H1 Ancient History
H1 Ancient History
ABOUT ME
• Material Remains
• Coins
• Inscriptions
• Literary Sources
• Foreign Accounts
• Village Study
• Natural Sciences
©DrMahipalRathore
Material Remains
©DrMahipalRathore
Material Remains
• Found on the hill slopes of plateaus and mountains, and on the banks of
nearby rivers with terraces, and comprise sundry fauna and flora.
• Numerous stone tools from the Stone Age have been found at these sites.
• The remains of tools, plants, animals, and humans from the pre-ice age
indicate the climatic conditions that prevailed at the time.
• Although writing was known in India by the middle of the third millennium
BC in the Indus culture, it has not so far been deciphered.
©DrMahipalRathore
Material Remains
• Though the Harappans knew how to write, their culture is placed in the
proto-historic phase.
• The same is the case with the Chalcolithic or copper–Stone Age cultures
which had no writing.
• Decipherable writing was known in India only in the third century BC with
the Ashokan inscriptions providing solid evidence for historical
reconstruction from that time.
©DrMahipalRathore
Material Remains
• The stone temples in south India and the brick monasteries in eastern
India still stand to remind us of the great building activities of the past.
©DrMahipalRathore
Mohenjo-daro or Mound of the Dead Men
©DrMahipalRathore
Material Remains
• Some mounds represent only the Painted Grey Ware (PGW) culture, others
Satavahana culture, and yet others that of the Kushans.
• As is the case with the Ramayana and Mahabharata, an excavated mound can be
used to understand successive layers of the material and other aspects of a
culture. ©DrMahipalRathore
Material Remains
• Horizontal excavation entails digging the mound as a whole or a major part of it.
• The method may enable the excavator to obtain a complete idea of the site
culture in a particular period.
• As most sites have been dug vertically, they provide a good chronological
sequence of material culture.
©DrMahipalRathore
Material Remains
In the dry arid climate of western UP, Rajasthan, and north-western India,
antiquities are found in a better state of preservation.
In the moist and humid climate of the mid-Gangetic plains and in the deltaic
regions even iron implements suffered corrosion and mud structures become
difficult to detect. Only the burnt brick structures or stone structures of the
Gangetic plains are well preserved.
Excavations have brought to light the villages that people established around
6000 BC in Baluchistan
©DrMahipalRathore
Material Remains
©DrMahipalRathore
Coins
©DrMahipalRathore
Coins
• Ancient coins were made of metal— copper, silver, gold, and lead.
• Coin moulds made of burnt clay discovered- Most of them relate to the
Kushan period, that is, the first three Christian centuries.
©DrMahipalRathore
Coins
• People stored money in earthenware and in brass vessels.
• Many of these hoards, contained not only Indian coins but also those
minted abroad, such as in the Roman empire, etc.
• Our earliest coins contain a few symbols, but the later coins depict the
figures of kings, and divinities, and also mention their names and dates.
• The areas where they are found indicate the region of their circulation.
This has enabled us to reconstruct the history of several ruling dynasties,
especially of the Indo-Greeks who came to India from north Afghanistan
and ruled here in the second and first centuries BC.
©DrMahipalRathore
Coins
The largest number of Indian coins date to the post-Maurya period.
These were made of lead, potin, copper, bronze, silver, and gold.
©DrMahipalRathore
Coins
• Coins also portray kings and gods,
and contain religious symbols and
legends, all of which throw light
on the art and religion of the time.
• The study of the old writing used in inscriptions and other old
records is called palaeography.
©DrMahipalRathore
Inscriptions
• The earliest inscriptions were written in Prakrit in the third century BC.
• Most Ashokan inscriptions were engraved in the Brahmi script, which was
written from left to right, but some were also incised in the Kharoshthi
script which was written from right to left.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Ashoka Inscriptions
©DrMahipalRathore
Inscriptions
• Inscriptions found on the seals of Harappa belonging to about 2500 BC are
considered symbolic by some scholars
©DrMahipalRathore
Inscriptions
• We have various types of inscriptions.
• Some convey royal orders and decisions regarding social, religious, and
administrative matters to officials and the people in general. Ashokan
inscriptions belong to this category.
• Inscriptions recording land grants, made mainly by chiefs and princes, are
very important for the study of the land system and administration in
ancient India.
©DrMahipalRathore
Literary Sources
• Although the ancient Indians knew how to write as early as 2500 BC, our
most ancient manuscripts are not older than the AD fourth century and
are found in Central Asia.
• Although old Sanskrit manuscripts are found all over India, they mostly
relate to south India, Kashmir, and Nepal.
©DrMahipalRathore
Literary Sources
• Most ancient books contain religious themes. Hindu religious literature
includes the Vedas, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, the Puranas,
and the like.
©DrMahipalRathore
Literary Sources
• In the post-Vedic period we have a large corpus of ritual literature.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Literary Sources
• The religious books of the Jainas and the Buddhists refer to historical
persons and incidents.
©DrMahipalRathore
Literary Sources
• An important law-book is the Arthashastra of Kautilya.
• This text was put in its final form in the beginning of the Christian era,
but its earliest portions reflect the state of society and economy in the
age of the Mauryas.
• It provides rich material for the study of ancient Indian polity and
economy.
• Of the non-religious texts, the grammatical works are very important for
historical construction. They begin with the Astadhyayi of Panini.
©DrMahipalRathore
Literary Sources
• Patanjali’s commentary on Panini, dated 150 BC, supplies valuable
information about post-Maurya times.
©DrMahipalRathore
Literary Sources
• They also speak of the Yavanas coming in their own vessels, purchasing
pepper with gold, and supplying wine and women slaves to the natives.
• The Sangam literature is a major source of our information for the social,
economic, and political life of the people living in deltaic Tamil Nadu in the
early Christian centuries.
©DrMahipalRathore
Foreign Accounts
• Greek, Roman, and Chinese visited India either as travellers or religious
converts.
©DrMahipalRathore
Foreign Accounts
• The Indika of Megasthenes, who came to the court of Chandragupta
Maurya, has been preserved only in fragments quoted by subsequent
classical writers.
• Greek and Roman accounts of the first and second centuries mention
many Indian ports and enumerate items of trade between India and the
Roman empire.
©DrMahipalRathore
Foreign Accounts
• The Periplus of the Erythrean Sea and Ptolemy’s Geography, both
written in Greek, provide valuable data for the study of ancient
geography and commerce.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Foreign Accounts
©DrMahipalRathore
Village Study
• Relics of communal sharing in feasts, festivals, and pujas throw light on
the egalitarian character of ancient tribal society.
• High caste people do not milk the cow and never take to the plough.
©DrMahipalRathore
Village Study
• Their contempt for manual labour promotes untouchability.
• Strong traces of inequality are not confined to castes alone but also
colour the relationship between man and woman.
• Till the 1930s even the sati system prevailed in rural parts of Bihar.
©DrMahipalRathore
Natural Sciences
• The use of the findings of social sciences started about thirty years
ago for the historical construction of ancient India.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Human Evolution : The Old Stone Age
©DrMahipalRathore
Stone Age
Generally, the period before the invention of script is broadly divided into
Stone Age, Bronze Age and Iron Age.
The period after the Old Stone Age (Palaeolithic) is called the Mesolithic
Age.
The period that followed the Mesolithic is called the Neolithic Age
©DrMahipalRathore
Stone Age
However, between 35,000 and 1500 BC, tools relating to both Middle and
Upper Palaeolithic ages have been found in the Deccan Plateau.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Stone Age
Lower Palaeolithic culture (600,000 and 150,000 BC)
The Lower Palaeolithic or the Early Old Stone Age covers the greater part of
the ice age.
The Early Old Stone Age may have begun in Africa around two million years
ago, but in India it is not older than 600,000 years.
©DrMahipalRathore
Lower Palaeolithic culture (600,000 and 150,000 BC)
Lithic Tools:
Human ancestors made large stone blocks and pebbles and chipped tools
out of them, using another strong stone.
Hand axes, cleavers, choppers and the like were designed in this way by
flaking off the chips.
They used the tools for hunting, butchering and skinning the animals,
breaking the bones for bone marrow and to recover tubers and plant
foods, and for processing food.
©DrMahipalRathore
cleavers
©DrMahipalRathore
Hand axes
©DrMahipalRathore
Lower Palaeolithic culture (600,000 and 150,000 BC)
Industries:
The industries of Palaeolithic cultures are divided into the Early, Middle
and Late Acheulian Industries.
The Acheulian tradition is absent in the Western Ghats, coastal areas and
north-eastern India. Heavy rainfall is attributed to its absence.
©DrMahipalRathore
Acheulian Stone tools
©DrMahipalRathore
Acheulian and Sohanian
These two cultural traditions are not considered distinct any longer.
Recent studies argue that there was no independent Sohan tradition
as Acheulian tools are found in the Sohan industry as well.
©DrMahipalRathore
Lower Palaeolithic culture (600,000 and 150,000 BC)
Distribution of Sites
©DrMahipalRathore
Fossils
The first Palaeolithic tools were identified at the site of Pallavaram near
Chennai by Robert Bruce Foote in 1863.
©DrMahipalRathore
Attirampakkam
or
Athirampakkam
©DrMahipalRathore
Fossils
©DrMahipalRathore
Narmada human
©DrMahipalRathore
Way of Life
They lived in open air, river valleys, caves and rock shelters, as seen from
evidence in Bhimbetka in Madhya Pradesh and Gudiyam near Chennai.
©DrMahipalRathore
Way of Life
They may have expressed a few sounds or words and used a sign
language.
©DrMahipalRathore
Stone Age
Middle Palaeolithic culture (150,000 and 35,000 BC)
In India, the Middle Palaeolithic phase was first identified by H.D. Sankalia
on the Pravara River at Nevasa.
©DrMahipalRathore
Middle Palaeolithic culture (150,000 and 35,000 BC)
The tool types of the Middle Palaeolithic period are hand axes, cleavers,
choppers, chopping tools, scrapers, borers and points, projectile points or
shouldered points, and knives on flakes.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Distribution
• River Narmada,
• South of the Tungabhadra river
• The Belan valley (UP), which lies at the foothills of the Vindhyas,
is rich in stone tools and animal fossils including cattle and deer.
These remains relate to both the Lower and Middle Stone ages
©DrMahipalRathore
Ways of Life and Main Characteristics
The main features of the Indian Middle Palaeolithic period include the
following:
©DrMahipalRathore
Stone Age
Upper Palaeolithic culture (35,000 and 10,000 BC)
©DrMahipalRathore
Upper Palaeolithic culture (35,000 and 10,000 BC)
©DrMahipalRathore
Upper Palaeolithic culture (35,000 and 10,000 BC)
The lithic industry of the Upper Palaeolithic period is based on blade and
bone tool technologies.
Bone tools and faunal remains have been found in Kurnool caves in
Andhra Pradesh.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Upper Palaeolithic culture (35,000 and 10,000 BC)
Distribution
The people of this period used caves as well as the open air space for living.
Incised ostrich eggshell, and shell and stone beads have been found at:
©DrMahipalRathore
Decorated ostrich shells from Upper Palaeolithic site in
Patne in Maharashtra
©DrMahipalRathore
An Upper Palaeolithic Shrine
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Mesolithic Culture
The Upper Palaeolithic age came to an end with the end of the ice age
around 10,000 BC.
©DrMahipalRathore
Sites
The rock paintings of Central India depict hunting, trapping, fishing and
plant food collection.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
The Mesolithic people buried the dead, which suggests their beliefs and
humane relationships.
The site remained occupied for 5000 years from the fifth millennium BC
onwards.
©DrMahipalRathore
Neolithic period
©DrMahipalRathore
Tools
The people of the Neolithic age used tools and implements of polished
stone.
They particularly used stone axes, which have been found in large numbers
in a substantial part of the hilly tracts of India.
©DrMahipalRathore
Tools
The north-western group of Neolithic tools is distinguished by
rectangular axes with a curved cutting edge;
The southern group by axes with oval sides and pointed butt.
©DrMahipalRathore
Neolithic Settlements in India
In the Ganges Valley, and in Central India Neolithic sites are found at
Lehuradeva, and Chopani Munda.
The Neolithic sites of Eastern India are found at many sites in Bihar and West
Bengal.
The metal first used was copper, and several cultures were based on the use
of copper and stone implements.
Such a culture is called Chalcolithic, which means the copper– stone phase.
©DrMahipalRathore
Such cultures as came in the later part of the mature Harappa culture or after
its end.
The Chalcolithic people mostly used stone and copper objects, but they also
occasionally used low grade bronze and even iron.
They were primarily rural communities spread over a wide area with hilly
land and rivers.
©DrMahipalRathore
©DrMahipalRathore
Telegram Link:
©DrMahipalRathore