Ancient India
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***[[Indo-Greek Kingdom]] and [[Kushan Empire]] (2nd c. BCE to 3rd c. CE) | ***[[Indo-Greek Kingdom]] and [[Kushan Empire]] (2nd c. BCE to 3rd c. CE) | ||
- | == Sources of fantasy == | + | == See also == |
- | ==[[Ancient India]]== | + | *[[Sources of fantasy]] |
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- | :''[[Ancient India]]'' | + | |
- | [[India]] has a long tradition of fantastical stories and characters, dating back to [[Vedic mythology]]. Several modern fantasy works such as ''[[RG Veda]]'' draw on the ''[[Rigveda|Rig-Veda]]'' as a source. [[Hindu mythology]] was an evolution of the earlier Vedic mythology and had many more fantastical stories and characters, particularly in the [[Indian epic poetry|Indian epics]], such as the ''[[Mahabharata]]'' by [[Vyasa]], and the ''[[Ramayana]]'' by [[Valmiki]], both of which were influential in Asia. The ''[[Panchatantra]]'' (''Fables of Bidpai'') was influential in Europe and the [[Middle East]]. It used various animal [[fable]]s and magical tales to illustrate the central Indian principles of [[political science]]. Talking animals endowed with human qualities have now become a staple of modern fantasy. | + | |
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- | The ''[[Baital Pachisi]]'' (''Vikram and the Vampire'') is a collection of various fantasy tales set within a [[frame story]] about an encounter between King [[Vikramāditya]] and a [[Vetala]], an early mythical creature resembling a [[vampire]]. According to [[Richard Francis Burton]] and [[Isabel Burton]], the ''Baital Pachisi'' "is the germ which culminated in the ''[[The Book of One Thousand and One Nights|Arabian Nights]]'', and which inspired the ''[[Golden Ass]]'' of [[Apuleius]], [[Boccacio]]'s ''[[The Decameron|Decamerone]],'' the ''[[Pentamerone]],'' and all that class of [[facetious]] [[fictitious]] literature." ([[Isabel Burton]], preface to [[Richard Francis Burton]] (1870), ''[[Vikram and The Vampire]]''.) | + | |
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Revision as of 10:10, 9 October 2013
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Ancient India may refer to:
- The ancient history of the whole Indian subcontinent
- History of South Asia and History of India
- Indus Valley Civilization — during the Bronze Age
- Vedic period — the period of Vedic Sanskrit, spanning the late Bronze Age and the earlier Iron Age
- Mahajanapadas — during the later Iron Age
- Magadha Empire — during classical antiquity (6th to 4th centuries BCE)
- Maurya Empire — the largest ancient Indian empire, contemporary to Hellenism in the west (4th to 2nd centuries BCE), golden age of early Classical Sanskrit literature
- Gupta Empire
- the Kingdoms of Ancient India as described in Sanskrit literature
- Middle kingdoms of India — during late antiquity and the early Middle Ages
- Indo-Greek Kingdom and Kushan Empire (2nd c. BCE to 3rd c. CE)
See also
Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Ancient India" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.