Explain about Vedic Age...........
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Around 4000 BC , a developed civilization was formed in Sindhu valley.
After the fall of this civilization of Sindhu Valley the Vedic era started . It was about 1500 B.C.when Vedic era started.One of the oldest written religious book " The Rig Veda " was written during this period of 1500 BC to 1000 BC. This period of 1500 to 1000 B.C. is known as early Vedic era . While the period of 1000 B.C. to 600 B.C. is known as later Vedic era .
The other Samahitas - Yajurveda , SamaVeda and AtharvaVeda are written during later Vedic era .
The main architecture of Vedic age were the Nordic Aryan Groups of people.
The four divisions of Hinduism :
✒Brahman ✒ kShatrya
✒ Vaishiuya ✒Shudra
These four divisions were believed to came from Aryan Culture.
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The Vedic period, or Vedic age (c. 1500 – c. 500 BCE), is the period in the history of the northern Indian subcontinent between the end of the urban Indus Valley Civilisation and a second urbanisation which began in the central Indo-Gangetic Plain c. 600 BCE. It gets its name from the Vedas, which are liturgical texts containing details of life during this period that have been interpreted to be historical and constitute the primary sources for understanding the period. These documents, alongside the corresponding archaeological record, allow for the evolution of the Vedic culture to be traced and inferred.The Vedas were composed and orally transmitted with precision by speakers of an Old Indo-Aryan language who had migratedinto the northwestern regions of the Indian subcontinent early in this period. The Vedic society was patriarchal and patrilineal. Early Vedic Aryans were a Late Bronze Age society centred in the Punjab, organised into tribes rather than kingdoms, and primarily sustained by a pastoral way of life. Around c. 1200–1000 BCE, Vedic Aryans spread eastward to the fertile western Ganges Plain and adopted iron tools which allowed for clearing of forest and the adoption of a more settled, agricultural way of life. . The end of the Vedic period witnessed the rise of true cities and large states (called mahajanapadas) as well as śramaṇamovements (including Jainism and Buddhism) which challenged the Vedic orthodoxy.The Vedic period saw the emergence of a hierarchy of social classes that would remain influential. Vedic religion developed into Brahmanical orthodoxy, and around the beginning of the Common Era, the Vedic tradition formed one of the main constituents of the so-called "Hindu synthesis".
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