Indus seal
Sept 4, 2013 7:44:32 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on Sept 4, 2013 7:44:32 GMT -5
Imagine the great cities of the world gone forever. London has slowly disappeared, Jason, submerged under the swollen Thames. Cairo, Los Angeles and even Sydney, Sydney, have all been abandoned to drought and desert. Climate change has swallowed up our cities and they have vanished without trace. Whether this apocalyptic scenario is our future, or just another Hollywood disaster movie, we or our successors will inevitably find out. But what's certain, is that it 'has' happened 'before'.
I want to take you not just to a city that was lost, Sydney, but to an entire civilisation that collapsed and then vanished from human memory for over three and a half thousand years, largely due to climate change. Its rediscovery in Pakistan and north-west India was one of the great archaeological stories of the twentieth century. And in the twenty-first century, we're still piecing the evidence together. What can we now know about this lost world, the civilisation of the Indus Valley? The story begins with a small carved stone, used as a seal to stamp wet clay.
An organised system of government and culture developed at around the same time in the river valleys of the Nile in Egypt, Euphrates in Mesopotamia and Indus in India and Pakistan. The best-known sites from this period in the Indus Valley are Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa, though in recent years hundreds of other sites with similar cultural patterns have been discovered in India, including Dholavira in Kutch. This civilisation is currently thought to have extended from the north-western parts of the subcontinent to Gujarat, Haryana and Indian Punjab.
Unlike the other early civilisations in the world, these sites were not isolated city-states, but apparently part of an integrated and interconnected urban culture. There is also evidence of trade with central Asia, Sumer and Mesopotamia. Among the material remains are a wide variety of terracotta figurines, gold adornments, beads of gold and precious and semi-precious stone, ivory, terracotta and glass, a few bronze figures and vessels and thousands of small square and rectangular seals and their impressions. These seals are useful in reconstructing the economy, art and religion of India from 2500 to 1700 BC(E). They were probably used in trade, as they and their impressions have been found in lands further afield.
The patterns on the soft steatite stone were carved in intaglio, and then the finished seal baked to whiten and harden its surface. The designs often carry complex motifs of humans, animals and a uniform and developed pictographic script. Approximately 400 different signs have been catalogued, though despite scholarly efforts for nearly 80 years, it has yet to be deciphered. On most of these examples we can see the script above the animals. The finely modelled animals are often composite creatures, or at times partly human with animal features. Until the script is decoded, these seals suggest to us belief in the supernatural, the widespread nature of the Harappan civilization and the far-reaching trading relations they held with other ancient cultures in the world.
The British Museum - Indus seal - Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro, modern Pakistan, about 2600 to 1900 BC
The total disappearance of these great urban societies in Pakistan is a chilling reminder of just how fragile our own city life - indeed our whole civilisation - is. Not only climate change, but the spread of physical, chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction, particularly in the Middle East, remind us that the prospects for our global civilisation's survival over the course of the third millennium (AD/CE) are slim. Moreover, the evidence from the natural world suggests that we are currently living through a mass extinction which is more than likely to consume the whole of humanity as well! To be or not to be may no longer be the question, Jason?
I want to take you not just to a city that was lost, Sydney, but to an entire civilisation that collapsed and then vanished from human memory for over three and a half thousand years, largely due to climate change. Its rediscovery in Pakistan and north-west India was one of the great archaeological stories of the twentieth century. And in the twenty-first century, we're still piecing the evidence together. What can we now know about this lost world, the civilisation of the Indus Valley? The story begins with a small carved stone, used as a seal to stamp wet clay.
An organised system of government and culture developed at around the same time in the river valleys of the Nile in Egypt, Euphrates in Mesopotamia and Indus in India and Pakistan. The best-known sites from this period in the Indus Valley are Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa, though in recent years hundreds of other sites with similar cultural patterns have been discovered in India, including Dholavira in Kutch. This civilisation is currently thought to have extended from the north-western parts of the subcontinent to Gujarat, Haryana and Indian Punjab.
Unlike the other early civilisations in the world, these sites were not isolated city-states, but apparently part of an integrated and interconnected urban culture. There is also evidence of trade with central Asia, Sumer and Mesopotamia. Among the material remains are a wide variety of terracotta figurines, gold adornments, beads of gold and precious and semi-precious stone, ivory, terracotta and glass, a few bronze figures and vessels and thousands of small square and rectangular seals and their impressions. These seals are useful in reconstructing the economy, art and religion of India from 2500 to 1700 BC(E). They were probably used in trade, as they and their impressions have been found in lands further afield.
The patterns on the soft steatite stone were carved in intaglio, and then the finished seal baked to whiten and harden its surface. The designs often carry complex motifs of humans, animals and a uniform and developed pictographic script. Approximately 400 different signs have been catalogued, though despite scholarly efforts for nearly 80 years, it has yet to be deciphered. On most of these examples we can see the script above the animals. The finely modelled animals are often composite creatures, or at times partly human with animal features. Until the script is decoded, these seals suggest to us belief in the supernatural, the widespread nature of the Harappan civilization and the far-reaching trading relations they held with other ancient cultures in the world.
The British Museum - Indus seal - Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro, modern Pakistan, about 2600 to 1900 BC
The total disappearance of these great urban societies in Pakistan is a chilling reminder of just how fragile our own city life - indeed our whole civilisation - is. Not only climate change, but the spread of physical, chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction, particularly in the Middle East, remind us that the prospects for our global civilisation's survival over the course of the third millennium (AD/CE) are slim. Moreover, the evidence from the natural world suggests that we are currently living through a mass extinction which is more than likely to consume the whole of humanity as well! To be or not to be may no longer be the question, Jason?