Indus Valley Civilization / Harappan Civilization : Ancient India

Indus Valley Civilization / Harappan Civilization:

  • The Harappan Civilization is dated between 2600 BC and 1900 BC.
  • It was a Bronze Age Civilization in the northwestern regions of South Asia.
  • Named after Harappa, the first site to be excavated, the entire civilization is known as the Harappan Civilization.
  • Sir
    John Hubert Marshall was responsible for the large-scale excavations
    that revealed Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro, the two largest cities of the
    previously unknown IVC (Indus Valley Civilization).
  • The Civilization was first identified in 1921 at Harappa in Punjab region (present-day Pakistan) and then in 1922 at Mohenjo-Daro near the Indus river.
  • There are 5 major urban sites (Harappa, Mohenjo-Daro, Dholavira, Ganeriwala, and Rakhigarhi).

 Origin

  • There were earlier and later cultures, known as Early Harappan and Later Harappan.
  • Harappan Civilization is also called Mature Harappan to distinguish from other cultures.
  • The period is characterized by seals, beads, weights, baked bricks and stone blades (also called Mature Harappan culture).

 Geography

  • It was spread over Sind, Afghanistan, Jammu, Punjab, Gujarat, Balochistan, northern Rajasthan, and Kathiawar.
  • It covered most of Pakistan along with the western states of India.
  • The Kalibangan – Mohenjo-Daro represents the center of the Harappan civilization.
  • The
    number of Harappan sites, of the Ghaggar-Hakra river and its
    tributaries are around 500 and those along the Indus and its tributaries
    are approximately 100 in number.

Town plan

  • Usually towns were laid out in a parallelogrammic form.
  • System
    town planning, drainage system, granary, dockyard, public bathing
    place, use of bricks, buildings, etc are some of the most impressive
    achievements.
  • Social equality seems to be widely prevalent in the cities of Indus Valley.
  • Existence of the first urban sanitation systems in the world.
  • The concept of urban planning is also widely evident.

Science

  • They knew how to make long lasting paints and dyes.
  • They also had the knowledge of proto-dentistry and the touchstone technique of gold testing.
  • The people evolved new techniques in metallurgy and produced copper, bronze, lead and tin.
  • First to develop a system of uniform weights and measures.
  • They knew metal working and mining.
  • They constructed well planned multi storey buildings.

Agriculture

  • The major cultivated cereal crop was naked six-row barley, a crop derived from two-row barley.
  • The Harappan cultivated wheat, peas, sesame and mustard.
  • Rice husk in Lothal and Rangpur which proves cultivation of rice as well.
  • First people in the world to grow cotton.
  • Sheep, oxen, goats, buffaloes, dogs were domesticated.

Religious beliefs

  • Harappans worshipped the mother Goddess as the symbol of fertility.
  • They also worship Lord Pashupati, which is a figure, seated in a yoga – like posture and is surrounded by animals.
  • Certain trees seem to have been considered as sacred.
  • They believed life after death, as their graves often contained belongings to the dead person.

Crafts

  • Various
    sculptured, seals, pottery, gold, jewelry and figurines in terracotta,
    bronze, and steatite, etc have been excavated from the sites of the
    Harappan Civilization.
  • Other crafts include shell works, special kinds of combs, ceramics, agate, glazes steatite bead making, etc.
  • Evidence of toys and stringed musical instruments.
  • The ‘Dancing Girl’ and the ‘Bearded Head’ from the Mohenjo-Daro are the two well-known pieces of art.

Trade and Transportation

  • The main forms of transport include bullock carts and boats.
  • Signs of maritime trade network between the Harappan and Mesopotamian civilizations also.
  • Tin and precious stones were imported from Iran and Afghanistan.

Decline

  • The gradual decline of the Indus Valley Civilization is believed to have started around 1800 BC.
  • By 1700 BC, most of the sites were abandoned.
  • The decline of civilization is believed to be connected with climate change.
  • The over utilization of resources and an increase in population contributed to the decline of Harappan Civilization.

Some important IVC sites

  • Harappa: the first site excavated, in 1921

Situated on banks of Ravi

Structures – 6 granaries in a row, images of mother goddess.

  • Mohenjo-Daro: largest site of IVC

Excavated in 1922

Structure- Great Bath, Great Granary

  • Lothal: Dock site

Rice husk found

  • Kalibangan: Black Bangle factory
  • Chanhudaro: city without a citadel, inkpot and lipstick
  • Dholavira: in Gujarat, stone water reservoir
  • Surkotada: Horse remains

 

🎥 Video Resources

Harappan (Indus Valley) Civilization | Harappa and Mohenjo Daro Excavations - Ancient Indian History

Harappan (Indus Valley) Civilization | Harappa and Mohenjo Daro Excavations - Ancient Indian History

Harappan Culture | Part 1 | Ancient History of India

Ancient Indian History || Indus Valley Civilisation | History | By: Dr. Vipan Goyal

Introduction to the Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilization

Indus Valley Civilization | Ancient History of India | UPSC CSE 2020/2021

Indus Valley Civilization Facts - History of Ancient India | Educational Videos by Mocomi

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