Indus River Valley Flashcards

1
Q

Region and Climate

A
  • Northwest Southern Asia
  • Based around the Indus River Valley
  • Experienced seasonal monsoons
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2
Q

Comparison to Other Cradles

A
  • Origin and decline unclear
  • Contemporary to Mesopotamia, Egypt, and China
  • Larger area and influence than other cradles
  • Relatively late archaeological work
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3
Q

Agriculture

A
  • Fully domesticated animals 7000 years before present
  • No irrigation needed due to monsoons
  • Cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats, chickens, dairy production
  • Wheat, barley, millet, peas, beans, fruit, melons, berries. Primary food staple was cereal grains
  • Multicropping
  • Crops could be grown in all seasons
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4
Q

Charles Masson 1800s

A
  • Discovered the first Indus Valley site and wrongfully attributed it to Alexander the Great
  • Wrote a book about his findings
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5
Q

Sir Alexander Cunningham 1875

A
  • Did an archaeological survey of India
  • Inspired by Masson’s writings
  • Discovered the Indus Script
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6
Q

John Marshall 1903

A
  • Excavated Mohenjo-Daro
  • Correctly thought it was part of its own large political society rather than a satellite city for Egypt
  • Other archaeologists did not believe this because they thought there could not be another great society in the area
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7
Q

Mortimer Wheeler

A
  • Developed a chronology of the area via stratigraphy
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8
Q

Pre-Harappan

A
  • Initial small settlements in the neolithic period
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9
Q

Early Harappan

A
  • Trade established with Egypt, Mesopotamia, possibly China
  • Population and infrastructure expanding
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10
Q

Mature Harappan

A
  • the pinnacle of cities and urbanization
  • Water and land trade firmly established, extensive maritime trade with Mesopotamia
    Agriculture was fully developed
  • Small cities which were able to develop due to surplus food
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11
Q

Cities

A
  • Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro were the largest
  • Infrastructural planning, waste management, water storage
  • Divided into upper and lower districts
  • Upper district in the West had the acropolis, high class residences, high intensity architecture and goods, public buildings, larger houses
  • Lower district in the East had regular people, low intensity architecture and good, small homes
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12
Q

Monumental Architecture

A
  • Citadels, public baths, granaries
  • Dams, lock gates, artificial lakes, fountains
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13
Q

Hygiene

A
  • Public baths
  • Bathrooms and sewage systems
  • “Flush” toilets which used water buckets
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14
Q

Late Harappan

A
  • Decline of the Indus Valley Civilization
  • Likely due to drought, famine, loss of trade with Egypt, rise in disease, breakdowns of urban infrastructure
  • Drying of the Ghaggar-Hakra river
  • Decline of trade goods due to the Late Bronze Age Collapse
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15
Q

Aryan Invasion Theory

A
  • Mortimer Wheeler proposed that a race called the “Aryans” (later discovered to be a linguistic group of Indo-Europeans) conquered the Indus Valley
  • This is where Hitler got the idea that Aryans are superior and his policies were justified
    Theory lost credibility in the 1960s
  • Reality was probably just a gradual period of peaceful migrations
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16
Q

Post Harappan

A
  • Major cities abandoned
  • People moved South
17
Q

Harappa

A
  • 2600 BC
  • 23500 people at its max
  • 370 acres
  • Damaged by British and French forces
18
Q

Mohenjo-Daro

A
  • “Mound of the Dead”
  • Largest Indus Valley city
  • 40,000 people
  • The Citadel
  • Abandoned by 1700 BC
19
Q

Mohenjo-Daro Citadel

A
  • 12m tall mud brick mound
  • 5000 residences
  • Assembly halls, public baths, great granary, great bath
  • No wall, indicating that this was more of an economic capital than a political one because it would be under less threat of invasion
20
Q

Culture

A
  • No evidence of central authority, rather they were probably organized into city-states
  • May have been Theocratic
  • No large military presence
21
Q

Indus Valley Script

A
  • About 4000 items found so far
  • Writings are short, and may not classify as a full writing system
  • Still not understood because we do not know what language they spoke, so we cannot do comparative analysis with a similar language
  • Small stamp seals
    From Early Harappan onward
  • Logosyllabic and pictographic writings have been found
22
Q

Theories of collapse

A
  • Climate change and a change to seasonal flooding
  • Changes to Egyptian and Mesopotamian trade
  • Rise in disease
    Breakdown of urban architecture
    Aryan invasion theory
  • Probably a series of peaceful migrations