History, asked by renu321faridpuri, 3 months ago


1. What do you understand by the term Janapada?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4

Answer:

Explanation:

The Sanskrit term janapada is a tatpurusha compound term, composed of two words: janas and pada. Jana means "people" or "subject" (cf. Latin cognate genus, English cognate kin). The word pada means "foot" (cf. ... Sanskrit padám, usually taken to mean "footprint, trail", diverges in accent from the PIE reconstruction.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

As per the vedic texts Aryan tribes were known as Janas, which were the largest social units.The term Janapada composed of janas means ‘people’ or ‘subject’ and pada means ‘foot’. Janapada’s were the earliest gathering places of men, merchants, artisans and craftsmen akin to marketplace or town surrounded by hamlets and villages.Later,Janapadas became major realms or Kingdoms of Vedic India.

A Janapadin was the ruler of a janapada. Ancient texts like Ashtadhyayi, Ramayana, Mahabharatha, and numerous puranas refer to many Janapadas of ancient times.The Indian Subcontinent was divided into the Janapadas with clear demarcated boundaries.The Vedic literature describes the 9 Janapadas besides with the people as the Andhras, Pulindas, Sabaras and Purandas. However, by the Time of 6th century B.C.Panini mentions as many as 22 different Janapadas out of which Magadha, Avanti, Kosala and Vatsa were considered very important.

Hope it helped you !

Similar questions