Q1: Describe the agricultural practices and means of irrigation used by the Harappans?
OR
Describe the subsistence strategies of Harappan civilisation?
Ans:
Q2: Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:
THE MOST ANCIENT SYSTEM YET DISCOVERED
About the drains, Mackay noted: “It was certainly the most complete ancient system as yet discovered.” Every house was connected to the street drains. The main channels were made of bricks set in mortar and were covered with loose bricks that could be removed for cleaning. In some cases, limestone was used for the covers. House drains first emptied into a sump or cesspit into which solid matter settled while waste water flowed out into the street drains. Very long drainage channels were provided at intervals with sumps for cleaning. It was a wonder of archaeology that “little heaps of material, mostly sand, have frequently been found lying alongside drainage channels, which shows … that the debris was not always carted away when the drain was cleared”.
From Ernest Mackay, Early Indus Civilisation, 1948.
Drainage systems were not unique to the larger cities, but were found in smaller settlements as well. At Lothal, for example, while houses were built of mud bricks, drains were made of burnt bricks.
(i) Why Mackay described this system as complete ancient drainage system?
(ii) Was the drainage system similar in large and small settlements of Harappa? Support your answer with facts.
(iii) What were the features of the drainage system?
Ans: (i) Mackay has described it as a complete because it is well-planned, systematic and unique like its contemporary civilization particularly drainage system. Cleanliness is also a major factor.
(ii) No, in large cities like Mohenjo-Daro and small settlement like Lothal, drainage was unique.
(iii) Features of drainage system
Q3: Explain the strategies for procuring material by the Harappans for craft production.
Ans: Harappans procured the raw material for craft production in the following ways:
Harappans had trade relations among themselves.
They procured:
Beyond the subcontinent trade:
Q4: Archaeologist have no concrete response for the central authority of the Harappan. Substantiate.
OR
Describe the opinions of the archaeologists on the central authority of the Harappan civilisation.
OR
Describe the different arguments given by archaeologists over the central authority of Harappan civilisation.
OR
Archaeologist records provide no immediate answer to the Harappan central authority. Analyse different views given on the same.
Ans: The Archaeological records provide no answer to the Harappa’s central authority:
Detailed Answer:-
Archaeological records provide no immediate answer in regard to centre for power or for depictions of people in power. Though many things have been found, there was a lot of damage because the bricks were used for railway purpose and by the people for their housing needs. Archaeologists were astonished at the drainage system. They found two parts in the town well separated. They found the seal and sealings. They came to know about the scripts. Many inscriptions were short, the largest containing 26 signs. Script was not alphabetical and it is not deciphered till date. Hence they remain in the dark yet about the central authority of the Harappan. It can also be said that since very few weapons have been found, people were peaceloving. Some archaeologists stated that Harappan society had no rulers, and everybody enjoyed equal status. Others feel there was no single ruler but several, that Mohenjodaro had a separate ruler, Harappa another, and so forth. Yet others argue that there was a single state. However, the last theory seems most plausible, as it was unlikely that entire communities could have collectively made and implemented such complex decisions.
Q5: ‘‘There were indications of complex decisions being taken and implemented in the Harappan society.’’ In light of this statement, explain whether there may have been rulers to rule over the Harappan society.
Ans: There were indications of complex decisions being taken and implemented in Harappan society:
Q6: Explain the exclusive features of the craft production in Chanhudaro.
Ans: Features of the craft production in Chanhudaro:
Q7: “The problems of archaeological interpretation are perhaps most evident in attempts to reconstruct the religious practices of Harappa”. Give suitable arguments in support of your answer.
Ans: The religious practices of Harappan Civilisation are as follows :
Priest King
Q8: Mention any two changes that were observed after 1900 BCE in Harappan civilisation. What could have brought these changes?
OR
Mention any three evidences that reflected the disappearance of Harappans civilisation by 1800 BCE. Explain any two factors that led to the abandonment of the Harappan city sites?
Answer: In the few Harappan sites that continued to be occupied after 1900 BCE, there exist a transformation of material culture, marked by the disappearance of the distinctive artifacts of the civilisation – weights, seals, special beads. Writing, long-distance trade, and craft specialisation also disappeared. In general, far fewer materials were used to make things. House construction techniques deteriorated and large public structures were no longer produced. Overall, artifacts and settlements indicate a rural way of life in what are called “Late Harappan” or “Successor Cultures”.
The reasons range from climatic change, deforestation, excessive floods, the shifting and/or drying up of rivers, to overuse the landscape. Some of these “causes” may hold for certain settlements, but they do not explain the collapse of the entire civilisation. It appears that a strong unifying element, perhaps the Harappan state, came to an end. This was evident by the disappearance of seals, the script, distinctive beads and pottery, the shift from a standardised weight system to the use of local weights; and the decline and abandonment of cities. The subcontinent would have to wait for over a millennium for new cities to develop in a completely different region.
When Harappan cities fell into ruin, people gradually forgot all about them. When men and women began living in the area millennia later, they did not know what to make of the strange artifacts that occasionally surfaced, washed by floods or exposed by soil erosion, or turned up while ploughing a field, or digging for treasure.
Q9: Explain the strategies used by the archaeologists to understand socio-economic differences among the Harappans.
Ans: Archeologists generally use the following strategies to find out the social and economic differences among the people in the Harappan society.
Burials:
Luxuries:
So, these were the findings of the above facts that there were social and of economic differences.
Q10: Explain the distinctive characteristics of the residential buildings of the Mohenjodaro.
OR
Describe the distinctive features of Mohenjodaro.
Ans:
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1. What are the different materials used in humanities and arts, as mentioned in the article "Bricks, Beads and Bones Humanities/Arts"? |
2. How do bricks contribute to the field of humanities and arts? |
3. In what ways are beads utilized in the humanities and arts? |
4. What is the significance of bones in the context of humanities and arts? |
5. How do bricks, beads, and bones collectively contribute to the study of humanities and arts? |
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