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Indians | Ep 8: The Vijayanagar Empire | A Brief History of a Civilization 

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Research, Script and Narration by Namit Arora;
Producer: The Wire;
Director: Natasha Badhwar;
Camera: Ajmal Jami;
Video Editor: Anam Sheikh.
Made possible by a grant from The Raza Foundation and contributions to The Wire by viewers like you. Join The Wire’s RU-vid membership program and help fund many such initiatives.
The story of India is one of profound and continuous change. It has been shaped by the dynamic of migration, conflict, mixing, coexistence, and cooperation. In this ten-part web series, Namit Arora tells the story of Indians and our civilization by exploring some of our greatest historical sites, most of which were lost to memory and were dug out by archaeologists. He will also focus on ancient and medieval foreign travellers whose idiosyncratic accounts conceal surprising insights about us Indians. All along, Arora surveys India’s long and exciting churn of cultural ideas, beliefs, and values-some that still shape us today, and others that have been lost forever. The series mostly mirrors-and often extends-the contents of his book, Indians: A Brief History of a Civilization. Bibliography appears below.
EPISODE 8: THE VIJAYANAGAR EMPIRE
The Vijayanagar Empire (1336-1565) once ruled much of south India. Foreigners have left vivid accounts of its capital city, aka Vijayanagar-its grand temples, palaces, royal baths, audience halls, Islamic quarter, bazaars, military might, and cosmopolitanism. Considered the birthplace of Carnatic music, Vijayanagar also evolved syncretic forms of architecture, governance, and courtly attire. Folk tales abound of its famous king, Krishnadevaraya, and his minister, Tenali Raman, who had a clever solution to every problem. The city’s remains now lie near Hampi village, in a beautiful rocky landscape by the Tungabhadra River.
How did Vijayanagar acquire all the wealth that impressed foreign travellers? Their eyewitness accounts-and contemporary scholars-reveal much about its economy, social customs, big festivals, and the cloistered lives of its elite women. In this episode, Namit Arora describes what’s known about its trade, taxation, governance, policing, crime and punishment. He also looks at Vijayanagar’s religious landscape and courtly norms, its eager embrace of Persianate culture, and its war machine and shifting military alliances in which religion mattered little. And finally, the causes of the empire’s massive defeat at the battle of Talikota. Hindu nationalists today fondly imagine Vijayanagar as a self-conscious bastion of Hinduism bravely resisting the ‘onslaught of Islam’. Is that true? As we’ll see, history is messy, and it often confounds sectarian readings of the past.
PARTIAL BIBLIOGRAPHY / FURTHER READING
Barbosa, Duarte; Trans. by Dames, M Longworth (1812); The Book of Duarte Barbosa: An account of the countries bordering on the Indian Ocean and their inhabitants, 1518.
Eaton, Richard M.; The New Cambridge History of India, A Social History of the Deccan, 1300-1761: Eight Indian Lives; CUP, 2005
Fritz, John M and Michell, George; Hampi Vijayanagara; Jaico, 2011
Ganeri, Jonardon (Editor); The Oxford Handbook of Indian Philosophy; OUP, 2017
Katragadda, Sri Lakshmi; Women in Vijayanagara: Women in sixteenth century (A Study of Tuluva Dynasty); Delta Publishing, 1996
Keay, John; India: A History; Harper Collins, 1999
Kulke, Hermann and Rothermundm Dietmar; A History of India; Psychology Press, 2004
Nikhil; ‘Kanaka Dasa’s musical critique of “Caste, caste, caste”’; Nikhil, etc., 7 March 2017
Samarqandi, Kamaluddin Abdul-Razzaq; Mission to Calicut and Vijayanagar; trans by W. M. Thackston; 1989
Sarasvati, A. Rangasvami; ‘Political Maxims of the Emperor Poet, Krishnadeva Raya’; Journal of Indian History 6 (1925)
Sastri, Nilakanta KA; A History of South India; OUP, 1958
Sayeed, Vikhar Ahmed; 'Beyond the Hindu-Muslim Binary'; Frontline, Jan 02, 2019
Sewell, Robert; Nunes, Fernão; Paes, Domingos; A Forgotten Empire (Vijayanagar): A Contribution to the History of India; 1900; Repub by Asian Educational Services 2001
Shanmugam, P., S. Srinivasan (Editors); Recent Advances in Vijayanagara Studies; New Era Publications, 2006
Stein, Burton; The New Cambridge History of India: Vijayanagara; CUP, 1989
Stoker, Valerie; Polemics and Patronage in the City of Victory; UC Press, 2016
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay; Agreeing to Disagree: Burton Stein on Vijayanagara; South Asia Research Vol. 17, No. 2, 1997
Thapar, Romila; The Past as Present; Aleph, 2014
Wagoner, Phillip B; ‘Sultan among Hindu Kings: Dress, Titles, and the Islamicization of Hindu Culture at Vijayanagara’; The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 55, No. 4, 1996
Join The Wire's RU-vid Membership and get exclusive content, member-only emojis, live interaction with The Wire's founders, editors and reporters and much more. Memberships to The Wire Crew start at Rs 89/month. / @thewirenews

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29 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 276   
@zedkay5145
@zedkay5145 4 месяца назад
Wire kindly release it on more platforms in different languages. The country need to watch this.
@anand1pillai
@anand1pillai 4 месяца назад
Certainly but then there would be no country. Hearing the presenter I could well imagine the attitude of the so called Hindus over the many millennia who would give their honour and ethics away for a few pennies or praise
@HRKhan-rg1kq
@HRKhan-rg1kq 4 месяца назад
​@@anand1pillaiesa nhi hai na to be posted😊 3rr😊
@debayanbose9983
@debayanbose9983 4 месяца назад
❤❤❤❤❤😊
@arunanand03
@arunanand03 4 месяца назад
Dear Namit Ji, We are grateful u bring these history episodes and presenting a very logical pictures.
@anand1pillai
@anand1pillai 4 месяца назад
There is a clear slant in his theme of presentation, almost appearing paid!
@anand1pillai
@anand1pillai 4 месяца назад
Logic may be but the partisan agenda of favouring extrinsic forces but paining the intrinsic in a poor light is obvious.
@morambam9897
@morambam9897 4 месяца назад
I have been watching the series enthusiastically from the beginning. I would love an episode about the Northeast in the later episodes.
@floatingrationale
@floatingrationale 4 месяца назад
Muslim rulers exempted Muslims but taxed only non-Muslims. Two of those taxes are jizya and Khara.
@floatingrationale
@floatingrationale 4 месяца назад
Sorry it was Kharaj. Given this, how did Hindu rulers of that time collected taxes? Were they at least taxed in a fair and balanced way?
@PercivalDark
@PercivalDark 3 месяца назад
This is a common confusion that Non-Muslims just don't understand. Under Islamic Law all citizens must usually pay taxes. For Muslims, the tax was called 'Zakat' and for Non-Muslims, the tax was called 'Jizyah'.
@PercivalDark
@PercivalDark 3 месяца назад
Zakat is one of the 5 pillars of Islam: 1. Iman (Faith/Belief) 2. Salat (Prayer) 3. Zakat (Tax) 4. Saum (Fasting in Ramadan) 5. Haj (Pilgrimmage)
@knowledgejunction8193
@knowledgejunction8193 4 месяца назад
What is stopping wire to do this Series in Hindi Language if they want to change the mind of Indian Hindus then it should be in Hindi Language as well,I request them to run this series in both English and Hindi Language...!!!👍
@abhishekmittal5440
@abhishekmittal5440 4 месяца назад
Thoroughly enjoying and loving this series....awesome!
@srinivasvaranasi1645
@srinivasvaranasi1645 4 месяца назад
Good to see a brutally objective history!
@kunals8022
@kunals8022 4 месяца назад
Would reserve my opinion till I see how he portrays the Invasions of the barbarians
@rohitvenkateshwaran
@rohitvenkateshwaran 4 месяца назад
Agree with 50% of what has been shown here. Disagree with the rest. Caste was prevalent in Vijayanagara as it was in just about every other Hindu and Muslim kingdom in India at that time, with Brahmins forming the privileged elite. But that doesn't mean that the social system was never questioned in Vijayanagara, or that the kings of that empire never accepted meritocracy. The saint Kanakadasa (mentioned in this video) himself is a case at point. Firstly, Kanakadasaru was not a "Dalit", but Kuruba (shepherd community: they're called Dhangar in Maharashtra. The later day Holkars of Indore would hail from this community) by origin. Kurubas were considered "Shudra" as per the caste hierarchy, and not outcaste. As per Kanakadasaru's biography (that has come down to us through oral legends), his father used to be a high ranking army officer in the court of King Krishnadevaraya, which means that caste was not a barrier to merit at least in military and administrative affairs. So Kanakadasa lived a happy and prosperous childhood with his father being able to appoint Brahmin teachers to tutor him. He grew up up to become a scholar, warrior and administrator, but then various events in his life instilled a sense of renunciation in him, due to which he relinquished his administrative position in the Vijayanagara court and went on to become the Bhakti saint we know him as today. Being well lettered since childhood, Kanakadasa was always a gifted poet: in fact, those poems in which he offers his harshest critique against caste discrimination are said to belong to the "pre-renunciation" period of his life, ie when he was employed at the Vijayanagara court! Secondly, the trend of dubbing Bhakti-devotionalism as another form of Brahminism in this series of videos is inappropriate. In case of saint Kanakadasa we're discussing here, after he resigned from worldly affairs, he became a disciple of Swami Vyasatirtha, a famous Vaishnavite monk belonging to the tradition of Madhwacharya. Vyasatirtha was a Bhakti saint-poet in his own right, but was also the preceptor to King Krishnadevaraya and the high-priest of the Tirumala Tirupati temple, which made him the Rajya-guru of the Vijayanagara kingdom! Vyasatirtha was a Brahmin by origin, but he had no qualms about admitting Kanakadasa into his cloister. Coincidentally, Vyasatirtha was Guru to saint Purandaradasa (again, mentioned in this video) as well, which makes all the three saint-poets contemporaries as well as compatriots! So considering Kanakadasa's poetry as "folk" and the works of Vyasatirtha and Purandaradasa as "orthodox Brahminical" makes no sense.
@guruprasadravi307
@guruprasadravi307 4 месяца назад
Good explanation Rohit, I can talk about this episode, as I hail from Karnataka and have done lot of unbiased reading on history of Karnataka. I agree to most of your information here. Due to lot of inaccuracies, I went back to see Mr Arora's credentials, and nothing stands clear about his dept of knowledge in Karnataka history. I can't talk about other episodes, as I have not done Indepth reading. I feel, it will be the same with the rest of the episodes. I feel everybody is trying to break happiness and commonsense of simple, hardworking, people. Most people are not obsessed with religion or history (especially fake history) like what we see now. Most people want to have a peaceful and moral life and good family values.
@Indian-xj5ww
@Indian-xj5ww 4 месяца назад
@rohitvenkateshwaran You say, "the trend of dubbing Bhakti-devotionalism as another form of Brahminism in this series of videos is inappropriate." Where do you see that? I think it's a gross misreading on your part. He has clearly distinguished between the two, in this and also in previous episodes. If you believe your understanding is correct, cite some quotes etc. from the episode. Of course, the two sometimes had similar effects-like pushing out the sex-positive Tantric religion-but otherwise they are rightly depicted at distinct in the series, in their origins, beliefs, and practices.
@bababijli5140
@bababijli5140 4 месяца назад
Presentation of Mr.Arora is superb. The whole thing when finished should be brought out as one volume as a presentation to hear and as a full book to read and ponder over. Congratulations the Wire and Mr. Arora
@johnalexander4982
@johnalexander4982 3 месяца назад
Like Nehru's Discovery of India..... Bharat ek Khoj
@AnirimaGhosh
@AnirimaGhosh 4 месяца назад
Amazing. I always make sure to add a comment to increase the reach. Will you please do an episode on the Bengal and East region. Thanks.
@kalyanimookherji8834
@kalyanimookherji8834 3 месяца назад
Exactly - very little authentic research videos on history of bengal
@ansh_u_r
@ansh_u_r 4 месяца назад
Nobody in history could ever say that Vijaynagar was an Islamic resistance kingdom...but certainly was an powerful Hindu kingdom...very different looking than an Islamic India..
@vrattaluri9045
@vrattaluri9045 4 месяца назад
Excellent presentation,👏👏
@adeshshingare1159
@adeshshingare1159 4 месяца назад
Mr. ARORA first of all thanks you lot for bringing this amazing series , I watched all the episodes of this series they are very fascinating and enjoyable thanks to your lucid presentation...I want to make demand for some more episodes on Chola empire, sangam age, Delhi sultanate, and Temples Architecture. ❤
@ranganathanv5365
@ranganathanv5365 4 месяца назад
well done and please continue with more such
@swarnamohanty3121
@swarnamohanty3121 4 месяца назад
Excellent sir.
@ssmot113
@ssmot113 4 месяца назад
The best thing about the comment section under 'Indians' series is that it's free from rude people. If it's not because of actual comment deletion by The Wire, then it's commendable...
@shrav1012
@shrav1012 2 месяца назад
Fantastic episode. Read Rushdie's Victory City recently and this is all the more interesting right now..
@vkravikumar2628
@vkravikumar2628 4 месяца назад
Really enjoyed
@user-wd2fw3io1q
@user-wd2fw3io1q 4 месяца назад
An excellent presentation based on research.A very valuable contribution for those who wants to rise above their prejudices and gain an insight about the actual facts recorded in India's history.Congratilations to all the team members who contributed in this presentation.Please keep up the good work.
@fellowhuman4656
@fellowhuman4656 4 месяца назад
Any body else gets so excited to see new episode on youtube feed!!
@shahrukhali4465
@shahrukhali4465 4 месяца назад
Shukriya ❤
@kalyanimookherji8834
@kalyanimookherji8834 3 месяца назад
Please think about compiling these episodes as a book, dvd etc before they are taken down.
@kvishnup
@kvishnup 4 месяца назад
Hooked to this series....very well written and directed👍
@arpanapalle5556
@arpanapalle5556 4 месяца назад
It's an eye opener. All they were after is power and wealth. Religion never really mattered like people of current times would like to believe. Krishna Deva Raya's period of rule is described as Golden age of Telugu literature. I guess their love for indulgence in arts and literature is what made them memorable
@criticphil
@criticphil 4 месяца назад
That's partially true. If Vijayanagar empire really subjugated other regions, those regions and their descendants would remember the atrocities as part of collective history.
@shalinikala
@shalinikala 4 месяца назад
Excellent!
@ObservantLearner
@ObservantLearner 4 месяца назад
As classy as always it is👌
@ashok755
@ashok755 4 месяца назад
Good lecture. Thanks
@MOONLIGHT-zu4ru
@MOONLIGHT-zu4ru 4 месяца назад
Well done wire...keep it up ❤
@atulmamtora
@atulmamtora 4 месяца назад
Excellent analysis.
@vishaalbhatnagar3924
@vishaalbhatnagar3924 4 месяца назад
Great insights, as always.
@mohitanand1844
@mohitanand1844 4 месяца назад
They failed to innovate when they needed it the most
@ragup205
@ragup205 4 месяца назад
Amazing narration as always ❤🎉
@ansh_u_r
@ansh_u_r 4 месяца назад
15:37 there is not only one lower caste poet, you can find many lower caste poets of the era who gives glimpses of their social lives..many in marathi... as marathi was also the language in Vijaynagar Empire...the read the writings of Chokha Mela...he gives the best descriptions of Lower caste people lives in central deccan..
@SCIENCEPARADISE
@SCIENCEPARADISE Месяц назад
Sir please make 2nd part of foreign travellers
@khursheedahmed7095
@khursheedahmed7095 4 месяца назад
Fascinating history.... I am always anxiously waiting for the next episode. Thanks for all the work that goes into making this series. Very enlightening, at a time when history is being distorted.
@aks1270
@aks1270 4 месяца назад
I have thoroughly enjoyed all the episodes and looking forward to the next ones. A suggestion , if these can be edited a bit to make it suitable for high-school students and published separately as such.Also if you can publish it in major Indian languages with some good voice over artist/ scholar. Most of the schools lack good history teachers and history books are boring. Your videos can be of immense help.
@veerindia5359
@veerindia5359 3 месяца назад
Intresting history telling ways ty sir👍
@rkvishwakarma4459
@rkvishwakarma4459 4 месяца назад
A Good job done
@azimshaikh8772
@azimshaikh8772 4 месяца назад
I eagerly wait for your episode of Indians, an excellent factual account of our history
@mw3175
@mw3175 4 месяца назад
high respect for this report
@ziaurda
@ziaurda 4 месяца назад
So fascinating.. ❤
@ranasyed3205
@ranasyed3205 4 месяца назад
Thanks for your hard work sir Very good analysis
@sagirahmed1601
@sagirahmed1601 4 месяца назад
Very informative! I wish to see an episode on Northeast India also.
@ArjunAchyutha-xyz
@ArjunAchyutha-xyz 4 месяца назад
Amazed by this new series on Indian history!!!...lovenit❤❤❤
@kaushalgagan6723
@kaushalgagan6723 4 месяца назад
Please release it in Hindi too. It will help many. Waiting for the next episode ❤
@muralimohanraoinamala8724
@muralimohanraoinamala8724 4 месяца назад
Thanks
@shiladityabikashsingh6457
@shiladityabikashsingh6457 4 месяца назад
Excellently explained and documented...Thanks WIRE
@vrattaluri9045
@vrattaluri9045 4 месяца назад
Excellent visuals . Thank you sir
@NRIWelfareForum
@NRIWelfareForum 4 месяца назад
Very nice series
@angelboy2901
@angelboy2901 4 месяца назад
amazing history of South India
@Mr303606909
@Mr303606909 3 месяца назад
Thank you for clear growth mindset brief on south Indian history.
@ShrekCunther
@ShrekCunther 4 месяца назад
I don't know why I get through this torture of seeing the wire vedio every time it's posted, the italian guy says no one knew how vijaynagar queens lived , immediately proceeds with women were persecuted ree..... what is Madhura Vijayam then ? Gangamba Devi not a poet how is she describing muslmans in that book ?
@AdvKapatkarS
@AdvKapatkarS 4 месяца назад
Thanks Again as Always
@ranasyed3205
@ranasyed3205 4 месяца назад
Wonderful series
@TheAbsurd_Man
@TheAbsurd_Man 4 месяца назад
Very informative series👍
@anandmohan4657
@anandmohan4657 4 месяца назад
Thanks for analysis
@prathvirajsinghpatel9918
@prathvirajsinghpatel9918 2 месяца назад
5:08 thank you ANAM SHEIKH JI for your such a secular video editing 😅😅😅
@sayantimitra6514
@sayantimitra6514 4 месяца назад
👍👍👍 for each and every segment
@pudur_artspudur_arts624
@pudur_artspudur_arts624 4 месяца назад
It felt like reading a history book authored by a scholar named "UNBIASED" . Netflix worthy materials. Let it come....
@harbrindersingh2170
@harbrindersingh2170 4 месяца назад
Always waiting for next episode
@AsadKhan-ii3es
@AsadKhan-ii3es 4 месяца назад
Excellent....
@Advaitvaadi
@Advaitvaadi 4 месяца назад
Great informative episode
@kunals8022
@kunals8022 4 месяца назад
Waiting for this fabulous historian to explain in detail about the Islamic conquest of India.Hope he explains the iconiclasm , library destruction and genocides to the tune of 60-80 millions by these "cultured" invaders
@DesiBhoy
@DesiBhoy 4 месяца назад
“This fabulous historian” is fabulous partly because, unlike you, he is not a graduate of WhatsApp university with its fake claims, comic fantasies, and gross exaggerations.
@kunals8022
@kunals8022 4 месяца назад
@@DesiBhoy Yes, Let's await his take on the Islamic invasions of India.Inammsure he won't disappoint me when he starts talking about the wonderful syncretic culture that brought biryani and Persian culture to Indians.I am also very sure he will totally ignore the Destruction of 40000 to 70000 temples, the destruction of universities, the massacres of 70 million natives ....Oh I forgot this is Whatsapp propaganda!
@DesiBhoy
@DesiBhoy 4 месяца назад
@@kunals8022 You're so smart. No wonder you give credence to the wildly fictional massacre of 70 million Hindus but not to the reality of a syncretic culture that's all around us.
@kunals8022
@kunals8022 4 месяца назад
@@DesiBhoy Why don't you disprove it? There are multiple studies conducted on this and yes, the number I quoted I conservative.Now I wouldn't want to keep arguing on this.I just know that this gentleman has a talent for half truths.
@DesiBhoy
@DesiBhoy 4 месяца назад
@@kunals8022 Since you are the one claiming that 70 million Hindus were massacred by invading Muslims (which was nearly the entire population of India at that time!), the burden of proof lies on you. Can you cite your sources and some of the “multiple studies conducted”? What I do know is that this is a hobbyhorse of rabid Hindutva chauvinists. Academic scholars find the claim laughable, ludicrous and malicious.
@devidaughter7782
@devidaughter7782 4 месяца назад
when you speak about the empire with the less strong economic base being more warlike, I wonder if this is a pattern that can be generalized? would it be fair to say that economically more stable and prosperous 'kingdoms' have been (generally) less warlike? if so, this certainly could explain the invaders from central Asia (without a strong economic base?) coming into the stable, prosperous IVC.
@ghostridermallu1835
@ghostridermallu1835 3 месяца назад
Bribery is part of our culture😂😂😂
@rgedz6148
@rgedz6148 4 месяца назад
Thank you sir..
@Adyjetu
@Adyjetu 21 час назад
Hakka raya and bukka raya were kannada feudal commanders of Telugu Kakatiyas kings
@vinaypande
@vinaypande 4 месяца назад
I am grateful for your coverage of the history of S India here. But please - you dont have to go overboard to combat RSS BJP. Your viewers are not children and they know whats happening in the politics of education and history today. In 30 minutes I still know nothing about where Vinayanagar came from, the extent of its empire, and how it conquered it. Nor do you spend more than a token amount of time on its cultural achievements.
@alokjagdhari
@alokjagdhari 2 месяца назад
Excellent content and presentation. I need some more information about the source materials for the description of the condition of women described in this video. Could you please help identify the core text used (out of a long list of texts cited above). The locals in Hampi (especially the tour guides) are completely in denial about the status of women. That's not unusual. The tour guides at Chittor are absolute sure of the existence of Rani Padmini, despite no evidence of her being a real person
@kunmun565
@kunmun565 4 месяца назад
Totally glossed over the destruction of Hoysala empire by attacks of Khiljis and Hakka-Bukka reconverted through Madhavacharya and established Vijaynagar Empire. They were not shudras by any means and were chieftains of Hoysala empire
@DesiBhoy
@DesiBhoy 4 месяца назад
Don't get carried away. There are many legendary tales of Hakka-Bukka and their rise to power. The one you mention is only one of them.
@user-white-rabbit
@user-white-rabbit 2 месяца назад
@@DesiBhoy LMAO!
@subhendudey6625
@subhendudey6625 4 месяца назад
Vijaynagara empire always fascinated me. Having vivid account of the past empire through this narration is very interesting informative and refreshing. So many misconceptions cleared and made transparent the whole idea of imaginary conceptions.
@user-wi6fl1im7o
@user-wi6fl1im7o 4 месяца назад
This episode want to translate in hindi language to understand anybody who cant english language
@notherepim
@notherepim 3 месяца назад
Great work. Please never stop telling the facts.
@malvindersingh6828
@malvindersingh6828 4 месяца назад
Fabulous series. Thank you Mr. Arora. Much needed in today’s day and age.
@narendrababu8999
@narendrababu8999 4 месяца назад
I am waiting for next episode
@subrahmanyamgudipati268
@subrahmanyamgudipati268 4 месяца назад
Good knowledge
@DSMEOMARFAROOQ
@DSMEOMARFAROOQ 4 месяца назад
Sir, You could have used some more accounts of information from the russian traveller Afanasy Nikintin
@infinity_thoughts_in_me
@infinity_thoughts_in_me 4 месяца назад
Dear Mr. Namith Arora, I am writing to express my heartfelt gratitude for your video on the anecdotal Indian history. I watched your video with great interest and admiration, as it was both educational and entertaining. I appreciate the effort and time you put in making the history simple and captivating, without losing the accuracy and authenticity of the historical facts and sources. You did an excellent job of presenting the history without prejudice and with a critical perspective, acknowledging the diversity and complexity of the Indian society and culture. Your video is well documented and cited, providing the viewers with resources and references to further learn about the topics and themes you explored. Your video is a wonderful contribution to the field of Indian history and a great service to the public. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and passion with us.
@rajivchawdhry4871
@rajivchawdhry4871 4 месяца назад
How to see earlier episodes?
@anandprasadsharma5067
@anandprasadsharma5067 4 месяца назад
Please upload next episode its very interesting series
@EustaquioSantimano
@EustaquioSantimano 4 месяца назад
Thank you for this enthralling series on the History of India. Very informative, educational, insightful !! The series should reach a wider audience.
@Mryajurarora
@Mryajurarora 4 месяца назад
Wonderful series. Looking forward to the next episode.
@pratheekrebello8319
@pratheekrebello8319 4 месяца назад
While I love this series, I’m curious to know why we rely so much on testimonies of travellers and foreigners. What do Indian sources say about these empires? Do their accounts agree with the foreign sources
@DesiBhoy
@DesiBhoy 4 месяца назад
Historians use a variety of sources that complement and support each other in creating the portrait of a society. Travellers are a valuable source because they tend to record things that natives often take for granted and don’t comment on. They bring fresh ways of seeing and an eye for cultural differences. But it’s also true that travellers can often be unreliable or misinformed or prone to exaggeration. So this has to be corrected for with other sources, including literary texts, court and trade records, inscriptions, archaeology, textual analysis, and of course other travellers’ testimonies. At times, multiple sources might confirm a detail; at other times, a detail only from a traveller is deemed reasonable to accept. It depends.
@xr55
@xr55 4 месяца назад
Testimonies of foreigners or travellers are unbiased. Also, the lower caste wasn't educated. ​@@DesiBhoy
@mayabava
@mayabava 26 дней назад
why did not talk about Cheras, Cholas and Pandya Kings who were more powerful than many kings in the world?
@zedkay5145
@zedkay5145 4 месяца назад
@keeping_1t_real
@keeping_1t_real 4 месяца назад
I wonder how much importance we can give to Nuniz’s account about the women in the royal palace. Given that royal women were largely secluded, how much access did he have to the day to day life and politics of the female quarters? We already know that much of the foreign accounts of Indian royal households were no more than bazaar gossip. As for the promiscuity of the kings, they may not have been any more ‘promiscuous’ than their contemporaries. So why don’t we hear more about venereal diseases among other royal dynasties if the time? I would also be a little sceptical of a large number of royal deaths due to venereal diseases.
@Indian-xj5ww
@Indian-xj5ww 4 месяца назад
@keeping_1t_real I noticed that not just Nuniz's but Barbosa's account is also cited. The portrait of elite women of Vijayanagar in this episode is hardly controversial among scholars, and is based on multiple sources, not "bazaar gossip". The fact that women of the harem were secluded, carried only in covered palanquins, given no public role, guarded by eunuchs, and were expected to commit sati, is amply indicative of their condition, is it not? Yes, it’s probably true that not all kings of Vijayanagar died of venereal disease. Nuniz couldn’t have known that with any certainty for more than a couple of generations before his time. But that this happened to at least some kings, including Krishnadevaraya, is still an arresting detail. One reason we don't hear much about venereal diseases among medieval Indian royalty may be that the precise causes of death were hardly ever recorded. Portuguese travellers noticed it probably because they were familiar with the symptoms of venereal diseases like syphilis from back home.
@neenathapainstitutions5499
@neenathapainstitutions5499 4 месяца назад
Really enjoying this series.. Have also shared it! Thank you Sir! 😊
@kabiruzzaman5129
@kabiruzzaman5129 4 месяца назад
🕊️
@mw3175
@mw3175 4 месяца назад
english language. high class
@ShrekCunther
@ShrekCunther 4 месяца назад
guy, accusing Vijayanagar of patriarchy & castiesm is also saying , oh don't judge it by binary of Muslims & Hindus when he clearly states that empire was ruled by Hindus common man, tera narrative narrative dusroka narrative not narrative...it's simple if you start looking for consensus in history you'll end up accepting narrative so listen to both sides
@pradeepbelagal
@pradeepbelagal 4 месяца назад
It appears that author (of script) while quoting several well meant studies misses some important things about it. "Recent Developments in the Historiography of the Vijayanagara State" Y Subbarayulu (Journal of Karnataka Studies May-October 2008, 5-2) points out how initial Telugu, Kannada nationalisms appropriated it. He points out early Vijayanagara was intact with almost Hoysala state (only latter incorporated Telugu provisions). But here Hakka Bukka strangely become "probably Telugu". Sheep Sacrifice pertains to period (1424-1426) of Deva Raya II (who first brought Turk cavalry into Vijayanagara army). Remember throughout it's history this kingdom was called Karnataka (even after getting Telugu area). Needs to be more sensitive
@user-white-rabbit
@user-white-rabbit 2 месяца назад
True!
@user-kb9qw6mq2e
@user-kb9qw6mq2e 3 месяца назад
Supar
@ileenollukaren6244
@ileenollukaren6244 4 месяца назад
Thanks Namit sir i love the way you narrate. Awesome work, fantastic research.
@user-bq5dg6fn9e
@user-bq5dg6fn9e 4 месяца назад
Thanks for wonderful sessions, gentle suggestion is Telugu names you pronounced incorrectly which gives wrong meaning.example name of Allasani peddhana. Please discuss with respective language speakers or natives for correct pronounciation of words.
@eonworldwide4724
@eonworldwide4724 4 месяца назад
Why historical records in India do not exist in vernacular but in Sanskrit spoken by a very few?
@jamilkhan715
@jamilkhan715 4 месяца назад
❤👍It was all game of thrones.
@veed85
@veed85 3 месяца назад
Loved the whole series, great research and presentation, Bohat zabardast Namit Sahib, Samandar ko qoozay mai band kardia apnay!!
@ankuragrawal2004
@ankuragrawal2004 4 месяца назад
Seems they ignored Mughals atrocities intentionally
@onetrueindian1
@onetrueindian1 4 месяца назад
Hello and welcome to INDIANS .... 👍👍👍
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