Early History, 1000 B.C.-A.D. 1202
Meet Bangladesh - Bangladesh 101:
For most of its history, the area known as Bangladesh was a political backwater--an observer rather than a participant in the great political and military events of the Indian subcontinent. Historians believe that Bengal, the area comprising present-day Bangladesh and the Indian state of West Bengal, was settled in about 1000 B.C. by Dravidian-speaking peoples who were later known as the Bang. Their homeland bore various titles that reflected earlier tribal names, such as Vanga, Banga, Bangala, Bangal, and Bengal.
The first great indigenous
empire to spread over most of present-day India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh was
the Mauryan Empire (ca. 320-180 B.C.), whose most famous ruler was Asoka (ca.
273-232 B.C.). Although the empire was well administered and politically
integrated, little is known of any reciprocal benefits between it and eastern
Bengal. The western part of Bengal, however, achieved some importance during the
Mauryan period because vessels sailed from its ports to Sri Lanka and Southeast
Asia. During the time of the Mauryan Empire, Buddhism came to Bengal, and it was
from there that Asoka's son, Mahinda, carried the message of the Enlightened One
to Sri Lanka. After the decline of the Mauryan Empire the eastern portion of
Bengal became the kingdom of Samatata; although politically independent, it was
a tributary state of the Indian Gupta Empire (A.D. ca. 319-ca. 540).
The third great empire
was the Harsha Empire (A.D. 606-47), which drew Samatata into its loosely
administered political structure. The disunity following the demise of this
short-lived empire allowed a Buddhist chief named Gopala to seize power as the
first ruler of the Pala Dynasty (A.D. 750-1150). He and his successors provided
Bengal with stable government, security, and prosperity while spreading Buddhism
throughout the state and into neighboring territories. Trade and influence were
extensive under Pala leadership, as emissaries were sent as far as Tibet and
Sumatra.
The Senas, orthodox and militant Hindus, replaced the Buddhist Palas as rulers of a united Bengal until the Turkish conquest in 1202. Opposed to the Brahmanic Hinduism of the Senas with its rigid caste system, vast numbers of Bengalis, especially those from the lower castes, would later convert to Islam.
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