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Founder

Vedic Civilization
About 2000 bc, a
highly developed civilization flourished in the Indus Valley, around
the sites of Harappā and Mohenjo-Daro. By about 1500 bc, when the
Indo-Aryan tribes invaded India, this civilization was in a serious
decline. It is therefore impossible to know, on present evidence,
whether or not the two civilizations had any significant contact.
Many elements of Hinduism that were not present in Vedic
civilization (such as worship of the phallus and of goddesses,
bathing in temple tanks, and the postures of yoga) may have been
derived from the Indus civilization, however. See Indus Valley
Civilization.
By about 1500 bc, the
Indo-Aryans had settled in the Punjab, bringing with them their
predominantly male Indo-European pantheon of gods and a simple
warrior ethic that was vigorous and worldly, yet also profoundly
religious. Gods of the Vedic pantheon survive in later Hinduism, but
no longer as objects of worship: Indra, king of the gods and god of
the storm and of fertility; Agni, god of fire; and Soma, god of the
sacred, intoxicating Soma plant and the drink made from it. By 900
bc the use of iron allowed the Indo-Aryans to move down into the
lush Ganges Valley, where they developed a far more elaborate
civilization and social system. By the 6th century bc, Buddhism had
begun to make its mark on India and what was to be more than a
millennium of fruitful interaction with Hinduism.

B
Classical Hindu Civilization
Gupta Empire During
the ad 300s, the Gupta dynasty emerged and united much of northern
India. The Gupta Empire bonded the disjointed tribes that once
inhabited the region and formed a cohesive political and religious
entity. Hinduism became a more coherent and codified religion
because of the efforts of the Gupta kings, who syncretized elements
of Buddhism with Hinduism and emphasized the theistic nature of the
religion, particularly the role of the god Vishnu.© Microsoft
Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
From about 200 bc to
ad 500 India was invaded by many northern powers, of which the
Shakas (Scythians) and Kushānas had the greatest impact. This was a
time of great flux, growth, syncretism, and definition for Hinduism
and is the period in which the epics, the Dharmashastras, and the
Dharmasutras took final form. Under the Gupta Empire (320-550?),
when most of northern India was under a single power, classical
Hinduism found its most consistent expression: the sacred laws were
codified, the great temples began to be built, and myths and rituals
were preserved in the Puranas.

C
Rise of Devotional Movements
In the post-Gupta
period, a less rigid and more eclectic form of Hinduism emerged,
with more dissident sects and vernacular movements. At this time,
too, the great devotional movements arose. Many of the sects that
emerged during the period from 800 to 1800 are still active in India
today.
Most of the bhakti
movements are said to have been founded by saints—the gurus by whom
the tradition has been handed down in unbroken lineage, from guru to
disciple (chela). This lineage, in addition to a written canon, is
the basis for the authority of the bhakti sect. Other traditions are
based on the teachings of such philosophers as Shankara and Ramanuja.
Shankara was the exponent of pure monism, or nondualism (Advaita
Vedanta), and of the doctrine that all that appears to be real is
merely illusion. Ramanuja espoused the philosophy of qualified
nondualism (Vishishta-Advaita), an attempt to reconcile belief in a
godhead without attributes (nirguna) with devotion to a god with
attributes (saguna), and to solve the paradox of loving a god with
whom one is identical.

Many of the sects
that emerged during the period from 800 to 1800 are still active in
India today.
The philosophies of
Shankara and Ramanuja were developed in the context of the six great
classical philosophies (darshanas) of India: the Karma Mimamsa
(“action investigation”); the Vedanta (“end of the Vedas”), in which
tradition the work of Shankara and Ramanuja should be placed; the
Sankhya system, which describes the opposition between an inert male
spiritual principle (purusha) and an active female principle of
matter or nature (prakriti), subdivided into the three qualities (gunas)
of goodness (sattva), passion (rajas), and darkness (tamas); the
Yoga system; and the highly metaphysical systems of Vaisheshika (a
kind of atomic realism) and Nyaya (logic, but of an extremely
theistic nature).
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