Knowledge of Indian history becomes more focused …

Years: 621BCE - 478BCE

Knowledge of Indian history becomes more focused by the sixth century BCE because of the available Buddhist and Jain sources of a later period.

Northern India is populated by a number of small princely states that rise and fall in the sixth century BCE.

In this milieu, a phenomenon arises that will affect the history of the region for several centuries—Buddhism.

Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, or "Enlightened One" (ca. 563-483 BCE), was born in the Ganges Valley.

His teachings are spread in all directions by monks, missionaries, and merchants.

The Buddha's teachings prove enormously popular when considered against the more obscure and highly complicated rituals and philosophy of Vedic Hinduism.

The original doctrines of the Buddha also constitute a protest against the inequities of the caste system, thereby attracting large numbers of followers.

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