| The
Indus Valley civilization flourished around 2,500 B.C. in
the western part of South Asia, in what today is Pakistan
and western India. It is often referred to as Harappan Civilization
after its first discovered city, Harappa.
The Indus Valley was home to the largest
of the four ancient urban civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia,
India and China. It was not discovered until the 1920's. Most
of its ruins, including major cities, remain to be excavated.
Its script has not been deciphered. Basic questions about
the people who created this highly complex culture are unanswered.
The Harappans used the same size bricks
and standard weights for a thousand miles. There were other
highly developed cultures in the area. Some are thousands
of years older. Harappa was settled before the Harappans of
the Indus Valley, and they were replaced by other still anonymous
peoples.
In fact, there seems to have been another
large river which parallel and west of the Indus in the third
and fourth millenium B.C. This was the ancient Ghaggra-Hakra
River or Sarasvati of the Rig Veda. Its lost banks are slowly
being laid out by researchers. Along its bed, a whole new
set of ancient towns and cities have been discovered.
Ancient Mesopotamian texts speak of trading
with at least two seafaring civilizations - Makkan and Meluha
- in the neighborhood of India in the third millennium B.C.
This trade was conducted with real financial sophistication
in amounts that could involve tons of copper. The Mesopotamians
speak of Meluha as an aquatic culture, where water and bathing
played a central role. A number of Indus Valley objects have
been found buried with Mesopotamians.
This doorway starts telling the story of
the Indus Valley as a series of chapters. It follows the re-discovery
of Harappa in the early 19th century by the explorers Charles
Masson and Alexander Burnes, and the archaeologist Sir Alexander
Cunningham in the 1870's. This work led to the the first excavations
in the early 20th century at Harappa by Rai Bahadur Daya Ram
Sahni, and by R.D. Banerji at another Indus Valley city, Mohenjo-daro.
Since 1986, the joint Pakistani American
Harappa Archaeological Research Project (HARP) has been carrying
out the first major excavations at the site in forty years.
These excavations have the shown Harappa to have been far
larger than once thought, perhaps supporting a population
of 50,000 at certain periods. These excavations, which continue
in 1998, are rewriting assumptions about the Indus Valley.
New facts, objects and examples of writing are being discovered
each season.
INDUS VALLEY CIVILIZATION
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