Religions of Early India: A Cultural History

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Princeton University Press, 26 Nov 2024 - Religion - 616 pages

The extraordinary multiplicity of religions and religious cultures in India, chronicled over two thousand years

From its earliest recorded history, India was a place of remarkable and varied religious activity, ranging from elaborate sacrificial rituals and rigorous regimes of personal austerity to psycho-spiritual experimentation and utopian visions. In this ambitious and wide-ranging chronicle, Richard Davis offers a history of India’s myriad religious cultures that spans two thousand years, from 1300 BCE to 700 CE. India, Davis writes, was not only the birthplace of the religions we now know as Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. It was also the home of other, often unnamed religions that can be classified as “folk” or “popular” religions. Tracing these intertwined practices, Davis shows that the ardent and heterogeneous religious cultures of early India came to define and redefine themselves in relation to one another.

Davis recounts this history through voices—voices recorded in hymns, poems, songs, didactic stories, epic narratives, scientific treatises, and theological discourses, as well as voices that speak through material remains, whether monumental sculptures or tiny terracotta figurines of nameless goddesses. He focuses on the long millennium often designated as “classical India,” which stretches from the time of the founding figures of Buddhism and Jainism during the sixth century BCE through the seventh-century-CE dynasties of the Chalukyas and the Pallavas in southern India. Throughout, he emphasizes encounter, interaction, debate, critique, and borrowing among religious communities within a shared, changing social and political reality. The voices and visions of early India’s religions, Davis shows us, are fascinating in their multiplicity.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
The Living Landscape of India
14
IndoAryans and the Vision of the Rig Veda Poets
40
The World of Sacrifice 1000600 BCE
88
A New Urban Culture and Renunciatory Religion
114
Religious Cultures of Empire
149
Disciplinary Communities and Religious Quests
188
Popular Religious Cultures during the Shunga
220
Imagined Empires of the Hindus
262
The Kushana Era and PanAsian Buddhism 0 CE300 CE
302
Icons Worship and Devotion
340
Guides for the Good Life
383
Religious Cultures of Court and Beyond
416
Varieties of Hindu Theism
453
Homes for Gods 460 CE700 CE
477
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About the author (2024)

Richard H. Davis is research professor in the interdisciplinary study of religion program at Bard College. He previously taught at Yale University. He is the author of The Bhagavad Gita: A Biography, Lives of Indian Images (both Princeton), and other books.

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