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Le document traite de la civilisation de la vallée de l'Indus, en mettant l'accent sur les artefacts, les pratiques agricoles, l'urbanisme et les structures sociales. Il décrit les découvertes archéologiques, notamment les sceaux, les systèmes de drainage et les techniques de production artisanale, ainsi que les échanges commerciaux avec des régions lointaines. Enfin, il aborde les débats sur l'organisation politique et sociale de cette civilisation, ainsi que l'importance des fouilles archéologiques dans la compréhension de son histoire.
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Humanities Ka Ghar!
BRICKS, BEADS
AND BONES
HUMAN GEOGRAPHY #
segcenrny? &
THE TWIN BROS NOTESBricks, Beads and Bones
Red fonts — important topics / details
© The Harappan seal
© The most distinctive artefact of the Harappan or Indus valley
civilisation.
© Made of steatite
© Often contain animal motifs and signs from a script that remains
undeciphered.
1. Beginnings
‘There were several archaeological cultures in the region prior to the
Mature Harappan..
© Settlements were generally small, and there were virtually no
large buildings.
* There was a break between the Early Harappan and the Harappan
civilisation
©. Evident from large-scale burning at some sites and abandonment
of certain settlements.
* The Harappans ate a wide range of plant and animal products, including
fish,‘* Archaeologists have been able to reconstruct dietary practices from
finds of charred grains and seeds.
© These are studied by archaeo-botanists, who are specialists in
ancient plant remains.
© Grains found at Harappan sites - wheat, barley, lentil, chickpea
and sesame.
© Millets are found from sites in Gujarat.
© Finds of rice are relatively rare.
‘* Animal bones found at Harappan sites - cattle, sheep, goat, buffalo and
pig.
© Studies done by archaeo-zoologists or z00-archaeologists indicate
that these animals were domesticated.
© Bones of wild species such as boar, deer and gharial are also
found.
© Bones of fish and fowl are also found.
2.1 Agricultural technologies
* Bull was known (representations on seals and terracotta sculpture).
© Oxen, possibly, were used for ploughing.
* Terracotta models of the plough have been found at sites in Cholistan
and at Banawali (Haryana);
* Evidence of a ploughed field have been found at Kalibangan (Rajasthan).
© The field had two sets of furrows at right angles to each other,
suggesting that two different crops were grown together.
* Irrigation in the
© Traces of canals have been found at the Harappan site of
Shortughai in Afghanistan, but not in Punjab or Sind.
© Itis likely that water drawn from wells was used for irrigation.
© Water reservoirs found in Dholavira (Gujarat) may have been used
to store water for agriculture.
* Mohenjodaro is the most well-known site. (However, the first site to be
discovered was Harappa).‘+ The settlement is divided into two sections, one smaller but higher (the
Citadel) and the other much larger but lower (the Lower Town).
© The Citadel owes its height to the fact that buildings were
constructed on mud brick platforms. It was walled.
© The Lower Town was also walled, Several buildings were built on
platforms, which served as foundations.
* The settlement was first planned and then implemented accordingly
(foundations are one of the signs of planning).
© Other signs of planning - bricks, which, whether sun-dried or
baked, were of a standardised ratio, where the length and breadth
were four times and twice the height respectively.
© Such bricks were used at all Harappan settlements.
* One of the most distinctive features of Harappan cities was the carefully
planned drainage system.
© Important description —
* In the Lower Town; the roads and streets were laid out
along an approximate “grid” pattern, intersecting at right
angles.
+ Itseems that streets with drains were laid out first and then
houses built along them
+ If domestic waste water had to flow into the street drains,
every house needed to have at least one wall along a street.
‘+ The Lower Town at Mohenjodaro provides examples of residential
buildings.
* Another important description —
© Many were centred on a courtyard, with rooms on all sides.
© The courtyard was probably the centre of activities such as
cooking and weaving
© Whats also interesting is an apparent concern for privacy:= There are no windows in the walls along the ground level.
= The main entrance does not give a direct view of the
interior or the courtyard.
© Every house had its own bathroom paved with bricks, with drains
connected through the wall to the street drains.
© Some houses have remains of staircases to reach a second storey
or the roof.
© Many houses had wells, often in a room that could be reached
from the outside and perhaps used by passers-by.
© The total number of wells in Mohenjodaro was about 700.
3.3 The Citadel
‘+ Here we find evidence of structures that were probably used for special
public purposes.
* These include the warehouse — a massive structure of which the lower
brick portions remain, while the upper portions, probably of wood,
decayed long ago
© Important description
= The Great Bath was a large rectangular tank in a courtyard
surrounded by a Corridor on all four sides.
= There were two flights of steps on the north and south
leading into the tank, which was made watertight by setting
bricks on’edge and using a mortar of gypsum.
= There were rooms on three sides, in one of which was a
large well. Water from the tank flowed into a huge drain
= Across a lane to the north lay a smaller building with eight
bathrooms, four on each side of a corridor, with drains from
each bathroom connecting to a drain that ran along the
corridor.
= The uniqueness of the structure, as well as the context in
which it was found (the Citadel, with several distinctive
buildings), has led scholars to suggest that it was meant for
some kind of a special ritual bath4.1 Burials
* One of the strategies to find social or economic differences amongst
people within a particular culture includes studying burials.
© At burials in Harappan sites the dead were generally laid in pits.
© Sometimes, there were differences in the way the burial pit was
made ~ in some instances, the hollowed-out spaces were lined
with bricks,
* Could these variations be an indication of social
differences? We are not sure.
© Some graves contain pottery and ornaments, perhaps indicating a
belief that these could be used in the afterlife.
+ Jewellery has been found in burials of both men and
women.
© Insome instances, the dead were buried with copper mirrors.
© Buton the whole, it appears that the Harappans did not believe in
burying precious things with the dead.
4.2 Looking for “luxuries”
‘* Another strategy to identify social differences is to study artefacts,
which archaeologists broadly Classify as utilitarian and luxuries,
©. Utilitarian - it includes objects of daily use made fairly easily out of
ordinary materials such as stone or clay. These include querns,
pottery, needles, flesh-rubbers (body scrubbers), etc., and are
usually found distributed throughout settlements.
© Luxuries - Archaeologists assume objects were luxuries if they are
rare or made from costly, non-local materials or with complicated
technologies.
© Thus, little pots of faience were probably considered precious
because they were difficult to make.
‘© Miniature pots of faience, perhaps used as perfume bottles, are found
mostly in Mohenjodaro and Harappa (large settlements).
5. Finding About Craft Production* Chanhudaro is a tiny settlement (less than 7 hectares) as compared to
Mohenjodaro (125 hectares), almost exclusively devoted to craft
production, including bead-making, shell-cutting, metal-working, seal-
making and weight-making.
© The variety of materials used to make beads is remarkable:
* Remember at least some names -
* Stones like carnelian (of a beautiful red colour), jasper,
crystal, quartz and steatite; metals like copper, bronze and
gold; and shell, faience and terracotta or burnt clay.
"Some beads were made of two or more stones, cemented
together, some of stone with gold caps.
«The shapes were numerous ~ disc-shaped, cylindrical,
spherical, barrel-shaped, segmented.
"Some were decorated by incising or painting, and some had
designs etched onto them.
‘* Techniques for making beads differed according to the material.
© Steatite, a very soft stone, was easily worked.
© Nodules were chipped into rough shapes, and then finely flaked
into the final form.
© Grinding, polishing anddrilling completed the process.
© Specialised drills havé been found at Chanhudaro, Lothal and
more recently at Dholavira.
* Nageshwar and Balakot both settlements are near the coast.
© These were specialised centres for making shell objects — including
bangles, ladles and inlay — which were taken to other settlements.
‘* Itis likely that finished products (such as beads) from Chanhudaro and
Lothal were taken to the large urban centres such as Mohenjodaro and
Harappa.
5.1 Identifying centres of production
* In order to identify centres of craft production, archaeologists usually
look for -
1. Raw material such as stone nodules, whole shells, copper ore;
tools; unfinished objects; rejects and waste material.
2. Waste is one of the best indicators of craft work.+ Craft production was also undertaken in large cities such as
Mohenjodaro and Harappa.
strategies for Procuring Materials
* Terracotta toy models of bullock carts suggest that this was one
important means of transporting goods and people across land routes.
* Riverine routes along the Indus and its tributaries, as well as coastal
routes were also probably used.
6.1 Materials from the subcontinent and beyond
1, The Harappans procured materials for craft production in various ways.
1. They established settlements such as Nageshwar and Balakot in
areas where shell was available.
2. Other such sites were Shortughai; in far-off Afghanistan, near the
best source of lapis lazuli and Lothal which was near sources of
carnelian, steatite and metal?
3. Another strategy for procuring raw materials may have been to
send expeditions tovaréas such as the Khetri region of Rajasthan
(for copper) and’south India (for gold).
6.2 Contact with distant lands
* Recent archaeological finds suggest that copper was also probably
brought from Oman, on the south-eastern tip of the Arabian Peninsula,
© Chemical analyses have shown that both the Omani copper and
Harappan artefacts have traces of nickel, suggesting a common
origin:
©. There are other traces of contact as well. A distinctive type of
vessel, a large Harappan jar coated with a thick layer of black clay
has been found at Omani sites.
‘* Mesopotamian texts datable to the third millennium BCE refer to copper
coming from a region called Magan, perhaps a name for Oman, and
interestingly enough copper found at Mesopotamian sites also contains
traces of nickel.‘+ Other archaeological finds suggestive of long-distance contacts include
Harappan seals, weights, dice and beads.
* In this context, it is worth noting that Mesopotamian texts mention
contact with regions named Dilmun (probably the island of Bahrain),
Magan and Meluhha, possibly the Harappan region
© Itis likely that communication with Oman, Bahrain or
Mesopotamia was by sea.
+ Mesopotamian texts refer to Meluhha as a land of
seafarers.
* Besides, we find depictions of ships and boats on seals.
7. Seals, Script, Weights
7.1 Seals and sealings
* Seals and sealings were used to facilitate long-distance communication.
7.2 An enigmatic script
‘© Important!
* Harappan seals usually have a line of writing, probably containing the
name and title of the owner.
‘* Scholars have also suggested that the motif (generally an animal)
conveyed a meaning to those who could not read.
‘* Most inscriptions are short, the longest containing about 26 signs.
* Although the script remains undeciphered to date, it was evidently not
alphabetical as it has just too many signs - somewhere between 375 and
400.
‘* Itis apparent that the script was written from right to left as some seals
show a wider spacing on the right and cramping on the left, as if the
engraver began working from the right and then ran out of space.
7.3 Weights
‘+ Exchanges were regulated by a precise system of weights, usually made
of a stone called chert and generally cubical with no markings.The lower denominations of weights were binary (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, etc.
up to 12,800), while the higher denominations followed the decimal
system.
‘+ The smaller weights were probably used for weighing jewellery and
beads.
‘© Metal scale-pans have also been found.
Ancient Authority
‘© There are indications of complex decisions being taken and
implemented in Harappan society.
© The extraordinary uniformity of Harappan artefacts as evident in
pottery, seals, weights and bricks.
© Bricks were of a uniform ratio throughout the region.
© Settlements were strategically set up in specific locations for
various reasons.
© Labour was mobilised for making bricks and for the construction
of massive walls and platforms.
8.1 Palaces and kings
‘There is no clear answer on who ruled or took decisions in the region
‘* Alarge building found at Mohenjodaro was labelled as a palace by
archaeologists.
* Astone statue was labelled and continues to be known as the “priest-
king”.
©. This is because archaeologists were familiar with Mesopotamian
history and its “priest-kings” and have found parallels in the Indus
region.
* Archaeologists on the rulers of the civilisation —
1. Some archaeologists are of the opinion that Harappan society had
no rulers, and that everybody enjoyed equal status.
2. Others feel there was no single ruler but several, that
Mohenjodaro had a separate ruler, Harappa another, and so forth.
3. Yet others argue that there was a single state, given the similarity
in artefacts, the evidence for planned settlements, the* Cunningham - the first Director-General of the ASI
‘* When Cunningham began archaeological excavations in the mid-
nineteenth century, archaeologists preferred to use texts and
inscriptions as a guide to investigations.
‘© Infact, Cunningham's main interest was in the archaeology of the Early
Historic (c. sixth century BCE-fourth century CE) and later periods.
© He used the accounts left by Chinese Buddhist pilgrims who had
visited the subcontinent between the fourth and seventh
centuries CE to locate early settlements.
© Cunningham also collected, documented and translated
inscriptions found during his surveys.
© When he excavated sites, he tendedito recover artefacts that he
thought had cultural value.
* Asite like Harappa, which was not part of the itinerary of the Chinese
pilgrims and was not known as an Early Historic city, did not fit very
neatly within his framework of investigation.
© So, although Harappan artefacts were found fairly often during
the nineteenth century and some of these reached Cunningham,
he did not realise how old these were.
© He thought that Indian history began with the first cities in the
Ganga valley.
© He missed the significance of Harappa.
10.2 A new old civilisation
* Seals were discovered at Harappa by archaeologists such as Daya Ram
Sahni in the early decades of the twentieth century.
‘© Rakhal Das Banerji found similar seals at Mohenjodaro, leading to the
conjecture that these sites were part of a single archaeological culture,‘* Based on these finds, in 1924, John Marshall, Director-General of the
ASI, announced the discovery of a new civilisation in the Indus valley to.
the world.
© ASS.N. Roy noted in The Story of Indian Archaeology, “Marshall
left India three thousand years older than he had found her.”
© This was because similar, till-then-unidentified seals were found at
excavations at Mesopotamian sites.
©. It was then that the world knew not only of a new civilisation, but
also of one contemporaneous with Mesopotamia.
John Marshall -
© First professional archaeologist to work in India
© Brought his experience of working in Greece and Crete
© Other than spectacular finds, he was equally keen to look for
patterns of everyday life.
‘* Marshall tended to excavate along regular horizontal units, measured
uniformly throughout the mound, ignoring the stratigraphy of the site.
* This meant thatall the artefacts recovered from the same unit were
grouped together, even if they were found at different stratigraphic
layers.
Asa result, valuable information about the context of these finds was
irretrievably lost.
10.3 New techniques and questions
* Itwas R.E.M. Wheeler, after he took over as Director-General of the ASI
in 1944, who rectified this problem.
© Wheeler recognised that it was necessary to follow the
stratigraphy of the mound rather than dig mechanically along
uniform horizontal lines.
© Asan ex-army brigadier, he brought with him a military precision
to the practice of archaeology.
‘* The major sites of the civilisation are now in Pakistani territory.
‘© Anextensive survey in Kutch has revealed a number of Harappan
settlements and explorations in Punjab and Haryana have added to the
list of Harappan sites in India.
‘© While Kalibangan, Lothal, Rakhi Garhi and most recently Dholavira have
been discovered, explored and excavated as part of these efforts, fresh
explorations continue.11. Problems of Piecing Together the Past
+ Itis material evidence that allows archaeologists to better reconstruct
Harappan life.
© This material could be pottery, tools, ornaments, household
objects, etc. Organic materials such as cloth, leather, wood and
reeds generally decompose, especially in tropical regions.
co What survive are stone, burnt clay (or terracotta), metal, etc.
11.1 Classifying
ds
* One simple principle of classification is in terms of material, such as
stone, clay, metal, bone, ivory, etc.
* The second, and more complicated, is in terms of function:
archaeologists have to decide whether, for instance, an artefact is a tool
or an ornament, or both, or something meant for ritual use.
© Anunderstanding of the function of an artefact is often shaped by
its resemblance with present-day things — beads, querns, stone
blades and pots are obvious examples.
© Archaeologists also try to identify the function of an artefact by
investigating the context in which it was found.
© Sometimes, archaeologists have to take recourse to indirect
evidence.
+ Forinstance, though there are traces of cotton at some
Harappan sites, to find out about clothing we have to
depend on indirect evidence including depictions in
sculpture
11.2 Problems of interpretation
* The problems of archaeological interpretation are perhaps most evident
in attempts to reconstruct religious practices.
© Early archaeologists thought that certain objects which seemed unusual
or unfamiliar may have had a religious significance.
©. These included terracotta figurines of women, heavily jewelled,
some with elaborate head-dresses. These were regarded as
mother goddesses.
© Rare stone statuary of men in an almost standardised posture,
seated with one hand on the knee ~ such as the “priest-king” —
was also similarly classified© Inother instances, structures have been assigned ritual
significance
"These include the Great Bath and fire altars found at
Kalibangan and Lothal.
© Attempts have also been made to reconstruct religious beliefs and
practices by examining seals.
«Plant motifs, are thought to indicate nature worship.
* Some animals - such as the one-horned animal, often called
the “unicorn” — depicted on seals seem to be mythical,
composite creatures.
+ In some seals, a figure shown seated cross-legged in a
“yogic” posture, sometimes surrounded by animals, has
been regarded as a depiction of “proto-Shiva”, that is, an
early form of one of the major deities of Hinduism.
© Conical stone objects have been classified’as lingas.
* Many reconstructions of Harappan religion are made on the assumption
that later traditions provide parallels with earlier ones. This is because
archaeologists often move from the known to the unknown, that is,
from the present to the past.
‘* While this is plausible in the case of stone querns and pots, it becomes
more speculative when we extend it to “religious” symbols.
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