moved in from the northwest
and overran the north or central parts of
the country. These migrations began with the
Aryan peoples of the second millennium B.C.
and culminated in the unification of the
entire country for the first time in the
seventeenth century under the Mughals.
Mostly these conquerors were nomadic or
seminomadic people who adopted or expanded
the agricultural economy and contributed new
cultural forms or religions, such as Islam.
The Europeans, primarily the English,
arrived in force in the early seventeenth
century and by the eighteenth century had
made a profound impact on India. India was
forced, for the first time, into a
subordinate role within a world system based
on industrial production rather than
agriculture. Many of the dynamic craft or
cottage industries that had long attracted
foreigners to India suffered extensively
under competition with new modes of mass
production fostered by the British. Modern
institutions, such as universities, and
technologies, such as railroads and mass
communication, broke with Indian
intellectual traditions and served British,
rather than Indian, economic interests. A
country that in the eighteenth century was a
magnet for trade was, by the twentieth
century, an underdeveloped and overpopulated
land groaning under alien domination. Even
at the end of the twentieth century, with
the period of colonialism well in the past,
Indians remain sensitive to foreign
domination and are determined to prevent the
country from coming under such domination
again. |