2.2: What is India? The Geography of South Asia
India’s dynamic history alternated between unified empires and periods when it was composed of a shifting mosaic of regional states. This history was also impacted by influxes of migrants and invaders. In thinking about the reasons for these patterns, historians highlight the size of India and its diverse geography and peoples.
It is important to remember that “India” can mean different things. Today, India usually designates the nation-state of India (see Map \(\PageIndex{1}\)). But modern India only formed in 1947 and includes much less territory than India did in ancient times. As a term, India was first invented by the ancient Greeks to refer to the Indus River and the lands and people beyond it. When used in this sense, India includes today’s nation of Pakistan. For the purpose of studying earlier history, India can be thought of as the territory that includes at least seven countries today: India, Pakistan, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives. This territory is also referred to as South Asia or the Indian subcontinent.
The Indian subcontinent is where Indian civilization took shape, but it was not created by one people, race, or ethnic group. Rather, the history of this region was shaped by a multitude of ethnic groups who spoke many different languages and lived and moved about on diverse terrain.
Large natural boundaries define the subcontinent. Mountain ranges ring the north, and bodies of water surround the rest. To the east lies the Bay of Bengal, to the south the Indian Ocean, and to the west the Arabian Sea. The largest mountain range is the Himalaya, which defines India’s northern and northeastern boundary. A subrange of the Himalaya—the Hindu Kush — sits at its western end. A ridge running from north to south defines the eastern end, dividing India from China and mainland Southeast Asia. To the northwest, the Suleiman Range and Kirthar Range complete what might seem like impassable barriers. Yet, these ranges are punctuated by a few narrow passes that connect India to Central Asia and West Asia.
To the south of the mountain ranges lie the Indo-Gangetic Plain and the two great rivers of northern India that comprise it: the Indus River and the Ganges River . These rivers originate in the Himalayas and are regularly fed by snowmelt and monsoon rains. Located in the northwest, the Indus River drains into the Arabian Sea. The region comprising the upper Indus is called the Punjab , while the region surrounding the lower Indus is referred to as the Sindh . Because they could support large populations, the plains surrounding these river systems served as the heartland for India’s first major states and empires.
Peninsular India is an important part of the story because over time great regional kingdoms will also emerge in the south. The peninsula is divided from northern India by the Vindhya Mountains, to the south of which lies the Deccan Plateau . This arid plateau is bordered by two coastal ranges— the Western Ghats and Eastern Ghats. This nearly 4600 miles of coastline linked fishing and trading communities to the Indian Ocean and the rest of Afro-Eurasia. Sri Lanka is an island located about thirty kilometers southeast of the southernmost tip of India, and served as an important conduit for trade and cultural contacts beyond India.