Examples of Ganges Plain in the following topics:
-
- Different theories explain the Vedic Period, c. 1200 BCE, when Indo-Aryan
people on the Indian subcontinent migrated to the Ganges Plain.
- Foreigners
from the north are believed to have migrated to India and settled in the Indus
Valley and Ganges Plain from 1800-1500 BCE.
- Vedic
Civilization is believed to have been centered in the northwestern parts of the
Indian subcontinent and spread around 1200 to the Ganges Plain, a 255-million
hectare area (630 million acres) of flat, fertile land named after the Ganges
River and covering most of what is now northern and eastern India, eastern
parts of Pakistan, and most of Bangladesh.
- From approximately 1000-500 BCE, the development of iron axes and
ploughs enabled the Indo-Aryans to settle the thick forests on the western
Ganges Plain.
- The Ganges Plain is supported by the Indus and Ganges river systems.
-
- By
1800 BCE, the Indus Valley climate grew cooler and drier, and a tectonic event
may have diverted the Ghaggar Hakra river system toward the Ganges Plain.
- The Harappans may have migrated
toward the Ganges basin in the east, where they established villages
and isolated farms.
-
- The Mauryan Army eliminated regional chieftains,
private armies and even gangs of bandits who sought to impose their own
supremacy in small areas.
- The Mauryan
Empire was divided into four provinces, with the imperial capital at
Pataliputra, near the Ganges River in the modern state of Bihar in India.
-
- Clodius eventually formed armed gangs that
terrorized Rome and began to attack Pompey’s followers, who formed
counter-gangs in response, marking the end o fhte political alliance between
Pompey and Caeser.
- Beginning in the
summer of 54 BCE, a wave of political corruption and violence swept Rome,
reaching a climax in January 52, when Clodius was murdered in a gang war.
-
- By 321 CE, he established a realm stretching along the Ganges River to
Prayag, the modern-day city of Allahabad, in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.
- By his death in 380 CE, Samudragupta had incorporated over 20
kingdoms into his realm and extended the Gupta Empire from the Himalayas to the
Narmada River in central India and from the Brahmaputra River that cuts through
four modern Asian nations to the Yamuna, the longest tributary of the Ganges
River in northern India.
-
- They were called the Marsh (Le Marais) or the Plain (La Plaine).
-
- They were called "the Marsh" (Le Marais) or "the Plain" (La Plaine).
-
- Around 270 CE, their territories on the
Gangetic Plain became independent under local dynasties such as the Yaudheyas.
-
- Originating from the kingdom of Magadha in the Indo-Gangetic Plain (modern Bihar, eastern Uttar Pradesh) in the eastern side of the Indian subcontinent, the empire had its capital city at Pataliputra (modern Patna).
-
- Two main groups developed, the Nguni (Xhosa, Zulu, Swazi), who occupied the eastern coastal plains, and the Sotho–Tswana who lived on the interior plateau.