indus

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Indus Valley Civilization a Primary Phase Culture little or no continuity with the following cultures forgotten until the 19th Century – rediscovered by the British, while building railroads

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Page 1: Indus

Indus Valley Civilization

a Primary Phase Culture little or no continuity with the following

cultures forgotten until the 19th Century

– rediscovered by the British, while building railroads

Page 2: Indus

Harappan society and its neighbors, ca. 2000 B.C.E.

Page 3: Indus

Harappan Culture

Indus valley– not desert– well-watered and heavily forested

500 miles along the river valley– 10-20 times larger than Mesopotamia or

Egypt

Page 4: Indus

Foundations of Harappan Society The Indus River

– Silt-enriched water from mountain ranges Major society built by Dravidian peoples,

3000-2500 BCE– Cultivation of cotton before 5000 BCE, early

cultivation of poultry– Decline after 1900 BCE

Major cities: Harrapa (Punjab region and Mohenjo-Daro (mouth of Indus River)– 70 smaller sites excavated (total 1,500)

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India

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Harappan culture sites

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Hydraulic Culture

like Egypt and Mesopotamia agriculture and flood-control significant industry and trade cities very common

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Lack of Sources

literate culture– we cannot read the writing– writing on bricks and seals– did not use paper or clay tablets

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“Unicorn” seal + writing

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More seals

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…and more seals...

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Seated “yogi” : early Shiva?

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Ancient Indus

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Reasonable generalizations

rapid development: early 2,000s B.C. roughly contemporary with Egypt and

Mesopotamia early village culture changing rapidly to urban civilization

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Comparative Timeline

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Generalizations, con’t

cities dominated both economic and political activity

origins of the people are unclear– similar to the Mediterranean type

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Major Cities

Harappa and Mohenjo-daro– surrounded by smaller cities, towns, and

villages one situated in the north one situated in the south

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Mohenjo-Daro Ruins

Population c. 40,000 Regional center

– Layout, architecture suggests public purpose– Broad streets, citadel, pool, sewage

Standardized weights evident throughout region

Specialized labor Trade

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Cities, con’t

uniform culture over a wide area cities built on a common plan

– a grid: always NS and EW axes• with twelve smaller grids

– kiln-dried brick

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Grid map of Mohenjo-daro

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Mohenjo-daro : aerial view

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Mohenjo-daro view of the “Citadel”

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The “Great Bath”

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another view of the “Great Bath”

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view of a small, side street

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looks like a small tower, but actually it is a neighborhood well

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A bathroom on a private residence

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A public well in Harappa, or perhaps an ancient laundromat...

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A large drain or sewer

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Monumental architecture

very-large scale building walled cites, with fortified citadels always on the same scale palaces, temples

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Architecture, con’t

large grain storage facilities near temples

a theocracy ?? planned economy

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Harappan granary

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Cities

very densely populated houses: two to three stories every house is laid out the same

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Culture and Society

advanced agriculture surplus production textiles: wool and cotton domesticated animals and fish

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Bronze Age technology

no swords spears and bows stone arrow heads

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Society

dominated by priests ? from the fortified palaces and temples ? power base: fertility ? deities: male and female, both nude bull worship and phallic symbols

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A priest? A bull

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Trade

with lower Mesopotamia but gradually declined

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Decline

domination of an indigenous people ?– who rebelled ?

foreign invasion? gradual decline ?

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Combination of Changes

climate shift: the monsoon patterns flooding destruction of the forests migrations of new peoples: the Aryans

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The Aryan “Invasion”

Aryans, lighter-skinned invaders from the north

Dravidians, darker-skinned sedentary inhabitants of Harappa

Color Bias Socio-Economic Implications Difficulty of theory: no evidence of

large-scale military conquest

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Possible route of the Aryan invasions

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The Aryans

not to be confused with Hitler’s “Aryans” these Aryans speak an Indo-European

dialect related to other languages like Greek

and Latin

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The Aryans, con’t

they called themselves “Aryans” their land: “Aryavarta”

– land of the Aryans

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The Early Aryans Pastoral economy: sheep, goats,

horses, cattle– Vegetarianism not widespread until many

centuries later

Religious and Literary works: The Vedas– Sanskrit: sacred tongue– Prakrit: everyday language, evolved into

Hindi, Urdu, Bengali– Four Vedas, most important Rig Veda

• 1,028 hymms to gods

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Gradual settlement

over a long period of time gradual infiltration more primitive than the earlier culture

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Settlement, con’t

new society by 1,200 B.C. or so little evidence not literate no record system

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Oral Tradition

passed down from priests and singers written down in the 500’s The Vedas

– “Veda” means “knowledge”

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The Vedas

our primary source– early Aryan tradition– later Hindu religion

four “vedas”– the Rig Veda is the oldest

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Krishna with Arjuna on the battlefield of Kuruksketra

2 points to the first person who can tell whether this is a modern or ancient painting and why?

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Krishna reveals himself to Arjuna in his manifold aspects

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The Vedas

oral poetry come to have a sacred character provide some historical information

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The Aryans

restless, warlike people tall, blue-eyed, fair-skinned describe the indigenous population as

– short, “black”, noseless, and slaves

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The Aryans, con’t

villages and kingdoms constantly fighting

warchiefs and kings aristocrats and freemen

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The Aryans, con’t

fond of fighting, drinking, chariot racing, gambling chasing women and bragging about their spears– any modern comparisons ???

fond of taking soma– a psychedelic drug– probably psychotropic mushrooms

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Aryans and Hindus

Aryans give rise to Hindu society but different characteristics

– cows: they ate them– classes, but no castes– priests subordinate to the nobility

the Mahabharata

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The Iron Age: new sources

the Vedas: passed on orally the Brahamanas: interpretations on the

Vedas the Upanishads: interpretations and

symbolic studies– forerunners of later dissenting literature

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Strain of change

Iron Age change causes strain on the class system

blurring of lines between Aryans and Daas– answered with the caste system

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Caste System, 1000 BC

skin color ritual purity “Us--Them” feelings divine order of four castes

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Caste System (“Varnas”)

Brahmins: the priests Kshatriyas: the warriors Vaisyas: merchants and peasants Sudras: non-Aryans

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Caste system, con’t

produced by Brahmins literature emphasized the divine order hierarchical relationship inheritance and marriage

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Caste system in practice

warrior class did not always accept it nor the other classes the process of evolution is still going on the most powerful organizer of Indian

society– thousand of castes today

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Castes

define a person’s social universe define a person’s standard of conduct define a person’s expectations define a person’s future define how a person deals with others

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Books you can read, if you read

Bridget and Raymond Allchin. The Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan.

A.L. Basham. The Wonder That Was India. Walter A. Fairservis. The Roots of Indian Tradition Jonathana Mark Kenoyer. Ancient Cities of the Indus

Valley Civilization Juan Mascaro, trans. The Upanishads Stuart Piggott. Prehistoric India Romila Thapar. A History of India Romila Thapar. Recent Perspectives of Early Indian

History