Lecture 3 Indus Valley Civilization
Lecture 3 Indus Valley Civilization
It incorporated within itself the social configurations and organizational devices that
characterize such a cultural form.
Cities and towns were particularly prominent.
The civilization occupied a region which included an expansive flood plain and an
agricultural regime based on floodwater farming and the cultivation of a diversity of plants
and animals.
Unlike Mesopotamia and Egypt, there were no grand religious shrines nor were
magnificent palaces and funerary complexes constructed for the rulers.
Houses with bathrooms, a network of serviceable roads and lanes, an elaborate system of
drainage and a unique water supply system.
The two major urban centres of the Indus Valley were Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. Both
settlements are surrounded by brick walls, have streets laid out in a grid pattern, and are
supplied with covered drainage systems to carry away waste.
HARAPPA CIVILIZATION
Harappa flourished from 3500 1700 BC in the Western part of the South Asia.
Architecture in a range of building materials, writing system, city life, formal styles
of sculpture, and the use of several kinds of stones, shells, and metals.
Early Harappan (3500 2600 BC)
Large number of villages emerged
Use of copper, wheel, and plough
Extra-ordinary range of pottery forms showing beginning of many regional traditions
Evidence of granary, defensive walls, and long distance trade
Emergence of uniformities in the pottery tradition throughout the Indus Valley
Origins of such motifs as Pipal, humped bulls, Cobras, horned deity, etc.
HARAPPA CIVILIZATION
Except for the west-central blocks, the basic unit of city planning was the individual house.
The planning principles employed here are followed practically without change at all other
sites
Some houses had rooms with wells, bathing rooms (paved with baked bricks) and even
toilets.
in Harappa, Mohan-jo-daro, the urban plan included the world's first urban sanitation
systems.
Waste water was drained out of the houses through drain chutes built into the side walls that
fed into a system of drains built alongside the lanes and streets.
Municipal authorities who are responsible for the whole of the valley also regularly maintain a
highly efficient drainage system
The quality of municipal town planning suggests knowledge of urban planning and efficient
municipal governments which placed a high priority on hygiene.
TOWN PLANNING (Mohenjo-Daro, Harappa)
TOWN PLANNING (Mohenjo-Daro, Harappa)
The behavior of the river providing an active flood plain and ecology,
Navigation through the river for internal trade,
Climate, accessibility to natural resources and trade routes, both internal and external.
The settlements types and their positioning also reflect the importance from the point of view of
distant marine trade e.g., Lothal and Mohenjodaro, Chanhudaro and Sutkagandor and Harappa; for
trade with the hinterland etc.
The River system, with its own network of tributaries, provided a consistent and better line of
communication through the Sirhind Nala between Punjab and Rajasthan for getting timber from the
areas of present Himachal Pradesh.
The River system had three major 'economic pockets'. The first was on the north along Sirhind The
second or the central pocket was in Bikaner Bhawalpur The third, southern one, in Kachchh, which is
geographically half way between Sindh and Gujarat These three 'economic pockets' in the 'culture
empire' of the Harappan provided a strong economic base that is the foundation of the 'urban boom
Harappan settlements are largely located along the major and perennial rivers.
AFTERMATH
WHAT IS NEXT ?
Vedic Civilization
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