Internet Indian History Sourcebook
Editor: Paul Halsall
This page is a subset of texts derived from the three major online Sourcebooks listed below, along with added texts and inidctaors of other useful web sites. For more contextual
information, for instance about Western imperialism, the Islamic world, or the history of
a given period, check out these other sections of Internet History Sourcebooks Project:
Notes: |
In addition to direct links to documents, links are made to a
number of other web resources. |
2ND
|
Link to a secondary article, review or discussion on a given
topic. |
WEB
|
Link to a website focused on a specific issue.. These are not
links to every site on a given topic, but to sites of serious educational value. |
Contents
Indus Valley Cultures
General
Indus Valley
Back to Index
The Vedic Age
General
Aryans
There is now some significant opposition among some writers to the idea that there was
ever an Aryan [i.e. Indo-European] movement into India. This opposition seems to derive,
at least in part, from nationalist desires to claim "we were always here". The
linguistic arguments for some common group which moved into both India, Iran, and Europe
remain compelling.
- Wikipedia: Aryan
- Wikipedia: Indo-Aryan Peoples
- The Laws of Manu, c. 1500 BCE, full text [At this
Site]
-
The Laws of Manu,
c. 1500 BCE, excerpts [Was At CCNY, now Internet Archive]
- 2ND Languages and Vedas [At Friesian.com] [Internet Archive version here]
Odd page, with odder organization, but useful maps and data on numbers of language
speakers and migrations. Also contains info on the Vedas and Upanishads.
-
2ND David Frawley: Myth of Aryan Invasion of India [Was At India Forum, now Internet Archive], a complete book, and
Myth of
Aryan Invasion of India [At Hindunet] [Internet Archive version here] an article-length discussion.
Frawley attacks 19th-century scholars such as Max Muller for bias, but seems unaware of
his own problematic position.
-
2ND Siddhartha Jaiswal: Aryan Invasion
Theory: Revising History to Change the Future [Was At Stanford, now Internet Archive]
A freshman college paper explaining why the theory is wrong. The full title and the
text are worth considering, though. The author objected to the theory because it
"undermined my belief in my culture". This sort of solipsistic
"history" seems to motivate much of the discussion about the "Aryan
Invasion".
- 2ND Richard Hooker: The Aryans [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
A much more reliable account that the nationalist arguments above.
The Vedas
- Wikipedia: Vedas
- Rig Veda: Hymn, excerpts [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
-
Rig Veda: Selection [At
Mountain Man] [Internet Archive version here]
-
The Purusha Sukta, The
Vedic Hymn on the Supreme Being [At Ramanuja] [Internet Archive version here]
- Varuna,
the All-Knowing God ('Rig Veda,' I, 25, 1-3, 7-14) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- King
Varuna is there ('Atharva Veda,' IV, 16, 1-6) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Varuna
and Indra (Rigveda) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- 'What
god shall we adore with our oblation?' (Rigveda) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- 'Indra-
who as soon as born surpassed the gods in power' ('Rig Veda,' II, 12, 1-5 13) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- A
Vedic Hymn to the Goddess Earth ('Atharva-Veda,' XII, I, selections) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- 'Loose
me from Sin' :A Hymn to Varuna ('Rig Veda,' II, 28) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- 'How
May I and Varuna be United?' ('Rig Veda,' VII, 86) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- 'Make
Me Immortal' :A Hymn to Soma Pavamâna ('Rig Veda,' IX, 113, 7-11) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Hymns
to Agni ('Rig Veda,' I, 11, III, VII, selections) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- A
Vedic Funerary Hymn ('Rig Veda,' X, I 8) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
Back to Index
The Formation
of Religious Traditions
General
The Hindu Tradition
- Indian
Cosmogony ('The Laws of Manu,' 1, 5-16) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- The
Creation of the World According to the Upanishads [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- How
to Become a Gadharva ('Shatapatha Brahmana,' XI, 5,) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Diksha,
an Indian Initiatory Ritual: Hinduism [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- The
Moment of Death as Described by the Upanishads [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
-
WEB Hindu Image Gallery [Website] [Internet Archive version here]
Delightful. Mostly modern printed images.
-
WEB Introduction to Hinduism [At Internet Archive, from Geocities]
A hyperlinked historical overview.
- Ramayana c. 1000 BCE
The older of the two Sanskrit poems, the Ramayana is a 50,000 line poem written by Sage
Valmiki.
- Mahabharata
The most famous Indian text, this epic poem is divided into 18 sections and
contains over 220,000 lines. The most famous section is the Bhagavad Gita.
- Wikipedia: Mahabharata
- The Bhagavad-Gita, complete
text translated by Kashinath Trimbak Telano, 1882, edited and updated by Richard
Hooker [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
Now the most readable version on the net.
- The Bhagavad-Gita, c. 400 BCE, full text,
translated by Sir Edwin Arnold [At this Site]
- The Bhagavad-Gita, c. 400
BCE, full text, translated by Ramanand Prasad [Was At EAWC, now Internet Archive]
- The Bhagavad-Gita:
Recension by William Quan Judge, Combined With His Essays on the Gita, trans. by William
Quan Judge [At TUP] [Internet Archive version here]
- Krishna's
Dilemma, [Was At CCNY, now Internet Archive]
- The Mahabarata,
excerpts on Kingship [Was At CCNY, now Internet Archive]
- The Upanishads, c. 600 BCE
Vashnavism
- Wikipedia: Vashnavism
- Vishnu,
the Cosmic God ('Vishnu Pura-na,' 3, 17,14-34) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Krishna's
Ephipany (Bhagavad-Gita, XI, Selections) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Perform
action, free from attainment to its fruits... ('Bhagavad Gita,' III, 8-9, 19-24, 31,
35) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Personal
Worship: Puja Hinduism [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- The
Merits of Building a Temple (Agni-purana,' XXXVIII, 1-50) [At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Vidyapati (1352?-1448): Love Songs to Krishna [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
-
WEB Sri Vaishnava Home Page [Internet Archive version here]
Shaivism
- Wikipedia: Shaivism
- 2ND Stephen F. Teiser, "The Spirits of Chinese Religion", from Donald S. Lopez, Jr. Religions of China in Practice,
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996) [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
- Images
Devotional Texts
Tantrism
- Wikipedia: Tantra
- WEB The Tantrik Homepage [Internet Archive version here]
Includes links to other Tantric sites, as well as English translation of texts.
The Jain Tradition
Buddhism
- Wikipedia: Buddhism
- General
- The Buddha
- Prince
Siddhartha Encounters Old Age, Sickness and Death ('Digha-nikaya,' XIV ['Mahapadana
suttanta']) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Gotama's
First Masters [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- 'I am
the Holy One in this world, I am the highest teacher. . .' ('Mahavagga,' I, 7-9) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Gotama
Buddha Ponders ('Majjhima-nikaya,' XXVI ['Ariya-pariyesana-sutta']) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Gotama
Buddha Remembers His Earlier Existences ('Majjhima-nikaya,' IV ['Bhaya-bherava-sutta])
[Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Buddha: First
Sermon (c. 6th Century BCE) [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
- Buddha: The
Teaching of Buddha, an early sermon on Nirvana [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
-
Buddha: The
Four Noble Truths [At BuddhaNet] [Internet Archive version here]
- Buddha: The
Basic Teachings [Was At CCNY, now Internet Archive]
- The
Buddha Enters Nirvana (Ashvagosha, 'Buddhacarita,' XXVI, 83-6, 88-106) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- The
Tathagata Announces that He has Entered Nirvana ('Saddharmapundarika,' XV, 268-72) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- The Buddha: Sources on His Life and Death
- The Story Of Sumedha, Translated from the Introduction to the Jataka (i.3).
- The Birth Of the Buddha, Translated from the Introduction to the Jataka (i.4721)
- The Attainment Of Buddhaship, Translated from the Introduction to the Jataka (i.685)
- First Events After the Attainment, Translated from the Maha-Vagga, and
constituting the opening sections. Hail to that Blessed One, that Saint, and Supreme
Buddha!
- The Buddha's Daily Habits, Translated from the Sumangala-Vilasini (i.4510),
Buddhaghosa's Commentary on the Digha-Nikaya
- The Death Of the Buddha, Translated from the Maha-Parinibbana-Sutta (v. and
vi.) of the Digha-Nikaya
- Buddhism in India
- Sources on the Buddhist Order
- Admission and Ordination Ceremonies, Reprinted from a paper by J.F.
Dickson, B.A., in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1874
- Mendicant Ideal, Translated from the Samyutta-Nikaya (xvi. 31)
- And Hate Not His Father And Mother, Translated from the Visuddhi-Magga (chap. iii.)
- Story Of Visakha, Part I, Translated from the Dhammapada, and from
Buddhaghosa's comment
-
The Vinaya [Buddhist
Monastic Code], full text [At Sacred Texts] [Internet Archive backup here]
- Faxian: Account
of the Buddhistic Kingdoms. [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
- Theravada/Hinayana Texts
- The Dhammpada [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
- The Dhammapada extracts, [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Wikipedia: The Dhammapada, with excerpts
- The Dhammapada, trans. by John Richards [Was at EAWC, now Internet Archive]
"An anthology of 423 Buddhist verses embodying ethical and spiritual precepts
arranged by subject."
- The Dhammapada,Wisdom
of the Buddha, translated by Harischandra Kaviratna, Full Text [At Theosophical
University Press] [Internet Archive version here]
- The
Buddha Foretells the Gradual Decline of Religion ('Anagatavamsa') [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Gotama
Buddha Talks of his Ascetic Practices ('Majjhima-nikaya,'XII
['Maha-sihanada-sutra']) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Gotama
Buddha Practiced the most Severe form of Ascetism ('Majjhima-nikaya,' XXXVI
['Maha-saccaka-sutra']) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Sutta Nipata, selections
from the Pali text translated by John D. Ireland. [At Purify Mind] [Internet Archive version here]
- The Four Foundations of Mindfulness [At BuddhaNet] [Internet Archive version here]
Part of the Satipatthana Sutra.
- Culasunnata Sutta[At
well.com] [Internet Archive version here]
A lesson on sunyata (emptiness)
- Mahayana Texts
- Buddha's Sermon
on the No-Self [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
- The Heart Sutra [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
- The
Bodhisattva's Infinite Compassion ('Shikshasamuccaya,' 280-2 ['Vajradhvaha-sutra'])
[Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Acts
and Rewards of Devotion to the Buddha ('Shikshasamuccaya,' 299-301 ['Avalokana-sutra']
[Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- The
Buddhist Conception of the Intermediate State ('Saddharma-smrityupasthana Sutra,' from
chapter XXXIV, via Chinese version) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Tibetan
Book of the Dead: Death and Intermediate States [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- The
Prophecy Concerning Maitreya, the Future Buddha ('Maitreyavyakarana') [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Milerepa
Extols His 'Five Comforts' [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- The Sutra of Forty-Two Chapters [Was At Sacred Texts, now Internet Archive]
The first Buddhist text taken to China, c. 67 CE.
- WEB Kalavinka
Contains very long excerpts from Nagarjuna's Treatise on The Great Perfection of
Wisdom (Mahaapraj~naapaaramitaa Upadesha), "an immense
exegesis to the Mahaapraj~naapaaramitaa Sutra in 25,000 lines. Classically, it is
preserved only in a 100-fascicle Chinese edition translated from Sanskrit in 405CE by
Kumarajiva, the brilliant and prolific translator-monk who was the premier transmitter to
the Chinese of the Maadhyamika teachings of Nagarjuna."
- Chinese/Japanese Buddhist Texts
- See also East Asian
History Sourcebook
- Pure Land
- Wikipedia: Pure Land Buddhism
- The Sutra on Amida Buddha, [Was At Amida Net, now Internet Archive]
Delivered by Shakyamuni Buddha, translated by Hisao Inagaki from (1) From Kumarajiva's
Chinese translation and (2) from Huan-tsang's Chinese translation.
- Extract from the
Lotus Sutra: The Nature of the Buddha [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
- Extract from the
Lotus Sutra: On Faith [Was At BC, now Internet Archive]
- Kûkai's
Initiation in the Esoteric Buddhism ('Kobo Daishi Zenshu,' I, 98 ff.) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- 2ND Kuya, 'the Saint of the Streets' [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Honen and the Invocation of Amida [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Shinran: 'The Nembutsu Alone is True' ('Tannisho,' selections) [Was At Eliade Page, now Internet Archive]
- Nicheren
- Chan/Zen
- Modern Renditions
- Images
- General Buddhist
- Indian Art
- Tibetan
- Chinese Art
- South East Asian Art
- Japanese Art
- Unsure [!]
Back to Index
Medieval India
General
The Mauryan Empire (321-185 BCE)
- Wikipedia: Maurya Empire
With maps.
- Kautilya: The Arthashastra, c. 250 BCE [At this Site]
Extensive selections
- Kautilya: The Arthashastra - On Gender Issues, c. 250 BCE
[At this Site]
- Kautilya: The Arthashastra (3rd Cent. BCE), excerpts [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
A treatise on government by the "prime minister" of India's first great emperor,
Chandragupta Maurya.
-
Kautilya: The
Arthashastra (3rd Cent. BCE) [Was At CCNY, now Internet Archive]
Another selection.
Ashoka (c. 265-238 BCE; also given as c. 273-232 BCE)
Gupta Empire (320-550 CE)
Culture
- Tales From Ancient India [At this Site]
- Kalidasa (4th-5th C. CE?): The Recognition of Sakuntala [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
A text from the "greatest of all ancient Indian playwrights".
- Kalidasa (4th-5th C. CE?): Sakuntala Translated by
Arthur W. Ryder (1914), full text. [At Sacred Texts] [Internet Archive verison here]
- Kalidasa (4th-5th C. CE?): Meghaduta or Clould Messenger [At Sacred Texts] [Internet Archive verison here]
Translated by Arthur W. Ryder (1914)
- Kama Sutra, translated
by Sir Richard Burton, [At Sacred Texts] [Internet Archive verison here]
Back to Index
Greek and Chinese
Sources
General
Greek Sources
Chinese Sources
Back to Index
Muslim Era India
General
The Delhi Sultanate 1206-1526
Mughal India 1526-1761
Culture
The Marathas
- WEB Shivaji on the Web [At Tripod] [Internet Archive version here]
"Shivaji created a Nation. It was he who released forces that changed the political
map of India in the eighteenth century. Within 50 years of the death of Aurangzeb, the
Marathas had overrun the entire sub-continent of India and taken possession of a greater
half of the country. It was only in 1803 that the sovereignity of India had passed to the
British."
- Wikipedia: Maratha Empire
Sikhism
The Sikhs are an Indian people, defined by their religion, who emerged in India during
the centuries of Muslim political power (which accounts for the placement of these texts
in the Sourcebook).
Back to Index
The Western Intrusion
General
European Imperialism
- St. Francis Xavier: Letter
from India, to the Society of Jesus at Rome, 1543 [At this
Site]
- England, India, and The East Indies, 1617 [At this
Site]
Various sources including a letter from Great Moghul Jahangir to James I, King of
England.
-
Thomas Mun (1571-1641): England's Treasure by Foreign Trade, pub 1664, extracts, [Was At Then Again, now Internet Archive] and extracts [At Hanover]
- Adam Smith (1723-1790): Of Colonies, from The Wealth of Nations, 1776: [At The American Revolution Site] [Internet Archive version here]
- Adam Smith (1723-1790): The Cost of Empire from The Wealth of Nations, 1776: [At The American Revolution Site] [Internet Archive version here]
- Trade Products in Early Modern History [Was At UMN, now Internet Archive]
-
The South Sea Bubble [Modern Report][Was At History House, now Internet Archive]
- Analyses
- John A. Hobson (1858-1940): Imperialism, 1902, excerpts
[At this Site]
- John A. Hobson (1858-1940): The
Economic Parasites of Imperialism [At Marxists.org]
- Vladimir Illyich Lenin (1870-1924): Imperialism and the Split in
Socialism, 1916 [At Marxists.Org][Full Text]
- Vladimir Illyich Lenin (1870-1924): Imperialism,
The Highest Stage of Capitalism, 1916, [Full text][At this Site]
- Vladimir Illyich Lenin (1870-1924): Imperialism, The Highest Stage of
Capitalism, 1916 [At Marxists.org][Full Text]
- Joseph A. Schumpeter: The Sociology of Imperialism,
1918 [At this Site]
- Extent of European
Colonialism in Statistical Terms [Was At Mt. Holyoke, now Internet Archive]
British India
- Conquest
-
WEB The East India Trade [Was At
Scholiast, now Internet Archive]
-
2ND East India Company History [At
East India Company Page]
The company still exists, and its homepage presents its history.
-
Robert Clive (1725-1774): Battle at Calcutta - Letter to the Lord Chancellor, Calcutta, 23 February 1757 [Was At Hillsdale, now Internet Archive]
-
Robert Clive (1725-1774): The Battle of Plassey - Letter to the East India Company, 26 July 1757 [Was At Hillsdale, now Internet Archive]
- Robert Clive (1725-1774): The
Battle of Plassey, 1757 [At this Site]
- Robert Clive (1725-1774): Letter to William Pitt on India, 1759 [Was At Oswego, now Internet Archive]
-
Lieutenant T.W.E. Holdsworth: The Battle of Kelat, 1839, [PDF format] [Was At Hillsdale, now here]
-
C. G. Rawlings: The March to Lhasa, July 1904 [Was At Hillsdale, now Internet Archive]
- Government
- Clash of Cultures
-
Duarte Barbosa: Sati
in Narsyngua [Was At CCNY now Internet Archive]
-
An Account of Sati
from Vikrama's Adventures [Was At CCNY now Internet Archive]
- Raja Rammohan Roy: A Second Conference Between an Advocate for, and An Opponent of the Practice of Burning Widows Alive, 1820 [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Sir William Bentinck: On
Ritual Murder in India , 1829, excerpts [At this Site]
- Mountstuart Elphinstone: Indian Customs and Manners,
1840 [At this Site]
Includes graphic account of suttee.
- Sir Monier Monier-Williams: Camp Life in India, 1850 [At
this Site]
- Dadabhai Naoroji: The
Benefits of British Rule, 1871 [At this Site]
- Charles Creighton Hazewel;: British India, The
Atlantic Monthly, November 1857 [Was At The Atlantic, now Internet Archive]
- Field Marshal Lord Roberts: When Queen Victoria
Became Empress of India, 1877 [At this Site]
- Rev. Arthur Male: The
Hill of Bones, Afghanistan 1878 [At this Site]
- The Indian Revolt 1857
- Indian Cultures
- Sir Monier Monier-Williams: The Towers of Silence,
1870 [At
this Site]
The Parsee's in Bombay.
- Lalon Fakir: Songs,
19th Century [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Toru Dutt: Sonnet,
1876 [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941): Gitanjali or "song offerings",
1913 [Was At School of Wisdom, now Internet Archive]
- Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941): Once There Was a King, 1916 [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
-
Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941): The
Home and the World, 1915, translated [from Bengali to English] by Surendranath Tagore,
1919, full text [At ibiblio] [Internet Archive version here]
-
2ND Ardeshir B. Damania: History of Bombay [Was At UH.edu, now Internet Archive]
Back to Index
Indian Nationalism
General
The Indian National Congress
Gandhi
- Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948): Indian Home Rule, 1909 [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
-
Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948): I Shall Be Arrested,
1930, letter written to Nehru [Was At Letters Magazine, now Internet Archive]
-
Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964): To His Jailers, 1932
[Was At Letters Magazine, now Internet Archive]
? letter written by Nehru while in jail for civil disobedience against the British
government.
- Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964): Marxism, Capitalism and
Non-Alignment, 1941, 1956, excerpts [At this Site]
- 2ND Mark Shepard: Mahatma Gandhi and His Myths,
the 1990 Annual Gandhi Lecture for the International Association of Gandhian Studies,
delivered at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville on October 2 [At Mark Shepard's
Nonviolence Page] [Internet Archive version here]
-
2ND Mark Shepard: Gandhi Today: A Report on Mahatma Gandhi's Successors [Was At Mark Shepard's
Nonviolence Page, now Internet Archive]
- 2ND Narayan Desai: Gandhi Through a Child's Eyes [Was At Mark Shepard's
Nonviolence Page, now Internet Archive]
- Wikipedia: Mahatma Gandhi
The Muslim League
Independence
- Winston Churchill: Announcement
to the House Of Commons of Sir Stafford Cripps' Mission to India, March 11, 1942. [At
PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Statement And Draft
Declaration by His Majesty's Government With Correspondence And Resolutions Connected
Therewith (Sir Stafford Cripps' Mission to India), Draft Declaration For Discussion With
Indian Leaders Published 30th March, 1942 [At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Government of India: Text
of the Original "Quit India" Resolution Drafted by Gandhi and rejected by
the All-Idia Congress Working Committee in favor of the modified version submitted by
Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, the Gandhi Draft was Presented to the Committee on April 27, 1942
[At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Sir Stafford Cripps: Review
of Negotiations With the All-India Congress, July 26, 1942 [At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Sir Stafford Cripps: Statement
on India, London, August 5, 1942 [At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Mohandas K. Gandhi: Speech
to the All-India Congress, Bombay, August 7, 1942 (Excerpts) [At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Leopold S. Amery, British Secretary of State For India: Broadcast, London,
August 9, 1942 [At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Orders to American Military Forces in India, August 12, 1942 [At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Winston Churchill: Report
to the House of Commons on The Policy of The British Government in India, September
10, 1942 [At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
- Mohandas K. Gandhi: Latest
Message to America, October 31, 1942 [At PHA] [Internet Archive version here]
-
2ND Robert K. Olson: Ambassador Henry Grady and Indian Independence [Was At UNC, now Internet Archive]
- British Government Statement: Policy in India,
1946 [At this Site]
- British Government Statement: Policy in Burma,
May 1945 [At this Site]
- Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964): Tryst with Destiny: Speech on the Granting of Indian
Independence, August 14, 1947 [At this Site]
Back to Index
India since Independence
General
- Wikipedia: History of India since 1947
-
WEB Documents Relating to Global Economic Issues [Was At Mt. Holyoke, now Internet Archive]
- WEB Documents Relating to Jammu and Kashmir [Was At Mt. Holyoke, now Internet Archive]
- WEB Global Economy [Was At Mt. Holyoke, now Internet Archive]
- WEB Trade [Was At Mt. Holyoke, now Internet Archive]
- WEB Multinational Corporations [Was At Mt. Holyoke, now Internet Archive]
- South Asia: Country Studies
-Prepared for Library of Congress under the Country Studies/Area Handbook Program sponsored by the Department of the Army. These are full descriptions of the countries
concerned, in terms of history, geography, economy, etc. There are also useful
bibliographies. [At LOC]
- South Asia: Constitutions
- India Constitution, 1996 [At
ICL, University of Bern]
- Nepal Constitution, 1990 [At
ICL, University of Bern]
-
Tibet Constitution 1991 [At
ICL, University of Bern]
This is the constitution of the "government in exile".
International Issues
India
The Nehru-Gandhi Dynasty
Regionalism
Back to Index
Pakistan since
Independence
General
Pakistan
- Faiz Ahmad Faiz (1914-1978): Selected Poems [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
Back to Index
Bangladesh
General
The 1971 Conflict
Back to Index
Burma
General
Back to Index
Indian: Sex, Gender and
Sexuality
Women
Homosexuality: General
Hindu
-
Ramakrishnan: "Bisexuality:
identities, behaviors, and politics", Trikone April 1996 [Was ar U Texas, now Internet Archive]
- Vatsyayana: Kama
Sutra, Part 2. Chap 9, 1883 trans. by Richard Burton. [At Bibliomania.com] [Internet Archive version here]
On "Mouth Congress" and "different types of eunuchs".
- The Vinaya [Buddhist Monastic Precepts]
- Wikipedia: Hijra
-
WEB Shri Krishna as Kali and Lalita [At
Shivashakti] [Internet Archive version here]
Although the sexual relationships of Indian gods often follow heterosexual expectations,
the individual god/dess may change form and be incarnate as another. This story could be
read as gay, lesbian, or multiply transgendered.
-
WEB Tantrik Links [At Shivashakti] [Internet Archive version here]
Tantricism was the "short path" to Enlightenment in Hinduism and Buddhism.
Sexual ecstasy was a particularly important feature, often represented by heterosexual
"yab-yum" figures.
Muslim
-
2ND Richard Burton: Terminal Essay, from his
edition of the Arabian Nights. [At this Site]
Burton' compilation of data on variety of societies was meant to explain some of the
stories in The Nights. In doing so, he provided first overview of Islamic
homosexuality.
Back to Index
Further Resources on
Indian and South Asian History
[Note this was once quite an extensive section, but guides to the web turned out to be very hard to maintain. Good advice now is to look up South Asian topics on Wikipedia and consult the further resources links at the bottom of many articles. Wikipedia is never a place to end research but it is a good place to start.]
- Wikipedia: History of India
- E-Texts
- Web Guides
- Academic History/Culture Sites
- WEB Manas: India and Its Neighbors [At UCLA]
The history, politics, culture, and art of India/Indian sub-continent. One of the best
sites.
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WEB The Atlantic Magazine: Indian Passages Articles from The Atlantic Monthly on India 1857-1988 [At the Atlantic] [Internet Archive version here]
- WEB India Documents [Was At Mt Holyoke, now Internet Archive]
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NOTES:
The Internet Indian History Sourcebook is part of the Internet History Sourcebooks Project. The date of inception was
4/8/1998. Links to files at other site are indicated by [At some indication of the site
name or location].
WEB indicates a link to one of small
number of high quality web sites which provide either more texts or an especially valuable
overview.
The Internet History Sourcebooks Project is located at the History Department of Fordham University, New York. The Internet
Medieval Sourcebook, and other medieval components of the project, are located at
the Fordham University Center
for Medieval Studies.The IHSP recognizes the contribution of Fordham University, the
Fordham University History Department, and the Fordham Center for Medieval Studies in
providing web space and server support for the project. The IHSP is a project independent of Fordham University. Although the IHSP seeks to follow all applicable copyright law, Fordham University is not
the institutional owner, and is not liable as the result of any legal action.
© Site Concept and Design: Paul Halsall created 26 Jan 1996: latest revision 15 November 2024 [CV]
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