CHAPTER 1: TRACING CHANGES THROUGH A THOUSAND
YEARS
Historical Period: 700 CE – 1750 CE
Timeline: [700 — 1750] → 1000 Years → Tracing Changes
1. Evolution of Cartography (Maps)
Map 1 (1154 CE) Map 2 (c. 1720)
By Al-Idrisi (Arab Geographer) By Guillaume de l'Isle (French)
• Inverted View: South India is at the top. • Part of "Atlas Nouveau".
• Sri Lanka is the island at the top. • Highly detailed; used by sailors.
2. Changing Terminologies
The Meaning of "Hindustan":
Authority Period Scope
Minhaj-i-Siraj 13th C (Persian) Political: Punjab, Haryana, and Ganga-Yamuna lands.
Amir Khusrau 14th C "Hind" as a geographical and cultural entity.
Babar 16th C Geography, fauna, and culture of inhabitants.
Note: No political/national meaning like today's "India".
3. Concept of "Foreigner"
Medieval (Pardesi/Ajnabi) Present Day
Any stranger not part of a specific society or culture. Someone who is not an Indian citizen.
4. Historians and Their Sources
Textual records increased significantly, displacing other sources (coins, inscriptions).
The Paper Revolution:
• Paper became cheaper and more widely available.
• Used for holy texts, chronicles, and judicial records.
5. Manuscripts and Scribes
Process: Scribes copied manuscripts by hand (no printing press).
Hand Copying → Small Errors → Substantial Changes
Historians must read many versions to identify the original meaning.
YEARS
Historical Period: 700 CE – 1750 CE
Timeline: [700 — 1750] → 1000 Years → Tracing Changes
1. Evolution of Cartography (Maps)
Map 1 (1154 CE) Map 2 (c. 1720)
By Al-Idrisi (Arab Geographer) By Guillaume de l'Isle (French)
• Inverted View: South India is at the top. • Part of "Atlas Nouveau".
• Sri Lanka is the island at the top. • Highly detailed; used by sailors.
2. Changing Terminologies
The Meaning of "Hindustan":
Authority Period Scope
Minhaj-i-Siraj 13th C (Persian) Political: Punjab, Haryana, and Ganga-Yamuna lands.
Amir Khusrau 14th C "Hind" as a geographical and cultural entity.
Babar 16th C Geography, fauna, and culture of inhabitants.
Note: No political/national meaning like today's "India".
3. Concept of "Foreigner"
Medieval (Pardesi/Ajnabi) Present Day
Any stranger not part of a specific society or culture. Someone who is not an Indian citizen.
4. Historians and Their Sources
Textual records increased significantly, displacing other sources (coins, inscriptions).
The Paper Revolution:
• Paper became cheaper and more widely available.
• Used for holy texts, chronicles, and judicial records.
5. Manuscripts and Scribes
Process: Scribes copied manuscripts by hand (no printing press).
Hand Copying → Small Errors → Substantial Changes
Historians must read many versions to identify the original meaning.