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Indus Valley Civilization: Town

Planning, Art, Social Life and


Religion
In 1925 archaeologists announced a spectacular discovery of
immense urban ruins of two cities Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa
divided apart by a distance of 640 km but identical in their layout,
architecture and building technique.

In 1922 Dr. Rakhal Das Banerjee, the then Archaeological


Superintendent of Western Circle noticed a Buddhist stupa at
Mahenjo-daro in the Larkana district of sind (now Pakistan).

A prodigious civilization lived in the region about 5000 years ago


and tied round the river Indus and its tributaries and thus
identified as the Indus valley civilization.

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Simultaneously Sir Dayaram Sahani discovered some remnants of


pre-historic age at Harappa in Montgomery district of the Punjab
(now Pakistan). Excavation in both places unearthed valuable
materials of a civilisation of higher order. Excavation at various
other sites at Chandra Daro, Amri, Lohunjo-daro, Noa and Rupar
proved that a prodigious civilization lived in the region about 5000
years ago and tied round the river Indus and its tributaries and thus
identified as the Indus valley civilization.

Date:
During the past two decades substantial additions have been made
to our knowledge of the Indus civilization. Numerous excavations
have been made to by various archaeological agencies both foreign
and Indian at different sites of the civilization. The discovery of
Naushera in Pakistan has yielded important evidence relating to the
actual process of transformation from the early to mature Harappan
phase.

It is difficult to assert when such a civilization of high order


flourished in the North-Western region of India. We do not get any
direct source in shape of inscriptions or any written material to say
the exact date and time of the civilization. During the process of
excavation many seals with scripts have been discovered.

Unfortunately it is still not possible to decipher the scripts. As a


result information embodied in the script are unknown till today.
According to John Marshall the then Director General of
Archaeology, this civilization flourished in this vast region roughly
between 3250 BC to 2750 BC.

His assertion was on the basis of several similarities noticed


between the discoveries of Mahenjo-daro and other ancient
civilizations of the world like Mesopotamia, Egypt and Babylonia.
Two other smaller sites excavated in recent years in Rojdi in
Saurastra and Desalpur in Kutch districts reveals that this
civilization had an extensive area of about 1600 km from West to
East and 1100 km. from North to South much greater than that,
occupied jointly by the contemporary civilizations of Egypt and
Mesopotamia.

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The site of Harappa is larger than Mahenjo-daro and gives more


source materials to know about the lost culture. After excavation
and careful study of the available sources it is estimated that the
town of Mahenjo-daro or the “Mound of the Dead” was perhaps
built and rebuilt nine times in the lapse of time.

Urban-Town Planning:
The excavation undertaken in various places gives clear indication
that the people of Indus valley were primarily urban people. The
Indus cities whether Harappa or Mahenjo-daro in Pakistan or
Kalibangan, Lothal or Sarkotada in India shows Town planning of a
truly amazing nature. In both the places the cities were built on a
uniform plan.

To the west of each was a ‘citadel’ mound built on a high podium of


mud-brick and to the east was the town proper the main hub of the
residential area. The citadel and the town was further surrounded
by a massive brick wall. In fact careful planning of the town, fine
drainage system, well arranged water supply system prove that all
possible steps were carefully adopted to make the town ideal and
comfortable for the citizenry.

The street lights system, watch and ward arrangement at night to


outwit the law breakers, specific places to throw rubbish and waste
materials, public wells in every street, well in every house etc.
revealed the high sense of engineering and town planning of the
people. The main streets some as wide as 30 to 34 feet were laid out
with great skill dividing the cities into blocks within which were
networks of narrow lanes.

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The streets were quite broad varying from 9 feet to 34 feet in


breadth. The corners of the street rounded off perhaps to enable the
heavy carts to take turn easily. The streets intersected in right
angles and so arranged that the prevailing winds could work as a
sort of suction pump and thereby clean the atmosphere
automatically. No building was allowed to be constructed arbitrarily
and encroaching upon a public highway. The owners of the pottery
kilns were not allowed to build the furnaces within the town
obviously to save the town from air pollution.

A tourist from England was highly enchanted seeing the idea of


advanced and skillful town planning and remarked that the town
was very much equivalent to the working of present day Lancashire.
In short the idea and arrangements were so extraordinary that one
get a thunder-struck. Drainage system managed by the Indus Valley
civilization is indeed unique. The idea and the system were highly
scientific and by all means best of the time. The drainage system of
Mahenjo-daro is so elaborate and scientific that similar advanced
System was not found in any town of same antiquity.

House drains connected in the main drains running under the main
streets and below many lanes. Drains were made of gypsum, lime
and cement, covered with portable stabs. In regular intervals, there
were inspection traps and main-holes for inspection. Main drains
were feet 2½ to 5 ft. broad. The small drains were connected with
main drains which helped to pull water speedily out of the town.
Every house had an independent soak- pit which collected all
sediments and allowed water to flow to the main drains passing
underneath the main streets of the town.

Proper care was taken to ensure that the house-wives did not throw
refuse and dirt in the drains. The extensive drainage system
adopted by the people of the Indus Valley unhesitatingly proves that
the people of the time had developed a high sense of health and
sanitation. The people of Indus Valley had generally constructed
three types of buildings. Such as dwelling houses, public halls and
public baths. Burnt bricks were used and fixed skillfully with the
help of mud and mortar for the construction of houses and other
different structures of the towns. Buildings were of different sizes
but generally were single or double storied.

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From the existence of a stare case it is evident that double storied
dwelling houses were widely prevalent. The houses were furnished
with paved floors and were provided with doors and windows. The
roofs were made of mud, reed and wood. Every house possessed a
well both room courtyard kitchen and first class drainage network.

The houses were more or less typified the same plan, a square
courtyard round of which a number of rooms. Almost every house
had a bathroom at the ground floor and some even on the first floor.
The bathrooms were connected by a drainage channel to sewers in
the main streets leading to soak-pits. The domestic drainage system
and the bathing structures and the outlets are found to be very
remarkable.

The average size of the ground floor of a house was about 11 square
metres but there existed many bigger houses. There were some
barrack-like groups of single roomed tenements at Mahenjo-daro
and Harappa similar to the coolie lines of Indian tea and other
estates. Many public buildings have come to notice during
excavation. A high pillared hall having an area of 80 sq. feet came to
light which is accepted to have been used as an assembly hall for
transacting matters of common interest. Another notable building
discovered is considered to be the state granary.

It is 200 feet long and 150 feet wide and further sub-divided into
smaller storage blocks for storing different types of grains generally
used during the period of food crisis. A great public bath excavated
in Mahenjo-daro is really significant. It is really thought provoking
how such a massive bath as back as 5000 years could be
constructed. It is 180 feet by 180 feet square.

The bricks used were of different sizes. Some were 20 inches by 8


inches and the smaller were 9 inches by 4 inches. The great bath is
surrounded by a large number of rooms. It has a flight of steps at
either end and is fed by a well situated adjoining room. There were
separate drainage systems to flush out waste and dirty water. The
actual bathing pool is about 139 feet in length and 23 feet in breadth
and the depth is 8 feet.
It is thus presumed that this great bath was used by the members of
the public on auspicious festive days. The strength and the
durability of the structure prove amply that it could last 5000 years
with standing all kinds of ravages of nature. To the West of the
Great Bath existed a remarkable group of 27 blocks of brick-work
crisscrossed by narrow ventilation channels. This structure is the
podium of the great granary.

Art, Craft, Painting and Sculpture:


The people of the Indus Valley civilization had shown equal
progress in sculpture, art of pottery, painting and carving. These are
sufficiently corroborated from many statues, figures etc. discovered
during excavation. The statue of a healthy bull a strong watch-dog
and a shawl-wearing yogi prove that the people were highly
proficient in the art of sculpture.

The statue of a dancing girl with her hands on hip and a dancer
standing on her right leg raising the left leg to the front typified the
standard of the artistic value of the people of the Indus Valley
civilization. The people had made remarkable progress in the art of
pottery. Many beautiful glazed and coloured potteries have been
unearthed during the excavation.

These potteries are generally regarded as the earliest example of its


kind in the ancient world. The clay pots were also polished and
glazed to give shine like those of the present days. The people of the
Indus Valley were very fond of paintings. Their patronage for
paintings transpires in the figures of human beings, animals and
other objects of nature. These quality paintings of the painters really
surpass all records.

Art of Carving:
The excavation of Mahenjo-daro and Harappa throws a flood of
light that the people of Indus valley did not lag behind in the field of
engraving of animals on many seals that came to our hand. The
engravings were simple but elegant and the variety is also a matter
of surprise. The engraving of bulls, rhinoceros elephants, deer’s etc.
on the seals speaks about their skill in this field.
The carving of a humped bull is a unique specimen and it
symbolizes the realism and simplicity in the process of the
engraving. The figures are generally engraved on ivory, soap stone,
leather, metal and wood. All these exhibits unmistakably prove that
the art of engraving achieved a success during the Indus valley
civilization.

The Indus valley people were also well versed in the art of writing.
The script followed was pictographic. Though in the seals scripts are
plentifully available but in-spite of pain staking endeavor the
scholars are not successful in deciphering the scripts for which
many important information’s still remain under darkness.

Social Life:
The ruins and various evidence of Harappa and Mahenjo-daro
reveal a great deal about social and economic life of the people of
Indus valley. On examination of the skulls and bones discovered
during excavation it is said that the people were either Dravidians
or a branch of Indo-Aryans. Some other scholars are of opinion that
they were from the same stock of the Sumerians or the Cretans.

It appears that the people were divided into four classes—the


learned class, warriors, traders and artisans, and manual labourers
or working class. The learned class included priests, physicians,
astrologers. The existence of palaces with ancient foundations, of
swords of watchmen’s quarters and of ancient fort walls points to
the second class whose duty was to protect the people.

Probably this class was similar to khatriyas. A commercial class and


various artisans such as the mason, engraver, shell worker, gold
smith, weaver, carpenter etc. formed the third class. Domestic
servants and manual labourers like leather workers, fishermen,
basket makers, peasants, daily wage earners formed the last class.
All this corresponds roughly to the four Varna’s of the Vedic age.

Food:
The people were taking beef, mutton, pork, poultry, turtles and
tortoises as their main food. Wheat was their main article of food.
Barley and palm-date were also familiar. Fish was commonly used
and vegetables and fruits seem to have been known though there is
no positive evidence.

Dress:
Cotton fabrics were in common use but wool was also used. Their
dress was simple. Men used shawls which were drawn over the left
shoulder and under the right arm so as to leave the right arm free. It
formed the upper garment. The lower garment was like a modern
dhoti. Their hair was combed backwards and was either cut short or
coiled in a knot on the top of the head. Men kept short beards and
sometimes the upper lip was shaved.

Ornaments:
The people were fond of ornaments. Both men and women of all
classes used necklaces fillets, arm lets, finger rings, and bangles.
Girdles nose studs, earrings, and anklets were used by the women
alone. There was a great variety in the shape and design of these
ornaments of the Indus valley people. The rich made the ornaments
of gold, silver, ivory, faience and other semi precious stones like
lapis-lazuli, carnelian, agate and jasper. The poor used ornaments
made of copper bone shell and terra cotta. People knew the art of
toilet and cosmetic.

Toilet jars made of ivory, metal, pottery and stone. Ladies were well
acquainted with the toilet culture. As stones were not available
there it was imported from other places and so was sparingly used.
As no scarp of iron is found in Mahenjo-daro, this metal was not
known to the people. Indus valley people knew the use of gold,
silver, copper, tin, lead and bronze.

Amusements:
Among amusements dancing with the accompaniment of the drum,
and dice playing was very common. Hunting was practiced as a
common game. People were also interested in fishing.

Household Articles:
The earthen ware vessels of rich variety prepared by the potters
with the help of their wheel either plain or painted highly burnished
with the appearance of Chinese lacquer discovered from the
Mahenjo-daro speaks of the high standard skill of the people of
Mahenjo-daro.

Very often the pots were ornamented with a pattern of concentric


circles in black and occasionally with figures of trees, birds and
animals. Some of the pottery was ornamented with clay knobs.
Vessels of copper, bronze, Silver and porcelain were known to the
people though rarely used.

A large number of bowls, dishes, cups, saucers, vases, basins, pans,


jars, jar stands, goblets and stone jars of different size were in use
by the people as have been found there. Needles and combs made of
bone or ivory, axes, chisels, saws, knives, fish hooks, and razors
copper and bronze were also used by the people.

Clay models of birds, animals, whistles, rattles, men and women etc.
were also discovered from the region. There were wheeled carts and
chairs. People used a large number of weights of different size. They
ranged from large ones to be lifted with a rope to very small ones
used by jewelers.

Cubical weights were most common. The unit weight had the value
of 8750 grams the largest weight being 10.970 grams. A bronze bar
with suspended copper pans was used as a scale. All these weights
prove that the decimal system was known to the people of the Indus
Valley.

Domestication of Animals:
They had domesticated animals. Humped bull, buffalo, sheep, pig,
dog, elephant and camels were domesticated. Horse was not
domesticated. They used carts in which bullocks were used. The
people had learnt the benefit of domesticating animals and
therefore widely practiced the same. It is evident that the people
were familiar to wild animals mainly tiger, bear, rhinoceros, hair
squirrel and monkey.

Weapons of War:
It is generally accepted that the Indus Valley people were peace
loving. In fact no deadly weapons or defensive weapons like shield
or armor have discovered during excavation. On the contrary
weapons like axe, spear, bows and arrows etc. discovered give
indication that the people were disinterested in warfare. However
the weapons so discovered prove that the people of the age knew the
use of copper, bronze. Incidentally they used to use a type of sharp
pointed and thick sword to protect themselves from external attack.

Disposal of Dead:
During the excavation the remnants discovered suggest that the
dead-bodies used to be disposed of by burning. Some dead-bodies
were buried under the ground and some were left exposed so that
animals or birds could consume its flesh and then the bones were
buried under the earth. Sir John Marshall said that the process of
burning was very common to the people.

Position of Women:
Women in the society were highly respected. The worship of mother
goddess indicates that women enjoyed enormous position in the
society. They were equally treated like their male counter-part in
the society.

Economic Life:
The basic economy of the people was necessarily agricultural.
Cultivation was on an extensive scale facilitated by the presence of
rivers. The principal food grains were wheat, barley, peas, and
sesamum. Cotton was also grown. The general diet consisted of
fruits, vegetables, animal food including beef, mutton, pork and
poultry.

There is clear evidence of the existence of a highly developed system


of craft production and distribution. There were specialized groups
of potters, copper and bronze workers. The merchants of the Indus
Valley carried their trade far beyond their frontiers of the empire
and established contacts with other peoples of other civilizations.

Gold was imported from Mysore. Silver was imported from


Afghanistan or Iran, Copper from Rajputana, South India,
Baluchistan and Arabia. Lead-ore was imported from Ajmer and
Afghanistan. Jade was collected from Central Asia. Evidence is
found of trade contacts between the Indus people and Sumerians,
Egyptians and other people. Trade between Indus region and Iraq
was carried on through the island of Bahrain in the Persian Gulf.

The cuneiform clay tablets speak of the trade through Bahrain have
been amply confirmed by modern excavation. There was an
intermediate trade centre at Magan or Makan identified with Oman
or Some other part of South Arabia. Besides copper peacocks were
exported in exchange of silver and other commodities from
Mesopotamia.

The construction of different categories of buildings and the


architectural planning of the town, the use of different kinds of
ornaments made of gold and silver speaks high of the economic
standard of the Indus valley people.

Religion:
From the various articles discovered, one can safely conclude that
the people believed in image worshipping. The image of a female
deity resembles the image of mother goddess which has been
identified as the symbol of “Sakti”. A number of statues have been
discovered. One is a seminude female figure wearing girdle or band-
round her loins. Those figures represent the Mahadevi of the valley.

Thus the cult of mother goddess seems to have been widely


prevalent in the Indus valley. A long seal discovered at Harappa
showing the figure of Mother Goddess with a man holding a dagger.
Women present with hands lifted represent the prevalence of
human sacrifice. Thus it is confirmed that people believed in female
energy as the source of all creation.

Simultaneously the idea of worshipping male god “Shiva-Pasupati”


was popular at that time. On one particular seal we find a figure
with two horns on two sides of a tall head dress surrounded by wild
animals and sitting in an erect meditative posture or a yoga posture.
This speaks of to a certain extent the later conception of Siva.

Lord Siva is regarded as the Maha-Yogi and is styled as Pasupati or


the Lord of the beasts. The three faces in the figure suggest the
concept of trimukha which directly symbolized the Lord Shiva. The
discovery of stone pieces which looked exactly like Shivalinga, has
further confirmed the idea of worshipping god shiva by the people
of Indus valley.

Apart from the worship of god and goddess the people of Indus
valley used to worship certain trees, birds, and animals. Some of the
animals were regarded as the ‘Vahana’ of the Shiva. The bull usually
depicted with a single horn was associated with god Shiva. It is
strange that the cow so universally worshipped in later Hinduism is
no where depicted in the Indus seals.

The great bath of Mahenjo-daro indicates that the people used to


bodily purify themselves by taking bath on the eve of the religious
ceremony before worshipping either goddess or gods.

Mahadevi or God Pasupati:


From the figure of a pipal tree in a seal indicate that the people used
to accept pipal tree as sacred. The dove was looked upon as sacred.
Some form of Naga Worship was also practiced. The representation
of Swastik and the wheel on some seals make us believe that though
actual worship of sun was not there but it was represented
symbolically.

From the above mentioned similarities it is no use denying that the


Hinduism of the present days is highly indebted to the culture and
civilization of the Indus Valley. Hence it is justified to think that
there is an organic relationship between the ancient culture of the
Indus Valley and the Hinduism of today.

Decline of Indus Valley Civilization:


The decline and the fall of the Indus Civilization was progressive
and the city of Mohenjo-Daro was already slowly dying before its
ultimate end. Houses mounted on artificial platforms or upon the
ruins in their endeavor to check the floods were shoddy in
construction, older buildings were subdivided even domestic
courtyards were partitioned.
The growing danger of flood forced the people living in the areas to
migrate to safer places. There are convincing evidence to prove that
around 2000 AD devastating flood repeatedly appeared in the lower
Indus Valley and destroyed this flourishing civilization.
Undisputedly, the Indus Valley was badly affected by flood more
than once.

The flood deposits at Chandudaro confirm the contention. The cities


were standing on artificial platforms and on the baked brick
revetments of the fortifications at Harappa and the mud brick
fittings in the foundation of the houses at Mahenjo-daro amply
support the theory.

The high hill of silt at Budh Takkar as referred by Sri Sahani only
corroborates that such deposits was possible because of
unprecedented flood of high magnitude that prolonged unusually.
The gradual alluvial building at the river mouths right from the
beginning of the civilization was ultimately responsible for sheet-
flooding and consequent sub-emergence of Harappa settlements in
low lying areas.

According to one school of scholars rainfall gradually declined in


the area and eventually turned the Sindh into a desert. In such an
adverse condition the inhabitants were compelled to migrate to
suitable places. Thus natural calamity like flood, cyclone,
earthquake etc. was responsible for the destruction of such a rich
civilization. Many Harappa’s left the Indus and proceeded towards
higher regions.

The fierce tribes living in the hills and jungles gradually mustered
strength and invaded the rich and unguarded cities of the Indus
Valley. They let loose rapine massacre and destruction which
compelled the habitants to quit the dwellings and take to heels to
safer places. As the inhabitants of Indus Valley were neither war like
nor possessed suitable weaponry for their defence, they were unable
to repulse theunslaught of the invading tribes including the Aryans.

The complete ruin of the Indus cities could also have been due to
the wiping out of their system of agriculture. The rivers might have
changed their courses which would make irrigation impossible and
ruin the city. To conclude we can say that the Indus Valley
civilization resembles a great deal with those of Egypt,
Mesopotamia and China.

The developed urban life, the use of the potters wheel, kiln-burnt
bricks, copper and bronze vessels and pictorial writings are some of
the common distinct characteristics of all these civilizations. Indus
Valley civilization thus has contributed many valuable imprints to
the human civilization.

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