Classical India (Period 2) Flashcards
Caste System
A Hindu social class system that controlled every aspect of daily life, a set of rigid social categories that determined not only a person’s occupation and economic potential, but also his or her position in society.
Brahmin
A member of the highest of the four Hindu varnas. (Priests)
Kshatriyas
The warrior caste in Hinduism
Vaisyas
Hindu caste consisting of farmers, craftspeople, and traders.
Sudras
Caste that made up most of the Indian population; most were peasants and manual laborers; they had limited rights in society.
Karma
Hinduism and Buddhism) the effects of a person’s actions that determine his destiny in his next incarnation.
Dharma
A Hindu/Buddhist concept that was a guide to living in this world and at the same time pursuing spiritual goals. According to dharma a person should accept and live within ones caste. Although the Buddhist notion of dharma is that one should seek to decrease suffering.
Samsara
(Hinduism and Buddhism) the endless cycle of birth and suffering and death and rebirth.
Moksha
The Hindu concept of the spirit’s ‘liberation’ from the end-less cycle of rebirths.
Vedas
Aryan hymns originally transmitted orally but written down in sacred books from the 6th century B.C.E.
Pariahs
At the lowest level of Indian society known as the untouchables.
Upanishads
A group of writings sacred in Hinduism concerning the relations of humans, God, and the universe.
Bhagavad-Gita
A portion of the Hindu epic Mahabharata in which Lord Krishna specifies ways of spiritual progress.
Brahman
A single, spiritual power that Hindus believe lives in everything.
Ganges River
Located in India, this river is considered sacred to Hindus and is used for spiritual cleansing, funeral rites, and other Hindu rituals.
Buddhism
A belief system based on the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, which stress freeing oneself from worldly desires.
Atman
In Hindu belief, a person’s essential self.
Code of Manu
The codification of Indian law from the second or third century C.E.; it lays down family, caste, and commercial law.
Aryans
An Indo-European people who, about 1500 BC, began to migrate into Indian subcontinent.
Mahabharata
One of the great epics of India, reflects the struggles that took place in India as the Aryan Kings worked to control Indian Kings.
Four Noble Truths
As taught by the Buddha, the four basic beliefs that form the foundation of Buddhism;
1) All life is full of suffering, pain, and sorrow.
2) suffering is cause by desire
3) desire can be distinguished by nirvana.
4) The way to achieve nirvana is by following Eightfold Path.
Nirvana
Buddhist belief that everyone could be in union with the universal spirit; which offers release from human suffering.
Mahayana
“Great Vehicle”, the popular development of Buddhism in the early centuries of the Common Era, which gives a much greater role to supernatural beings and looks at Buddha as a god.
Theravada
A sect of Buddhism focusing on the strict spiritual discipline originally advocated by the Buddha.
The Eightfold Path
Buddhists follow Buddha’s guidelines for behavior in order to reach nirvana.