Title: Indus Valley Civilization
1Indus 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
2Harappan society and its neighbors, ca. 2000
B.C.E.
3Harappan Culture
- Indus valley
- not desert
- well-watered and heavily forested
- 500 miles along the river valley
- 10-20 times larger than Mesopotamia or Egypt
4Foundations 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)
5India
6Harappan culture sites
7Hydraulic Culture
- like Egypt and Mesopotamia
- agriculture and flood-control
- significant industry and trade
- cities very common
8Lack of Sources
- literate culture
- we cannot read the writing
- writing on bricks and seals
- did not use paper or clay tablets
9Unicorn seal writing
10More seals
11and more seals...
12Seated yogi early Shiva?
13Reasonable generalizations
- rapid development early 2,000s B.C.
- roughly contemporary with Egypt and Mesopotamia
- early village culture
- changing rapidly to urban civilization
14Generalizations, cont
- cities dominated both economic and political
activity - origins of the people are unclear
- similar to the Mediterranean type
15Major Cities
- Harappa and Mohenjo-daro
- surrounded by smaller cities, towns, and villages
- one situated in the north
- one situated in the south
16Mohenjo-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
17Cities, cont
- 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
18Grid map of Mohenjo-daro
19Mohenjo-daro aerial view
20Mohenjo-daro
view of the Citadel
21The Great Bath
22another view of the Great Bath
23view of a small, side street
24looks like a small tower, but actually it is a
neighborhood well
25A bathroom on a private residence
26A public well in Harappa, or perhaps an ancient
laundromat...
27A large drain or sewer
28Monumental architecture
- very-large scale building
- walled cites, with fortified citadels
- always on the same scale
- palaces, temples
29Architecture, cont
- large grain storage facilities near temples
- a theocracy ??
- planned economy
30Harappan granary
31Cities
- very densely populated
- houses two to three stories
- every house is laid out the same
32Culture and Society
- advanced agriculture
- surplus production
- textiles wool and cotton
- domesticated animals and fish
33Bronze Age technology
- no swords
- spears and bows
- stone arrow heads
34Society
- dominated by priests ?
- from the fortified palaces and temples ?
- power base fertility ?
- deities male and female, both nude
- bull worship and phallic symbols
35A priest?
A bull
36Trade
- with lower Mesopotamia
- but gradually declined
37Decline
- domination of an indigenous people ?
- who rebelled ?
- foreign invasion?
- gradual decline ?
38Combination of Changes
- climate shift the monsoon patterns
- flooding
- destruction of the forests
- migrations of new peoples the Aryans
39The 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
40Possible route of the Aryan invasions
41The Aryans
- not to be confused with Hitlers Aryans
- these Aryans speak an Indo-European dialect
- related to other languages like Greek and Latin
42The Aryans, cont
- they called themselves Aryans
- their land Aryavarta
- land of the Aryans
43The 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
44Gradual settlement
- over a long period of time
- gradual infiltration
- more primitive than the earlier culture
45Settlement, cont
- new society by 1,200 B.C. or so
- little evidence
- not literate
- no record system
46Oral Tradition
- passed down from priests and singers
- written down in the 500s
- The Vedas
- Veda means knowledge
47The Vedas
- our primary source
- early Aryan tradition
- later Hindu religion
- four vedas
- the Rig Veda is the oldest
48Krishna 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?
49Krishna reveals himself to Arjuna in his manifold
aspects
50The Vedas
- oral poetry
- come to have a sacred character
- provide some historical information
51The Aryans
- restless, warlike people
- tall, blue-eyed, fair-skinned
- describe the indigenous population as
- short, black, noseless, and slaves
52The Aryans, cont
- villages and kingdoms constantly fighting
- warchiefs and kings
- aristocrats and freemen
53The Aryans, cont
- 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
54Aryans 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
55The 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
56Strain of change
- Iron Age change causes strain on the class system
- blurring of lines between Aryans and Daas
- answered with the caste system
57Caste System, 1000 BC
- skin color
- ritual purity
- Us--Them feelings
- divine order of four castes
58Caste System (Varnas)
- Brahmins the priests
- Kshatriyas the warriors
- Vaisyas merchants and peasants
- Sudras non-Aryans
59Caste system, cont
- produced by Brahmins
- literature emphasized the divine order
- hierarchical relationship
- inheritance and marriage
60Caste 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
61Castes
- define a persons social universe
- define a persons standard of conduct
- define a persons expectations
- define a persons future
- define how a person deals with others
62Books 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