It is no exag- geration to state that Alexander's conquest of the Achaemenian empire altered the face of the world in the short space of eleven years from the crossing of the Hellespont in 334 B.C. to his death in 323 s.c. Under his father, who was assassinated in 336 B.C., Macedonia had become the dominant power in Hellas. Alexander left Macedonia in the spring of 334 B.C. Crossing the Hellespont he marched through the western parts of Asia Minor to Cilicia and passing through the Cilician Gates defeated the Persian king Darius Codo- mannus at the battle of Issus (333 s.c.). After a gallant though unsuccessful resistance by the garrisons of Tyre and Gaza he easily overran Egypt. Retracing his steps through Syria to Mesopotamia he crossed the Euphrates at Thap- sacus and the swiftly flowing Tigris, driving the Persians from Gaugamela and Arbela. The so- called battle of Arbela (331 s.c.) was actually fought at Gaugamela, some sixty miles north- -west of Arbela. This battle had far-reaching effects. It opened the road to Babylon and Susa which submitted without resistance. After brush- ing aside serious opposition Alexander reached Persepolis. Ecbatana was occupied in 330 B.C. and converted into an advanced military base. In pursuit of Darius, who had deserted his army after Gaugamela, he reached Damghan only to find that Darius had been assassinated. This facilitated his conquest of the remaining pro- vinces of the Persian empire. After annexing Hyrcania and Parthia, Aria submitted and the satraps of Carmania and Gedrosia acknowledged his rule. He then marched through Drangiana (the Helmand area) to Arachosia where he founded the city of Alexandria Arachoton (Kan- dahar). From Kandahar he advanced probably by way of Ghazni to Kabul which he reached in 329 B.C. In five years Alexander had conquered the Achaemenian dominions between the Hellespont and the Caspian. The opposition now stiffened and it took him another two years to complete his task by conquering Bactria and Sogdiana in the Oxus-Jaxartes basin. The limit of his advance in this direction was marked by the city of Alexandreschate which he founded on the banks of the Jaxartes, 3,500 miles east of Hdlas. BIBLIOGRAPHY I. Cambridge Ancient History, vol. vi, 1927, chs. Aii and )(EL 2. Macedonian Imperialism, P. JOUGUET, 1928. (8) Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/19: CIA-RDP08001297R000200140008-9 THRACE ) ie _--, .0 ,.....0 ? I % P i lj RYGI Ad CAPPADOCIA ALMA/ l tk1 CILI.cli1 PAPHLAGONIA 'I IV ---> is SEA 41 % ( < \ ovo" , 4%, (5,0 B,t.aquminv DAHAE Cv. 1 r c "0 (3 d,?4 CYPRUS I / ..0..., / i oEmesa(Homs)