INTRODUCTION TO MOEN-JO-DARO:
Cities
arose along the Indus River and Ghaggar-Hakra River by circa 2600 B.C. This
marked the beginning of the Indus Civilization. Each major city was linked with
others through rivers, which served as transportation and communication
highways. This extensive network over a vast area supported a prosperous and
stable society, and advances in technology in these cities yielded products that
were traded as far away as the Arabian Sea and Mesopotamia.
The
most distinctive feature of the Indus Civilization was its intricate urban
planning. Some cities were composed of two sections surrounded by walls, the
"Citadel" and the "Lower Town". The "Citadel" was
the administrative and religious center with public buildings such as the
"Great Bath" and the "Granary", and the "Lower
Town" was primarily a residential area. The cities were distinguished by a
well-planned layout of streets and buildings and sophisticated construction.
More than 1,500 sites have been discovered, and approximately ten of these are
cities.
Human and animal terracotta figurines, various toys, decorative
motifs painted on pottery and other objects made from copper/bronze, shell and
semi-precious stones all indicate that people enjoyed an affluent urban life.
Specialized craftsmen residing in cities made these objects, and their skilled
production inspired trade with far-off lands. People in surrounding villages
must have admired urban life and the cities as centers of information and all
the latest trends.
The
people of the Indus Civilization apparently regarded buffalo horns and pipal
trees as sacred. Depictions on some seals and tablets of men wearing horned
headdresses decorated with pipal leaves may have represented religious as well
as secular leaders. Perhaps these men wore the unique ornaments made of gold and
semi-precious stones found at Indus sites. Of these ornaments, carnelian beads
with bleached (etched) white designs treated with alkaline solution were an
Indus specialty, exported as far as the Persian Gulf and Mesopotamia.
Recent excavations at Harappa (Punjab, Pakistan) are being conducted by the
American team of the Harappa Archaeological Research Project jointly with the
Department of Archaeology and Museums of Pakistan. Excavations at Dholavira
(Gujarat, India) are being conducted by the Archaeological Survey of India.
These excavations have been the focus of much attention in the last decade. Habitation at both sites began well before 3000 B.C. and continued until several
hundred years after the decline of the Indus Civilization (after the end of
urban life). New data from these sites is expected to contribute to a better
understanding of the formative stages of the Indus Civilization, as well as its
decline.
The
land of "Meluhha" mentioned in Mesopotamian cuneiform tablets was
probably the Indus Civilization. Trade contacts between the Indus Civilization
and the Persian Gulf and Mesopotamia are evident from Indus signs engraved on
button-shaped Persian Gulf seals and the unique carnelian beads and ornaments
found in these regions. Chlorite stone vessels manufactured in Iran have also
been found throughout the Indus and Mesopotamian regions. Semi-spherical copper
ingots probably originating in Magan (Oman) provide further evidence of
widespread trade. Various goods traded from east to west, as well as from west
to east, surely spread beliefs and philosophies along with material goods.