ANCIENT HISTORY (Stone Age To 700 A.D.)
ANCIENT HISTORY (Stone Age To 700 A.D.)
ANCIENT HISTORY (Stone Age To 700 A.D.)
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Stone Age
Palaeolithic Period( old stone age)
The word ‘Palaeo’ means old & ‘lithic’ means stone; during this period early man used tools
made of stone for activites like hunting, taking out flesh from animals etc. Thus it is known
as stone age. It is the prehistoric period which ranges from 5 lakh years to 6000 years ago.
Man 1st appeared on earth in early Pleistocene period in Africa. India was inhabited later &
first evidence of man is obtained from Bori, Maharstra( 1.4 million years ago)
o Belan valley in UP
o Luni valley (Rajasthan)
o Son and Narmada rivers
o Bhimbetka
o Tungabhadra river valleys
o Major sites in Rajasthan
a. Luni valley
b. Didwana
c. Budha pushkar
• End of ice age & climate began transition towards becoming warm & humid
• 1st appearance of Homo Sapiens
• Marked by appearance of new flint industries
• Use of blade & burins; scrapers
• Tools characterized by larger flakes than earlier periods
• Emergence of small communities having seasonal habitation which coincided with
change of seasons
• Settlements developed near permanent source of water marks the faint beginning of
longer term settlements in place of nomadism
• Evidences of early human rock art; themes- group hunting, day to day mundane
events, birds( absence of perching birds)
• Some important sites:
o Bhimbhetka (South of Bhopal)
o Belan
o Son
o Chota Nagpur plateau (Bihar)
o South eastern Rajasthan & river bains like mahi etc
• Important sites in Rajasthan :
o Chittorgarh, Kota & river basins of Sabarmati, Mahi, kadamli & wagoon
o Discovery of Ostrich egg shells in many sites
o Rajasthan
o Southern UP
o Central & Eastern India
o South of Krishna river
Bagor
Tilwara
Chalcolithic Age
• The period is marked by use stone – metal; copper was the 1st metal to be used by
man( End of the Neolithic period saw the use metals)
• Technologically it applies to pre-harappans; in various parts of the country appeared
after Harappan civilization.
• They were primarily rural communities residing in in hilly areas where rivers are
available nearby
• They knew the art of copper smelting
• They used wheel turn black and red pots and were the first to use painted pottery
• Major sites- Southeastern Rajasthan, western part of Madhya Pradesh Western
Maharashtra and southern and Eastern India; jorwe culture; kayatha culture etc.
• Some of the major chalcolithic cultures in Rajasthan are:
• Lies mainly in the river valleys of Banas and its tributaries ; in South Eastern Rajasthan
• About 90 sites of this culture have been discovered; important among them are gilund,
Aahar, Ojiana, balathal, pachamta
• Provides the evidence of early farming rural communities who were contemporary to
the the Indus valley civilizations
• A small chopper made of thin sheet of copper is an important antiquity of Ahar
culture.
• Faience of Harappan type is also noteworthy to established relationship with other
contemporary cultures.
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• They were rural farming communities also engaged in in livestock keeping and
hunting
• Main crops were wheat, barley, Millets , Bajra and Jawar.
• Remakable refinement in Technology ; invention of first wheel industrial activities ;
mass production of ceramics ;Metal Works and development of Bead industries
• Beads were made in in Shell, bone, Ivory ,semi -precious stones, steatite and
Terracotta
• Evidences of terracotta bull; names as banasian bull
• Houses were square shaped & large made up of stones; walls were made of mud\
mud bricks
• They carried on trade with Indus Valley Civilization people
• Evidence of rice has been noticed in the form of Impressions on potsherds
• Technology
• They mainly used copper metal and produced also used polished stone tools and used
microliths as well
• Evidences of coins & seals dating back to period 3rd BC to 1st BC – a coin having
mark of trishul on side & greek god Apollo on the other
Gilund
• It is located in Rajsamand district and drained by three rivers that is Kothari Banaras
and berach
• Excavation carried out under BB Lal in 1959 -60
• Use of burnt bricks on large scale
• Evidences of two distinct phases- early Ahar phase: 3000- 2000 BC and late Ahar
phase: 2000 - 1700 BC
• First phase:
-represent chalcolithic phase; evidences of few microliths along with copper
objects
- Residential houses for made of mud brick and plastered with mud
-Use of black and red ware pottery
-Terracotta figurines search s bull with prominent hump and longhorns are
noticeable
• Second phase :
Balathal
The site was abandoned for a long period of time; till the inhabitation was seen in
early historic period.
Ojiana
• Distinctive features:
-large number of terracotta bulls, both naturalistic and stylized, with
a great variety of shape and size
-White paintings on these bulls make them unparalleled in
contemporary cultures in India. These white painted bulls, termed as Ojiyana
bulls which perhaps served as cult objects and as it appears white paintings
was applied during the ceremony or rituals
-Another important discovery is the terracotta figurines of cow;
Modelling of cow here was quite common;as is evidence from the variety of
modelling. These were also perhaps the cult objects.
Pachamta
o Excavation began in 2015 under the project called the Mewar Plains archaeological
assessment
o the area lies in Udaipur district of rajasthan; close to gilund
o Belongs to ahar banas culture
o Period- 3000 BC to 1700 BC
o Major findings- perforated jars, shell bangles, terrcotta beads and semi precious
stones; lapis lazuli
o Evidences of early pottery & brick structures
The Indus Valley Civilization dates around 3300 BC. It flourished between 2600 BC and
1900 BC (Mature Indus Valley Civilization). It started declining around 1900 BC and
disappeared around 1400 BC.
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Kalibangan
• Evidence of world's earliest attested ploughed field; the field had two sets of furrows
at right angles to each other, suggesting that two different crops were grown together.
• Remains of Cylindrical seal of Mesopotamia and incised terracotta cake are quite
significant.
• The cemetery of the Harappans was located to the west-southwest of the citadel.
➢ The houses within the walled area were also made of mud-
bricks.
➢ The distinctive trait of this period was the pottery which was
significantly different from that of the succeeding Harappans
➢ No writing system developed
➢ Familiar with use of copper & produced pottery.
➢ The drainage system was not properly developed.
o Harappan phase
➢ An orderly layout and use of baked bricks
➢ A cemetery and a fortified citadel.
➢ The structural pattern of the settlement was changed.
➢ There were now two distinct parts: the citadel on the west
and the lower city on the east.
➢ 3 rd part- Lower city - It consisted of a modest structure,
containing four to five ‘fire-altars’ and as such could have
been used for ritualistic purposes.
➢ The cemetery of the Harappans was located to the west-
southwest of the citadel.
➢ Three types of burials were attested: extended inhumation in
rectangular or oval grave-pits; pot-burials in a circular pit;
and rectangular or oval grave-pits containing only pottery
and other funerary objects. The later two methods were
unassociated with skeletal remains.
Mahajanapadas of Rajasthan:
Matsya
• Capital: - Viratnagar
• 1st mentioned in Rigveda. Here matysa has been mentioned as rival of famous king
sudas
• In gopath brahamana, they have been related to shalvas and in kaushitki Upanishad,
they are related to kuru panchlas
• Mahabharat era- refers to a King Sahaja, who ruled over both the Chedis and the
Matsyas, which implies that Matsya once formed a part of the Chedi Kingdom.
Pandavas spent their one year of exile in matsya region
• The Mahabharata refers to a King Sahaja, who ruled over both the Chedis and the
Matsyas, which implies that Matsya once formed a part of the Chedi Kingdom.
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Shurasena (Brajmandala)
• Presently covers Braj region in Uttar Pradesh; - Alwar, Bharatpur, Dhaulpur and
Karauli.
• The ancient Greek writers (e.g., Megasthenes) refer to the Sourasenoi and its cities,
Methora and Cleisobra.
• The Buddhist texts refer to Avantiputta, the king of the Surasenas in the time of Maha
Kachchana, one of the chief disciples of Gautama Buddha, who spread Buddhism in
the Mathura region.
• Archaeological remains:
o The earliest period belonged to the Painted Grey Ware culture (1100-500
BCE)
Kuru
• In the 4th century BCE, Kautiliya's Arthashastra also mentions the Kurus
following the Rajashabdopajivin (king consul) constitution.
Shivi Janapada
Arjunayana Janapada
Malav Janapad
Yaudheyas
Shalvya
Rajanya
Mauryan Period
Bairat (Viratnagar)
o Iron wires, large scale remains of iron weapons and agricultural implements of
iron
o Remains of inscribed bricks having brahmi script.
• Rise of number of small kingdoms & republics due to fall of Mauryan Empire. It
provided a fertile ground for foreign invasions.
• Attack by Greek king Menander in 150 BC- on Madhyamika & established his
control over areas around chittorgarh
• Evidences : Greek coins have been found near naliyasar( freshwater) lake; bairath and
nagari; 16 Greek coins were found from Bairat.
• Attack of Sycthians around 1st century AD; Coins were found from the Rang Mahal of
Hanumangarh belonging to the Kushan period.
• Greek rule ended by about 90 AD
• Kushana rule - Coins of Kushana King, Huvishka( 95 to 127 AD) has been found near
naliyasar lake; Coins were found from the Rang Mahal of Hanumangarh belonging to
the Kushan period.
• Inscription near Sudarshan lake (150 AD) gives information that Kushanas rules from
marupradesh till upto Sabarmati river..
Gupta Period
• Hunas attacks began during Gupta times due to stong Central Authority and
dispersion of powers among small principalities; as Polity was becoming more Feudal
• Attack of Huna Kung Toraman in 503 AD & established control over Rajasthan
• Attack of Huna king Mihirkul in around 6th century AD- uprooted alomost all
republics & kingdoms in rajasthan; For example- Bairath,Rangmahal
• Mihirkula built Shiva temple in Badauli.
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• Later Mihikula was defeated by Narsingh Baladitya Gupta and Rajasthan was
reoccupied by Guptas.
• The capital of Gurjar-Pratihar was Bhinmal.
• Chinese traveller Huang Tsang visited Bhinmal during his period.
• Brahmagupta belongs to Bhinmal.
• Gurjar Pratihar stopped Arab invasion from North West.
Ganeshwar
• It revealed over 1000 copper objects including 400 arrowheads 50 fish hooks 60 flat
cells and numerous other objects like harpoons, needles, bangles
• Evidences of vitrified clay lumps , charred wood and metallurgical slag shows
highly advanced metal processing skills
• With its microliths and other stone tools, Ganeshwar culture can be ascribed to the
pre-Harappan period.
• Ganeshwar people were mainly engaged in agriculture and hunting; was primarily a
rural culture
• Although their principle craft was manufacture of copper objects but they were unable
to urbanize on the lines of Indus Valley Civilisation.
Sunari, jhunjhunu
• Excavated in 1980-81
• Evidences of iron smelters; considered as the most ancient discovered in India yet
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• A distinct iron bowl is also found here; not discovered from any other site yet
• Remains of maurayn, shunga & kushana period is also found in subsequent layers in
good quantity
Kurada
• In Nagaur district.
• Kurada (nagarur)
• The site was excavated around 1934
• large number of copper objects have been found; 103 in number
• Known as a centre of copper objects
• Reamins of Perforated jars have been found; Throws light on relations between Iran
and this region
Iswaal
• In Udaipur district.
Gardara
• In Bundi district.
Jodhpura