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Indus Valley

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INDUS VALLEY ART

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INDUS VALLEY CIVILIZATION
• The Indus Valley Civilization (IVC) was a
Bronze Age civilization (3300–1300 BCE;
mature period 2600–1900 BCE) extending
from what today is northeast Afghanistan
to Pakistan and northwest India.

• Along with Ancient Egypt and


Mesopotamia it was one of three early
civilizations of the Old World, and of the
three the most widespread.

• It flourished in the basic of the Indus


River, one of the major rivers of Asia, and
the Ghaggar-Hakra River, which oncePage 3
• At its peak, the Indus Civilization may have had a
population of over five million.

• Inhabitants of the ancient Indus river valley


developed new techniques in handicraft (carnelian
products, seal carving) and metallurgy (copper,
bronze, lead, and tin).

• The Indus cities are noted for their urban planning,


baked brick houses, elaborate drainage systems,
water supply systems, and clusters of large
non-residential buildings.

• The discovery of Harappa, and soon afterwards,


Mohenjo-Daro, was the culmination of work
beginning in 1861 with the founding of the
Archaeological Survey of India in the BritishPage
Raj. 4
Early Harappan-Ravi Phase
3300-2800 BC

• This distinctive, regional culture which


emerged is called Early or Pre-Harappan.
• Trade networks linked this culture with related
regional cultures and distant sources of raw
materials, including lapis lazuli and other
materials for bead-making.
• Domesticated crops included peas, sesame
seeds, dates and cotton.
• Domestic animals also used, such as the water
buffalo. Page 5
Middle Harappan-Integration Era
2600-1900 BC
• By 2500 BCE, communities had been
turned into urban centers.
• Six such urban centers have been
discovered, including: Harappa,
Mohenjo Daro and Dicki in Pakistan,
along with Gonorreala, Dokalingam and
Mangalore in India.
• In total, over 1052 cities and settlements
have been found, mainly in the general
region of the Ghaggar-Florence River
and its tributaries.
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Late Harappan-Cemetery H
1700-1300 BC
• Cremation of human remains. The bones
were stored in painted pottery burial urns.
This is completely different to the Indus
civilization where bodies were buried in
wooden coffins.

• Reddish pottery, painted in black with


antelopes, peacocks etc., sun or star
motifs, with different surface treatments to
the earlier period.

• Apparent breakdown of the widespread


trade of the Indus civilization, with
materials such as marine shells no longer
used. Page 7
Major Cities: Mohenjo-Daro and
Harappa
• The cities are well known for their
impressive, organized and regular layo

• They have well laid our plumbing and


drainage system, including indoor toile

• Over one thousand other towns and


villages also existed in this region.
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The similarities in plan and construction between
Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa indicate that they were part
of a unified government with extreme organization.

– Both cities were constructed of the same type and


shape of bricks.

– The two cities may have existed simultaneously and


their sizes suggest that they served as capitals of
their provinces.

– In contrast to other civilizations, burials found from


these cities are not elaborate; they are more
simplistic and contain few material goods.

– Remains of palaces or temples in the cities have not


been found.

– No hard evidence exists indicating military activity,


though the cities did contain fortifications andPage 9
Mohenjo-Daro

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Mohenjo-Daro

• This shows the high western mound made up of a


massive mud brick platform and brick houses of the
Harappan period ( 2600 to 1900 B. C.).
• On top of the Harappan structures is a Buddhist
period stupa made of mud brick that dates to the first
century A.D. Page 11
The Great Bath
• The "great bath" is the earliest public
water tank.

• The tank measures approximately 12 meters


north-south and 7 meters wide, with a maximum
depth of 2.4 meters.
• Two staircases lead down into the tank from the
north and south and small sockets at the edges of
the stairs are thought to have held wooden planks
or treads.
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Harappa

• The high mound at Harappa (Mound AB) is


surrounded by a massive mud brick city wall with
large square ramparts.
• One of these eroding ramparts is visible through the
underbrush that now covers the site. The flags Page
mark13
Granary
• The "granary" of Harappa is found on Mound F.

• It is a brick structure that was built on a massive brick


foundation over 45 meters north-south and 45 meters
east-west.

• Two rows of six rooms that appear to be foundations


are arranged along a central passageway that is about 7
meters wide and partly paved with baked bricks.

• Each room measures 15.2 by 6.1 meters and has three


sleeper walls with air space between them.

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Harappa: Mound E and ET
• Inside the city is an area that has been identified
as a crafts quarter.
• Large quantities of manufacturing debris have
been found in this area indicating the presence of
workshops for making stone beads, shell
ornaments, glazed faience ornaments, stone tools
and possibly even gold working.

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Arts & Crafts
The central ornament worn on the forehead of the
famous "priest-king" sculpture from
Mohenjo-daro appears to represent an eye bead,
possibly made of gold with steatite inlay in the
center

priest-king Page 16
Arts & Crafts
• The "dancing girl of Mohenjo Daro"

Chanhudaro. Fragment of Large Deep Vessel,


circa 2500 B.C.E. Red pottery with red and
black slip-painted decoration, 415/16×6⅛Page
in. 17
“Unicorn”
• This unicorn seal was also discovered during the
late 1927-31 excavations at Mohenjo-Daro.
• One theory holds that the bull actually has two
horns, but that these have been stylized to one
because of the complexity of depicting three
dimensions.
• However the manufacturing and design process
behind seals was so sophisticated that the depiction
of three dimensions might not necessarily have
been a problem.

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Figurines

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Ornaments
• This collection of gold and agate ornaments (see
next slide) includes objects found at both
Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa.
• At the top are fillets of hammered gold that would
have been worn around the forehead.
• The other ornaments include bangles, chokers, long
pendant necklaces, rings, earrings, conical hair
ornaments, and broaches.
• These ornaments were never buried with the dead,
but were passed on from one generation to the next.
• These ornaments were hidden under the floors in
the homes of wealthy merchants or goldsmiths.

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Collapse of Harappan
“Civilization”
• The de-urbanization period of the Harappan
Civilization saw the collapse and disappearance
of the urban phenomena in the South Asia.

• The theme for this period is localization.

• Architectural and ceramic forms changed along


with the loss of writing, planned settlements,
public sanitation, monumental architecture,
seaborne and exotic trade, seals, and weights

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