Читаем The Great Events by Famous Historians полностью

Meanwhile the Four Castes had been formed. In the old Aryan colonies among the Five Rivers of the Punjab, each house-father was a husbandman, warrior, and priest. But by degrees certain gifted families, who composed the Vedic hymns or learned them off by heart, were always chosen by the king to perform the great sacrifices. In this way probably the priestly caste sprang up. As the Aryans conquered more territory, fortunate soldiers received a larger share of the lands than others, and cultivated it not with their own hands, but by means of the vanquished non-Aryan tribes. In this way the Four Castes arose. First, the priests or Brahmans. Second, the warriors or fighting companions of the king, called Rajputs or Kchatryas, literally "of the royal stock." Third, the Aryan agricultural settlers, who kept the old name of Vaisyas, from the root vis, which in the primitive Vedic period had included the whole Aryan people. Fourth, the Sudras, or conquered non-Aryan tribes, who became serfs. The three first castes were of Aryan descent, and were honored by the name of the Twice-born Castes. They could all be present at the sacrifices, and they worshipped the same Bright Gods. The Sudras were "the slave-bands of black descent" of the Veda. They were distinguished from their "Twice-born" Aryan conquerors as being only "Once-born," and by many contemptuous epithets. They were not allowed to be present at the great national sacrifices, or at the feasts which followed them. They could never rise out of their servile condition; and to them was assigned the severest toil in the fields, and all the hard and dirty work of the village community.

The Brahmans or priests claimed the highest rank. But they seemed to have had a long struggle with the Kchatryas, or warrior caste, before they won their proud position at the head of the Indian people. They afterward secured themselves in that position by teaching that it had been given to them by God. At the beginning of the world, they said, the Brahman proceeded from the mouth of the Creator, the Kchatryas or Rajput from his arms, the Vaisya from his thighs or belly, and the Sudra from his feet. This legend is true so far that the Brahmans were really the brain power of the Indian people, the Kchatryas its armed hands, the Vaisyas the food-growers, and the Sudras the down-trodden serfs. When the Brahmans had established their power, they made a wise use of it. From the ancient Vedic times they recognized that if they were to exercise spiritual supremacy, they must renounce earthly pomp. In arrogating the priestly function, they gave up all claim to the royal office. They were divinely appointed to be the guides of nations and the counsellors of kings, but they could not be kings themselves. As the duty of the Sudra was to serve, of the Vaisya to till the ground and follow middle-class trades or crafts; so the business of the Kchatryas was to fight the public enemy, and of the Brahman to propitiate the national gods.

Each day brought to the Brahmans its routine of ceremonies, studies, and duties. Their whole life was mapped out into four clearly defined stages of discipline. For their existence, in its full religious significance, commenced not at birth, but on being invested at the close of childhood with the sacred thread of the Twice-born. Their youth and early manhood were to be entirely spent in learning the Veda by heart from an older Brahman, tending the sacred fire, and serving their preceptor. Having completed his long studies, the young Brahman entered on the second stage of his life, as a householder. He married, and commenced a course of family duties. When he had reared a family, and gained a practical knowledge of the world, he retired into the forest as a recluse, for the third period of his life; feeding on roots or fruits, practising his religious duties with increased devotion. The fourth stage was that of the ascetic or religious mendicant, wholly withdrawn from earthly affairs, and striving to attain a condition of mind which, heedless of the joys, or pains, or wants of the body, is intent only on its final absorption into the deity. The Brahman, in this fourth stage of his life, ate nothing but what was given to him unasked, and abode not more than one day in any village, lest the vanities of the world should find entrance into his heart. This was the ideal life prescribed for a Brahman, and ancient Indian literature shows that it was to a large extent practically carried out. Throughout his whole existence the true Brahman practised a strict temperance; drinking no wine, using a simple diet, curbing the desires; shut off from the tumults of war, as his business was to pray, not to fight, and having his thoughts ever fixed on study and contemplation. "What is this world?" says a Brahman sage. "It is even as the bough of a tree, on which a bird rests for a night, and in the morning flies away."

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

1939: последние недели мира.
1939: последние недели мира.

Отстоять мир – нет более важной задачи в международном плане для нашей партии, нашего народа, да и для всего человечества, отметил Л.И. Брежнев на XXVI съезде КПСС. Огромное значение для мобилизации прогрессивных сил на борьбу за упрочение мира и избавление народов от угрозы ядерной катастрофы имеет изучение причин возникновения второй мировой войны. Она подготовлялась империалистами всех стран и была развязана фашистской Германией.Известный ученый-международник, доктор исторических наук И. Овсяный на основе в прошлом совершенно секретных документов империалистических правительств и их разведок, обширной мемуарной литературы рассказывает в художественно-документальных очерках о сложных политических интригах буржуазной дипломатии в последние недели мира, которые во многом способствовали развязыванию второй мировой войны.

Игорь Дмитриевич Овсяный

История / Политика / Образование и наука
Лжеправители
Лжеправители

Власть притягивает людей как магнит, манит их невероятными возможностями и, как это ни печально, зачастую заставляет забывать об ответственности, которая из власти же и проистекает. Вероятно, именно поэтому, когда представляется даже малейшая возможность заполучить власть, многие идут на это, используя любые средства и даже проливая кровь – чаще чужую, но иногда и свою собственную. Так появляются лжеправители и самозванцы, претендующие на власть без каких бы то ни было оснований. При этом некоторые из них – например, Хоремхеб или Исэ Синкуро, – придя к власти далеко не праведным путем, становятся не самыми худшими из правителей, и память о них еще долго хранят благодарные подданные.Но большинство самозванцев, претендуя на власть, заботятся только о собственной выгоде, мечтая о богатстве и почестях или, на худой конец, рассчитывая хотя бы привлечь к себе внимание, как делали многочисленные лже-Людовики XVII или лже-Романовы. В любом случае, самозванство – это любопытный психологический феномен, поэтому даже в XXI веке оно вызывает пристальный интерес.

Анна Владимировна Корниенко

История / Политика / Образование и наука