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The Age of Reorganisation

Ch 6 — The Age of Reorganisation | atsixty.com
NCERT Class VII  |  Social Science
Exploring Society: India and Beyond — Part I
Chapter 6
The Age of Reorganisation
History – Tapestry of the Past
c. 185 BCE – 300 CE
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Quick Reference
Chapter at a Glance
TextbookExploring Society: India and Beyond, Part I
Class / BoardVII | CBSE (New Curriculum 2025)
Chapter6 — The Age of Reorganisation
Core ThemePolitical fragmentation after the Mauryas; rise of new kingdoms; cultural flowering
Periodc. 185 BCE to c. 300 CE
StrandTapestry of the Past (History)
Dynasties coveredShungas, Satavahanas, Chedis, Cholas, Cheras, Pandyas, Indo-Greeks, Shakas, Kushanas
A What is the ‘Age of Reorganisation’?

The last Maurya emperor was assassinated around 185 BCE by his commander-in-chief Pushyamitra Shunga — barely half a century after Ashoka. The empire broke apart and many new kingdoms emerged across the subcontinent.

  • Scholars call this the Age of Reorganisation because existing regions were being reorganised into new, competing kingdoms — the map of India changed significantly.
  • The northwest became weak, exposing it to invasions from outside the subcontinent.
  • Two types of dynasties arose: from within the subcontinent (Shungas, Chedis, Satavahanas, Cholas, Cheras, Pandyas) and from outside (Indo-Greeks, Shakas, Kushanas).
  • Kingdoms competed through warfare and matrimonial alliances — marriages between royal families to secure political bonds.
  • Despite political change, art, architecture, literature, and trade flourished dramatically throughout this period.
B The Shungas  (c. 185 BCE – 73 BCE)

Who were they?

  • Founded by Pushyamitra Shunga; ruled parts of north and central India.
  • Performed the ashvamedha yajna (horse sacrifice) to assert royal supremacy.
  • Empire was smaller than the Mauryas but resisted invaders; maintained friendly ties with the Greeks after some initial military campaigns.
  • Dynasty lasted about a century before fading.

The Ashvamedha Yajna — explained

A horse, accompanied by soldiers, was set free to roam. Any land it crossed unchallenged became part of the king’s empire. If a neighbouring ruler stopped the horse, a battle followed to determine supremacy. Many kings of this era used this ritual to declare their power.

Culture under the Shungas

  • Sanskrit emerged as a leading language for philosophy and literature — the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali were compiled in this period.
  • Vedic rituals were revived, but Buddhism, Jainism, and other schools of thought continued to flourish.
  • The Bharhut Stupa (Madhya Pradesh): the Shungas added beautifully carved railings and relief panels depicting scenes from the Buddha’s life — some of the earliest examples of Buddhist narrative art.
  • Shunga art includes terracotta figures, bronze bangles, ivory combs, and beaded jewellery — revealing details of daily life and fashion.
CSatavahanas  (c. 2nd century BCE – 3rd century CE)

Also called the Andhras, they ruled large parts of the Deccan — present-day Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and Maharashtra. Major capitals: Amravati and Pratishthana (Paithan).

Economy & Trade

  • Satavahana coins found from Gujarat to Andhra Pradesh — both coasts — show the empire’s commercial reach.
  • Many coins depicted ships, pointing to active maritime trade and advanced shipbuilding.
  • Trade reached as far as the Roman Empire: exports included spices, textiles, sandalwood, gold-plated pearls, and ivory; imports included glass and perfumed ointments.
  • Agriculture was strong in the Krishna-Godavari river system — the economic backbone of the kingdom.
  • The Naneghat Caves near Pune served as toll-collection points and resting places for traders on a major trade route.

Society & Women

  • Princes were named after their mothers — Gautamiputra Satakarni was named after his mother Gautami Balashri, a powerful queen who donated land to Buddhist monks and had inscriptions carved at Nashik.
  • A Satavahana widow queen performed the ashvamedha yajna and other Vedic rituals — a remarkable instance of female agency.
  • Naneghat inscriptions record dana (donations) of land, cows, horses, elephants, and silver coins to priests, scholars, guests, and monks.
  • Early numerals in Brahmi script at Naneghat resemble modern shapes — evidence that modern numerals ultimately originated in India.

Religion & Art

  • Followers of Vasudeva (Krishna) but patronised Vedic scholars, Jains, and Buddhists equally — granting them tax-free agricultural land.
  • Karla Caves near Lonavala (Maharashtra) — magnificent rock-cut caves for Buddhist monks, with grand pillars and a stone stupa carved out of a hillside.
  • A Yaksha sculpture at Pitalkhora caves is signed by ‘Kanahadasa, a goldsmith’ — showing craftsmen worked across different materials.

Decline

  • In the 3rd century CE, weak central control and gradual economic decline broke the empire into smaller independent kingdoms.
DChedis of Kalinga  (c. 2nd century BCE)
  • After Maurya decline, Kalinga rose to prominence under the Chedi dynasty.
  • Key ruler: Kharavela — a devoted Jain, sometimes called bhikshu-raja (monk-king), yet respectful of all faiths and schools of thought.
  • Near Bhubaneswar: the Udayagiri-Khandagiri caves — likely built for Jain monks — feature intricate carved panels, spacious rock-cut rooms, and a scene from the Ramayana.
  • The Hathigumpha inscription (Brahmi script) records Kharavela’s achievements year by year — military victories and welfare works for his people.
Key idea: Kharavela declared himself ‘respector of every sect and repairer of every temple’ — described in the NCERT textbook as a fundamental part of the ‘Indian ethos’.
EThe South  (c. 3rd century BCE – 3rd century CE)

Three powerful kingdoms — Cholas, Cheras, and Pandyas — dominated South India. They remained independent even during Mauryan rule. Their era is also called the Sangam Age.

What is Sangam Literature?

The word Sangam comes from Sanskrit sangha — ‘association’ or ‘coming together’ — here referring to an assembly of poets. Sangam literature is the oldest in South India: anthologies of Tamil poems expressing love, heroism, and generosity. Historians use it as a key source for southern society and culture of this period.

The Cholas — Capital: Uraiyur

  • Ruled parts of South India from the 3rd century BCE to 13th century CE — one of the longest-lasting dynasties in Indian history.
  • King Karikala defeated a combined force of Cheras and Pandyas, establishing Chola supremacy.
  • Karikala built the Kallanai (Grand Anicut) on the Kaveri river — a complex water diversion system that earned the region the name ‘rice bowl of the South’. Still in use today.

Silappadikaram — The Tamil Epic

The Tale of the Anklet: Kannagi and her husband Kovalan live in the Chola capital Puhar. Kovalan squanders his wealth on a dancer, returns repentant, and Kannagi forgives him. They go to Madurai (Pandya capital) to start afresh. Kovalan is falsely accused of theft and executed by the Pandya king. Kannagi proves his innocence — the king dies of shock. Kannagi curses Madurai, which is destroyed by fire. She walks to the Chera kingdom, where she is worshipped as a goddess — still worshipped in Tamil Nadu and Kerala today. Core theme: a ruler’s dharma is to protect justice.

The Cheras — Capital: Vanji (present-day Karur, Tamil Nadu)

  • Also known as Keralaputra (sons of Kerala) — ruled western Tamil Nadu and Kerala.
  • Patronised Sangam poets; played a key role in shaping Tamil literature.
  • Major trading power — exported spices, timber, ivory, and pearls to the Roman Empire and West Asia.

The Pandyas — Capital: Madurai

  • One of the oldest kingdoms; rule goes back several centuries BCE.
  • Megasthenes mentions them in Indika as prosperous with a strong administration.
  • Traded actively with Greeks and Romans — famous for pearls.
  • An important naval power; contributed greatly to art and architecture.
  • Pandya inscriptions show concern for subjects’ welfare and encouragement of all schools of thought.

The Three Kingdoms at a Glance

KingdomCapitalKnown for
CholasUraiyurKarikala; Kallanai dam; Silappadikaram; longest-ruling dynasty
CherasVanji (Karur)Keralaputra; trade with Rome; patronised Sangam poets
PandyasMaduraiNaval power; pearls; mentioned by Megasthenes; welfare inscriptions
F Foreign Dynasties: Indo-Greeks, Shakas & Kushanas

The Indo-Greeks

  • Descended from governors (satraps) left behind by Alexander. After Maurya decline, they controlled the northwest (present-day Pakistan and Afghanistan).
  • Though invaders, they were deeply influenced by Indian culture — Greek and Indian elements blended in governance, art, language, and daily life.
  • The Heliodorus Pillar near Vidisha (MP) — erected by a Greek ambassador — praises Vasudeva as ‘god of gods’ and preaches: self-restraint, charity, consciousness.
  • Indo-Greek coins: gold, silver, copper, nickel — a king on one side and Greek or Indian deities on the other (Vasudeva-Krishna, Lakshmi). Proof of cultural assimilation.

The Shakas (Indo-Scythians)

  • Invaded northwest India; ruled from c. late 2nd century BCE to 5th century CE.
  • Introduced the Shaka Samvat calendar — 78 years behind the Gregorian calendar. Adopted as India’s National Calendar in 1957.

The Kushanas

  • Originally from Central Asia; entered India c. 2nd century CE. Empire stretched from Central Asia to large parts of northern India.
  • Most powerful ruler: Kanishka — his statue bears the Brahmi inscription maharaja rajadhiraja devaputra kanishka (‘great king, king of kings, son of God’).
  • Kanishka’s coins featured both Buddha and Shiva — reflecting religious tolerance.
  • Controlled key sections of the Silk Route — trade boomed, connecting India to China, Persia, and Rome.

Two Great Art Schools under the Kushanas

FeatureGandhara StyleMathura Style
RegionWestern Punjab / NW IndiaMathura, Uttar Pradesh
MaterialGrey-black schist stoneRed sandstone
InfluenceGreco-Roman + Indian blendDistinctly Indian; less Greek influence
SubjectsBuddha images — realistic anatomy, flowing robes; BodhisattvasIndian deities — Kubera, Lakshmi, Shiva, Buddha; fuller figures, smooth modelling
The Silk Route connected China with Rome through Central Asia and Persia. Indian cities like Takshashila, Mathura, Pataliputra, and Tamralipti were key hubs on the caravan network. Kushana control over this route dramatically boosted India’s trade with the wider world.
G Big Themes of the Chapter

Political Fragmentation ≠ Chaos

  • Multiple kingdoms competing actually enabled trade, art, and philosophical debate to thrive across many centres simultaneously.

The ‘Indian Ethos’ — Respect for All Schools of Thought

  • Pushyamitra revived Vedic rituals — but Buddhism and Jainism still flourished.
  • Kharavela (a Jain) called himself ‘respector of every sect.’
  • Satavahanas patronised Vedic scholars, Jains, and Buddhists equally.
  • Indo-Greeks and Kushanas adopted Indian deities on their coins.

India Absorbed its Invaders

  • Foreign rulers did not destroy Indian culture — they blended into it, creating richer art (Gandhara, Mathura) and fused traditions. Indian themes remained dominant.

Role of Women was Notable

  • Satavahana queens wielded real power — inscriptions, land donations, religious performances.
  • Kannagi (Silappadikaram) is still worshipped as a goddess — justice as a feminine virtue.

Trade Connected the World

  • India traded with Rome, Persia, Central Asia, and Southeast Asia — by land (Silk Route) and sea.
  • Satavahana ships, Pandya pearls, Chera spices — commerce was a civilisational force.
HGlossary
TermMeaning
Ashvamedha YajnaVedic horse sacrifice performed by kings to assert royal supremacy over neighbouring territories
Matrimonial AlliancePolitical bond secured through marriage between royal families
Sangam LiteratureOldest literature of South India — Tamil poetry anthologies on love, heroism, and generosity; defines the Sangam Age
SangamFrom Sanskrit ‘sangha’ — assembly; here, an assembly of poets
Bhikshu-RajaMonk-king — informal title given to Kharavela of the Chedis
Hathigumpha InscriptionBrahmi inscription in Udayagiri cave recording Kharavela’s achievements year by year
DanaCharitable gift — land, animals, money to priests, scholars, and monks; a religious duty of kings
Gandhara SchoolArt blending Greco-Roman and Indian styles; grey-black schist stone; known for realistic Buddha images
Mathura SchoolDistinctly Indian school of art in red sandstone; fuller figures of Indian deities
Silk RouteAncient trade network connecting China with Rome through Central Asia; Kushanas controlled key sections
Shaka SamvatCalendar from the Shaka era; 78 years behind Gregorian; India’s National Calendar since 1957
SatrapRegional governor left by Alexander; later became independent rulers — the Indo-Greeks
IThe Timeline
c. 185 BCE
Pushyamitra Shunga kills last Maurya emperor; Shunga dynasty begins
c. 2nd cent. BCE
Satavahanas rise in the Deccan; Chedi dynasty rises in Kalinga under Kharavela
2nd cent. BCE onwards
Indo-Greeks control northwest India; Greek-Indian cultural blend begins
2nd BCE – 5th CE
Shakas (Indo-Scythians) rule northwest; Shaka Samvat calendar created
3rd BCE – 3rd CE
Cholas, Cheras, Pandyas flourish in South India — the Sangam Age of Tamil poetry
c. 1st BCE – 1st CE
Silappadikaram composed soon after the Sangam collections
c. 2nd cent. CE
Kushanas enter India from Central Asia; Kanishka — their greatest ruler
Kanishka’s reign
Gandhara and Mathura art schools flourish; Silk Route trade booms
c. 3rd cent. CE
Satavahana empire fragments; regional kingdoms reassert dominance
J Chapter-End Question — Answers
Q1. Why was the post-Maurya era also known as the era of reorganisation?
After the last Maurya emperor was killed (c. 185 BCE), the large empire broke into many smaller kingdoms — both native (Shungas, Satavahanas, Chedis, Cholas, Cheras, Pandyas) and foreign (Indo-Greeks, Shakas, Kushanas). These kingdoms constantly competed for territory, reorganising the political map of India. However, this was not mere decline — art, trade, and culture flourished alongside political change. Hence scholars call it an ‘age of reorganisation’ rather than simply an age of chaos.
Q2. Write a note on Sangam literature in 150 words.
Sangam literature is the oldest body of literature in South India, produced during the Sangam Age (c. 3rd century BCE to 3rd century CE). The word ‘Sangam’ comes from the Sanskrit ‘sangha,’ meaning an assembly — here, an assembly of Tamil poets. It consists of several anthologies of poems composed by many poets. The poetry primarily expresses personal emotions like love and societal values like heroism and generosity, with great skill and delicacy. Historians rely heavily on Sangam poems to understand the society, culture, economy, and political life of the three great southern kingdoms — the Cholas, Cheras, and Pandyas. The Silappadikaram (The Tale of the Anklet), composed soon after the Sangam collections, is a famous Tamil epic that grew out of this tradition. Sangam literature remains a living cultural heritage of Tamil Nadu today.
Q3. Which rulers included their mother’s name in their title, and why?
The Satavahana rulers followed this tradition. For example, Gautamiputra Satakarni was named after his mother, Gautami Balashri. This likely signified the high status and influence of mothers in the Satavahana royal family. Gautami Balashri herself was a powerful queen — she donated land to Buddhist monks and had inscriptions carved at Nashik, showing her real authority. Naming a king after his mother publicly honoured her role and may have helped establish the king’s legitimacy through his mother’s respected lineage.
Q4. Write a 250-word note on one kingdom from the chapter.
The Kushanas are a fascinating example of cultural transformation. Originally from Central Asia, they entered India c. 2nd century CE and built an empire stretching from Central Asia to large parts of northern India. Their greatest ruler, Kanishka, held the title maharaja rajadhiraja devaputra — great king, king of kings, son of God. Kanishka patronised both Buddhism and Shaivism — his coins featured Buddha and Shiva — reflecting remarkable religious tolerance. The Kushanas controlled major sections of the Silk Route, connecting India to China, Persia, and Rome, and trade boomed during their reign. Under them, two great art schools flourished: the Gandhara style (Greek-Indian fusion, realistic Buddha images in grey-black stone) and the Mathura style (distinctly Indian, red sandstone, fuller figures of Indian deities). The Kushanas are a remarkable example of foreign rulers who, rather than destroying Indian culture, became its champions and added richly to it.
Q5. (Creative) Imagine your own kingdom — emblem, title, and values.
This is an open-ended creative question. Include: (a) A royal emblem — choose a meaningful symbol; explain its significance. (b) A royal title — link it to your values. (c) Core values — justice, education, trade, environment, etc. (d) Unique features of administration. Draw inspiration from the chapter: Kharavela protected all schools of thought; Karikala built the Grand Anicut for public welfare; Satavahana queens showed that women could hold real power.
Q6. Map activity — mark locations of ancient structures mentioned in the chapter.
Key locations to mark: Bharhut Stupa (Madhya Pradesh) — Shungas; Naneghat Caves and Karla Caves (near Pune/Lonavala, Maharashtra) — Satavahanas; Udayagiri-Khandagiri Caves (near Bhubaneswar, Odisha) — Chedis; Kallanai/Grand Anicut (Kaveri river, Tamil Nadu) — Cholas; Heliodorus Pillar (near Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh) — Indo-Greeks; Mathura (Uttar Pradesh) — Mathura School of Art; Gandhara region (present-day Pakistan/Afghanistan) — Gandhara School of Art.
K Select Extra Facts  (Beyond the Textbook)
◆ The Bharhut Stupa’s railings are now in the Indian Museum, Kolkata

The original carved railings and gateways were moved to the Indian Museum, Kolkata in the 19th century for preservation. The Stupa itself remains in Satna district, Madhya Pradesh.

◆ The Grand Anicut is one of the world’s oldest water structures still in use

Built over 2,000 years ago by Chola king Karikala, the Kallanai (Grand Anicut) is widely regarded as one of the oldest water-regulation structures in the world that remains operational. British engineer Sir Arthur Cotton restored and improved it in the 19th century.

◆ Silappadikaram is one of the Five Great Tamil Epics

Tamil tradition recognises five major epics (Aimperumkappiyangal). Silappadikaram is the first and most celebrated. Its companion work, Manimekalai, continues the story. The author is traditionally identified as Ilango Adigal, believed to be a Chera prince who became a monk.

◆ Menander (Milinda) — the most famous Indo-Greek king — converted to Buddhism

King Menander I (called Milinda in Buddhist texts) is the most celebrated Indo-Greek ruler. His philosophical dialogues with the Buddhist monk Nagasena are recorded in the Pali text Milindapanha. He is said to have converted to Buddhism.

◆ Kanishka convened the Fourth Buddhist Council

Kanishka of the Kushana dynasty organised the Fourth Buddhist Council in Kashmir, where Buddhist scriptures were compiled and debated. This was important for the development of Mahayana Buddhism.

◆ Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras — 196 aphorisms, still studied worldwide

Compiled during the Shunga period, the Yoga Sutras consist of 196 aphorisms systematising the philosophy and practice of Yoga into eight limbs (Ashtanga Yoga). They remain the foundational text of classical Yoga philosophy globally today.

◆ The Shaka Samvat — India’s official national calendar

India officially uses two calendars: the Gregorian for civil purposes, and the Saka calendar as the National Calendar, reformed and adopted on 22 March 1957. The year begins with the month of Chaitra.

◆ Gandhara corresponds to a character in the Mahabharata

Gandhara (modern Kandahar region, Afghanistan/Pakistan) is the kingdom of Gandhari — Duryodhana’s mother in the Mahabharata — and her brother Shakuni. The NCERT textbook itself hints at this connection in its ‘Think About It’ box.

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