History of Archaeology (English)
History of Archaeology (English)
History of Archaeology (English)
The history of Indian archaeology spans from the 19th century to the present, and
includes a wide variety of archaeologists investigating the region's history. ... Mohenjo-
Daro and Harappa are also ancient archaeological sites that were once a part of India,
but now lie within the borders of Pakistan.
Col. Meadows Tylor of the early nineteenth century was one of the earliest to show
interest in the archaeology of India. His interest, however, remained more concentrated
on the south Indian Megaliths. Alexander Cunningham in 1861 and Robert Bruce Foote
in 1863 began their explorations and recording of prehistoric antiquities of the country in
the subsequent period.
While the former concentrated on the historic period and that too of the northern regions
of India, the latter was more extensive in his interest extended to even the earliest
Stone Age period. In fact the credit for reporting the first Palaeolithic tools from India is
also given to Robert Bruce Foote.
The spectacular discovery of Harappa and Mohenjodaro during the early twenties of this
century brought about a great deal of interest in Indian archaeology among the
scholars. In 1930 Burkitt reported on Cammiade’s stone age tools collected from lower
Krishna valley and also attempted to create a climatic succession for Indian Pleistocene’
period on Richardson’s line of what has been attempted in early African prehistory.
De Terra and Paterson in 1939 published their detailed geological study of the Potwar
region in Punjab and also described the tools associated with the identified climatic
succession. Almost in the same year Michael Todd reported an Upper Palaeolithic in
stratigraphic context from Khandivli near Bombay.
In the strictly chronological sense, one can see that the rise and development of interest
in Indian archaeology follows almost parallel with the same in France and England. In
1861 the Archaeological Survey of India was established and this was broadly the
period when in Denmark the Prehistoric Museum was being established by organizing
amateurists.
A proper synthesis of retrieved fragments of the past was not attempted till 1950 when
Stuart Piggott brought out the book Prehistoric India. Of course, works of Panchanan
Mitra, on the same lines preceded Piggott’s by a couple of decades but the amount of
material discovered till his time was too rudimentary to form a complete picture.
Researches in Archaeology of India for the period between 1861 to 1944 can be best
compared with a stamp collection and had not formulated any theoretical paradigm calls
it the Pre-Paradigm-stage). It was only in 1944 that Sir Mortimer Wheeler started
baptising a series of Indian archaeologists into what Dhavalikar (1984) calls the ‘time-
space’ perspective; the archaeologists in India could now collect their ‘stamps’ without
damaging the corners and also learn the method of arranging them within a given
‘album’.
In 1961, the first international conference of Asian archaeology was organized by the
Archaeological Survey of India to mark the occasion of their completing one hundred
years of existence. The deliberations of this conference, at many points, brought Indian
archaeologists face to face with anthropology but the total pre-occupation of the former
with pot sherds, stone tools or megaliths on the one hand and with terraces, layers and
phases on the other, made them totally ignore the cultural logic of the renowned
anthropologists.
From then onwards there has been no looking back. Archaeology in India has
progressively moved away from anthropology. Any criticism of our inadequate
chronology has been adequately met with by delving deeper and deeper in our vertical
trenches. Inevitable requirement of natural and biological sciences to perfect our time
sequence is being emphasized.
The Tata Institute of Fundamental Research was established in 1961 and a plethora of
radiocarbon dated started appearing from our Chalcolithic sites. In 1964, Deccan
College, Pune for the first time attempted to bring together all the information gathered
till then in Indian Archaeology. Almost in the same year (1965) D.D. Kosambi brought
out The Culture and Civilization of Ancient India in Historical Outline.
The book became an instant success in sociology, history and Indology. It aims at the
reconstruction of Indian civilization as a dynamic process with the help of
archaeological, textual and mythological basis whenever and whichever is available. In
Indian archaeology this book did not even create a ripple. To most of the archaeologists
his approach was as ridiculous as looking through the wrong end of the telescope.
Subbarao’s The Personality of India (1958) made a much bigger impact than Kosambi’s
work could. This was primarily because Subbarao’s approach was purely
anthropogeographic and also such an approach has a common-sense level attraction
as well. The establishment of a special journal for archaeology. Puratattva, in 1967
shows that by this time a marked increase in the number of scholars involved in
archaeological research must have occurred.
University departments, museums and research institutes were generating fresh data
from all over the country. A look through the contents of the early issues of this Journal
can at once explain the generalized trend set for archaeological researches in India.
The questions asked and dealt with are by no means unimportant, but nothing can be
further from anthropology than these researches.
Archaeology in the United States during this period was passing through a series of
reformations and rethinking. While Binford brought out his ‘Archaeological Systematics
and the Study of Culture Process’; in 1965, Chang (1963) appealed for more studies in
settlement archaeology. In 1967 Deetz gave an ‘Invitation to Archaeology’ for looking
beyond material culture.
Orme (1972) came out almost openly to recommend anthropological models for culture
studies. Allen and Richardson (1971) went way ahead of all by even recommending
methods of reconstructing kinship from archaeological data. All this was so bewildering
for the conservative school of archaeologists that Jacquetta Hawks (1968) could not
help but bring out her apprehensions in print.
The only Indian to have reacted to Hawks was D.P. Agarwal (1970). The latter goes all
the way to support the changes in archaeology where, increasingly, natural and
biological sciences are being used. Surprisingly he does not comment on the need of
these objectivized environmental data for serving the new paradigm that archaeology
was adopting in the west.
Another Indian scholar after a short stay in California came back and wrote a book to
emphasize the very important cause anthropology can serve in Indian archaeology.
Again this solitary attempt to wed the two branches could not bring the desired change
because of its rather sharp criticism of the existing school and theoretically weak
arguments for anthropology.
In the second place, a large number of the new generation archaeologists in USA
started reviving ecology as a dominant factor in moulding human culture. The seminar
on Radiocarbon and Indian Archaeology plainly shows the effects of these
developments in Indian archaeology.
The first volume of the organ of this society named Man and Environment appeared the
same year. Sankalia’s updating work of Prehistory and Protohistory of India and
Pakistan (1974) incorporates a considerable amount of the new body of data from the
Middle East including the remarkable evidence from Mehergarh but discussion of
culture-process is kept to the minimum.
In 1978, Allchin, Goudie and Hegde brought out The Prehistory and Protohistory of the
Great Indian Desert. Allchin and Chakravarti’s A Source book of Indian Archaeology
(1979) surprisingly does not even raise the issues which are relevant in any historical
summary.
These are some others like Pant’s Prehistoric Uttar Pradesh (1982) or Jaiswal’s
Chopper-Chopping Component of Palaeolithic India (1982) but these address
themselves to fragmented areas or features. Agrawal’s latest book called The
Archaeology of India (1982) attempts to summarize all the archaeological material of
past researches apparently within a historical framework.
There is no theory in this book, not even broad generalizations. He does fall back on
anthropology but only so far as the selections of chapter headings go, e.g., ‘The first
farming cultures’. But he demolishes all hopes for anthropological archaeology when in
the 7th line after opening the chapter on Prehistoric Art he writes, possibly he (the
Mesolithic man) did not even believe in anything beyond the material. There were no
gods, religion or after-life. One wonders whether Agrawal is describing the capitalistic
western world of today!
the impact of New Archaeology of what Dhavalikar would like to call “Bin- Clarke’
revolution in Indian archaeology. Sankalia himself chose this topic for the D N Majumdar
memorial lecture in 1974. The very fact that he chose to examine ‘New Archaeology’ in
a very pointed fashion, should have made some impact on Indian archaeologists, but
apparently they had no time for theory when they were busy with classifying ‘pots and
pans’ or ‘stones and bones’ coming out of their on-going excavations.
The only reverberation of this was felt in 1985 when Deccan College organized a
seminar on Recent Advances in Indian Archaeology. The proceedings report is edited
by Deo and Paddayya (1985). Paddayya goes all out to initiate the Indian
archaeologists to the concept and methods of processual archaeology – but alas what
follows is the same stuff – although carrying such ambitious and misleading captions as
‘Cultural Ecology, of Early Man in India’ or ‘Cultural Ecology of the Neolithic India.’
The above discussion will clearly demonstrate that Indian archaeology still remains in
what may be described as a “descriptive stage”. An analytical stage in archaeology
cannot emerge without a sound theoretical foundation for the structure of culture or
culture change.
Such a change seems a very remote likelihood without developing anthropological
archaeology in India. Archaeology in our country has its umbilical cord tied to history
and this kind of archaeology cannot help us much in understanding such a complex
country as India.