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Although agriculture seems to have come late to
India, arriving sometime around 5000 BC, India was one of the first
regions to give birth to civilization. Only a few centuries after the
first Mesopotamian cities sprang up, a people living along the
northern reaches of the Indus River discovered urbanization,
metalwork, and writing. It is a mysterious civilization and one with
no discernible continuity, for it thrived for just several centuries
and then disappeared. The Indo-European immigrants who settled the
region did not adopt most of the aspects of this civilization, and
what precisely they did adopt is difficult to ascertain. So while
Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Yellow River civilizations lasted for
millenia and left their mark on all subsequent cultures, the Indus
River civilization seems to have been a false start.
For the overwhelming majority of human history, this
early culture was truly a lost civilization. The mounds which stood
where great cities once thrived excited interest in observers, but no
one in their wildest dreams could have imagined that beneath those
large mounds lay cities that had been lost to human memory.
In the 1920's, excavations began on one of these
mounds in Harappa in Pakistan. While the archaeologists expected to
find something, they did not imagine that a city lay beneath the
earth. Archaeologists would later discover another large city to the
recovery of at least eighty villages and towns related to this newly
discovered civilization. They named it Harappan after the first
city they discovered, but it is more commonly called the Indus
River civilization. While we have stones and tools and fragments
and bones, we really have no one's voice or experience from the
bustling days of the great Harappan cities. We don't know who the
people were who built and lived there. We don't know, either, when
they first built their cities; some scholars argue that Harappan
civilization arises around 2250 BC, while others argue that it can be
dated back to 2500 BC or earlier.
Like the civilizations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and
Greece, Harappa grew on the floodplains of a rich and life-giving
river, the Indus. The original cities and many of the towns seemed to
have been built right upon the shores of the river. The Indus,
however, is destructive and unpredictable in its floods, and the
cities were frequently levelled by the forces of nature. Mohenjo-Daro
in the south, where the flooding can be fairly brutal, was rebuilt six
times that we know about; Harappa in the north was rebuilt five times.
The Harappans were an agricultural people whose
economy was almost entirely dominated by horticulture. Massive
granaries were built at each city, and there most certainly was an
elaborate bureaucracy to distribute this wealth of food. The Indus
River valley is relatively dry now, but apparently it was quite wet
when the Harappans thrived there. We know this because the bricks that
they built their cities with were fired bricks; since sun-dried bricks
are cheaper and easier to make, we can only assume that over-abundant
humidity and precipitation prevented them from taking the cheaper way
out. In addition, many of the Harappan seals have pictures of animals
that imply a wet and marshy environment, such as rhinoceroses,
elephants, and tigers. The Harappans also had a wide variety of
domesticated animals: camels, cats, dogs, goats, sheep, and buffalo.
Their cities were carefully planned and laid out;
they are, in fact, the first people to plan the building of their
cities. Whenever they rebuilt their cities, they laid them out
precisely in the same way the destroyed city had been built. The
pathways within the city are laid out in a perpendicular criss-cross
fashion; most of the city consisted of residences.
Life in the Harappan cities was apparently quite
good. Although living quarters were cramped, which is typical of
ancient cities, the residents nevertheless had drains, sewers, and
even latrines. There is no question that they had an active trade with
cultures to the west. Several Harappan seals have been found in
excavations of Sumerian cities, as well as pictures of animals that in
no way could have existed in Mesopotamia, such as tigers. There is
not, however, a wealth of Mesopotamian artifacts in Harappan cities.
We know nothing of the religion of the Harappans.
Unlike in Mesopotamia or Egypt, we have discovered no building that so
much as hints that it might be a temple or involve any kind of public
worship. The bulk of public buildings in the city seemed to be solely
oriented towards the economy and making life comfortable for the
Harappans. We do, however, have a number of tantalizing figures on
various seals and statues. What we gather from these figures (and we
can not gather much), is that the Harappans probably exercised some
sort of goddess worship. There is, however, some sort of male god
(maybe) that has the head of a man with the horns of a bull. In
addition, we believe from various artifacts that the Harappans also
may have worshipped natural objects or animistic forces, but the
circumstances of this worship can only be guessed at.
We know that the Harappans were eventually
supplanted by waves of migrations of Indo-Europeans. These new
peoples, however, did not seem to adopt the religious practices of the
Harappans, so it is not possible to reconstruct Harappan religion
through the religion of the Vedic peoples, that is, the Indo-Europeans
who constructed the rudimentary Indian religion represented by the
Vedas.
Right at the heart of the mystery, like a person
speaking behind sound-proof glass, are the numerous writings on the
artifacts that have been unearthed. Harappan writing was a
pictographic script, or at least seems to be; as of yet, however, no
one has figured out how to decipher it or even what language it might
be rendering. The logical candidate is that the Harappans spoke a
Dravidian language, but that conclusion, which may not be true, has
not helped anybody decipher the script. Like the rest of Harappan
civilization, the writing was lost to human memory after the
disappearance of the Harappans.
And finally they disappeared. And they disappeared
without a trace. Some believe that they were overrun by the war-like
Aryans, the Indo-Europeans who, like a storm, rushed in from Euro-Asia
and overran Persia and northern India. Some believe that the periodic
and frequently destructive flooding of the Indus finally took its toll
on the economic health of the civilization. It is possible that the
periodic changes of course that the Indus undergoes also contributed
to its decline. All we know is that somewhere between 1800 and 1700
BC, the Harappan cities and towns were abandoned and finally reclaimed
by the rich soil they had sprung from. |