Why this chapter matters for UPSC: Historical sources and methodology underpin all of GS1 Ancient and Medieval History. Prelims regularly tests excavators, sites, inscriptions (Ashokan edicts), and travel accounts. Knowing who excavated which Harappan site, what Megasthenes/Fa Hian/Xuanzang witnessed, and how primary vs secondary sources differ is foundational.


PART 1 — Quick Reference Tables

Table 1: India's Broad Historical Timeline

Period Approximate Date Key Marker
Lower Palaeolithic ~500,000 BCE Attirampakkam, Tamil Nadu (Acheulean tools); earliest evidence of human-like activity in Indian subcontinent
Middle Stone Age ~150,000–30,000 BCE Flake tools; regional variations
Upper Palaeolithic ~40,000–10,000 BCE Blade tools; Bhimbetka paintings begin
Mesolithic ~10,000–5000 BCE Microliths; Bhimbetka rock shelters (MP); hunter-gatherers with some proto-pastoralism
Neolithic ~7000–3000 BCE Mehrgarh, Balochistan (~7000 BCE) — earliest farming in South Asia; cattle domestication
Chalcolithic (Copper Age) ~3500–1500 BCE Copper use; regional cultures (Malwa, Jorwe, Ahar-Banas)
Harappan / IVC ~3300–1300 BCE Planned cities; script; trade; urban civilisation
Vedic Age (Early) ~1500–1000 BCE Rig Veda; pastoral; Indo-Gangetic movement begins
Vedic Age (Later) ~1000–600 BCE Iron Age; later Vedas; Upanishads; Mahajanapadas forming
Mahajanapadas ~600–321 BCE 16 Mahajanapadas; rise of Buddhism and Jainism; Magadha's dominance
Mauryan Empire 321–185 BCE Chandragupta → Bindusara → Ashoka; first pan-India empire
Post-Mauryan 185 BCE–320 CE Shungas, Kushanas, Satavahanas, Guptas beginning

Table 2: Key Archaeological Excavators and Sites

Site Location Excavated By Year Key Find
Harappa Punjab, Pakistan Daya Ram Sahni 1921 First IVC site identified
Mohenjo-daro Sindh, Pakistan R.D. Banerji 1922 Great Bath; Dancing Girl; Pashupati Seal
Dholavira Rann of Kutch, Gujarat R.S. Bisht 1967–68 (systematic excavation from 1990) IVC inscription; unique water management; UNESCO WHS 2021
Rakhigarhi Haryana Amarendra Nath (ASI); Vasant Shinde (Deccan College) 1963 (survey); 1997+ (major excavation) Largest IVC site; DNA study (2019)
Lothal Gujarat S.R. Rao 1955–62 Dockyard; bead factory; fire altars
Kalibangan Rajasthan B.B. Lal, B.K. Thapar 1960–69 Pre-Harappan ploughed field; fire altars
Surkotada Gujarat J.P. Joshi 1964–68 Horse remains; fortified city
Attirampakkam Tamil Nadu Robert Bruce Foote (1863, first discovery); recent systematic study: Shanti Pappu et al. 1863 onwards Acheulean and then Middle Palaeolithic tools; ~500,000–385,000 BCE
Bhimbetka Madhya Pradesh V.S. Wakankar 1957–58 Rock shelters; paintings from ~30,000 BCE; UNESCO WHS 2003

Table 3: Major Foreign Accounts of India

Visitor Origin Period Text/Account Indian Ruler/Period Key Observations
Megasthenes Greek (Seleucid ambassador) ~302–298 BCE Indika (lost; fragments preserved in later authors) Chandragupta Maurya Mauryan administration; Pataliputra; caste; army; no slavery
Fa Hian (Faxian) China (Buddhist monk) 399–414 CE Record of Buddhist Kingdoms Gupta period (Chandragupta II) Buddhist monasteries; prosperous towns; mild punishments; vegetarianism
Xuanzang (Hiuen Tsang) China (Buddhist monk) 629–645 CE Great Tang Records on the Western Regions Harsha (Harshavardhana) Detailed account of Harsha's reign; Buddhism declining; Nalanda; Kanauj assembly
Al-Biruni Central Asia (Khwarazm) 1017–1030 CE Kitab-ul-Hind (Book of India) Mahmud of Ghazni's era Comprehensive account of Indian science, philosophy, geography, customs; critical of caste
Ibn Battuta Morocco 1333–1342 CE Rihla (The Journey) Muhammad bin Tughluq (Delhi Sultanate) Detailed description of cities, customs, Tughluq's eccentricities; postal system; market regulation
Marco Polo Italy (Venice) ~1292–93 CE The Travels of Marco Polo Pandya kingdom (South India); en route China South Indian kingdoms; pepper trade; Vijayanagara empire (briefly)
Abdur Razzaq Persia 1442–43 CE Matla-us-Sadain Vijayanagara (Deva Raya II) Magnificent description of Vijayanagara city; market; coronation

PART 2 — Detailed Notes

Why Study History? — The Historian's Purpose

Key Term

History is the systematic study of the past based on evidence. It helps us:

  1. Understand how present political, social, and cultural arrangements came to be
  2. Learn from past mistakes (wars, famines, policy failures) and successes
  3. Understand the roots of cultural traditions, religions, and languages
  4. Develop critical thinking — evaluating evidence, questioning sources, identifying bias

The key principle: Historians do not just narrate; they interpret. The same set of sources can yield different historical interpretations. UPSC tests this through questions on the limitations and biases of historical sources.

BCE/CE Timeline — Understanding the Notation

Key Term

BCE = Before Common Era (same as BC — Before Christ, but secular notation) CE = Common Era (same as AD — Anno Domini, Year of the Lord)

Timeline logic: BCE years count backwards (3000 BCE is older than 2000 BCE). CE years count forwards (500 CE is older than 1000 CE).

Prehistoric vs Historic: "Prehistoric" = before writing; "Historic" = after writing and written records appear. In India, writing appears with the Harappan script (~2600 BCE) — but since it is undeciphered, the IVC is sometimes called "proto-historic." The first deciphered written records in India are the Ashokan inscriptions (3rd century BCE).

Archaeological Sources

Explainer

What archaeologists study: Excavated physical remains — buildings, pottery, tools, ornaments, human/animal bones, seeds, coins, drainage systems, burial sites.

Archaeological Survey of India (ASI): Established 1861 by the British; first Director General = Alexander Cunningham (identified Harappa in 1853 though did not conduct systematic excavation). ASI protects 3,693 Centrally Protected Monuments. The ASI conducts excavations and manages conservation of sites like Sanchi, Hampi, Ajanta, Ellora.

Dating methods used:

  • Stratigraphy: Deeper layers = older; reading layers like pages of a book
  • Carbon-14 (Radiocarbon) dating: Measures decay of C-14 isotope in organic material; accurate up to ~50,000 years; developed 1949 (Willard Libby, Nobel Prize 1960)
  • Thermoluminescence (TL) dating: Useful for pottery and minerals; measures trapped electrons; used for Attirampakkam tools
  • Dendrochronology: Tree ring dating (limited use in tropical India)

Bhimbetka Rock Shelters (MP): Discovered by V.S. Wakankar in 1957-58. UNESCO World Heritage Site 2003. Rock paintings span from ~30,000 BCE to historical period — animals, hunting, dancing, religious rituals. The oldest paintings depict hunting scenes with aurochs (wild cattle) and elephants. Located in Raisen district, Madhya Pradesh.

Inscriptions — The Most Reliable Written Sources

UPSC Connect

UPSC GS1 — Ashokan Edicts and Early Indian Inscriptions:

Ashokan Edicts: Emperor Ashoka (r. ~268–232 BCE) issued rock edicts and pillar edicts across his empire — the first political inscriptions in India. Written in Brahmi script (most), Kharosthi script (northwest, modern Pakistan/Afghanistan), and Greek and Aramaic (bilingual edicts in northwest for Greek-speaking subjects).

Ashoka refers to himself as "Devanampiya Piyadasi" (Beloved of the Gods, Pleasing to Behold) in the inscriptions. The identification of these inscriptions with Ashoka was made by James Prinsep in 1837 when he first deciphered the Brahmi script — one of the greatest achievements in Indological research.

Types of Ashokan inscriptions:

  • Major Rock Edicts (14): On large boulders; spread across empire; content on dhamma, non-violence, respect for all sects, treatment of animals and humans
  • Minor Rock Edicts: Personal inscriptions; mention his conversion after Kalinga war
  • Pillar Edicts (7 major): On polished sandstone pillars; edicts on dhamma, administration, release of prisoners

Key locations: Girnar (Gujarat), Dhauli (Odisha, near Kalinga battlefield), Shahbazgarhi, Mansehra (Pakistan), Delhi-Meerut Pillar, Delhi-Topra Pillar, Sanchi, Sarnath (Lion Capital — now India's national emblem).

Samudragupta's Allahabad Pillar Prashasti: Written by court poet Harishena (~350 CE); on an Ashokan pillar at Prayagraj (Allahabad); records Samudragupta's military campaigns and his position as "king of kings" (a primary source for Gupta period political history).

Manuscripts

Key Term

Manuscripts: Handwritten documents on palm leaf (tala patra), birch bark (bhurja patra), and later paper. Housed in manuscript libraries (National Mission for Manuscripts, est. 2003, has surveyed ~5 million manuscripts across India).

Key manuscripts and texts:

  • Arthashastra (Kautilya/Chanakya, ~300 BCE): Political science and economics; governance, espionage, foreign policy; rediscovered 1905 (R. Shamasastry in Mysore Oriental Library)
  • Ain-i-Akbari (Abul Fazl, ~1590s CE): Third volume of Akbarnama; detailed administrative account of Akbar's empire — provinces, revenue, mansabdari system; invaluable primary source
  • Vedas: Oral tradition for ~3,000 years before being written down; Rig Veda (~1500 BCE oral composition; written down much later); show that oral traditions can preserve ancient texts with remarkable accuracy

Coins as Historical Sources

Explainer

What coins tell us:

  • Rulers and dynasties: Name, portrait, title of issuing ruler
  • Religion: Deities on coins reveal state religion (Kushana coins show Greek, Iranian, and Indian deities — evidence of their syncretic culture)
  • Economy: Presence of gold coins = prosperous trade; debasement of silver coins = economic crisis
  • Trade routes: Distribution of coin hoards shows trade networks

Key coin types:

  • Punch-marked coins (Mauryan era): Earliest Indian coins; symbols punched (not engraved portrait); janapada coins and imperial Mauryan coins
  • Gupta gold coins (Dinaras): Considered the most artistic ancient Indian coins; show Gupta rulers in various poses (hunting, playing veena, Ashwamedha); important source for Gupta history
  • Kushana coins: Show both Indian deities and Zoroastrian/Greek deities; evidence of cultural synthesis
  • South Indian coins: Chera, Chola, Pandya punch-marked coins; Tamil Brahmi legends

Historical Methodology — Critical Approach

UPSC Connect

UPSC GS1 — Evaluating Historical Sources:

Primary sources = Contemporary evidence created at the time of the event (coins, inscriptions, official documents, eye-witness accounts like Megasthenes).

Secondary sources = Accounts written after the event, based on primary sources or other secondary sources (modern history books, textbooks).

Biases in sources:

  • Political bias: Court chronicles (like Ain-i-Akbari) glorify the ruler; victories are exaggerated, defeats minimised
  • Religious bias: Buddhist texts focus on Buddhist kings; Brahmanical texts emphasise varna hierarchy; each tradition portrays history through its own lens
  • Gender bias: Ancient texts almost universally written by men, about men; women's perspectives largely absent
  • Class bias: Arthashastra is a text of the elite ruling class; the lives of ordinary farmers, artisans, slaves are poorly documented

Interdisciplinary history: Modern historians use archaeology + linguistics + genetics + palaeoclimatology together. For example, the 2019 ancient DNA study of Rakhigarhi skeletons (by Vasant Shinde et al., published in Cell) found no genetic contribution from Central Asian steppe pastoralists — complicating but not resolving the debate about Aryan migration/indigenous origin.


Exam Strategy

Prelims traps:

  • Harappa excavated by Daya Ram Sahni (1921), NOT Mohenjo-daro; Mohenjo-daro = R.D. Banerji (1922)
  • Dholavira = Gujarat (Rann of Kutch); UNESCO WHS 2021 (not 2012 — that was Western Ghats)
  • Rakhigarhi = largest Harappan site (Haryana); Mohenjo-daro is the most famous but not largest
  • Lothal (Gujarat) = dockyard; Kalibangan (Rajasthan) = ploughed field evidence
  • Bhimbetka = UNESCO WHS 2003; discoverer = V.S. Wakankar; located in Madhya Pradesh (Raisen district)
  • Ashokan edicts in Brahmi script decoded by James Prinsep, 1837 (not Alexander Cunningham)
  • Ashoka = "Devanampiya Piyadasi" in inscriptions; personal name appears only in minor rock edicts
  • Fa Hian = Gupta period (Chandragupta II); Xuanzang = Harsha's period; often confused
  • Al-Biruni wrote Kitab-ul-Hind (NOT Marco Polo, NOT Ibn Battuta)
  • ASI established 1861; first DG = Alexander Cunningham

Mains angles:

  • Limitations of ancient Indian sources for reconstructing social history (gender, class, caste biases)
  • How the Ashokan inscriptions revolutionised understanding of Mauryan India
  • Genetic/archaeological evidence and the Aryan migration debate

Previous Year Questions

Prelims:

  1. Who among the following was the first excavator of the Harappan site at Harappa?
    (a) R.D. Banerji
    (b) Daya Ram Sahni
    (c) John Marshall
    (d) Mortimer Wheeler

  2. Xuanzang (Hiuen Tsang) visited India during the reign of which ruler?
    (a) Chandragupta II
    (b) Ashoka
    (c) Harshavardhana
    (d) Chandragupta Maurya

  3. Consider the following statements about Dholavira:

    1. It is located in Gujarat.
    2. It was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2021.
    3. It is the largest known Harappan site.
      Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
      (a) 1 and 2 only (Rakhigarhi, Haryana, is the largest — not Dholavira)
      (b) 2 and 3 only
      (c) 1 and 3 only
      (d) 1, 2 and 3

Mains:

  1. Discuss the significance of Ashokan inscriptions as historical sources. How have they contributed to our understanding of the Mauryan Empire and Ashoka's policy of Dhamma? (CSE Mains 2018, GS Paper 1, 15 marks)

  2. "Ancient Indian historical writing suffers from an absence of voices from the margins — women, lower castes, artisans, and slaves." Critically examine this statement with reference to the nature of available sources. (CSE Mains 2020, GS Paper 1, 10 marks)