Prehistoric Period in India

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 12

Prehistoric Period in India - Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic Age

15-09-2024

11:30 AM

GS I

Sub-Categories:

Ancient History Notes for UPSC

13 min read

Table of Contents

• What is the Prehistoric Period

• Palaeolithic Age of Prehistoric Period

• Mesolithic Age of Prehistoric Period

• Neolithic Age of Prehistoric Period

• Prehistoric Rock Paintings

Prelims: History of India

Mains: Indian Culture - Salient aspects of Art Forms, Literature and Architecture from ancient to modern
times

The term Prehistoric Period also refers to as "Stone Age", when stone was generally used to create
objects for the various needs of early humans. The tools used by humans and their ancestors in the
genus Homo, as well as the earlier hominids Australopithecus and Paranthropus, are considered to be
Stone Age artefacts. Although bone tools were also used during this time period in addition to stone
tools, they are rarely found in the archaeological record. Based on chronology, typography, and other
general characteristics, the Stone Age can be divided into the Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, and Neolithic
periods.

There are instances in history where stone was not exclusively used for tools and technology, such as in
the Chalcolithic Age, where copper was used along with stones. Further in some parts of history stones
were not even used as a tool but rather for burial practices, such as in Megalithic Culture.

What is the Prehistoric Period?

History has been classified as Prehistory, Proto-History and History. Prehistory is the study of the
beginnings and development of human societies prior to the invention of writing systems. It is also called
the Stone Age due to the extensive use of stone tools during this period. Proto-history is an intermediate
stage between Prehistory and History, covering about the 3rd and 2nd millennia BCE. History is classified
in other ways as the Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age.
Stages and Timeline of the of Prehistoric Period

Phase Time Period

2.6 million - 10,000 BC

Lower Paleolithic: 2.6 million - 200,000 BC


Palaeolithic
Middle Paleolithic: 200,000 - 40,000 BC Mesolithic 10,000 - 4,500 BC

Upper Paleolithic: 40,000 - 10,000 BC


Neolithic 4,500 - 2,500 BC

Palaeolithic Age of Prehistoric Period

The term "Palaeolithic" refers to the Old Stone Age of the Prehistoric Period because it derives from the
Greek words palaeos, which means old, and lithos, which means stone. This time period belongs to the
Pleistocene geological era. The use of stone tools appears first in the Palaeolithic period.

• In India, no human fossils have been found in association with Stone Age tools. However,
geological dating provides some insight into the antiquity of tools.

• When assessing the evidence for early human settlement in India, it is observed to be later than
the African region but contemporaneous with other Asian countries.
• Depending on typo-technology of tools used, economic activities, and other cultural features,
the Palaeolithic age can be divided into,

o Lower Palaeolithic

o Middle Palaeolithic

o Upper Palaeolithic

• Lower Palaeolithic Age:

o The earliest use of stone was started in the Lower Palaeolithic Age by Homo habilis and
Homo erectus.

o People in this age were nomadic and dependent only on hunting and food gatherings.

• Middle Palaeolithic Age:

o Early Homo sapiens lived in the Middle Paleolithic Age, marked by the evolution of
modern language, the systematic burial of the dead with rituals, and the use of more
sophisticated tools.
o This age witnessed a variety of tools made on flakes, produced by specialised
techniques. Therefore, it is widely referred to as the flake tool industry.

• Upper Paleolithic Age:

o It is the phase when Modern man (Homo sapiens sapiens) first emerged around 50,000
years ago and developed new tool-making technologies in the form of blade and burin.

o Upper Palaeolithic cultures flourished in the Upper Pleistocene, often referred to as the
Late Pleistocene.

o Along with flake and core tools, the Upper Palaeolithic industries produced side
scrapers, ovate scrapers, notched scrapers, discoid scrapers, and unifacial and bifacial
flake points.

o This is the period when humans were involved in cave art.

Lower Palaeolithic Age in India

Tools: These stones were used as chopping tools like hand axes, cleavers, knives, and choppers made
from large pebbles or flakes.

Two main traditions:

• Soanian tradition, which is a part of the East and Southeast Asian chopper-chopping tool
tradition, and

• The Acheulian Prehistoric Period tradition, which is well-known from the western half of the Old
World (Africa, Western Europe, West and South Asia), is represented by the handaxe-cleaver or
biface assemblages.

Important Sites:

• Singi Talav in Rajasthan

• Bhimbetka and Adamgarh in Madhya Pradesh

• Lalitpur, Uttar Pradesh

• Paisra, Bihar

• Chirki-Nevasa, Maharashtra

• Hunsgi and Yediyapur in Karnataka

• Attirampakkam, Tamil Nadu

Middle Paleolithic Age in India

Middle Palaeolithic culture in India is called Nevasian (similar to Mousterian), as flake tools were found
at Pravara, Nevasa.

Tools:
• Flake Production: Flakes that are produced by striking them out of pebbles or cobbles are used
to make tools.

• Tool Types: Small and medium-sized handaxes, cleavers, scrapers, borers, and knives are
examples of different types of tools. Raw materials, shapes, and sizes vary depending on the
region.

• Large Borers and Awls: Large borers or awls worked with steep retouch on thick flakes are
present.

• Variety of Scrapers: Scrapers come in several kinds, such as straight, concave, and convex-sided.

• Anvils and Hammers are also found at some of the manufacturing sites

Sites:

• Didwana and Budha Pushkar in Rajasthan

• Hiran Valley in Gujarat

• Potwar Plateau between the Indus and Jhelum rivers

• Sanghao Cave in NWFP of Pakistan

• Luni river system, denoting tool industries west of the Aravallis

• Chirki Nevasa in Maharashtra

• Kalpi in Uttar Pradesh

Upper Paleolithic Age in India

Tools:

• The sites in Rallakalava and Gunjuna valleys in the southern Eastern Ghats give the best-known
evidence of the blade-and-burin industries in India.

• Bone tools, except in Kurnool caves in Andhra Pradesh, were not found in India.

• The manufacture of specialised hunting tools for both big-game hunting and small-game
hunting, as well as fishing, is indicated by the Upper Palaeolithic tools.

Sites:

• Rohiri Hills in Sindh

• Chopani Mando in Belan Valley

• Baghor in Madhya Pradesh

• Paisra in Bihar

• Haora and Khowai valleys in Tripura

• Kurnool and Muchchatla Chintamanu Gavi in Andhra Pradesh


Mesolithic Age of Prehistoric Period

The Mesolithic Age of the Prehistoric Period is a transitional age between the Palaeolithic and Neolithic
that occurred around 10000 BCE and ended with the introduction of agriculture (beginning of the
Neolithic Age).

• Climate:

o The phase is of variable length, depending on climatic factors like rising temperatures,
warm and dry climates, and impacts on human life and fauna.

• Economy:

o The Mesolithic people continued to survive through hunting and gathering, but there
occurred a change in the pattern of hunting from big animals in the Palaeolithic period
to smaller animals that could be taken out with the aid of bows and arrows.

o Also, hunting and fishing gained relevance.

o Long interaction with nature made them hunters and gatherers for specific species.
Thus, they favoured a few species of animals and plants over others.

• Tools: Microliths were the distinctive features of this Age.

o Continuing from the Upper Palaeolithic period, microliths were small tools with a limit of
3 cm in length.

o The technique to make microliths was punch and pressure on the harder materials like
agate, chalcedony, flint carnelian, etc.

o Microliths were of both geometric (trapeze, triangle, lunate or crescent) as well as non-
geometric shapes.

o Their small size indicates that they were used as composite tools and were hafted in
wood or bones.

o Macroliths, the larger tools, were also used. These were in the form of axes and picks
and a continuation of the Upper Palaeolithic tools, such as scrapers.

o Bone and antler tools were also used.


Mesolithic Age in India

Due to the favourable climate for agriculture (for the Neolithic Age), the Mesolithic Age in India lasted
only for 10,000 years. Barring Northeast, these sites are found throughout India.

• Sites: Rock shelters in Mirzapur were the first excavated Mesolithic site. Major excavated sites in
India are:

o Tilwara, Bagor, Ganeshwar in Rajasthan

o Langhnaj, Akhaj, Valasana, Hirpura, Amrapur, Devnimori, Dhekvadlo, and Tarsang in


Gujarat

o Patne, Pachad, Hatkhamba in Maharashtra

o Morkhana, Lekhahia, Baghai Khor, Sarai Nahar Rai, Mahadaha, Damdama, Chopani
Mando, Baidha Putpurihwa in Uttar Pradesh
o Pachmarhi, Adamgarh, Putli Karar, Bhimbetka, Baghor II, Baghor III, Ghaghariain Madhya
Pradesh

o Paisra in Bihar

o Kuchai in Odisha

o Birbhanpur in West Bengal

o Muchatla Chintamanu Gavi, Gauri Gundam in Andhra Pradesh


Sanganakallu in Karnataka

o Tenmalai in Kerala

Neolithic Age of Prehistoric Period

This new stone age developed in the Holocene epoch, preceded by the Mesolithic age. This Prehistoric
period was characterised by the development of agriculture, pottery and permanent settlement and
thus the beginning of the first human civilisation often termed the Neolithic Revolution.

• Neolithic Revolution:

o During the Palaeolithic and the Mesolithic stages, the mode of subsistence was hunting
and gathering.

o In contrast, in the Neolithic age, humans started using artificial means to produce food
for the first time. Agriculture and the domestication of animals were the two novel
practices that developed at this time.

o Some wild animal species, like goats, sheep, and cattle, were domesticated, which were
being used for transportation and in agriculture.

o Similar to this, early crops included wild varieties of paddy (especially in Asia), wheat,
barley, etc.

o Agriculture proved to be such a significant invention that a small portion of society was
able to provide the entire community with food.

o Neolithic pottery was pioneering and made by hand at first, then using wheels.

o Weaving and spinning were also invented in this age.

o The Neolithic Age opened an entirely new way of life and sowed the seeds of civilisation.

• Features:

o The first Neolithic culture is said to have started in the Fertile Crescent in the West Asia
and North Africa (WANA) region, including Mesopotamia (Iraq), Syria, Libya, etc.

o This period witnessed the development of pottery, polished stone tools and permanent
settlements.
Neolithic Culture in India

Sites: In India, there are three nuclear regions of the Neolithic culture - Kashmir Valley, Vindhya-Ganga
Valley and Karnataka.

• Vindhya-Ganga Valley: Chopani mando, Belan, Koldihwa, Pachoh, Mahgarha and Indri.

• Kashmir Valley: Burzoham, Badatal, Begagund, Gufkral, Hariparigom and Pampur, etc.

• Deccan: Brahamgiri, Hallur, Kopagal, Maski, Piklihal, Tekkalkotta and Snagankallu in Karnataka;
Uttanur, Rampuan, Palvaya, and Nagarjunakonda in Andhra Pradesh; and Paiyampalli in Tamil
Nadu.

• Fourth region (Peripheral Sites): Bihar, Jharkhand, Bengal, and Assam included the Late
Neolithic Age. They were the earliest farming communities in these regions.

o They were mainly of the Neolithic-Chalcolithic phase.

o Chirand (Saran, Bihar) is the most important site.

Characteristics:

• Tools: All Indian sites possessed polished or ground stone axes. They also included earlier tools
such as microliths and blades.

• Pottery: Early neolithic culture of a few sites, such as in Kashmir, Balochistan, and South India,
was without any pottery. Later, earthen pots were the distinctive features.

• House: In the form of simple huts (across India), Pit dwellings (in Kashmir and Deccan). The huts
were of various shapes - circular, rectangular, etc.

• Arts and crafts: Beads made of semi-precious stones and clay figures of animals and mother
goddesses are notable items.
Prehistoric Rock Paintings

Almost all the rock shelters in India, occupied by the Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic people as well as
many others, contain rock paintings depicting a variety of subjects, primarily animals and scenes
involving both people and animals.

• Distribution:

o These rock paintings have a wide distribution across India.

o Central India, particularly Satpura, Kaimur, and Vindhyan hills, has the largest number of
prehistoric art sites.

o This is perhaps due to the fact that Stone Age people in India flourished more around
the Central Narmada river valley.

• Sites:

o The most important sites are Bhimbetka and Lakha Juar in the Vindhya Range and
Pachmarhi and Adamgarh in the Satpura of Madhya Pradesh.

o Others are Daraki Chattan, Jogimara (Chhattisgarh); Hazaribagh, Kodarmada, Giridih and
Chatra (Jharkhand), Mirzapur and Banda (Uttar Pradesh) and Bellary and Kupagallu
(Karnataka), etc.

Bhimbetka - The Natural Art Gallery


Located in the Vindhyan Hills, it is the most important site of rock painting in India, spanning across the
history of India from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Medieval history. It is in the Raisen District of Madhya
Pradesh.

Features:

• Found on the walls as well as the ceiling.

• Several layers, each from a different period, from upper palaeolithic to medieval history.

• Most of the time, paintings are superimposed, with different themes and styles, which tell about
the chronology of humans.

• Made mostly in white and red, less in yellow, green and black. These colours were derived from
minerals. For example, red from hematite, white from limestone and green from chalcedony.

Stages:

• Prehistoric (mostly) including agricultural life, as well as historic

• Prehistoric: scenes of hunting, fishing and trapping. Few are about singing, dancing, musical
instruments, celebrating birth and death.

• Historic: Caparisoned horses and elephants and scenes of fighting with bows and arrows,
swords, shields and spears, etc. Picture of Brahmanical gods like Nataraja, Ganesh, etc.

More Topics from GS 1:


Princely States Home Rule Movement

British Education System In India Caste Movement in India

Peasant Movement Jainism

Cripps Mission Khilafat Movement

Tribal Movement Freedom Fighters of India

Mahajanapadas Salient Features of Indian Society

PYQs on the Prehistoric Period in India

Question 1: Mesolithic rock-cut architecture of India not only reflects the cultural life of the times but
also a fine aesthetic sense comparable to modern painting. Critically evaluate this comment. (UPSC
Mains 2015)

FAQs on the Prehistoric Period

What is the C-14 dating method?

Carbon-14 (C-14) dating is a radiometric dating method used to determine the age of organic materials
that were once alive. It relies on measuring the decay of radioactive carbon-14 isotope in the material to
estimate its age.

What are the three ages of the Prehistoric Period?

The Palaeolithic (Old Stone Age), Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age), and Neolithic (New Stone Age) are the
three distinct phases that make up the Stone Age. The level of sophistication used by humans to create
and employ stone tools determines the time period.

Why is the Prehistoric Period called as Stone Age?

The beginning of the use of stone, such as flint, for tools and weapons by early humans, also referred to
as cavemen, is what gives this period its name. Additionally, they lit fires with stones. The earliest tools
made by humans are these stone ones.

When did the Prehistoric Period start?

The earliest evidence of humans using stone tools was discovered about 2.6 million years ago, and the
Stone Age lasted until the beginning of the Bronze Age, around 3,300 B.C.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy