Indus Valley Civilization



Indus civilization, also called Indus valley civilization or Harappan civilization, the earliest known urben calture of the Indian subcontinent. The nuclear dates of the civilization appear to be about 2500–1700 BCE, though the southern sites may have lasted later into the 2nd millennium BCE. The civilization was first identified in 1921 at  Harrapa in the Punjab region and then in 1922 at Mohenjo-daro (Mohenjodaro), near the indus river in the Sindh (Sind) region. Both sites are in present-dayPakistan, in Punjab and sindh provinces, respectively. The ruins of Mohenjo-daro were designated a UNESCO world heritage site 1980.

·         On the valleys of river Indus.
·         Also known as Harappan Civilization.
·         Beginning of city life.
·         Harappan Sites discovered by – Dayaram Sahni (1921) – Montgomori district, Punjab, Pakistan.
·         Mohanjodaro discovered by – R. D. Banerji – Larkana district, Sind, Pakistan.
·         City was divided into Citadel(west) and Lower Town(east).
·         Red pottery painted with designs in black.
·         Stone weights, seals, special beads, copper tools, long stone blades etc.
·         Copper, bronze, silver, gold present.
·         Artificially produced – Faience.
·         Specialists for handicrafts.
·         Import of raw materials.
·         Plough was used.
·         Bodies were buried in wooden coffins, but during the later stages ‘H symmetry culture’ evolved where bodies were buried in painted burial urns.
·         Sugar cane not cultivated, horse, iron not used.
Indus Valley Sites and Specialties
HARAPPA
·         Seals out of stones
·         Citadel outside on banks of river Ravi
MOHENJODARO
·         Great Bath, Great Granary, Dancing Girl, Man with Beard, Cotton, Assembly hall
·         Term means ” Mount of the dead”
·         On the bank of river Indus
·         Believed to have been destructed by flood or invasion(Destruction was not gradual).
CHANHUDARO
·         Bank of Indus river. – discovered by Gopal Majumdar and Mackey (1931)
·         Pre-harappan culture – Jhangar Culture and Jhukar Culture
·         Only cite without citadel.
KALIBANGAN
·         At Rajastan on the banks of river Ghaggar, discovered by A.Ghosh (1953)
·         Fire Altars
·         Bones of camel
·         Evidence of furrows
·         Horse remains ( even though Indus valley people didn’t use horses).
·         Known as third capital of Indus Empire.
LOTHAL
·         At Gujarat near Bhogava river, discovered by S.R. Rao (1957)
·         Fire Altars
·         Beside the tributary of Sabarmati
·         Store house
·         Dockyard and earliest port
·         double burial
·         Rice husk
·         House had front entrance (exception).
ROPAR
·         Punjab, on the banks of river Sutlej. Discovered by Y.D Sharma (1955)
·         Dog buried with humans.
BANAWALI
·         Haryana
·         On banks of lost river Saraswathi
·         Barley Cultivation.
DHOLAVIRA
·         Biggest site in India, until the discovery of Rakhigarhi.
·         Located in Khadir Beyt, Rann of Kutch, Gujarat. Discovered by J.P Joshi/Rabindra Singh (1990)
·         3 parts + large open area for ceremonies
·         Large letters of the Harappan script (sign boards).
Religion of Indus Valley People
·         Pashupathi Mahadev (Proto Siva)
·         Mother goddess
·         Nature/ Animal worship
·         Unicorn, Dove, Peepal Tree, Fire
·         Amulets
·         Idol worship was practiced ( not a feature of Aryans)
·         Did not construct temples.
·         Similarity to Hindu religious practises. (Hinduism in its present form originated later)
·         No Caste system.
Town Planning System  
The Town Planning System of Indus Valley Civilization (Harappan Civilization) was city based. The excellent drainage and sanitation systems are remarkable.
Urban Cities: The Indus civilization flourished around cities. The ruins of the cities, so far unearthed, show remarkable town planning, and excellent system of drainage and sanitation of the indus velly civilization. The city was the heart of the civilization. The life in the Indus cities gives the impression of “a democratic bourgeois economy” like that of ancient Crete.
Large cities divided into two parts: Both at Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro and also at Kalibangan, the city was divided into two main parts. The higher and upper portion of the city was protected by a construction which looks like a fort. The ruling class of the towns perhaps lived in the protected area. The other part of the towns was lower in height than the former and common men lived in this area. The lower area of the towns generally spread over one square mile.
Streets
The main streets of Indus Valley ran from north to south and east to west intersecting one another at right angles. The streets were broad varying from 9 feet to 34 feet. They ran straight to a mile. They were suitable for wheeled traffic. Lanes were joined with the streets. Each lane had a public welt. Street lamps were provided for welfare of public.
Systematically built Buildings and Houses
The nature of the buildings at Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro shows that the town dwellers were divided into various social classes. The rich and the ruling class lived in the multi-roomed spacious houses and the poorer section lived in small tenements. The public building and big houses were situated on the streets. The modest houses were situated on the lanes. Encroachment on public roads or lanes by building houses was not permitted. The houses can be divided into three main groups viz.
·         dwelling houses,
·         larger buildings,
·         Public baths.
Smaller houses had two rooms, while larger houses had many rooms. There were courtyards attached to big buildings. There was little artistic touch in the architectural design of the buildings belonging either to the rich or the poor. They were plain, utilitarian and comfortable to live. Some of the buildings were probably multi-storied.
Most of the houses had baths, wells and covered drains connected with street drains. Ordinary buildings had little ventilation arrangements, as doors and windows were rarely fixed in the outer walls. Doors of entrance were fixed not on the front wall but on the side walls. One could enter a house by the door facing the side lanes of the house. The doors were made of wood. Large buildings had spacious doors.
Building Materials
There was no stone built house in the Indus cities. Most of the houses were built of burnt bricks. But unburnt sun-dried bricks were also used. That portion of the buildings where contamination with water was possible, burnt bricks were used. For other parts sun-dried bricks were used. Most of the bricks were of equal size. The staircases of big buildings were solid; the roofs were flat and were made of wood.
Drainage System
The elaborate drainage system was a remarkable feature of the civilization. According to D. D. Kosambi, the drainage plans of the Indus cities definitely establish the separate identity or independent character of the Indus civilization. No ancient civilization before the Roman civilization had such an advanced drainage and sanitation system. Each house had horizontal and vertical drains. There were underground drains for the streets. These drains were covered by stone slabs. The soak pits were made of bricks. The house drains were connected with road drains.
Great Public Bath and Granary of Indus Valley Civilization
There is an impressive building which was used as a public bath. The overall dimension of the Bath is 180 feet by 108 feet. The bathing pool is 39 feet by 23 feet with 8 feet depth. There is a device to fill and empty the water of the bathing pool. There are galleries and rooms on all sides of the bathing pool. Dr. Kosambi has provided an interpretation of the bathing pool and the adjoining rooms which is ingenuous. According to him, men used to bathe in the tanks as a ritual for the mother goddess to whom the citadel belonged. This public bath was attached to the Mohenjo-Daro fort where upper class people lived. Among the other large buildings there was a big hall which was perhaps used for public meeting.
There is the ruin of a great granary at Harappa measuring 169 fit x 135 fit. Attached to the granary were two roomed tenements with a common courtyard. These tenements housed the workers or the slaves who thrashed the corn to be preserved in the granary.

Declining Stage of the City

The advanced style of the Indus city life found in the earlier layers is absent in the later layers. In later layers there was a marked decline in civic discipline. Buildings encroached on the roads. Lanes were chocked with klins. Slums grew around. At Harappa and more clearly, at Mohenjo-Daro excavation has revealed the general shape of town planning system of the Indus Valley Civilization.

Conclusion

Modern archaeologists have been impressed by the perfectness of the town planning system of the Indus Valley civilization. The systematic construction of residential houses and public buildings, laying down of principal streets, etc. are comparable with the modern day city planning.
Indus Valley Society and Culture
·         Systematic method of weights and measures ( 16 and its multiples).

·         Pictographic Script, Boustrophedon script – Deciphering efforts by I. Mahadevan
·         Equal status to men and women
·         Economic Inequality, not an egalitarian society
·         Textiles – Spinning and weaving
·         3 types – burial, cremation and post cremation were there, though burial was common.
·         Majority of people Proto-australoids and Mediterraneans (Dravidians), though Mongoloids, Nordics etc were present in the city culture. Read more on races of india.


Reasons for Decline of Indus Valley Civilization
Though there are various theories, the exact reason is still unknown. As per a recent study by IIT Kharagpur and Archaeological Survey of India, a weaker monsoon might have been the cause of decline of Indus Valley Civilization. Environmental changes, coupled with loss of power of rulers (central administration) of Indus valley to sustain the city life might be the cause (Fariservis Theory). There might be resource shortage to sustain the population, and then people moved towards south India. Another theory by  Dr. Gwen Robbins Schug states that inter-personal violence, infectious diseases and climate change had played a major role in the demise of the Indus Valley Civilization.
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Indus Valley Civilization Indus Valley Civilization Reviewed by saurabhraj84060@gmail.com on March 22, 2019 Rating: 5

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