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Indus River Valley: 2500 BC The culture Harappa (named after the city Harappa) existed along the Indus River in what is present day Pakistan. It flourished for 1,000 years then vanished without a trace until this century. River Valley Life: The Positives Many Natural Resources Fresh water / Timber (Himalayans) Cedar / Timber (in Valleys) Gold, silver, semi-precious stones. Marine resources: Coastal settlements were involved in fishing and trading, using the monsoon winds to travel to Oman and the Persian Gulf region. River Valley Life: The Negatives The Great Monsoon Balance Monsoons shaped Indian life. If the monsoon was late, devastation occurred (famine, starvation) If the monsoon was too heavy, rushing rivers would flood Twin Capital Cities: Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa URBAN PLANNING: Well-known for impressive, organized layout. They were part of a unified government with extreme organization. INDOOR PLUMBING: Well laid out plumbing / drainage system, including indoor toilets. Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa Economy-Trade The civilization was mainly urban and mercantile. Indus valley traded w/ Mesopotamia, S. India, Afghanistan, and Persia for gold, silver, copper, and turquoise. Mesopotamia model of irrigated agriculture used along Indus River. Other Civilization Uniqueness: Egalitarian (classless) / equitable distribution of wealth => socialism? First vaccination of smallpox Cultivate cotton for production of cloth Originated the concept of zero and decimal system of numbers Harappan Astronomers? Language translation not complete, but indications they understood astronomy Straight streets of the Indus cities are oriented towards cardinal directions. The Vedic calendar created about the time the Indus civilization flourished. Language Indus people used pictographic script Script often contain realistic pictures of animals worshipped as sacred This material is important to the investigation of the Harappan language and religion Undeciphered writing system: Comparing First Writing: Four Theories of Collapse Archaeologists offer 4 explanations: Three are based on ecological factors: intense flooding, decrease in precipitation, and desertification of the Sarasvati River. The fourth hypothesis is that of the Aryan Invasion Possible route of the Aryans The Aryan “Invasion” Invaders from North Restless, warlike people Tall, blue-eyed, fair-skinned Difficulty of theory: no evidence of large-scale military conquest. They just co-existed. The Aryan “Invasion”, cont. Settled over a long period of time More primitive than the earlier culture New society by 1,200 B.C. or so Little evidence Not literate No record system The Early Aryans Pastoral economy: sheep, goats, horses, cattle Religious and Literary work: Four Vedas – songs 1,028 hymns / prayers to gods Foundation for which religion? The Caste System The Vedas: Our primary source of info about Aryans explained their caste system: Brahmins: the priests Kshatriyas: the warriors Vaisyas: merchants and peasants Untouchables History of South Asia Stone Age before 10000 BC Mature Harappan 2600–1700 BC Late Harappan + Aryans 1700–1300 BC Iron Age 1200–300 BC Maurya Empire • 321–184 BC Middle Kingdoms 230 BC–1279 AD Satavahana • 230 BC–220 BC Gupta Empire • 280–550 AD Islamic Sultanates 1206–1596 Mughal Empire 1526–1707 Sikh Confederacy 1716-1849 British India 1858–1947 Modern States since 1947 Arthur A. McDonnell once wrote, “Early India wrote no history because it never made any. The ancient Indians never went through a struggle for life like the Greeks, the Persians and the Romans. Secondly, the Brahmans early embraced the doctrine that all action and existence are a positive evil and could therefore have felt but little inclination to chronicle historical events.”