Celebrate
India Networks Ltd, Inc.
The peoples of India comprise widely
varying mixtures of ethnic strains drawn from
peoples settled in the subcontinent before the
dawn of history or from invaders. Languages: Hindi,
English (both official), and other Indo-European
languages, including Bengali, Kashmiri, Marathi,
and Urdu Dravidian languages hundreds from several
other language families. Religions: Hinduism also
Islam, Christianity, Sikhism, Buddhism, Jainism.
Currency rupee. India has three major geographic
regions the Himalayas, along its northern border
the Indo-Gangetic Plain, formed by the alluvial
deposits of three great river systems, including
the Ganges (Ganga) and the southern region, noted
for the Deccan plateau. Agricultural products
include rice, wheat, cotton, sugarcane, coconut,
spices, jute, tobacco, tea, coffee, and rubber.
The manufacturing sector is highly diversified
and includes both heavy and high-technology industries.
India is a republic with two legislative houses;
its chief of state is the president, and the head
of government is the prime minister. India has
been inhabited for thousands of years. Agriculture
in India dates to the 7th millennium BC, and an
urban civilization, that of the Indus valley,
was established by 2600 BC. Buddhism and Jainism
arose in the 6th century BC in reaction to the
caste-based society created by the Vedic religion
and its successor, Hinduism. Muslim invasions
began c. AD 1000, establishing the long-lived
Delhi sultanate in 1206 and the Mughal dynasty
in 1526. Vasco da Gama's voyage to India in 1498
initiated several centuries of commercial rivalry
between the Portuguese, Dutch, English, and French.
British conquests in the 18th and 19th centuries
led to the rule of the British East India Co.,
and direct administration by the British Empire
began in 1858. After Mohandas K. Gandhi helped
end British rule in 1947, Jawaharlal Nehru became
India's first prime minister, and Nehru, his daughter
Indira Gandhi, and his grandson Rajiv Gandhi guided
the nation's destiny for all but a few years until
1991. The subcontinent was partitioned into two
countries-India, with a Hindu majority, and Pakistan,
with a Muslim majority-in 1947. A later clash
with Pakistan resulted in the creation of Bangladesh
in 1971. In the 1980s and '90s, Sikhs sought to
establish an independent state in Punjab, and
ethnic and religious conflicts took place in other
parts of the country as well. The Kashmir region
in the northwest has been a source of constant
tension.
