Indus Valley Civilization - Study Notes
Indus Valley Civilization - Study Notes
Indus Valley Civilization - Study Notes
Civilization - Study
Notes
Indus Valley Civilisation(BC 2500-1500) was the period in which the development of human
culture was witnessed when people started looking beyond the satisfaction of material needs.
It was extended from Kabul in Afghanistan, Kashmir in the North to the Gulf of Khambhat
in Gujrat in the South. While at the east it extended up to Uttar Pradesh and towards the
Iran border at the west.
It was the rst civilization whose archaeological evidence is well identi ed and under
exploration.
It showed the connection of trade with other parts of civilization like Pharaohs(Egypt)
and Sumerians (Iraq).
Important Sites
1. Mohenjodaro
2. Harappan
4. Kuchchh
5. Lothal
6. Alamgirpur
7. Dholavira
8. Chahnudaro
9. Kot Diji
10. Desalpur
11. Surkotada
Pashupati seal
Bearded man
In the burials, children were found with a head having a hole in the
skull. There is research going on regarding its signi cance.
Priest quarters
Fire pits
Kalibangan
Plough marks
(Rajasthan)
Double cropping pattern
Bronze bull
Twin burials
Lothal
Terracotta model of plough
(Gujrat)
Manchester of India: Highest crop production was
Witnessed.
Ceramic items
न न ल खत व तुएं पाई गई थ
पुजारी के कमरे
कालीबंगा अ न कुं ड
राज ान हल के नशान
दोहरी फसल व प
कां य बैल
न न ल खत व तुएं पाई गई थ
गुजरात हल का टे राकोटा त प
उ र दे श तांबे का टू टा आ लेड
सरे मक व तुएं
Bangle Factory.
Chanhudaro Ink Pot.
(Pakistan) Bead makers shop.
Rakhigarhi Copper and bronze objects, such as beads, bangles, and gurines
Architecture:
Town Planning:
Roads:
The big grid road was divided into small roads connected to the small lanes to the
individual houses.
Buildings:
City Division:
Got divided into the upraised citadel and lower part into the west and east sides
respectively.
Lower part: small one-room quarters for working-class people, Public baths. Eg. Great
Bath at the Mohenjodaro site.
Drainage System:
Small drains from each house were connected to larger drains running alongside the
main roads.
Sculptures:
Seals:
A seal is a small portable artifact mostly made of stone but also found in other materials,
such as bone/ivory, metal, and various arti cial pastes. It displays engraved motifs and is
generally perforated so that it can be suspended.
Seals made of copper, gold, faience, ivory, and terracotta were also found.
Some seals have an impression of half man and half animal. Eg. Pashupati seal.
Use: primarily for trade, identi cation marks, or educational purposes. Eg. Seals having
mathematical images like Swastik on it.
Language:
The script was in pictographic language written from right to left side and then from left
to the right side. This is called a boustrophedon type of writing.
Bronze gures:
Cire perdue technique is also known as a lost wax method used to make bronze gures.
In this technique, holes are made to ll the liquid metal. After drying the wax is removed
from a metal structure.
Dancing girl: Tribhanga posture, is one of its makings. (Refer: To image 2 in the evidence
heading.)
Terracotta:
Pottery:
Excavation sites found 2 kinds of pottery: plain pottery and painted pottery.
Trees, birds, animal gures, and geometrical patterns were some of the themes.
Stone gures:
Eg. Bearded priest stone gure: draped in a shawl with trefoil patterns. The eyes are
elongated and half-closed as in meditation.
1. Pashupati Seal:
3. Great Bath:
4. Fire pits:
Livelihood:
Food habits:
Women had used bracelets and necklaces made up of shells, gold, and silver.
Men were used to wearing amulets to protect themselves from wrong in uences.
Ornaments:
Amusements:
Children used to play with small clay carts, dolls, rattle, marbles, etc.
Occupations:
Making of beads like clay, stone, paste, shell, and Ivory; and amulets.
Metalworks.
Trade:
At Lothal dock, weights and measures have been found in various shapes and were
accurate.
Traces of trading with Afghanistan for Blue gemstone and Lapis Lazuli.
Religion:
Inscriptions of clay gures of mother-goddess and seated gures of male gods carved on
a small stone seal. Eg. Pashupati seal.
They had few things believed to be sacred. Eg. Peepal Tree seal, Horned Bull seal, is, etc.
Fall of Harrappans:
Around 1500 B.C. fall of the Harappan civilization was predicted. It was the same period
that is considered the arrival of Aryans.
1. Massive ood to the Indus River which led to the drowning of cities. (Movie Mohenjodaro
by Ashutosh Govarikar used this reference at the end of the lm). Another disastrous
change in the Harappan climate might have been eastward-moving monsoons or winds
that bring heavy rains. Monsoons can be both helpful and detrimental to a climate,
depending on whether they support or destroy vegetation and agriculture.
2. One theory suggested that a nomadic, Indo-European tribe called the Aryans invaded and
conquered the Indus Valley Civilization.
3. Some experts believe the drying of the Saraswati River, which began around 1900 BCE,
was the main cause of climate change led to a massive drought for long years.
5. It is suspected that some pandemic diseases had spread (like COVID-19 for today) which
eliminated the population.
6. By 1800 BCE, the Indus Valley climate grew cooler and drier, and a tectonic event may
have diverted or disrupted river systems, which were the lifelines of the Indus Valley
Civilization. The Harappans may have migrated toward the Ganges basin in the east,
where they could have established villages and isolated farms.