ABSTRACT

Patterns of ritual power, presence, and space are fundamentally connected to, and mirror, the societal and political power structures in which they are enacted.

This book explores these connections in South Asia from the early Common Era until the present day. The essays in the volume examine a wide range of themes, including a genealogy of ideas concerning Vedic rituals in European thought; Buddhist donative rituals of Gandhara and Andhra Pradesh in the early Common Era; land endowments, festivals, and temple establishments in medieval Tamil Nadu and Karnataka; Mughal court rituals of the Mughal Empire; and contemporary ritual complexes on the Nilgiri Plateau. This volume argues for the need to redress a historical neglect in identifying and theorising ritual and religion in material contexts within archaeology. Further, it challenges existing theoretical and methodological forms of documentation to propose new ways of understanding rituals in history.

This volume will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of South Asian history, religion, archaeology, and historical geography.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

The archaeology of ritual in South Asian contexts

part I|83 pages

Power

chapter 1|20 pages

Imagining sacrifice in ancient India

A genealogy of Heesterman’s Broken World1

chapter 2|44 pages

Rituals of power

Coinage, court culture and kingship under the great Mughals

chapter 3|17 pages

Ritual as performed constitution

Badagas in the Nilgiris district

part II|89 pages

Presence

part III|97 pages

Space

chapter 7|22 pages

Money for rituals

Akṣayanīvī and related inscriptions from Āndhradeśa

chapter 8|18 pages

Neither cave nor temple

Creating and commemorating ‘place’ in the ritual landscapes at Badami

chapter 9|25 pages

Ritualising land and cultivating distinctions

Medieval period donative practices and a political ecology of the Raichur doab

chapter 10|30 pages

Sacred frames

Knowledge, culture and ritual agency in ancient tālukas of Karnataka (late 10th−12th centuries)