Difference between revisions of "History 8 India Ancient India Workbook"

From SJS Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Blanked the page)
 
(9 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Return to [[History 8]].  '''Be sure that you sign your entry. Use only authoritative sources for external links.'''
 
  
'''[[Page 1]]'''
 
 
Throughout its early history, the Himalayas helped protect India from outside invaders. How does this image especially make that dramatically clear?
 
How does this photo help to show why such river systems were so important in the rise of the earliest civilizations?
 
 
'''[[Page 2]]'''
 
 
Most Indians consider the Ganges River to be sacred. Why do you think they might have come to view it as sacred?
 
What are monsoons, and why do they have such big impact on life in India?
 
 
[[Page 3]]
 
 
What can you tell about the geography and climate of this region from the poster alone?
 
 
http://www.joseflebovicgallery.com/catalogue/Archive/Cat-115-2005/Large/0064.jpg
 
 
Historians say many of India’s older traditions and beliefs survived more in southern India than in the north. Why do you suppose that was so?
 
 
What else about the geographical features of southern India might explain why it was able to stay more isolated from outside influence than other regions of India?
 
 
[[Page 4]]
 
 
'''The Indus River civilization is one of four ancient civilizations shown here. From this map, what major geographical feature did these civilizations have in common?'''
 
 
http://phsglobalsmartkids.wikispaces.com/file/view/river_valley_civilizations.gif/75086471/751x432/river_valley_civilizations.gif
 
 
'''What details seem to reveal the most about the ruins in Illustration?'''
 
 
'''What details are hardest to interpret?'''
 
 
'''[[Page 5]]'''
 
 
A These ruins are a sign this was a complex, highly organized civilization. Why do you think they are evidence of this?
 
 
B Some archaeologists think that washing may have had religious or ritual meaning. What do you think they mean by that?
 
 
C What else can you surmise about this aspect of the Indus River civilization?
 
 
[['''Page 6''']]
 
 
The seals were meant to be impressed and leave marks. That is, they were a form of writing. What uses can you imagine for seals of this sort?
 
 
[['''Page 7''']]
 
 
Can you think of some examples of catastrophic climate changes or natural disasters that would have been serious enough to wipe out an entire civilization?
 
 
This map may hold clues to another possible answer. It shows groups of people in Central Asia known as Indo‐Europeans. How does the map help to suggest their importance in world history?
 
[[
 
'''Page 8''']]
 
 
From the hymn shown here, what sort of god do you think Indra was supposed to be?
 
 
What attitude towards the god does this hymn take?
 
 
[['''Page 9''']]
 
 
This photo shows bullocks being honored during a South Indian rice‐harvest festival. How does this suggest links between Hindu religion and India’s long agrarian past?
 
What does this photo suggest about Hinduism and its relationship to India’s villages and traditional culture?
 
 
[['''Page 10''']]
 
 
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5083/5289739986_6fa1b5b706.jpg Cow dung drying on wall
 
http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4123/4817636196_a163706f20.jpg Cow being fed at trough
 
 
As these photos show, even today life in much of India is not that different from what it was like at the time of the Aryans. How do these photos help to show that?
 
 
What, if anything, about them appears more modern? What seems traditional and likely to have been found in Indian villages centuries ago?
 
 
[["'Page 11"']]
 
 
Over time, Hinduism went beyond earlier Vedic beliefs to what some might call a more philosophical system of ideas. The drawing here depicts these deities—Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva (from left). How does this visual depiction express the notion that these are all different aspects of one another, and of Brahman?
 
 
'''[[Page 12]]'''
 
 
Castes were ranked by their supposed level of “spiritual pollution.” What do you think this means?
 
 
Three Brahmin priests are shown here taking part in the sacred thread ceremony marking the time when boys of the top three classes begin their education. What view of Brahmin priesthood to you get from this drawing?
 
 
Some say the Hindu idea of reincarnation makes the caste system less difficult to bear for those at the bottom of it. Do you think they are right? Why or why not?
 

Latest revision as of 12:22, 24 February 2014