The document provides background information on the Indus Civilization, including its extent, discovery, and debates around its origins. It can be summarized as:
1) The Indus Civilization emerged around 4th millennium BC in the Indus River valley and extended throughout modern-day Pakistan and western India, covering a large area.
2) It was first discovered in the early 1850s during railway construction works in Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. Further excavations in the 1920s uncovered more sites.
3) There was debate among scholars about whether it originated locally or was a colony from Mesopotamia, but later excavations provided evidence of a pre-Harappan indigenous
The document provides background information on the Indus Civilization, including its extent, discovery, and debates around its origins. It can be summarized as:
1) The Indus Civilization emerged around 4th millennium BC in the Indus River valley and extended throughout modern-day Pakistan and western India, covering a large area.
2) It was first discovered in the early 1850s during railway construction works in Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. Further excavations in the 1920s uncovered more sites.
3) There was debate among scholars about whether it originated locally or was a colony from Mesopotamia, but later excavations provided evidence of a pre-Harappan indigenous
The document provides background information on the Indus Civilization, including its extent, discovery, and debates around its origins. It can be summarized as:
1) The Indus Civilization emerged around 4th millennium BC in the Indus River valley and extended throughout modern-day Pakistan and western India, covering a large area.
2) It was first discovered in the early 1850s during railway construction works in Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. Further excavations in the 1920s uncovered more sites.
3) There was debate among scholars about whether it originated locally or was a colony from Mesopotamia, but later excavations provided evidence of a pre-Harappan indigenous
The document provides background information on the Indus Civilization, including its extent, discovery, and debates around its origins. It can be summarized as:
1) The Indus Civilization emerged around 4th millennium BC in the Indus River valley and extended throughout modern-day Pakistan and western India, covering a large area.
2) It was first discovered in the early 1850s during railway construction works in Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. Further excavations in the 1920s uncovered more sites.
3) There was debate among scholars about whether it originated locally or was a colony from Mesopotamia, but later excavations provided evidence of a pre-Harappan indigenous
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HISTORY
Subject : History (For under graduate student)
Paper No. : Paper-I
History of India
Unit, Topic & Title : Unit- 4
Topic- 2 Indus Civilization
Lecture No. & Title : Lecture 1
Extent, Nomenclature and Origin
Indus Civilization: Extent, Nomenclature and Origin
The rising sun over the Indus seems to defy the soft mist spread over it as a blanket, so that the sleeping splendor of the past is not disturbed. Here lay the remains of a civilization that thrived for about three millennia. This is the Indus Civilization, knowledge of which began with the discovery of two cities, Harappa and Mohenjo Daro. It had a deep impact not only on history but on the entire Indian civilization.
The discovery of these two cities, namely Harappa and
Mohenjo Daro, linked by the river Indus actually pushed back the origins of the Indian Civilization to the fourth millennium BC. Commenting on this, historian Irfan Habib has said that along with the civilizations of Egypt and Mesopotamia, the Indus Civilization emerged as the third great civilization in the whole world.
The Indus civilization marks the first phase of urbanization in
India as it was essentially confined to the cities. The first civilization that the Indian sub-continent witnessed was thus urban in nature. The earliest evidence of this civilization was accidentally discovered by Alexander Cunningham, who was neither an archaeologist nor a historian but a British engineer.
1853 was a momentous year in the history of our country
because railway lines were being laid for the first time. The process involved a lot of digging, and it was while this work was going on that Cunningham accidentally stumbled across the first Harappan seal, inscribed with a bull and six letters of a script that has still defied attempts at deciphering by scholars. (He obviously did not know it was a Harappan seal till it was identified as one later on). But Cunningham undoubtedly deserves credit for discovering the earliest specimen relating to the Indus Civilization. Although the Archaeological Survey of India had been established in 1896, it was not before 1921 that excavation work at Harappa was carried out by Dayaram Sahni. Around about the same time Mohenjo Daro was discovered by Rakhaldas Banerjee. Since then (1921-22), for the rest of the British colonial period (twenty-five years), many archaeologists were engaged in excavation work in this area. The earliest historians or archaeologists connected with the study of the Indus Civilization were Dayaram Sahni, Rakhaldas Banerjee, John Marshall, E. Mackay and Mortimer Wheeler.
Excavations continued methodically and meticulously, in the
post colonial, post-partition period, (ie. after 1947), both by archaeologists of the newly founded state of Pakistan and India. The Kot Diji and Amri sites in the Dadu district of the Lower Indus were discovered in 1958, followed by excavations in Haryana, Rajasthan and Gujarat. Lothal, believed to be a major sea port in Gujarat was discovered in 1964. A hundred and sixty kilometers to the south, Malawan (close to Surat) was also identified as an Indus site. The next discovery was the extremely important site of Dholavira, located on Khadirabet, an island in the Great Rann of Kutch (Gujarat) between 1989 and 1990. Excavations at Kalibangan (North Rajasthan, 200 miles west of Delhi) Banawali and Rakhigarhi, have revealed further sites that bear testimony to the spread of the civilization towards the east. Alamgirpur in the Meerut district in the central Ganges-Yamuna Doab is considered as marking the farthest extension of the Indus culture in the east. Towards the north, in Punjab, lay the site of Rupar, (in the foothills of the Himalayas), marking possibly the farthest outpost in northern India. Another similar site was Manda in Jammu and Kashmir. The Indus Civilization appears to be essentially a culture of the plains, as it does not seem to have crossed the sub Himalayan foothills. In the west, the civilization penetrated to Baluchistan upto Sutkagen Dor, close to Pakistan's border with Iran.
The extent of the Indus Civilization on the whole, in terms of
modern territorial boundaries, may be assumed to have covered almost the whole of Punjab (both in the Indian Union as well as in Pakistan), Haryana, parts of Western UP, northern Rajasthan, Sindh, most of Gujarat and parts of North-eastern and southern Baluchistan. This gives one an idea of the large area covered by the Indus civilization.
There exists some confusion regarding whether it would be
preferable to term this civilization as the ‘Harappan civilization’, or as the ‘Indus Valley Civilization’. As Harappa happened to be the first site to be excavated by Dayaram Sahni, the entire culture came to be called the Harappan culture. There is an unwritten understanding among scholars that a civilization is designated by the earliest site to be discovered. It was Mortimer Wheeler who in his report on the excavations at Harappa way back in 1946, and again in 1953 in his book titled ‘The Indus Civilization used the term ‘Indus civilization’ to denote this particular civilization. Even we, as children had studied this civilization as the ‘Indus Valley Civilization’. The explanation for the change in nomenclature lies in the fact that over a period of time numerous excavations have revealed to us, that the civilization was spread out even beyond the Indus valley, thereby making it inappropriate to refer to it as the Indus Valley Civilization any longer. The eminent historian, Prof. D.K. Chakraborty constantly reminds us why it is wrong to use the term "Indus Valley Civilization", and emphasizes that it would be far more accurate to call it the Indus Civilization or even as Harappan Civilization. He himself prefers using the term Harappan Civilization as he feels that it being a geographically non- committal term is the most suitable. He also says that it is only out of deference to its long usage, that the term Indus Civilization may be used.
A question arises in this connection as to why this civilization
was not named after Mohenjodaro. The simple answer to this is that Harappa was the first site to be discovered and in terms of chronology Mohenjodaro came a little later. Anyway, according to the practice of naming a civilization by the name of the first site where it has been discovered, this civilization should be referred to as the Harappan Civilization and not by any other name.
There is a difference of opinion among scholars regarding the
genesis of this civilization. While some claim that it originated indigenously, others say that it was a colony of some other civilization. Historians like John Marshall, V.Gordon Childe, Stuart Piggot, and Nani Gopal Majumdar, belonged to a school who empasized categorically the indigenous origin of the civilization. V.Gordon Childe further explained that it formed the basis of modern Indian culture, which then leads to the question of whether the civilization is still evident at present, and if so what the features were those links the present with the Harappa Civilization. Nani Gopal Majumdar who carried out extensive work in the region of Amri in Sindh between 1929 and 1931 came to the conclusion that the pottery he discovered in Amri had a very distinct style of its own, and should be looked upon as the earlier stage of the Chalcolithic Civilization that is represented by Harappa and Mohenjo Daro.
On the other hand we have Sir Mortimer Wheeler who
believed that the civilization of the Indus Plain actually came from Mesopotamia, and that the Indus civilization was nothing but an extension of the Mesopotamian Civilization. There were others like Heine-Geldern (writing in 1956), and Gordon (writing in 1958),who agreed with him, and considered the cities of Harappa and Mohenjodaro to be colonial cities. They claimed to have detected some amount of foreign influence in the architectural designs of these two towns, strengthening their theory that these citadels were actually colonial towns, and that they were definitely an extension of the Mesopotamian civilization.
However as more excavations were carried out in the 1950’s
and 1960’s further data poured in that changed the entire perspective of the Indus Civilization. These excavations pushed the period of the civilization far back into history. Between 1955 and 1957, extensive excavation work at Kot Diji, revealed a fortified citadel castle below the Harappan level of the site. J.M. Casal who wrote between 1959 and 1962 lent support to Nani Gopal Majumdar's find of a pre- Indus level, which he identified as a transitional stage between the early Amri culture and later Indus civilization. Nani Gopal Majumdar termed it as pre-Indus, and pointed out that Amri pottery had a very distinct culture of its own.
The third major excavation was carried out in Kalibangan by
B.B. Lal and B.K. Thapar. The excavations here threw up similar results, -a fortified and pre-Indus settlement- towards the western sector of this site. Basically these three major excavations served to indicate that the Indus culture was of indigenous origin. The debate was thus finally resolved in favour of those who put forth the theory of indigenous origin. Along with this began the use of new terminology regarding the periodisation of the Indus civilization. Whereas earlier historians would speak of just three periods, - the Early, the Mature and the Late Harappan period, now they began speaking about a pre- Harappan period, necessitated by the findings at Kot Diji, Kalibangan and other sites. Scholars were becoming aware that the whole process of the germination, maturity and end of the Harappa civilization spanned a long period of 2200 years between 3500 B.C. and 1300 B.C. Three stages of evolution may be identified as, -- the pre-Harappan or the Early Harappan, followed by the Mature Harappan stage and finally the Late Harappan stage.
Archaeologists also made the significant discovery that the
ground for the Indus Civilization was prepared by the early Neolithic and Chalcolithic culture of the 8th and 7th millennium B.C. which denotes that it had not just cropped up all of a sudden. Just as ‘Rome was not built in a day’, so also the Indus civilization was not built in a day. The gradual evolution of this civilization began with the Chalcolithic culture which preceded it and was regarded by scholars as the Early Harappan culture. Then followed the Mature Harappan stage when urbanization had reached a fully developed form, and then the Late Harappan Stage denoting the stage of decline.
The Harappan Civilization was the most ancient civilization in
South-east Asia. This extinct civilization according to some historians is perhaps the third major civilization after Egypt and Mesopotamia. In the beginning it was thought that this civilization existed only in the Indus river valley but over a period of time further archaeological discoveries pushed its boundaries to Surat in the south, Meerut in the east, Kashmir in the north and the border of Pakistan and Iran in the west. Therefore, it is now called the Indus Civilization rather than Indus Valley Civilization. There were controversies about its origin earlier but later, extensive archaeological excavations proved beyond doubt that these civilizations were indigenous in nature and not colonies of other civilizations.