Democracy in Ancient India
by Steve Muhlberger, Associate Professor of History,
Nipissing University.
Note on this article.
I must state right out front that I read no Indian languages, which may
lead some readers to dismiss entirely my work in this difficult field.
For the more tolerant, let me explain that an earlier version of this article
has been read and commented on by several academic readers, whose comments
and corrections have been taken into account. The editors of the Journal
of World History liked it well enough to ask me to write a broader
treatment of democracy's prehistory. This resulted in Phil Paine and I
writing "Democracy's Place in World History," which appeared in that journal
in 1993. This article, however, never found a home of its own -- in part
because I myself could think of few journals that would be interested in
an article that concentrates on specialized material yet draws broad conclusions
from it.
Returning to it now, in 1998, I find
I still believe in my interpretation of the ancient evidence for Indian
democracy, and in its relevance to how we understand the world history
of democracy. Rather than let it languish further, I am releasing it electronically,
for both general and specialist readers. I
will be glad to hear your comments. For the reader who wants to look
into the question independently, I have posted a bibliography,
and of course there are always the footnotes.
I should make clear that though
this article bears my name alone, I was pointed in the right direction
by an unpublished essay on democracy by Phil Paine. I also wish to note
that I was aided in my research by the collection of Asian literature at
Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario. My philosopher-colleague at
Nipissing University, Dr. Wayne Borody, made some suggestions, but neither
he nor anyone else is responsibile for any errors or misinterpretations.
Historians who are interested in democracy often
insist it must be understood in context of a unique western tradition of
political development beginning with the Greeks. The spread of democratic
ideals and practice to other cultures, or their failure to spread, have
many times been explained on the assumption that democracy or personal
liberty are ideals foreign to the non-Western world -- an assumption at
least as old as Herodotus.1
But events since the late 1980s have shown that people both in "Western"
and "non-Western" countries have a lively interest in democracy as something
relevant to their own situation. The old assumption deserves to be re-examined.
In fact, the supposed differences between "Western"
and "non-Western" cultures are in this case, as in so many others, more
a matter of ideological faith than of cool, impartial judgment. If we are
talking about the history of humanity as a whole, democracy is equally
new or equally old everywhere. Fair and effective elections, under adult
suffrage and in conditions that allow the free discussion of ideas, are
a phenomenon of this century. The history of democracy, properly so called,
is just beginning.
The "prehistory" of democracy, however, is scarcely
restricted to Europe and Europeanized America and Australasia. A search
of world history finds much worth studying. There are no perfect democracies
waiting to be discovered, but there is something else: a long history of
"government by discussion," in which groups of people having common interests
make decisions that affect their lives through debate, consultation, and
voting. The vast majority of such groups, it may be objected, are more
properly called oligarchies than democracies. But every democracy has been
created by widening what was originally a very narrow franchise. The history
of government by discussion, which may be called republicanism for brevity's
sake, has a claim to the interest of anyone who takes democracy seriously.2
This article will examine one important case of
government by discussion -- the republics of Ancient India. Although they
are familiar to Indologists, these republics are hardly known to other
historians. They deserve, however, a substantial place in world historiography.
The experience of Ancient India with republicanism, if better known, would
by itself make democracy seem less of a freakish development, and help
dispel the common idea that the very concept of democracy is specifically
"Western."
The present article has two goals. First, it will
summarize the history of the ancient Indian republics as it is currently
known. This survey is restricted to North India and the period before about
400 A.D., when sovereign republics seem to have become extinct.
Second, the article will examine the historiographical
evaluations of the Indian republican experience, and suggest that most
of them have placed it in too narrow a context. Ancient Indian democratic
experiments, it will be argued, are more important than they are usually
granted to be. It is well known that the sources of ancient Indian history
present considerable difficulties. All the indigenous ancient literature
from the subcontinent has been preserved as part of a religious tradition,
Brahmanical, Buddhist or Jaina. When the subject is political theory and
its implementation, the preselected nature of sources is a distinct handicap
to the researcher. The largest and most influential Indian literary tradition,
the Brahmanical, is distinctly hostile to anything resembling democracy.
Brahmanical literature gives kingship a central
place in political life, and seldom hints that anything else is possible.
For moral philosophers and legislators such as Manu (reputed author of
the Manu-Smrti between 200 B.C.-A.D. 200), the king was a key figure
in a social order based on caste (varna ). Caste divided society
into functional classes: the Brahmans had magical powers and priestly duties,
the ksatriyas were the rulers and warriors, the vaisyas cultivators,
and the sudras the lowest part of society, subservient to the other
three. Moral law or dharma depended on the observance of these divisions,
and the king was the guarantor of dharma , and in particular the
privileges of the Brahmans. 3
Another tradition is best exemplified by the Arthasastra of Kautilya
(c. 300 B.C.), which alloted the king a more independent role but likewise
emphasized his responsibility for peace, justice and stability.4
Both Kautilya's work and the Manu-Smrti
are considered classic expressions of ancient Indian political and social
theory. A reader of these or other Brahmanical treatises finds it very
easy to visualize ancient Indian society as one where "monarchy was the
normal form of the state." 5
Until the end of the last century, the only indication
that this might not always have been the case came from Greek and Roman
accounts of India, mostly histories of India during and just after Alexander
the Great's invasion of India in 327-324 B.C. These works spoke of numerous
cities and even larger areas being governed as oligarchies and democracies,
but they were not always believed by scholars.6
Yet research into the Buddhist Pali Canon during the nineteenth century
confirmed this picture of widespread republicanism. The Pali Canon is the
earliest version of the Buddhist scriptures, and reached its final form
between 400-300 B.C.7
It contains the story of Buddha's life and teaching and his rules for monastic
communities. The rules and teachings are presented in the form of anecdotes,
explaining the circumstances that called forth the Buddha's authoritative
pronouncement. Thus the Pali Canon provides us with many details of life
in ancient India, and specifically of the sixth century (the Buddha's lifetime)
in the northeast. In 1903, T.W. Rhys Davids, the leading Pali scholar,
pointed out in his book Buddhist India8
that the Canon (and the Jatakas, a series of Buddhist legends set
in the same period but composed much later) depicted a country in which
there were many clans, dominating extensive and populous territories, who
made their public decisions in assemblies, moots, or parliaments.
Rhys Davids' observation was not made in a vacuum.
Throughout the nineteenth century, students of local government in India
(many of them British bureaucrats) had been fascinated by popular elements
in village life.9
The analysis of village government was part of a continuous debate on the
goals and methods of imperial policy, and the future of India as a self-governing
country. Rhys-Davids' book made the ancient institutions of India relevant
to this debate. His reconstruction of a republican past for India was taken
up by nationalistic Indian scholars of the 1910s.10
Later generations of Indian scholars have been somewhat embarrassed by
the enthusiasm of their elders for early republics and have sought to treat
the republics in a more balanced and dispassionate manner.11
Nevertheless, their work, like that of the pioneering nationalists, has
been extremely productive. Not only the classical sources and the Pali
Canon, but also Buddhist works in Sanskrit, Panini's Sanskrit grammar (the
Astadhyayi ), the Mahabharata, the Jaina Canon, and even
Kautilya's Arthasastra have been combed for evidence and insights.
Coins and inscriptions have documented the existence of republics and the
workings of popular assemblies.
The work of twentieth century scholars has made
possible a much different view of ancient political life in India. It has
shown us a landscape with kings a-plenty, a culture where the terminology
of rule is in the majority of sources relentlessly monarchical, but where,
at the same time, the realities of politics are so complex that simply
to call them "monarchical" is a grave distortion. Indeed, in ancient India,
monarchical thinking was constantly battling with another vision, of self-rule
by members of a guild, a village, or an extended kin-group, in other words,
any group of equals with a common set of interests. This vision of cooperative
self-government often produced republicanism and even democracy comparable
to classical Greek democracy.
Though evidence for non-monarchical government
goes back to the Vedas, 12
republican polities were most common and vigorous in the Buddhist period,
600 B.C.-A.D. 200. At this time, India was in the throes of urbanization.
The Pali Canon gives a picturesque description of the city of Vesali in
the fifth century B.C. as possessing 7707 storied buildings, 7707 pinnacled
buildings, 7707 parks and lotus ponds, and a multitude of people, including
the famous courtesan Ambapali, whose beauty and artistic achievements contributed
mightily to the city's prosperity and reputation. The cities of Kapilavatthu
and Kusavati were likewise full of traffic and noise.13
Moving between these cities were great trading caravans of 500 or 1000
carts -- figures that convey no precise measurement, but give a true feeling
of scale: caravans that stopped for more than four months in a single place,
as they often did because of the rainy season, were described as villages.14
Religion, too, was taking to the road. The hereditary Brahman who was also
a householder, as in later Vedic tradition, saw his teachings, authority
and perquisites threatened by wandering holy men and self-appointed teachers.15
There were warlord-kings who sought to control
this fluid society, some with a measure of success. But the literature,
Pali and Sanskrit, Buddhist and Brahmanical, shows that non-monarchical
forms of government were omnipresent. There was a complex vocabulary to
describe the different types of groups that ran their own affairs.16
Some of these were obviously warrior bands; 17
others more peaceful groups with economic goals; some religious brotherhoods.
Such an organization, of whatever type, could be designated, almost indifferently,
as a gana or a sangha; and similar though less important
bodies were labeled with the terms sreni, puga, or vrata.
Gana and sangha, the most important of these terms, originally
meant "multitude." By the sixth century B.C., these words meant both a
self-governing multitude, in which decisions were made by the members working
in common, and the style of government characteristic of such groups. In
the case of the strongest of such groups, which acted as sovereign governments,
the words are best translated as "republic."
That there were many sovereign republics in India
is easily demonstrated from a number of sources. Perhaps it is best to
begin with the Greek evidence, even though it is not the earliest, simply
because the Greek writers spoke in a political language that is familiar.
Perhaps the most useful Greek account of India
is Arrian's Anabasis of Alexander , which describes the Macedonian
conqueror's campaigns in great detail. The Anabasis, which is derived
from the eyewitness accounts of Alexander's companions, 18
portrays him as meeting "free and independent" Indian communities at every
turn. What "free and independent" meant is illustrated from the case of
Nysa, a city on the border of modern Afghanistan and Pakistan that was
ruled by a president named Aculphis and a council of 300. After surrendering
to Alexander, Aculphis used the city's supposed connection with the god
Dionysus to seek lenient terms from the king:
"The Nysaeans beseech thee, O king out
of respect for Dionysus, to allow them to remain free and independent;
for when Dionysus had subjugated the nation of the Indians...he founded
this city from the soldiers who had become unfit for military service ...From
that time we inhabit Nysa, a free city, and we ourselves are independent,
conducting our government with constitutional order." 19
Nysa was in Greek terms an oligarchy, as further
discussion between Alexander and Aculphis reveals, and a single-city state.
There were other Indian states that were both larger in area and wider
in franchise. It is clear from Arrian that the Mallian republic consisted
of a number of cities.20
Q. Curtius Rufus and Diodorus Siculus in their histories of Alexander mention
a people called the Sabarcae or Sambastai among whom "the form of government
was democratic and not regal." 21
The Sabarcae/Sambastai, like the Mallians, had a large state. Their army
consisted of 60,000 foot, 6000 cavalry, and 500 chariots.22
Thus Indian republics of the late fourth century could be much larger than
the contemporaneous Greek polis . And it seems that in the northwestern
part of India, republicanism was the norm. Alexander's historians mention
a large number of republics, some named, some not, but only a handful of
kings.23
The prevalence of republicanism and its democratic form is explicitly stated
by Diodorus Siculus. After describing the mythical monarchs who succeeded
the god Dionysus as rulers of India, he says:
At last, however, after many years had
gone, most of the cities adopted the democratic form of government, though
some retained the kingly until the invasion of the country by Alexander.24
What makes this statement particularly interesting
is that it seems to derive from a first-hand description of India by a
Greek traveler named Megasthenes. Around 300 B.C., about two decades after
Alexander's invasion, Megasthenes served as ambassador of the Greek king
Seleucus Nicator to the Indian emperor Chandragupta Maurya, and in the
course of his duties crossed northern India to the eastern city of Patna,
where he lived for a while.25
If this statement is drawn from Megasthenes, then the picture of a northwestern
India dominated by republics must be extended to the entire northern half
of the subcontinent.26
If we turn to the Indian sources, we find that
there is nothing far-fetched about this idea. The most useful sources for
mapping north India are three: The Pali Canon, which shows us northeastern
India between the Himalayas and the Ganges in the sixth and fifth centuries
B.C.; the grammar of Panini, which discusses all of North India, with a
focus on the northwest, during the fifth century; and Kautilya's Arthasastra,
which is a product of the fourth century, roughly contemporaneous with
Megasthenes. All three sources enable us to identify numerous sanghas
and ganas, some very minor, others large and powerful.27
What were these republican polities like? According
to Panini, all the states and regions (janapadas ) of northern India
during his time were based on the settlement or conquest of a given area
by an identifiable warrior people who still dominated the political life
of that area. Some of these peoples (in Panini's terms janapadins
) were subject to a king, who was at least in theory of their own blood
and was perhaps dependent on their special support.28
Elsewhere, the janapadins ran their affairs in a republican manner.
Thus in both kinds of state, the government was dominated by people classified
as ksatriyas, or, as later ages would put it, members of the warrior
caste.
But in many states, perhaps most, political participation
was restricted to a subset of all the ksatriyas . One needed to
be not just a warrior, but a member of a specific royal clan, the rajanya.29
Evidence from a number of sources shows that the enfranchised members of
many republics, including the Buddha's own Sakyas and the Licchavis with
whom he was very familiar, considered themselves to be of royal descent,
even brother-kings. The term raja, which in a monarchy certainly
meant king, in a state with gana or sangha constitution could
designate someone who held a share in sovereignty. In such places, it seems
likely that political power was restricted to the heads of a restricted
number of "royal families" (rajakulas) among the ruling clans. The
heads of these families were consecrated as kings, and thereafter took
part in deliberations of state.
Our Indian republics are beginning to sound extremely
undemocratic by our modern standards, with real power concentrated in the
hands of a few patriarchs representing the leading lineages of one privileged
section of the warrior caste. A reader who has formed this impression is
not entirely mistaken. No doubt the rulers of most republics thought of
their gana as a closed club -- as did the citizens of Athens, who
also defined themselves as a hereditarily privileged group. But, as in
ancient Athens, there are other factors which modify the picture, and make
it an interesting one for students of democracy.
First, the closed nature of the ruling class is
easy to exaggerate. Republics where only descendants of certain families
held power were common; but there was another type in which power was shared
by all ksatriya families.31 This may not sound
like much of a difference, since the restriction to the warrior caste seems
to remain. But this is an anachronistic view of the social conditions of
the time. The varnas of pre-Christian-era India were not the castes
of later periods, with their prohibitions on intermarriage and commensality
with other groups.32
Rather, they were the constructs of theorists, much like the division of
three orders (priests, warriors and workers) beloved by European writers
of the Early Middle Ages.33
Such a classification was useful for debating purposes, but was not a fact
of daily existence. Those republics that threw open the political process
to all ksatriyas were not extending the franchise from one clearly
defined group to another, albeit a larger one, but to all those who could
claim, and justify the claim, to be capable of ruling and fighting.
Other evidence suggests that in some states the
enfranchised group was even wider. Such a development is hinted at in Kautilya:
according to him, there were two kinds of janapadas, ayudhiya-praya,
those made up mostly of soldiers, and sreni-praya , those comprising
guilds of craftsmen, traders, and agriculturalists.34
The first were political entities where military tradition alone defined
those worthy of power, while the second would seem to be communities where
wealth derived from peaceful economic activity gave some access to the
political process. This interpretation is supported by the fact that sreni
or guilds based on an economic interest were often both part of the armed
force of a state and recognized as having jurisdiction over their own members.35
In the Indian republics, as in the Greek poleis or the European
cities of the High Middle Ages, economic expansion enabled new groups to
take up arms and eventually demand a share in sovereignty36
If it was not granted, one could always form one's own mini-state. Panini's
picture of stable, long-established janapadas is certainly the illusion
of a systematizing grammarian. As Panini's most thorough modern student
has put it, there was "a craze for constituting new republics" which "had
reached its climax in the Vahika country and north-west India where
clans constituting of as many as one hundred families only organized themselves
as Ganas."37
Furthermore, power in some republics was vested in a large number of individuals.
In a well-known Jataka tale we are told that in the Licchavi capital
of Vesali, there were 7707 kings (rajas), 7707 viceroys, 7707 generals,
and 7707 treasurers.38
These figures, since they come from about half a millenium after the period
they describe, have little evidentiary value, despite the ingenious efforts
of scholars to find a core of hard fact. The tale does not give us the
number of Licchavi ruling families (rajakulas), the size of the
Licchavi assembly, or any real clues as to the population of Vesali.39
Yet the Jataka does retain the memory of an undisputed feature of
Indian republicanism: the rulers were many.40
The same memory can be found in other sources, especially in those critical
of republicanism. The Lalitavistara, in an obvious satirical jab,
depicts Vesali as being full of Licchavi rajans , each one thinking,
"I am king, I am king," and thus a place where piety, age and rank were
ignored.41
The Santi Parva section of the Mahabharata shows the participation
of too many people in the affairs of state as being a great flaw in the
republican polity:
The gana leaders should be respected
as the worldly affairs (of the ganas) depend to a great extent upon
them...the spy (department) and the secrecy of counsel (should be left)
to the chiefs, for it is not fit that the entire body of the gana
should hear those secret matters. The chiefs of gana should carry
out together, in secret, works leading to the prosperity of the gana
, otherwise the wealth of the gana decays and it meets with danger.42
A Jaina work again criticizes ganas for being
disorderly: the monks and nuns who frequent them will find themselves bullied,
beaten, robbed, or accused of being spies.43
The numerous members of a sovereign gana
or sangha interacted with each other as members of an assembly.
Details of the working of such assemblies can be found both in Brahmanical
and Buddhist literature. By the time of Panini (fifth century B.C.), there
was a terminology for the process of corporate decision-making. Panini
gives us the terms for vote, decisions reached by voting, and the completion
of a quorum. Another cluster of words indicates that the division of assemblies
into political parties was well known. Further, Panini and his commentators
show that sometimes a smaller select group within a sangha had special
functions -- acting as an executive, or perhaps as a committees for defined
purposes.44
The Pali Canon gives a much fuller, if somewhat
indirect, depiction of democratic institutions in India, confirming and
extending the picture found in Panini. This is found in three of the earliest
and most revered parts of the canon, the Maha-parinibbana-suttanta,
the Mahavagga, and the Kullavagga.45
These works, taken together, preserve the Buddha's instructions for the
proper running of the Buddhist monastic brotherhood -- the sangha
-- after his death. They are the best source for voting procedures in a
corporate body in the earliest part of the Buddhist period. They also give
some insight into the development of democratic ideology.
The rules for conducting the Buddhist sangha
were, according to the first chapter of the Maha-parinibbana-suttanta,
based in principle on those commonly found in political sanghas
or ganas. In the case of the Buddhist sangha, the key organizational
virtue was the full participation of all the monks in the ritual and disciplinary
acts of their group. To assure that this would be remembered, detailed
rules concerning the voting in monastic assemblies, their membership, and
their quorums, were set down in the Mahavagga and the Kullavagga
.
Business could only be transacted legitimately
in a full assembly, by a vote of all the members. If, for example, a candidate
wanted the upasampada ordination, the question (ñatti)
was put to the sangha by a learned and competent member, and the
other members asked three times to indicate dissent. If there was none,
the sangha was taken to be in agreement with the ñatti.
The decision was finalized by the proclamation of the decision of the sangha.46
In many cases, as in the granting of upasampada
ordination, unanimity of a full assembly was required.47
Of course, unanimity was not always possible. The Kullavagga provides
other techniques that were used in disputes especially dangerous to the
unity of the sangha, those which concerned interpretation of the
monastic rule itself. If such a dispute had degenerated into bitter and
confused debate, it could be decided by majority vote, or referred to a
jury or committee specially elected by the sangha to treat the matter
at hand.48
It is here that we see a curious combination of
well-developed democratic procedure and fear of democracy. The rules for
taking votes sanctioned the disallowance by the vote-taker of results that
threatened the essential law of the sangha or its unity.49
Yet, if the voting procedure is less than free, the idea that only a free
vote could decide contentious issues is strongly present. No decision could
be made until some semblance of agreement had been reached.50
Such manipulations of voting were introduced because Buddhist elders were
very concerned about the survival of the religious enterprise: disunity
of the membership was the great fear of all Indian republics and corporations.51
Yet the idea of a free vote could not be repudiated. The Kullavagga
illustrates a conflict within the Buddhist sangha during its earliest
centuries between democratic principles and a philosophy that was willing
in the name of unity to sacrifice them.
Since the rules of the Buddhist sangha
are by far the best known from the period we have been discussing, it is
tempting to identify them with the rules of political ganas, particularly
those of the Licchavis (or Vajjians), since the Buddha made a clear connection
between the principles applicable to the Licchavi polity and those of his
sangha.52
But from early on, scholars have recognized that the Buddhist constitution
was not an exact imitation of any other: for instance, sovereign republics
had a small, elected executive committee to manage the affairs of the gana
when the whole membership of the gana was unable to be assembled.53
But neither did the Buddha or his earliest followers invent their complex
and carefully formulated parliamentary procedures out of whole cloth. R.C.
Majumdar's conclusion, first formulated in 1918, still seems valid: the
techniques seen in the Buddhist sangha reflect a sophisticated and
widespread political culture based on the popular assembly.54
Similarly, the value placed on full participation
of members in the affairs of their sangha must reflect the ideology
of those who believed in the sangha-gana form of government in the
political sphere. The Buddha's commitment to republicanism (or at least
the ideal republican virtues) was a strong one, if we are to believe the
Maha-parinibbana-suttanta, among the oldest of Buddhist texts.55
As is common in the Buddhist scriptures, a precept is illustrated by a
story. Here Ajatasastru, the King of Maghada, wishes to destroy the Vajjian
confederacy (here = the Licchavis) 56
and sends a minister, Vassakara the Brahman, to the Buddha to ask his advice.
Will his attack be a success? Rather than answer directly, the Buddha speaks
to Ananda, his closest disciples:
"Have you heard, Ananda, that the Vajjians
hold full and frequent public assemblies?"
"Lord, so I have heard," replied he.
"So long, Ananda," rejoined the Blessed One, "as
the Vajjians hold these full and frequent public assemblies; so long may
they be expected not to decline, but to prosper...
In a series of rhetorical questions to Ananda, the
Buddha outlines other requirements for Vajjian prosperity:
"So long, Ananda, as the Vajjians meet
together in concord, and rise in concord, and carry out their undertakings
in concord...so long as they enact nothing not already established, abrogate
nothing that has been already enacted, and act in accordance with the ancient
institutions of the Vajjians as established in former days...so long as
they honor and esteem and revere and support the Vajjian elders, and hold
it a point of duty to hearken to their words...so long as no women or girls
belonging to their clans are detained among them by force or abduction...so
long as they honor and esteem and revere and support the Vajjian shrines
in town or country, and allow not the proper offerings and rites, as formerly
given and performed, to fall into desuetude...so long as the rightful protection,
defense, and support shall be fully provided for the Arahats among them,
so that Arahats from a distance may enter the realm, and the Arahats therein
may live at ease -- so long may the Vajjians be expected not to decline,
but to prosper."
Then the Blessed One addressed Vassakara the Brahman,
and said, "When I was once staying, O Brahman, at Vesali at the Sarandada
Temple, I taught the Vajjians these conditions of welfare; and so long
as those conditions shall continue to exist among the Vajjians, so long
as the Vajjians shall be well instructed in those conditions, so long may
we expect them not to decline, but to prosper."
The comment of the king's ambassador underlines the
point of this advice: "So, Gotama, the Vajjians cannot be overcome by the
king of Magadha; that is, not in battle, without diplomacy or breaking
up their alliance."
The same story tells us that once the king's envoy
had departed, the Buddha and Ananda went to meet the assembly of monks.
Buddha told the monks that they too must observe seven conditions if they
were to prosper: Full and frequent assemblies, concord, preserving and
not abrogating established institutions, honoring elders, falling "not
under the influence of that craving which, springing up within them, would
give rise to renewed existence," delighting in a life of solitude, and
training "their minds that good and holy men shall come to them, and those
who have come shall dwell at ease." 57
These precepts, and others that follow in sets of seven, were the main
point for the monks who have transmitted the Maha-parinibbana-suttanta
to us. We, however, may wish to emphasize another point: the Buddha saw
the virtues necessary for a righteous and prosperous community, whether
secular or monastic, as being much the same. Foremost among those virtues
was the holding of "full and frequent assemblies." In this, the Buddha
spoke not only for himself, and not only out of his personal view of justice
and virtue. He based himself on what may be called the democratic tradition
in ancient Indian politics -- democratic in that it argued for a wide rather
than narrow distribution of political rights, and government by discussion
rather than by command and submission.58
The Pali Canon gives us our earliest, and perhaps
our best, detailed look at Indian republicanism, its workings, and its
political philosophy. About no other republics do we know as much as we
do about the Buddhist sangha and the Licchavis in the time of Buddha
-- even though we do know that republics survived and were a significant
factor until perhaps the fourth century A.D., a period of over 800 years.
Scattered inscriptions, a great number of coins, and the occasional notice
in Greek sources, the Jatakas or other Indian literature give us
a few facts. But any history of Indian republicanism is necessarily a rather
schematic one.
The theme that has most attracted the attention
of scholars is the constant danger to republicanism, and its ultimate failure.
Much of what we know about the sovereign ganas of India derives
from stories of attacks upon them by various conquerors. Yet it is remarkable
that for several centuries, the conspicuous successes of monarchs, even
the greatest, had only a temporary effect on the sovereign republics and
very little effect indeed on the corporate organization of guilds, religious
bodies, and villages. The reason is, of course, that Indian kings have
seldom been as mighty as they wished to be, or wished to be presented.
Conquerors were not in a position to restructure society, to create states
as we visualize them today. Rather they were usually content to gain the
submission of their neighbors, whether they were other kings or republics.59
These defeated rivals were often left in control of their own affairs,
merely required to pay tribute and provide troops for the conquerors next
war. The great emperors of ancient India, including Chandragupta Maurya
and Asoka, ran rather precarious realms. Once the center weakened, these
unraveled very quickly, and society returned to its preceding complexity.
Rival dynasties revived, as did defeated republics.60
As Altekar recognized, the mere existence of warlords
was not fatal to the republican tradition of politics. Far more important
was the slow abandonment of republican ideals by republicans themselves.
We have seen that many republics were content even in the earliest days
with a very exclusive definition of the political community. In some, ideas
of wider participation gained currency and even implementation. But the
contrary movement is easier to document. By the third and fourth centuries
A.D., states known to be republics in earlier times were subject to hereditary
executives. Eventually such republics became monarchies.61
An evolution away from republicanism is clearly
seen in the literature of politics and religion. If we grant that the society
depicted by the Pali Canon is the beginning of a new era, one with an economy
and culture quite distinct from the Vedic period, it immediately becomes
obvious that the most democratic ideals are the earliest. The Pali Canon,
and to some extent the Jaina Canon, show us energetic movements that rejected
the hierarchialism and caste ideology seen in the Vedas and Brahmanas in
favor of more egalitarian values. Buddhism and Jainism were scarcely exceptional:
they are merely the most successful of many contemporary religious movements,
and left us records. It is clear from Panini that egalitarianism was an
important element in the fifth century B.C.: he preserves a special term
for the gana where "there was no distinction between high and low." 62
Such Brahmanical classics as the Mahabharata,
the writings of Kautilya and the Manu-Smrti, works that promoted
hierarchy, are manifestations of a later movement (300 B.C.-200 A.D.) away
from the degree of egalitarianism that had been achieved. Kautilya, who
is traditionally identified with the chief minister of the Mauryan conqueror
Chandragupta Maurya (fl. after 300 B.C.), is famous for his advice to monarchs
on the best way to tame or destroy ganas through subterfuge; perhaps
a more important part of his achievement was to formulate a political science
in which royalty was normal, even though his own text shows that ganas
were very important factors in the politics of his time.63
Similarly, the accomplishment of the Manu-Smrti was to formulate
a view of society where human equality was non-existent and unthinkable.
Members of ganas were encouraged to fit
themselves into a hierarchical, monarchical framework by a number of factors.
Kings were not the only enemies of the ganas . The relationships
between competing ganas must have been a constant political problem.
Ganas that claimed sovereignty over certain territory were always
faced by the competing claims of other corporate groups.64
How were these claims to be sorted out, other than by force? The king had
an answer to this question: if he were acknowledged as "the only monarch
[i.e. raja, chief executive] of all the corporations," 65
he would commit himself to preserving the legitimate privileges of each
of them, and even protect the lesser members of each gana from abuse
of power by their leaders. It was a tempting offer, and since the alternative
was constant battle, it was slowly accepted, sometimes freely, sometimes
under compulsion. The end result was the acceptance of a social order in
which many ganas and sanghas existed, but none were sovereign
and none were committed to any general egalitarian view of society. They
were committed instead to a hierarchy in which they were promised a secure
place.66
Such a notional hierarchy seems to have been constructed in North India
by the fifth century A.D. Even the Buddhist sangha accommodated
itself to it -- which led eventually to the complete victory of the rival
Brahmans.
This was not quite the end of republicanism, because
"government by discussion" continued within many ganas and sanghas
; but the idea of hierarchy and inequality, of caste, was increasingly
dominant. The degree of corporate autonomy in later Indian society, which
is considerable and in itself a very important fact, is in this sense a
different topic that the one we have been following. A corporation that
accepts itself as a subcaste in a great divine hierarchy is different from
the more pugnacious ganas and sanghas of the Pali Canon,
Kautilya or even the Jataka stories.
What have modern historians made of what we might
call the golden age of Indian republicanism? We have already distinguished
above between two eras of scholarship on the topic. In the first, patriotic
enthusiasm and the simple thrill of discovery of unsuspected material characterized
scholars' reactions. The former attitude was especially seen in K.P. Jayaswal's
Hindu Polity . Published first in article form in 1911-1913, then
as a book in 1924, Jayaswal's work was avowedly aimed to show that his
countrymen were worthy of independence from Britain. The history of "Hindu"
institutions demonstrated an ancient talent for politics:
The test of a polity is its capacity
to live and develop, and its contribution to the culture and happiness
of humanity. Hindu polity judged by this test will come out very successfully...The
Golden Age of [the Hindu's] polity lies not in the Past but in the Future...
Constitutional or social advancement is not a monopoly of any particular
race.67
In Jayaswal's book scholarship was sometimes subordinated
to his argument. In his discussion of ancient republics (which was not
his only subject), the evidence was pushed at least as far as it would
go to portray the republics as inspiring examples of early democracy.68
A similar, though quieter satisfaction can be seen in the contemporary
discussions of R.C. Majumdar and D.R. Bhandarkar.69
In the second period of scholarship, in the years
since independence, a more restrained attitude has been adopted by younger
scholars who feel they have nothing to prove. Among these scholars the
general tendency has been to emphasize that the republics were not real
republics, in the modern usage that implies a universal adult suffrage.
The clan-basis and the exclusiveness of the ruling class are much discussed.
Sometimes writers have bent over backwards to divorce the Indian republican
experience from the history of democracy: 70
thus A.K. Majumdar's judgement that because in a gana-rajya "all
inhabitants other than the members of the raja-kulas [had] no rights
[and] were treated as inferior citizens," people were actually better off
in the monarchies, where "if not the general mass, at least the intellectuals
and the commercial community enjoyed freedom in a monarchy, which seems
to have been lacking in a gana-rajya." 71
The contrast drawn here is not backed up by any real argument, and makes
one wonder about the how the author defines "freedom."
The reaction has perhaps gone too far.72
One feels that modern scholars have still not come to grips with the existence
of widespread republicanism in a region so long thought to be the home
par excellence of "Oriental Despotism." 73
Republicanism now has a place in every worthwhile book about ancient India,
but it tends to be brushed aside so that one can get back to the main story,
which is the development of the surviving Hindu tradition.74
Historians, in India as elsewhere, seem to feel that anything which could
be so thoroughly forgotten must have had grievous flaws to begin with.75
Most historians still cannot discuss these republics without qualifying
using the qualifiers "tribal" or "clan."76
Long ago Jayaswal rightly protested against the use of these terms: "The
evidence does not warrant our calling [republics] 'clans.' Indian republics
of the seventh [sic] and sixth centuries B.C...had long passed the tribal
stage of society. They were states, Ganas and Samghas, though
many of them likely had a national or tribal basis, as every state, ancient
or modern, must necessarily have." 77
He was equally correct when he pointed out that "Every state in ancient
Rome and Greece was 'tribal' in the last analysis, but no constitutional
historian would think of calling the republics of Rome and Greece mere
tribal organizations." 78
Yet the phrases "clan-" and "tribal-republic"
are still routinely used today in the Indian context, and it is difficult
to avoid the conclusion that they are being used perjoratively. In both
common and scholarly usage, to label a people's institutions or culture
as tribal is to dismiss them from serious consideration. "Tribespeople"
are historical dead-ends, and their suppression or absorption by more advanced
cultures (usually those ruled by centralizing governments) is taken for
granted.79
The terminology of even Indian historians demonstrates the survival of
an ancient but inappropriate prejudice in the general evaluation of Indian
republicanism.
Once that prejudice is overcome, Indian republicanism
gains a strong claim on the attention of historians, especially those with
an interest in comparative or world history.
It is especially remarkable that, during the near-millenium
between 500 B.C. and 400 A.D., we find republics almost anywhere in India
that our sources allow us to examine society in any detail. Unless those
sources, not least our Greek sources, are extremely deceptive, the republics
of India were very likely more extensive and populous than the poleis
of the Greeks.80
One cannot help wondering how in many other parts of Eurasia republican
and democratic states may have co-existed with the royal dynasties that
are a staple of both ancient and modern chronology and conceptualization.
This may well be an unanswerable question, but so far no one has even tried
to investigate it. If an investigation is made, we may discover things
that are as surprising to us as the republics of India originally were.
The existence of Indian republicanism is a discovery
of the twentieth century. The implications of this phenomenon have yet
to be fully digested, because historians of the past century have been
inordinately in love with the virtues of centralized authority and government
by experts, and adhered to an evolutionary historicism that has little
good to say about either direct or representative democracy. Perhaps the
love affair is fading. If so, historians will find, in the Indian past
as elsewhere, plenty of raw material for a new history of the development
of human government.
Notes for "Democracy in Ancient India"
In referring to classical sources, I have usually
not given full citations to the editions, on the assumption that specialists
will know how to find them, but that general readers will be more interested
in the translations.
Also, references to Indian primary materials will
be made to English translations (where available). Nearly all the secondary
literature on the topic is in English.
1. See for example Herodotus,
The Histories 7. 135, trans. Aubrey de Sélincourt, rev. ed.
(Harmondsworth, 1972), p. 485: the famous reply of the Spartan emissaries
to the Persian general Hydarnes. Back
to text.
2. For more on this, see Steven
Muhlberger and Phil Paine, "Democracy's Place in World History," Journal
of World History 4 (1993): 23-45 and the World
History of Democracy site, especially Chapter
Two -- Democracy at the Basic Level: Government by consent in small communities.
Back
to text.
3. A.S. Altekar, State and
Government in Ancient India, 3rd edn. rev. and enlarged (Delhi, 1958;
first ed. 1949), p. 1; the Manu-Smrti translated by G. Bühler
as The Laws of Manu, vol. 25 of Sacred Books of the East,
hereafter SBE] ed. F. Max Müller (Oxford, 1886). Back
to text.
4. Kautilya's Arthasastra,
trans. by R. Shamasastry, 4th ed. (Mysore, 1951; first ed. 1915).
Back to text.
5. Altekar, State and Government
in Ancient India, p. 1 (hereafter State and Government ); but
see the same work, p. 109, where the statement is qualified as a prelude
to discussing republics.
Back to text.
6. Altekar, State and Government,
pp. 110-111; K.P. Jayaswal, Hindu Polity: A Constitutional History of
India in Hindu Times, 2nd. and enl. ed. (Bangalore, 1943), p. 58. Back
to text.
7. An introduction to the Pali
Canon may be found in R.C. Majumdar, The History and Culture of the
Indian People, vol. 2, The Age of Imperial Unity, (Bombay, 1951),
pp. 396-411. Back
to text.
8. (London, 1903). Back
to text.
9. See, for instance, Sir Henry
Sumner Maine, Village Communities in the East and West (1889; reprint
edn. New York, 1974). Back
to text.
10. K.P. Jayaswal, Hindu Polity:
A Constitutional History of India in Hindu Times 2nd and enl. edn.
(Bangalore, 1943), published first in article form in 1911-13; D.R. Bhandarkar,
Lectures on the Ancient History of India on the Period form 650 to 325
B.C., The Carmichael Lectures, 1918 (Calcutta, 1919); R.C. Majumdar.
Corporate Life in Ancient India, (orig. written in 1918; cited here
from the 3rd ed., Calcutta, 1969, as Corporate Life). Back
to text.
11. E.g. Altekar (n. 6); J.P.
Sharma, Republics in Ancient India, c. 1500 B.C.-500 B.C. (Leiden,
1968) [hereafter Republics]; U.N. Ghoshal, A History of Indian
Public Life, vol. 2, The Pre-Maurya and Maurya Period (Oxford,
1966). For the embarrassment, see Sharma, Republics, pp. 2-3. Back
to text.
12. Sharma, Republics,
pp. 15-62, 237. Back
to text.
13. Narendra Wagle, Society
at the Time of the Buddha (Bombay: 1966), pp. 27-28. Back
to text.
14. Wagle, Society at the
Time of the Buddha, pp. 147-148. Back
to text.
15. Sukumar Dutt, Buddhist
Monks and Monasteries of India (London, 1957), pp. 35-44. Back
to text.
16. V.S. Agrawala, India as
Known to Panini: A study of the cultural material in the Ashatadhyayi,
2nd edn. rev. and enl. (Varanasi, 1963), pp. 426-444 [hereafter, Panini];
Sharma, Republics, pp. 8-14. A.K. Majumdar, Concise History of
Ancient History, vol. 2: Political Theory, Administration, and Economic
Life (New Delhi, 1980), p. 131 [hereafter, Concise History].
Back
to text.
17. It is often assumed in the
literature that mercenary bands or wild tribes must be clearly distinguished
from true political communities. A reading of Xenophon's Anabasis
(trans. by W.H.D. Rouse as The March Up Country (New York and East
Lansing, 1959)) would give food for thought about this distinction. The
army Xenophon was part of and led for a time is perhaps the best documented
example of the day-to-day political life of a Greek community that we have.
Back
to text.
18. See "Arrianus, Flavius" Oxford
Classical Dictionary, 2nd edn. (Oxford, 1970), pp. 122-123. Back
to text.
19.. Arrian 5.1-2; all translations
from the Greek sources are taken from R.C. Majumdar's compilation, The
Classical Accounts of India (Calcutta, 1960) [hereafter Classical
Accounts] -- in this case, p. 20. However, those who don't have access
to that handy work can find these authors, whose books are all well-known
classical works, in standard editions and translations. Back
to text.
20. Arrian, 5.22, 5.25-6.14,
Classical Accounts, pp. 47, 64-75. Back
to text.
21. Q. Curtius Rufus, History
of Alexander the Great 9.8, Classical Accounts, p. 151; Diodorus
Siculus, Bibliotheca Historica 17.104, Classical Accounts,
p. 180. Back
to text.
22. Ibid. Back
to text.
23. Altekar, State and Government,
p. 111. Back
to text.
24. Diodorus Siculus 2.39, Classical
Accounts, p. 236; cf. Arrian's Indika 9, Classical Accounts,
p. 223, which seems to derive from the same source, i.e. Megasthenes, for
whom see below. Back
to text.
25. Otto Stein, "Megasthenes
(2)," Real-Encyclopädie der classischen Altertumwissenschaft,
ed. A. von Pauly, G. Wissowa, et. al. (Stuttgart, 1893-) vol. 15, pt. 1,
col. 232-3. Back
to text.
26. R.C. Majumdar, Classical
Accounts, Appendix I, pp. 461-473, throws doubt on the authority of
this whole section of Diodorus (2.35-42, called "the Epitome of Megasthenes,"),
but classicists do not share his doubts, though they grant that the original
material may have been handled roughly by later epitomizers. See Otto Stein,
"Megasthenes (2)," col. 255; Barbara C.J. Timmer, Megasthenes en de
Indische Maatschaapij (Amsterdam, 1930); Diodorus of Sicily,
trans. by C.H. Oldfather Cambridge, Mass. and London, 1935), vol. 2, p.
vii. Back
to text.
27. Kautilya, 11.1; Agrawala,
Panini, pp. 445-457; see the short history of known republics in
Altekar, State and Government pp. 118-123. See Joseph E. Schwartzenberg,
ed., A Historical Atlas of South Asia (Chicago and London, 1978),
p. 16 (Plate III.B.2). Back
to text.
28. Agrawala, Panini,
pp. 426-428; Benoychandra Sen, Studies in the Buddhist Jatakas: Tradition
and Polity (Calcutta, 1974), pp. 157-159. Back
to text.
29. Agrawala, Panini,
pp. 430-432. Back
to text.
30. Altekar, State and Government,
p. 135; Sharma, Republics, pp. 12-13, 99-108, 112, 175-176. Back
to text.
31. Altekar, State and Government,
p. 114. Back
to text.
32. Wagle, Society at the
Time of the Buddha, pp. 132-33, 156-158. Back
to text.
33. Georges Duby, The Three
Orders: Feudal Society Imagined, tr. Victor Goldhammer (Chicago, 1980);
Jacques Le Goff, "Labor, Techniques and Craftsmen in the Value Systems
of the Early Middle Ages (Fifth to Tenth Centuries)," in Time, Work,
and Culture in the Middle Ages, tr. Victor Goldhammer (Chicago, 1980),
pp. 71-86. Back
to text.
34. Agrawala, Panini,
pp. 436-439. Contra, Ghoshal, A History of Indian Public Life, ii,
p. 195, n. 5, who rejects Agrawala's interpretation of the evidence in
Panini and Kautilya, and insists on a strict (but anachronistic) division
between political, military, and social and economic groups. A fair reading
of Kautilya shows that "corporations" of whatever sort could be important
political and military factors, whether they were sovereign or not, and
whether they "lived by the name of raja" (Kautilya, 11.1, tr. Shamasastry,
p. 407) or not. Back
to text.
35. See esp. R.C. Majumdar, Corporate
Life, pp. 18-29, 60-63; Charles Drekmeier, Kingship and Community
in Early India (Stanford, 1962), pp. 275-277. Back
to text.
36. W.G. Forrest, The Emergence
of Greek Democracy, 800-400 B.C. (New York, 1966), esp. pp. 67-97;
J.K. Hyde, Society and Politics in Medieval Italy: The Evolution of
the Civil Life, 1000-1350, esp. 48-60, 104-118; John Hine Mundy, Liberty
and Political Power in Toulouse 1050-1230 (New York, 1954). Back
to text.
37. Agrawala, Panini,
p. 432. Again cf. Italy at the beginning of the High Middle Ages, Hyde,
Society and Politics in Medieval Italy, pp. 56-57. Back
to text.
38. Jataka 149, trans.
in The Jataka, or Stories of the Buddha's Former Births, ed. E.B.
Cowell, tr. by Various Hands, 6 vols. (1895; reprint, London, 1957), 1:
316. Jataka 301 (Cowell trans., 3: 1) also mentions 7707 kings,
"all of them given to argument and disputation." Back
to text.
39. Every scholar to approach
this material has wrestled with this number, none more diligently than
Sharma, Republics, pp. 99-104. It is hard to take any of them very
seriously once one has examined Jataka 149 itself. Here, as in many
other places, 7077 is used as a large, ideal number. Back
to text.
40. Similarly suggestive numbers
can be found in Jataka 465 (Cowell trans., 4: 94) where 500 Licchavi
kings (not necessarily the entire body of kings) are mentioned; in the
Mahavastu, which refers to "twice 84,000 Licchavi rajas residing
within the city of Vesali," (Sharma, Republics, p. 99; the Mahavastu
is yet untranslated into a European language) and Jataka 547 (Cowell
trans., 6: 266), which mentions 60,000 ksatriyas in the Ceta state,
all of whom were styled rajano (Agrawala, Panini, p. 432).
Back
to text.
41. Agrawala, Panini,
p. 430; Sharma, Republics, p. 101; A.K. Majumdar, Concise History,
2: 140. No translation of the Lalitavistara into a European language
was available to me. Back
to text.
42. Mahabharata 12.107,
trans. by R.C. Majumdar, Corporate Life, 251. Back
to text.
43. A.K. Majumdar, Concise
History, 2: 140, referring to Acharangasutra II.3.1.10. The
SBE translation of the Acharangasutra (vol. 22 (1884), tr. Hermann
Jacobi) of this passage entirely conceals the meaning of gana. This
is typical of older translations, and some not so old (e.g. the Roy trans.
of the Mahabharata, Santi Parva (Calcutta, 1962), c. 107, where
Roy insists that gana here must be understood as denoting an aristocracy
of wealth and blood). Back
to text.
44. Agrawala, Panini,
pp. 433-435. Back
to text.
45. The Maha-parinibbana-suttanta:
Buddhist Suttas vol. 1, tr. T.W. Rhys Davids, SBE 11 (1881): 1-136.
Mahavagga, Kullavagga, and Pattimokkha: Vinaya Texts, tr.
T.W. Rhys Davids and H. Oldenberg, SBE vol. 13, 17, 20 (1881, 1882, 1885).
Back
to text.
46. Mahavagga 1.28, SBE
13: 169-170. Back
to text.
47. Note complex rules, e.g.
Mahavagga 9.4.7-8, SBE 17: 217-272, establishing who has the right
to vote (i.e., in such cases, to object). Back
to text.
48. Kullavagga 4.9-14,
SBE 20: 24-65. Back
to text.
49. Kullavagga 4.10.1,
SBE 20: 20-26, where it is stated that taking of votes is invalid "when
the taker of votes [an elected official] knows that those whose opinions
are not in accordance with the law will be in the majority," or "when he
is in doubt whether the voting will result in a schism in the Samgha,"
or "when they do not vote in accordance with the view that they really
hold." Kullavagga 4.14.26, SBE 20: 56-57 shows how the vote-taker
was permitted to prevent the will of the majority from being enacted even
in a secret vote, by throwing out the results if the winners' opinion went
against the law -- or his interpretation of it. Back
to text.
50. See Kullavagga 4.14.25-26,
SBE 20: 54-57, where the emphasis is on reconciling monks to a decision
which they were opposed to. Voting is one method of doing so; manipulation
of votes preserves the religious law without splitting the sangha.
Back
to text.
51. It is commonly accepted by
scholars that the regulations we have been discussing are, in the form
we have them, the product of a long evolution, though all of them are attributed
to the Buddha. See Rhys Davids' and Oldenberg's introduction to the Vinaya
Texts, SBE 13: ix-xxxvii, and notes throughout. For the concern with
disunity, see the extract from the Maha-parinibbana-suttanta (i.1)
below; the Mahabharata, Santi Parva 107, and Kautilya, 11.1 (which
despite their monarchist purpose, contain passages of republican thought
-- see below, n. 71); Altekar, State and Government, pp. 129-130;
A.K. Majumdar, Concise History, 2: 140. Back
to text.
52. Maha-parinibbana-suttanta
1.1, SBE 9: 6-7; see below. Back
to text.
53. Altekar, pp. 126-127, 132-134;
Sharma, Republics, pp. 12, 110-111. Back
to text.
54. Corporate Life, pp.
233-234; A.K. Majumdar, Concise History, 2: 137. Back
to text.
55. The Maha-parinibbana-suttanta
is the story of the "great decease of the Buddha" and as such includes
both colorful anecdotes and important last-minute instructions to his followers.
Back
to text.
56. The Pali Canon uses both
the term Vajji (Vriji in Sanskrit) and Licchavi to designate a republican
polity based at Vesali. Scholars believe that the Licchavi were the people
who lived at Vesali, while Vajji was the name of a confederation that they
headed. For a detailed discussion, see Sharma, Republics, pp. 81-84,
93-97. Back
to text.
57. Maha-parinibbana-suttanta
1.1, SBE 11: 6-7. Back
to text.
58. In this sense R.C. Majumdar
was right in calling the Buddha "an apostle of democracy;" Corporate
Life, p. 219. Contra, Drekmeier, Kingship and Community in Early
India, p. 113. Back
to text.
59. Sen, Studies in the Buddhist
Jatakas, pp. 60-64. Compare Burton Stein, Peasant State and Society
in Medieval South India (Delhi, 1980) for a similar evaluation of South
Indian monarchy in a later period. Back
to text.
60. Altekar, State and Government,
p. 136. Back
to text.
61. Altekar, State and Government,
pp. 137-138; A.K. Majumdar, Concise History, 2: 144. Back
to text.
62. Agrawala, Panini,
p. 428. What may be the clearest statement of egalitarian political ideology
only comes to us through many intermediaries, as a tantalizing passage
in Diodorus Siculus (2.39; Classical Accounts, p. 236) which seems
to derive from Megasthenes: "Of several remarkable customs existing among
the Indians, there is one prescribed by their [sc. Indian] ancient philosophers
which one may regard as truly admirable: for the law ordains that no one
among them shall, under any circumstances, be a slave, but that, enjoying
freedom, they shall respect the principle of equality in all persons: for
those, they thought, who have learned neither to domineer over nor to cringe
to others will attain the life best adapted for all vicissitudes of lot:
since it is silly to make laws on the basis of equality of all persons
and yet to establish inequalities in social intercourse." Megasthenes (who
was a contemporary of Kautilya) is often criticized for the good reason
that slavery and other forms of inequality did indeed exist among the Indians.
But perhaps he correctly presented the views of "their ancient philosophers."
Back
to text.
63. Kautilya, 11.1, Shamasastry
tr. p. 410. The Mahabharata, Santi Parva, a royalist treatise on
morality and politics, likewise mentions ganas (in c. 107; cf. c.
81) only to show how a raja who is not yet a true monarch in his
state can implement his will -- and as we have seen, eliminating popular
participation in government is an essential part of this. It is interesting
to note that there are in both works passages that urge the raja
to cooperate with the gana and, like the Maha-parinibbana-suttanta,
emphasize the dangers to a gana of disunity. R.C. Majumdar (in Ancient
India, 7th ed. (Delhi, 1974), p. 159) regarded Mahabharata, Santi
Parva 107 as a piece of republican political science reworked for monarchist
purposes. Back
to text.
64. Altekar, State and Government,
p. 124, draws attention to the existence of republican-style local government
within the greater republic. Cf. the Italian situation described by Hyde,
Society and Politics in Medieval Italy, p. 104: "Government under
medieval conditions was always a precarious matter...the Italian cities
faced special problems of their own, derived from the fact that the commune
was originally no more than one kind of societas in a society that
abounded in societates, so that it was an uphill task to assert
any special claim to the loyalty and obedience of the citizens." Back
to text.
65. Kautilya, 11.1, Shamasastry
trans., p. 410. Back
to text.
66. See R.C. Majumdar, Corporate
Life, pp. 42-59 for the attitude of later Dharmasastra writers to the
place of semi-autonomous corporations and kindreds in the monarchical polity
of the fifth century A.D. and later. Back
to text.
67. Pp. 366-367. Back
to text.
68. N.B. the introduction: "To
the memory of the Republican Vrishnis, Kathas, Vaisalas, and Sakyas who
announced philosophies of freedom from devas, death, cruelty and caste."
Back
to text.
69. See above, n. 10. Back
to text.
70. See esp. Ghoshal's treatment,
A History of Indian Public Life, ii, pp. 185-197, which goes almost
as far in one direction as Jayaswal went in the other. Cf. Drekmeier, Kingship
and Community in Early India, p. 279; A.K. Majumdar, Concise History,
ii, pp. 139-144; Burton Stein, "Politics, Peasants and the Deconstruction
of Feudalism in Medieval India," Journal of Peasant Studies, xii,
no. 2-3 (1985), p. 62 (discussing South India at a later period). Back
to text.
71. A.K. Majumdar, Concise
History, 2: 143. Back
to text.
72. A similar tendency in recent
decades to dismiss democratic elements in classical Athens and republican
Rome is now being challenged: e.g. Ellen Meiksins Wood, Peasant-Citizens
and Slave: The Foundation of Athenian Democracy, corrected paperback
edn. (London, 1989) and much more cautiously by John North, "Politics and
Aristocracy in the Roman Republic," Classical Philology, 85 (1990):
277-287 and reply to W.V. Harris's criticisms, pp. 297-298; John North,
"Democratic Politics in Republican Rome," Past and Present 126 (1990):
3-21. Back
to text.
73. Romila Thapar, A History
of India, vol. 1 (Harmondsworth, 1966), p. 19; Bhandarkar, Lectures
on the Ancient History of India, p. ix (written in 1918): "We have
been so much accustomed to read and hear of Monarchy in India being always
and invariably unfettered and despotic that the above conclusion [that
republics were important in ancient India] is apt to appear incredible
to many as it no doubt was to me for a long time." Back
to text.
74. A.L. Basham, The Wonder
That was India (London, 1954), pp. 96-98. Back
to text.
75. In European history, the
Anglo-Saxons have often been treated as a failed culture, and the Visigothic
kingdom of Spain is seldom approached in any other way. See the opening
remarks of Roger Collins, The Arab Conquest of Spain, 710-789 (Oxford,
1989). Back
to text.
76. Thapar is one of the few
to avoid this usage. Back
to text.
77. Jayaswal, Hindu Polity,
p. 46. Back
to text.
78. Jayaswal, Hindu Polity,
p. 116. Back
to text.
79. For a general discussion
of the concept of "tribalism," see Eric R. Wolf, Europe and the People
Without History (Berkeley, 1982). Back
to text.
80. Agrawala, Panini,
pp. 479-493. Back
to text. |