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CC5 Mod 4D

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CC-5: HISTORY OF INDIA (CE 750-1206)

IV. TRADE AND COMMERCE


(D). PROCESS OF URBANIZATION

The early medieval age in the historiography of Indian feudalism is said to have
ushered in widespread decay of urban centres. The idea of decline of cities,
urban crafts, trade and money in the early medieval times is an important part of
the hypothesis of Indian feudalism. Historian R. S. Sharma has put forward his
theory of a two-stage urban decay, one beginning in the Second half of the 3rd
or the 4th century, and the second one starting after the 6th century. R. S.
Sharma has summarized archaeological data from various regions to
substantiate his theory. He admits that the Indian literary evidence for urban
decay is not strong, but cites the accounts of Xuan Zang and Arab writers. His
explanation of urban decay centres around a supposed decline in long-distance
trade. Urban decline undermined the position of urban-based artisans and
traders; artisans were forced to migrate to rural areas; traders were not able to
pay taxes; the distinction between town and village became blurred.

The decay of urban centres is suggested to have resulted in ruralisation. Thus


the expansion of the rural economy appears as the cause and effect of de-
urbanization. The key to this critical situation is located in the practice of
granting lands favouring agrarian spread and growth. This brought an end to the
second urbanization in Indian history. Marxist historiography, however,
attaches greatest importance to the improved use of iron technology and
agricultural development generating the vital agrarian surplus as the key factor
for the rise of cities belonging to second urbanization in India (600 BCE- CE
300). But the same genre of historical writings portray agrarian expansion of the
early medieval period as the principal agent behind the disappearance of cities
on a pan-Indian scale from CE 300-CE 1000. The decay of urban centres in the
600 CE-1000 CE phase is explained as an impact of the languishing long-
distance trade.

Urban contraction was, however, accompanied by agrarian expansion.


Elsewhere, R.S. Sharma cites epigraphic references to the transfer of rights over
markets to donees, merchants transferring part of their profits to temples, and
the transfer of customs dues from the state to temples. On this basis, he talks of
a feudalization of trade and commerce. He argues that a mild urban renewal
began in some parts of the subcontinent in the 1lth century, and that urban
processes were well-established by the 14th century. A revival of foreign trade-
linked to an increase in the cultivation of cash crops, better irrigation
techniques, increasing demand tor commodities, improvements in ship-building
and an expansion of internal trade-is cited as a major reason for the urban
revival, as well as for the decline of the feudal order.

The urban processes in the early medieval India had been a subject of debate
among the Historians. B.D. Chattopadhyaya has argued that the early medieval
period saw the decline of certain urban centres, but there were others that
continued to flourish, as well as some new ones that emerged. Xuan Zang
suggests that cities such as Kaushambi, Shravasti, Vaishali, and Kapilavastu
were in decline. But he also mentions flourishing ones such as Thaneswar,
Vararnasi, and Kanyakubja. The archaeological data on the settlements of the
period is patchy and inadequate. But some early historical cities continued to be
inhabited during early medieval times, for e.g., Ahichchhatra, Atranjikhera,
Rajghat, and Chirand.

With regard to monetary history, John S. Deyell has convincingly shown that
money was not scarce in early medieval India, nor were the states of the time
suffering from a financial crisis. There was a reduction of coin types and a
decline in the aesthetic quality of coins, but not in the volume of coins in
circulation. Traders of the subcontinent were part of a wider world of trade
interaction that connected Africa, Europe and various parts of Asia. India’s
trade with Southeast Asia and China grew during the early medieval period.
Ranabir Chakravarti highlights the importance of mandapikas in the trade
circuit of early medieval India. These were, for most part, local centres of
exchange that constituted an intermediate level between the small, periodic
markets and larger trade centres. They were also centres of collection of
commercial tolls and duties. The analysis of literary and epigraphic sources of
western India (1000-1300 CE) by V. K. Jain indicates that traders of this region
were carrying business in luxury goods as well as in staples such as food grains,
pulses, salt, oil, ghee, jaggery, etc. According to Jain the western Indian traders
tended to confine their operation to coastal and internal trade, leaving the
operation further afield to the Arabs and others. The diversification of trade
commodities and trade links seemed to be the general pattern as far as Indian
trade in the early medieval period is concerned.

In the far south the spurt of urban centres since the ninth century coincides with
the growing appeal of Vaishnava and Saiva sectarian devotional cults, the
construction of monumental temples around sacred centres associated with
these devotional cult and the increasing political power of the Cholas. From the
studies of Historian R. Champakalakshmi we get to know about the twin cities
of the Cholas, Kudamukku-Paliyarai, situated in the most fertile tracts in the
Kaveri delta, the core area of the Cholas. While Paliyarai was the site of the
palace Kudamukku functioned as the sacred centre having a number of
tenmples. The twin cities were located on an important trade route and noted for
its transactions in two bulk items, areca nuts and betel nuts. There was also a
concentration of metal workers in the area. According to R. Champakalakshmi,
the rise of Kudamukku-Paliyarai, the twin cities of the Cholas to prominence
was a result of the factor, which are- (1) its access to and linkages with the
hinterland for the supply of local agrarian.(2) the importation of luxury items
for the consumption of the elite groups products. (3) its role as a religious centre
leading to temple establishments.

It may therefore be reasonably argued that notwithstanding the decay of a


number of prominent towns in India, especially in the Ganga valley, during CE
300-900, a general urban decay did not engulf the subcontinent as a whole. The
diagnosis of urban anaemia leading to ruralization and peasantization may not
serve as an all purpose key. Urban developments in early historical and early
medieval times were not primarily conditioned by external trade. So the decline
or otherwise of long-distance trade cannot be taken as the principal determinant
of urban development and decay in Indian conditions. The greater the
convergence of economic, political and cultural (including religious) activities
at an urban centre, more eminent would be its position than cities with a
predominantly single functional role. Urban centres of early medieval times
however are seen not merely as a counterpoint to the feudal social formations,
but also as possessing distinctiveness from cities belonging to the early
historical phase. The second urbanization in Indian history (c. 600 BCE-CE
300) had its epicentre in the Ganga valley (or more precisely in the middle
Ganga valley) which acted as a platform for the development of secondary
urban centres. In the early medieval period Chattopadhyaya does not find any
such epicentre generating urban impulses to disparate regions. Urban enters
from CE600 onwards, on the other hand, appear to have been strongly oriented
to their local roots and therefore may be judged in terms of their respective local
developments and local formations. Such local formations were largely helped
by agrarian expansion, generating resources for local or supra-local ruling
groups. The mobilization of resources and the urge to procure exotic and luxury
items by rulers would encourage movements of products, both within the region
and also beyond it. The growing popularity of sectarian bhakti cults was often
expressed in the brisk temple- building activities and/or patronage to matha
complexes. Both the temple and the matha are found to have provided excellent
meeting grounds for ruling groups and mercantile communities. The
combinations of these formations helped the emergence and development of
early medieval urban centres which by their distinctiveness are situated by
Chattopadhyaya in the third phase of urbanization in Indian history.

REFERENCE-

Chakravarti Ranabir, Exploring Early India upto Circa AD 1300

Singh Upinder, A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India. Delhi, 2008.

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