HISTORY OF HARRAPA
Harappa
is an archaeological in Punjab, Pakistan,
about 24 km west of Sahiwal. The site takes its name from a modern village located
near the former course of the Ravi River.
The current village of Harappa is 6 km from the ancient site. Although
modern Harappa has a legacy railway station from the period of the British Raj,
it is today just a small crossroads town of population 15,000.
The
site of the ancient city contains the ruins of a Bronze Age fortified city, which was part of the Cemetery H culture and the Indus Valley Civilization, centered in Sindh and the Punjab. The city is believed to have had as
many as 23,500 residents and occupied about 150 hectares (370 acres) with clay sculptured houses at its greatest
extent during the Mature Harappan phase (2600–1900 BC), which is
considered large for its time. Per archaeological convention of
naming a previously unknown civilization by its first excavated site, the Indus
Valley Civilization is also called the Harappan Civilization.
The
ancient city of Harappa was heavily damaged under British rule, when bricks
from the ruins were used as track ballast in the construction of the Lahore-Multan Railway. In
2005, a controversial park scheme
at the site was abandoned when builders unearthed many archaeological artifacts
during the early stages of building work. A plea from the Pakistani archaeologist Ahmad Hasan
Dani to the Ministry of Culture resulted in a restoration of the site.
The Indus Valley
Civilization (also known as the Harappan culture) has its earliest roots
in cultures such as that of Mehrgarh, approximately 6000 BCE. The two greatest
cities, Mohenjo-Daro and
Harappa, emerged circa 2600 BCE along the Indus River valley
in Punjab and Sindh. The civilization, with a possible writing system, urban centers, and diversified social and economic system, was rediscovered in the 1920s after excavations at Mohenjo-Daro in
Sindh near Larkana, and Harappa, in west Punjab south
of Lahore. A number of other sites stretching from the Himalayan foothills
in east Punjab, India in
the north, to Gujarat in
the south and east, and to Pakistani Baluchistan in
the west have also been discovered and studied. Although the archaeological
site at Harappa was damaged in 1857 when
engineers constructing the Lahore-Multan railroad
(as part of the Sind and Punjab Railway), used brick from the Harappa ruins for track ballast, an abundance of artifacts has nevertheless been found. The bricks discovered were made of red
sand, clay, stones and were baked at very high temperature. As early as 1826
Harappa located in west Punjab attracted the attention of a British officer in
India, gets credit for preliminary excavations in Harappa.
Indus
Valley civilization was mainly an urban culture sustained by surplus
agricultural production and commerce, the latter including trade with Sumer in southern Mesopotamia.
Both Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa are generally
characterized as having "differentiated living quarters, flat-roofed brick
houses, and fortified administrative or religious centers."[8] Although such similarities have given
rise to arguments for the existence of a standardized system of urban layout
and planning, the similarities are largely due to the presence of a
semi-orthogonal type of civic layout, and a comparison of the layouts of Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa shows that they are in
fact, arranged in a quite dissimilar fashion.
The
chart weights and measures of the Indus Valley Civilization, on the other hand,
were highly standardized, and conform to a set scale of gradations. Distinctive
seals were used, among other applications, perhaps for identification of
property and shipment of goods. Although copper and bronze were in use, iron was not yet employed. "Cotton was
woven and dyed for clothing; wheat, rice, and a variety of vegetables and
fruits were cultivated;
and a number of animals, including the humped, were domesticated," as well as "fowl for
fighting". Wheel-made
pottery some of it adorned with animal and geometric motifs has been found in
profusion at all the major Indus sites. A centralized administration for each
city, though not the whole civilization, has been inferred from the revealed
cultural uniformity; however, it remains uncertain whether authority lay with a
commercial oligarchy.
Harappans had many trade routes along the Indus River that went as far as the
Persian Gulf, Mesopotamia, and Egypt. Some of the most valuable things traded
were carnelian and lapis lazuli.
What
is clear is that Harappan society was not entirely peaceful, with the human
skeletal remains demonstrating some of the highest rates of injury (15.5%)
found in South Asian prehistory. Pale
pathological analysis demonstrated that leprosy and tuberculosis were present
at Harappa, with the highest prevalence of both disease and trauma present in
the skeletons from Area G (an ossuary located south-east of the city walls). Furthermore, rates of crania-facial
trauma and infection increased through time, demonstrating that the
civilization collapsed amid illness and injury. The bio archaeologists who
examined the remains have suggested that the combined evidence for differences
in mortuary treatment and epidemiology indicate that some individuals and
communities at Harappa were excluded from access to basic resources like health
and safety, a basic feature of hierarchical societies world-wide.
The
excavators of the site have proposed the following chronology of
Harappa's occupation:
1. Ravi Aspect of the Hakra phase,
c. 3300 – 2800 BC.
2. Kot Dijian (Early Harappan)
phase, c. 2800 – 2600 BC.
3. Harappan Phase, c. 2600 –
1900 BC.
4. Transitional Phase, c. 1900 –
1800 BC.
5. Late Harappan Phase, c. 1800 –
1300 BC.
By far
the most exquisite and obscure artifacts unearthed to date are the small,
square steatite (soapstone)
seals engraved with human or animal motifs. A large number of seals have been
found at such sites as Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa. Many bear pictographic
inscriptions generally thought to be a form of writing or script. Despite
the efforts of philologists from all parts of the world, and despite the use of
modern cryptographic analysis, the signs remain
undeciphered. It is also unknown if they reflect proto-Dravidian or other non-Vedic language(s).
The ascription of Indus Valley Civilization iconography and epigraphy to
historically known cultures is extremely problematic, in part due to the rather
tenuous archaeological evidence of such claims, as well as the projection of
modern South Asian political concerns onto the archaeological record of the
area. This is especially evident in the radically varying interpretations of
Harappan material culture as seen from both Pakistan- and India-based scholars.
In February 2006 a school teacher in the village of Sembian-Kandiyur in Tamil Nadu discovered
a stone Celt (tool) with an inscription estimated
to be up to 3,500 years old. Indian epigraphist Iravatham Mahadevanpostulated that the four
signs were in the Indus script and called the find "the greatest
archaeological discovery of a century in Tamil Nadu". Based on this
evidence he goes on to suggest that the language used in the Indus Valley was
of Dravidian origin. However, the absence of
a Bronze Age in South India, contrasted with the knowledge of bronze making
techniques in the Indus Valley cultures, calls into question the validity of
this hypothesis.
Clay and stone tablets unearthed
at Harappa, which were carbon dated 3300–3200 BCE., contain trident-shaped
and plant-like markings. "It is a big question as to if we can call what
we have found true writing, but we have found symbols that have similarities to
what became Indus script" said Dr. Richard Meadow of Harvard University,
Director of the Harappa Archeological Research Project. This primitive writing is placed
slightly earlier than primitive writings of the Sumerians of Mesopotamia, dated c.3100 BCE. These markings have similarities to
what later became Indus Script.
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