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Planned Cities on the Indus

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Title: Planned Cities on the Indus


1
Planned Cities on the Indus
  • KEY IDEA People of the first civilization in
    India built cities on the banks of the Indus
    River.

2
The Geography of South Asia
  • South Asiamodern India, Pakistan, and
    Bangladeshlies separated from the rest of Asia
    by tall mountains, the Hindu Kush Mountains,
    Himalayan Range and the Karakoram Mountains.
  • Just below the mountains are two large plains
    that hold the Ganges and Indus rivers- the
    Indo-Gangetic Plain and the Deccan Plateau.
  • The high mountains gave the people safety from
    invaders. Because they lived close to the sea,
    the people could travel over the water to trade
    with other peoples.

3
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5
Environmental Challenges
  • The people along the Indus River had many of the
    same challenges that the people in Mesopotamia
    had.
  • Their river flooded each year and left soil good
    for farming, but the floods did not occur at the
    same time each year.
  • In addition, the river sometimes changed course.

6
Monsoon
  • The regions weather caused problems also.
    Seasonal winds called monsoons were responsible
    for the wet and dry seasons of the sub-continent.
  • Each winter, strong winds blew dry air across the
    area. Each spring, the winds brought heavy rains.

7
Winter Monsoon- Dry Season
  • Between October and May, the winter monsoon blows
    from the north bringing cold dry continental air
    from the European continent.

8
Summer Monsoon- Wet Season
  • Between June and September, the wind direction
    shifts and blows from the south and southwest
    carrying warm moist air onto the subcontinent.

9
Little Is Known
  • Historians have not learned much about the people
    who settled in the Indus Valley because they
    cannot understand their way of writing.

10
Early Arrivals
  • They do know that people were farming along the
    river by about 3200 B.C. It is most likely that
    these people came from north through the Hindu
    Kush Mountains through the Khyber Pass
  • They also know that the culture of these people
    covered an area larger than either Mesopotamia or
    Egypt.

11
What We Do Know
  • About 2500 B.C., these people began building
    their first cities. The cities showed careful
    planning.
  • In Mesopotamia, cities were a jumble of streets
    laid down without thinking first. In the Indus
    Valley, however, the builders of cities followed
    a grid of streets.
  • They built a strong area called a citadel that
    was easy to defend and held all the important
    buildings.
  • They also had systems for carrying water and
    sewage.

12
The Citadel
  • The cities of the Indus Valley had fortified
    areas called citadels which contained major
    buildings of the city.

13
Built in Water main that flowed from the river
into the city
14
The Great Bath
  • The central bathing area of the Great Bath is
    similar to the ritual purification pools that
    have been found in later Indian society. Some
    scholars believe it was used for religious
    ceremonies.

15
Underground Sewage System
  • Wastes drained through clay pipes into brick
    sewers running below the streets. These sewers
    had manholes through which sanitation workers
    could inspect the drains and clean them out.
    This same type of sewage system did not come back
    into use until the late 1800s.

16
No Significant Social Differentiation
  • Historians believe the civilization of the Indus
    was peaceful for the following reasons
  • The houses were mostly like one another
    suggesting that the Indus culture did not have
    sharp differences between social classes.
  • Few weapons have been found at the sites of these
    ancient cities. This suggests that warfare was
    not common.

17
Artifacts From Indus Valley
Jewelry
Toys replicas of carts and boats.
18
Important Contributions
  • These early people left an important mark on the
    region.
  • Some religious objects include symbols that
    became part of the culture that developed later
    in India.
  • Historians also think that the people of the area
    traded with the people of Mesopotamia because
    they found seals from Mesopotamia at the
    archeological site

19
Mysterious Decline
  • Around 1750 B.C., though, the cities began to
    show signs of trouble. The Indus Valley
    civilization collapsed around 1500 B.C. No one
    knows the reason, but there are three
    possibilities
  • 1. The Indus River may have changed its course,
    ending the good effects of the yearly floods.
  • 2. The people may have over-worked the land and
    left the soil too poor to produce crops any
    longer.
  • 3. Perhaps a group of invaders defeated the
    Indus civilization.

20
Answer these Questions
  • What environmental challenges did the farmers in
    the Indus Valley face that the Sumerians and
    Egyptians did not?
  • What does the attentions the Indus people gave to
    the plumbing and sewer system suggest about their
    culture?

21
The End
22
Briefly compare the Indus Valley Civilization to
those of Egypt and Sumer.  
Briefly compare the Indus Valley Civilization to
those of Egypt and Sumer.  
     
     
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