Ancient Indian Town Planning PDF
Ancient Indian Town Planning PDF
Ancient Indian Town Planning PDF
SUBMITTED BY.
Manjeet Singh
160201007
The Indus valley
civilization
• The Indus Valley Civilization (c. 3300–1300 BC, flowered 2600–1900 BC) was an
ancient civilization thriving along the Indus River and the Ghaggar-Hakra River in what is
now Pakistan and north-western India.
• Among other names for this civilization is the Harappan Civilization, in reference to its
first excavated city of Harappa.
• The Indus Valley Civilization (IVC) was discovered in the 1920s and is known only from
archaeological excavations, except, possibly, for Sumerian references to Meluha, which
has been proposed to correspond to the IVC.
• An alternative term for the culture is Saraswati-Sindhu Civilization, based on the popular
identification of the Ghaggar-Hakra River with the Saraswati River.
The Indus civilization
arose and flourish by
processes of change that
are essentially local, and
yet it participated in a
much larger world of
trade, commerce and
cultural history.
• A sophisticated and technologically advanced urban culture is evident in the Indus Valley
Civilization.
• The quality of municipal town planning suggests knowledge of urban planning and efficient
municipal governments which placed a high priority on hygiene.
• The streets of major cities such as Mohenjo-daro or Harappa were laid out in perfect grid
patterns.
• As seen in Harappa, Mohenjo-daro and the recently discovered Rakhigarhi, this urban
plan
included the world's first urban sanitation systems.
• Within the city, individual homes or groups of homes obtained water from wells. From a room
that appears to have been set aside for bathing, waste water was directed to drains, which
lined the major streets.
• Most city dwellers appear to have been traders or artisans, who lived with others pursuing
the same occupation in well-defined neighborhoods.
• Although some houses were larger than others, Indus Civilization cities were remarkable
for their apparent egalitarianism.
• Two wide staircases in the north and the south lead down into
the tank. At the foot of the steps is a ledge extending the entire
width of the pool.
• A thick layer of bitumen was laid along the sides of the tank and
beneath the floor.
• The tank was probably used for special religious functions where
water was used to purify and renew the well being of the bathers.
Granary and Great
• Hall
Granary (50x40 m) is built on a massive mud brick foundation.
• Two rows of six rooms are arranged along a central passageway (7 m wide and paved
with baked bricks).
• Each room (15.2 x 6.1 m) has 3 sleeper walls with airspace between them.
• A wooden superstructure would have built on the brick foundation with stairs leading to
the central passage area.
• Small triangular openings may have been air ducts to allow the flow of fresh air beneath
hollow floors.
• Great Hall (50 x 27 m) is built on the top of a tapered brick platform and has a solid
brick foundation.
• The foundation was divided into 27 square and rectangular blocks by narrow
passageways running east west and north south. Some of these blocks have
square sockets for holding wooden beams or pillars.
• Large open areas inside the gateway may have been used as a market or checkpoint for taxing goods coming
into the city
• Outside the city walls a cluster of houses may represent temporary rest stops for travelers and caravans
• No division of the society is reflected in the layout of the city. Since large public buildings, market areas, large
and small houses as well as craft workshops have been found in the same neighborhood.
• Basic house plans ranging from single room tenements to houses with courtyards and up to 12 rooms to great
houses with several dozen rooms and several courtyards.
• Houses built with a perimeter wall and adjacent houses were separated by a narrow space of land.
• Timber used for flat roofs and as frames or lacing for brickwork
Drainage System
• Wells and reservoirs were provided in cities to ensure drinking and bathing water. The wells were lined with specially-
made wedge-shaped bricks to form a structurally sound cylinder.
• Ropes were used to lift the water out, probably with leather or wooden buckets. Some neighborhoods had communal
wells.
• Bathing platforms with drains were often situated in rooms adjacent to the wells. The floors of the baths were made of
tightly-fitted bricks, often set on edge to make a watertight floor. A small drain cut through the house wall out into the
street directed the dirty water into a larger sewage drain.
• Drains and water chutes in the upper storeys were often built inside the wall with an exit opening just above the street
drains. Tapered terracotta drainpipes were used to direct water out to the street.
• Many houses had distinct toilets, separate from the bath areas. Commodes were large jars or sump pots sunk into
the floors and many of them contained a small jar. Sometimes the sump pots were connected to drains to let the
sewage flow out and most had a tiny hole on the bottom to allow the water to seep into the ground.
• Drains were made of burnt bricks and connected the bathing platforms and latrines of private houses to medium-
sized open drains in the side streets. These open drains flowed into the larger sewers in the main streets which were
covered with baked bricks or dressed stone blocks. Separate garbage bins were provided along the major streets.
• The most common building materials were mud bricks and baked bricks,
wood and reeds.
• Most private houses had rooms arranged around a central courtyard. Doors
and
windows opened out into side lanes. Stairs led up to the roof or the second
storey.
• Large buildings in the acropolis area may represent administrative or ritual
structures.
• These buildings had access routes or provided thoroughfare from one area to
another. Markets and public meetings were probably held in large open
courtyards.
• Groups of houses and public buildings were built close together with shared
walls
and formed larger blocks that were bordered by wide streets.
• Most houses had private bathing areas and latrines as well as private wells.
• At Harappa, the transition of the settlement from an agricultural village to early
city probably took place in around 2800 BC (Kot Diji) phase.
• During this phase the settlement grew to about 25 hectares in size and
became a
centre for trade networks.
• In the next few hundred years, the town had grown six times larger, covering
Dholavira
• Unlike most Harappan cities, Dholavira in the
Rann of Kacchh , excavated by R. S. Bisht in
the 1990s, presents us with a largely
undisturbed plan and clearly delineated multiple
enclosures covering about 48 hectares.
• It also has given the evidence of the earliest (c. 2800 BC)
ploughed agricultural field ever revealed through an
excavation.
The roads were neither always straight, nor are they cut
at right-angles. It lacked systematic drainage system, a
noteworthy feature of the Indus civilisation.
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Surkotada
• The site at Surkotada is located 160 km (99 mi) north-east
of Bhuj, in the district of Kutch, Gujarat. The ancient mound
stands surrounded by an undulating rising ground clustered by
small sandstone hills. The mound is higher on the western side
and lower on the eastern side and has an average height of 5 to
8 m (16 to 26 ft).
• In the ancient days, a river 750 m (½ mi) wide flowed past the
north-eastern side of the site. This river, which emptied into the
Little Rann, might have been an important reason for siting the
town here. Now this river is only a small nalla (stream).
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Divisions of Society
Bramhin Guna The intellectual, thinker
Kshatriya Guna The ruler,politician,administrative,executive
Vaishya Guna Businessman, agriculturist
Shudra Guna Labourer, worker
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The General Planning principles
• Each village should be surrounded by a wall of thick brick or stone and supported by ramparts. Beyond this wall, there
has to be a deep broad moat.
• Four gates ,each at the centre of one side of the wall and one gate at each corner.
• At the centre of the village, there are temples, public halls and public spaces generally built for the meetings.
• The village then should be divided to 4 blocks. each of which again gets subdivided into many blocks by sreets,which
has to be straight and should run from one end to the other.
• Houses should be built along the main streets facing each other and ground floor of these houses should be used as
shops.
• Tanks,ponds,community worship buildings etc should be provided within convenient distance and should be accessible
to all.
A o o o
o o o A
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