"The wealth of the country reached its two peaks under Chandragupta Maurya and Shah Jehan. The riches of India under the Gupta kings became a proverb throughout the world. Yuan Chwang pictured an Indian city as beautified with gardens and pools, and adorned with institutes of letters and arts; “the inhabitants were well off, and there were families with great wealth; fruit and flowers were abundant. . . . The people had a refined appearance, and dressed in glossy silk attire; they were . . . clear and suggestive in discourse; they were equally divided between orthodoxy and heterodoxy.”41 “The Hindu kingdoms overthrown by the Moslems,” says Elphinstone, “were so wealthy that the historians tire of telling of the immense loot of jewels and coin captured by the invaders.”42 Nicolo Conti described the banks of the Ganges (ca. 1420) as lined with one prosperous city after another, each well designed, rich in gardens and orchards, silver and gold, commerce and industry.43 Shah Jehan’s treasury was so full that he kept two underground strong rooms, each of some 150,000 cubic feet capacity, almost filled with silver and gold.44 “Contemporary testimonies,” says Vincent Smith, “permit of no doubt that the urban population of the more important cities was well to do.”45 Travelers described Agra and Fathpur-Sikri as each greater and richer than London.46 Anquetil-Duperron, journeying through the Mahratta districts in 1760, found himself “in the midst of the simplicity and happiness of the Golden Age. . . . The people were cheerful, vigorous, and in high health.”47 Clive, visiting Murshidabad in 1759, reckoned that ancient capital of Bengal as equal in extent, population and wealth to the London of his time, with palaces far greater than those of Europe, and men richer than any individual in London.48 India, said Clive, was “a country of inexhaustible riches.”49 Tried by Parliament for helping himself too readily to this wealth, Clive excused himself ingeniously: he described the riches that he had found about him in India—opulent cities ready to offer him any bribe to escape indiscriminate plunder, bankers throwing open to his grasp vaults piled high with jewels and gold; and he concluded: “At this moment I stand astonished at my own moderation.”50"
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Will Durant and , ', Book I, Our Oriental Heritage (1935)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Economy_of_India
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Economy of India
53 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Economy of India →
Related Quotes
"Mahmud Ghaznavi also collected lot of wealth from Khams. A few facts and figures may be given as illustrations. In hi…"
"One idea that struck Alauddin Khalji (1296-1316) was that it was “wealth” which was the “source of rebellion and disa…"
"In 1823, A. D. Campbell, a British officer stationed in South India, wrote about the direct impact of these economic …"
"…grandees pay for a work of art considerably under its value, and according to their own caprice. … When an Omrah or …"
"The Sultans drew from the people every rupee of tribute that could be exacted by the ancient art of taxation, as well…"
"Internal trade flourished; every roadside was—and is—a bazaar. The foreign trade of India is as old as her history;22…"
"“The Indians,” says Megasthenes, “neither put out money at usury” (interest), “nor know how to borrow. It is contrary…"
"Indians of old were keenly alive to the expansion of dominions, acquisition of wealth, and the development of trade, …"
"India survived only by virtue of its patience, its superhuman power and its immense size. The levies it had to pay we…"
"There should be left only so much to the Hindus that neither, on the one hand, they should become arrogant on account…"