Unit-29 State and Society in South India 200 B.C To 300 A.D
Unit-29 State and Society in South India 200 B.C To 300 A.D
Unit-29 State and Society in South India 200 B.C To 300 A.D
AGRARIAN SOCIETY IN
PENINSULAR INDIA
(THE DECCAN AND THE SOUTH)
Structure
29.0 Objectives
29.1 Introduction
29.2 Forms of Subsistence
29.3 Spread of Agrarian Settlements
29.3.1 Agricultural Production in the Settlementsin Tamilaham
29.3.2 Settlements in the Deccan
29.4 Ownership Rights
29.5 Revenue and Surplus Extraction
29.5.1 Revenue from Agriculture
29.5.2 Modes of Acquiring and Distributing resources in Tamilaham
29.5.3 Excesses in Extraction
29.6 Social Organisation
29.6.1 Society in Tamilaham
29.6.2 Society in the Deccan
29.7 New Elements and Social Change
29.8 Let Us Sum Up
29.9 Key Words
29.10 Answers to Check Your Progress Exercises
29.0 OBJECTIVES
The main aim of this unit is to discuss the spread of agrarian settlements in the Deccan
and South India from 200 B.C. to 300 A.D. After reading this unit you should be able
to know about:
different forms of subsistence which were prevalent in different parts of South India,
the nature of the spread of agrarian settlements,
the nature of ownership of land,
revenue income from agriculture, and redistribution of resources in the agrarian
settlements,
the organisation of agrarian society, and
the introduction of new elements and the beginnings of change.
29.1 INTRODUCTION
The earliest evidence of cultivation in peninsular India is traced back to the later phase
of the new stone age which is dated in the first half of the second millennium B.C. The
new stone age people cultivated millets like ragi and bajra and also pulses like green
gram and horse gram. Making terraces on slopes of hills was an important feature of the'
settlement of the new stone age and the cultivation was limited to the terrace fields.
Rice was found in peninsular India roughly around the beginning of the first millennium
B.C. which is the starting point of the iron age in the south. The spread of rice
cultivation took place in the Deccan and south India during the iron age.
The earliest of the iron age settlements are seen in the upland areas. The introduction
of iron did not bring any sudden change in the techniques of cultivation. Technological
advancement came later with the introduction of the iron ploughshare. This coincided
with a concentration of settlements in the river valleys. Harnessing of bullocks to the
plough and the extensive use of iron ploughshare resulted in the expansion of area
under cultivation and an unprecedentedincrease in agricultural production. There was
a corresponding increase in the population too. A remarkable change occurred later in
the agrarian sector with the beginning of the practice of donating village land to
religious beneficiaries such as Buddhist monasteries and Brahmans. They had better
knowledge of seasons and ability to predict weather. The grants of land to the monks
State dSoclety In South Indh and Brahmans resulted in the coming in of non-cultivatinggroups in the agrarian sector.
200 B.C. to J00 A.D.
Thus we identify three phases is the spread of agrarian settlements in south India.
The first phase of primitive agriculture with a low level technoloev in which
cultivation was confined to the hill slopes.
A second phase, characterised by plough agriculturewith considerable advancement
in technology and spread~ofcultivation to the river valleys.
A third phase which witnessed the introduction of a noncultivating groups into the
agrarian sector. These groups were endowed with better knowledge of seasons,
managerial capacity and aids for method of cultivation.
The paiai zone was a seasonalphenomenon of the summer. During summer, cultivation
was not possible due to scarcity of water. Therefore there were some people in the
region who took to wayside robbery and cattle lifting. Salt merchants and dealers in
other articles often passed through the palai regions in caravans. Such caravans were
often plundered by people who belonged to the marava groups.
From the above discussion, the following forms of livelihood can be listed.
bunting and gathering forest produce
cattle rearing
plough agriculture
fishing and salt making
wayside robbery.
- -
e
c h s r t I : P b y d o l p . p h i f D l ~ , ~ M d ~
faturc
hill and forests
xdnbirmtr
huntersand
gathers
(Kuravar,Vefcr)
"aT-'
huntmng, food
gathering
slash and burn
cultivation.
M W pasture land with shepherds Cattlerearing,
low hills and thin ( A y u and Itoyu) shifting cultivation
forests
Msrutlm ' River valleys and cultivators Plough agriculture
planes (uzhsvar and vellaler)
N m Sea-Coasts Fishermen Fishing, pearl diving
mavm) Salt making
RI.L Arid zone Robbers Ways~de
(transformation of Eyinar, Maravar) robbery and hunting.
the hill tracts of
pastureland in
the summer)
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3) Write three'lines about the form of subsistence in the mullal or pasture lands.
The social distinction on the basis of wealth and property takes us to the problem of
ownership rights. In the far south, we have seen that there were some vellala groups
who were masters of the soil. This seems to suggest possession of land rather than work
on other's land for wages. Occasionally, the chieftains granted ur settlements to their
fighters and bards. In effect the person who wasgiven land received the right to collect
the income from the ur settlements which were granted to him. Generally, the field was
owned_collectivelyand the produce wire also enjoyedcollectively after paying the dues
to the chiefs. The nature of land rights is clearer in the Deccan..There were Gahapati
householders who were both landowners and merchants. According to an inscription
Ushavadata son-in-law of Kshatrapa ruler Nahapana of western Deccan, purchased a
plot of land form a Brahmin and donated it to a Buddhist Sangha. This was possible
because of the fact that landcould be owned privately. From this deal the private owner
received 40,000 kahapana coins. The Satavahana kings donated plots of land and even
villages t o religious beneficiaries. The lay devotees followed this practice only later.
From the inscriptions of the period we know that private individuals owned plots of
land.
I
I
I
I 3) Write five lines about the tools and implements and inigatisnal facilitiea in the
I agrarian settlements in the Deccan.
SM ad S o w In Bmth laWI:
200 B.C. to 300 A.D. . 4) Write five lines about the ownership of land in the Deccan. ,
i
w
collected in a centre, that is the residence of the chiefs. Distribution of gifts from a
centre was an important feature of redistribution. The pooling of resources often led to
plunder and pillage of agrarian tracts. Grains and Cattle were looted. What they could
not carry was destroyed. Setting fire to the peasant settlements, devastation of the
harvesting fields of the enemies and conversion of the rich gardens to waste land were
L some of the acts of the plunderers. The marva fighters of the hill tracts and the pasture
lands yere used by the chiefs to plunder settlements. The booty of such plunders was
redistributed among the marava fighters and the Brahman priests by way of
presentation and the remuneration for expiatory rituals. The defenceless plight of the
peasants and the way they were terrorised and exploited are attested to by a number of
songs of the Sangam anthologies.
Inspite of all such excess committed against the poor peasants, the war was celebrated
as a noble heroic act. It was even institutionalised. The cult of war was propagated
through the praise'of the courage of the warriors whose memorial stones were made
cult objects or objects of worship. The pana singers sang in praise of the warlike qualities
of the chieftain and his fighters. Booty capture was necessary because of the scarcity of
resources. At the'same time such activities of excesses resulted in the destruction of
resources. This was a contradiction which was inherent in the mechanism of
redistribution at the level of chieftains.
*C -
Check Your Progress 3
1) Mark the right (v) and wrong (x) from the following:
i) Iral and tlral were the two items of revenue to be paid in cash.
ii) gualmlkas were the rural administrators of.the Satavahanas.
iii) The bards and dancers travelled from court to court to receive rich
presentations of cattle and land.
iv) The plunder war was institutionalised in ahcient Tamilaham.
2) Write five lines about the plunder wars in ancient South India.
to the grantees. It appears that the land grants included some fiscal and administrative
rights over the peasants. The royal grants freed the village folk from obligatory
payments to administrative functionaries and soldiers who visited the village. In the
past many grants to individuals had been temporary. But now the trend was to make
the grant perpetual.
The privileges and immunities sanctioned by the rulers and the grant of permanent right
over land placed the religious beneficiaries in a highly powerful position. These new
developments in the agrarian sector brought about serious and far-reaching changes in
the land system and economy.
In the first place the religious beneficiaries became powerful authorities of the villages
received by them with the new economic and administrative privilepcs in addition to the
spiritual control which they exercised.
Secondly, land grants to monks and priests created a new class of non-cultivating land
owners. Buddhist monks and Brahman priests were not cultivators themselves. They
had to employ others to work on their land. The actualtillers were thus separated from
' the land and its produce.
Thirdly, this type of private ownership abolished earlier collective rights over forests,
pastures, fisheries, anbreservoirs.
Fourthly, the beneficiaries enjoyed the rights dot only over land but also over peasants
who worked on land. 'This led to an erosion of the rights of the peasants who became
servile.
These developments in the Deccan were to become prominent elsewhere in the
subsequent centuries. Finally, the practice of land grant contributed, with several other
features, to the creation of a social order which is described by some scholars as "Indian
feudalism".
F-
Check Your P r o m u 4
1) Mark the right (v) and the wrong (x) in the space provided:
a) Social complexity started appearing in the pasture lands. ( 1
b) According to Tolkapplyam the traders belonged to the bhatrlya groups.
( 1
c) In the Madurai and Tirunelveli regions the cave dwellings were donated to the
ascetics of the heterodox sectr like Jainism and Buddhism. ( 1
d) Kondakundacharya war the founder of the Mularangha of the D1gambara
sect . ( 1
e) The idea of the four-fold division of society war familiar in the Deccan. ( )
2) Write three liner about the craftsmen group8 in the Tarnilaham.
' 3) Write seven lines about the Satavahana land grants to the religious groups in the
' Deccan .
Statc.ad.%klyLnSomlbladl.:
2M B.C. lo jOO A.D.
i 4) Write a paragraph about the results of the land grants to Buddhist monks and
Brahman priests.
Shah and bum cultlvatlon: A primitive type of agriculture. Trees and bushes on the
hill-slopes are cut down and then burnt. Thus the ground is prepared and then the seed
is sown.
Shifting cultlvatlon: The mode of agriculture in which the plot of cultivation is shifted
periodically. This is to avoid exhaustion of land caused by continuous use of the same
plot.
Tinai: A generic term for a physiographic division of land in early Tamilaham.
Totem worship: Worship of the main symbol of a tribe. .
4) You should write about vellala, Gahapati etc. and their rights. See Section 29.4