Page 1
85
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
The Beginnings of
Indian Civilisation
CHAPTER
6
The most ancient civilisation of India, known variously as the
Harappan, Indus or Indus-Sarasvati Civilisation, was indeed
remarkable in many ways. ... [It showed how] a well-balanced
community lives — in which the differences between the rich
and the poor are not glaring. ... In essence, the Harappan
societal scenario was not that of ‘exploitation’, but of mutual
‘accommodation’.
— B.B. Lal
Fig. 6.1. The North Gate entrance
to Dholavira’s ‘Castle’ area.
1. What is a civilisation?
2. What was the earliest
civilisation of the Indian
Subcontinent?
3. What were its major
achievements?
The Big
Questions
6-100724_v8.indd 85 6-100724_v8.indd 85 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
Page 2
85
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
The Beginnings of
Indian Civilisation
CHAPTER
6
The most ancient civilisation of India, known variously as the
Harappan, Indus or Indus-Sarasvati Civilisation, was indeed
remarkable in many ways. ... [It showed how] a well-balanced
community lives — in which the differences between the rich
and the poor are not glaring. ... In essence, the Harappan
societal scenario was not that of ‘exploitation’, but of mutual
‘accommodation’.
— B.B. Lal
Fig. 6.1. The North Gate entrance
to Dholavira’s ‘Castle’ area.
1. What is a civilisation?
2. What was the earliest
civilisation of the Indian
Subcontinent?
3. What were its major
achievements?
The Big
Questions
6-100724_v8.indd 85 6-100724_v8.indd 85 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
86
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Tapestry of the Past
What Is a Civilisation?
At the end of Chapter 4, we saw the first human groups
settling down, practising agriculture, developing some
technologies (such as construction, metallurgy, transport)
and moving towards ‘civilisation’.
What, then, is civilisation? In general, the term is used for
an advanced stage of human societies. To be precise, we
will consider here that a ‘civilisation’ should have at least
the following characteristics:
? some form of government and administration — to
manage a more complex society and its many activities
? urbanism — town-planning, the growth of cities and
their management, which generally includes water
management and a drainage system
? a variety of crafts — including the management of raw
materials (such as stone or metal) and the production
of finished goods (such as ornaments and tools)
? trade both internal (within a city or a region) and
external (with distant regions or other parts of the
world) — to exchange all sorts of goods
? some form of writing — needed to keep records and to
communicate
? cultural ideas about life and the world, expressed
through art, architecture, literature, oral traditions or
social customs
? a productive agriculture — enough to feed not just
the villages, but also the cities.
THINK ABOUT IT
Which of the above characteristics do you think is the most
fundamental — that is, a characteristic essential to the
development of all others?
Metallurgy:
Includes the
techniques
of extracting
metals from
nature,
purifying or
combining
them, as well
as the scientific
study of metals
and their
properties.
6-100724_v8.indd 86 6-100724_v8.indd 86 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
Page 3
85
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
The Beginnings of
Indian Civilisation
CHAPTER
6
The most ancient civilisation of India, known variously as the
Harappan, Indus or Indus-Sarasvati Civilisation, was indeed
remarkable in many ways. ... [It showed how] a well-balanced
community lives — in which the differences between the rich
and the poor are not glaring. ... In essence, the Harappan
societal scenario was not that of ‘exploitation’, but of mutual
‘accommodation’.
— B.B. Lal
Fig. 6.1. The North Gate entrance
to Dholavira’s ‘Castle’ area.
1. What is a civilisation?
2. What was the earliest
civilisation of the Indian
Subcontinent?
3. What were its major
achievements?
The Big
Questions
6-100724_v8.indd 85 6-100724_v8.indd 85 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
86
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Tapestry of the Past
What Is a Civilisation?
At the end of Chapter 4, we saw the first human groups
settling down, practising agriculture, developing some
technologies (such as construction, metallurgy, transport)
and moving towards ‘civilisation’.
What, then, is civilisation? In general, the term is used for
an advanced stage of human societies. To be precise, we
will consider here that a ‘civilisation’ should have at least
the following characteristics:
? some form of government and administration — to
manage a more complex society and its many activities
? urbanism — town-planning, the growth of cities and
their management, which generally includes water
management and a drainage system
? a variety of crafts — including the management of raw
materials (such as stone or metal) and the production
of finished goods (such as ornaments and tools)
? trade both internal (within a city or a region) and
external (with distant regions or other parts of the
world) — to exchange all sorts of goods
? some form of writing — needed to keep records and to
communicate
? cultural ideas about life and the world, expressed
through art, architecture, literature, oral traditions or
social customs
? a productive agriculture — enough to feed not just
the villages, but also the cities.
THINK ABOUT IT
Which of the above characteristics do you think is the most
fundamental — that is, a characteristic essential to the
development of all others?
Metallurgy:
Includes the
techniques
of extracting
metals from
nature,
purifying or
combining
them, as well
as the scientific
study of metals
and their
properties.
6-100724_v8.indd 86 6-100724_v8.indd 86 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
87
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
LET’S EXPLORE
For each characteristic in the list above, can you make a list of
professions or occupations that might exist in such a society?
It is easy enough to see that all these characteristics are
present in most societies in the world today. But when did
civilisation begin, in the sense we have now defined?
Civilisation began at different times in different parts of the
world. In the region known as Mesopotamia (modern Iraq
and Syria), that happened about 6,000 years ago, and the
civilisation in ancient Egypt followed a few centuries later.
You will learn about these and a few more civilisations in a
later grade. In many ways, humanity would not have reached
its present stage without the enormous contributions and
advances of those ancient civilisations.
For now, however, we will only look at the Indian
Subcontinent, and its northwest region is where our story
begins.
Beginning
of Egyptian
civilisation
Indus-Sarasvati
civilisation
3000
BCE
4000
BCE
2000
BCE
Beginning of
Mesopotamian
civilisation
Fig. 6.2. Timeline showing the period of the Indus-Sarasvati civilisation, from
about 2600 to 1900 BCE.
6-100724_v8.indd 87 6-100724_v8.indd 87 11-Jul-24 4:24:57 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:57 PM
Page 4
85
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
The Beginnings of
Indian Civilisation
CHAPTER
6
The most ancient civilisation of India, known variously as the
Harappan, Indus or Indus-Sarasvati Civilisation, was indeed
remarkable in many ways. ... [It showed how] a well-balanced
community lives — in which the differences between the rich
and the poor are not glaring. ... In essence, the Harappan
societal scenario was not that of ‘exploitation’, but of mutual
‘accommodation’.
— B.B. Lal
Fig. 6.1. The North Gate entrance
to Dholavira’s ‘Castle’ area.
1. What is a civilisation?
2. What was the earliest
civilisation of the Indian
Subcontinent?
3. What were its major
achievements?
The Big
Questions
6-100724_v8.indd 85 6-100724_v8.indd 85 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
86
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Tapestry of the Past
What Is a Civilisation?
At the end of Chapter 4, we saw the first human groups
settling down, practising agriculture, developing some
technologies (such as construction, metallurgy, transport)
and moving towards ‘civilisation’.
What, then, is civilisation? In general, the term is used for
an advanced stage of human societies. To be precise, we
will consider here that a ‘civilisation’ should have at least
the following characteristics:
? some form of government and administration — to
manage a more complex society and its many activities
? urbanism — town-planning, the growth of cities and
their management, which generally includes water
management and a drainage system
? a variety of crafts — including the management of raw
materials (such as stone or metal) and the production
of finished goods (such as ornaments and tools)
? trade both internal (within a city or a region) and
external (with distant regions or other parts of the
world) — to exchange all sorts of goods
? some form of writing — needed to keep records and to
communicate
? cultural ideas about life and the world, expressed
through art, architecture, literature, oral traditions or
social customs
? a productive agriculture — enough to feed not just
the villages, but also the cities.
THINK ABOUT IT
Which of the above characteristics do you think is the most
fundamental — that is, a characteristic essential to the
development of all others?
Metallurgy:
Includes the
techniques
of extracting
metals from
nature,
purifying or
combining
them, as well
as the scientific
study of metals
and their
properties.
6-100724_v8.indd 86 6-100724_v8.indd 86 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
87
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
LET’S EXPLORE
For each characteristic in the list above, can you make a list of
professions or occupations that might exist in such a society?
It is easy enough to see that all these characteristics are
present in most societies in the world today. But when did
civilisation begin, in the sense we have now defined?
Civilisation began at different times in different parts of the
world. In the region known as Mesopotamia (modern Iraq
and Syria), that happened about 6,000 years ago, and the
civilisation in ancient Egypt followed a few centuries later.
You will learn about these and a few more civilisations in a
later grade. In many ways, humanity would not have reached
its present stage without the enormous contributions and
advances of those ancient civilisations.
For now, however, we will only look at the Indian
Subcontinent, and its northwest region is where our story
begins.
Beginning
of Egyptian
civilisation
Indus-Sarasvati
civilisation
3000
BCE
4000
BCE
2000
BCE
Beginning of
Mesopotamian
civilisation
Fig. 6.2. Timeline showing the period of the Indus-Sarasvati civilisation, from
about 2600 to 1900 BCE.
6-100724_v8.indd 87 6-100724_v8.indd 87 11-Jul-24 4:24:57 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:57 PM
88
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Tapestry of the Past
From Village to City
The vast plains of the Punjab (today
divided between India and Pakistan) and
Sindh (now in Pakistan) are watered by
the Indus River and its tributaries. This
made those plains fertile and, therefore,
favourable to agriculture. A little further
east, a few millenniums ago, another
river, the Sarasvati, used to flow from
the foothills of the Himalayas through
Haryana, Punjab, parts of Rajasthan
and Gujarat (see Fig. 6.3). In this whole
region, from about 3500 BCE, villages
grew into towns, and with increasing
trade and other exchanges, those towns
further grew into cities. This transition
happened around 2600 BCE.
Archaeologists gave this civilisation
several names — ‘Indus’, ‘Harappan’,
‘Indus-Sarasvati’ or ‘Sindhu-Sarasvati’
civilisation. We will use all these terms.
Its inhabitants are called ‘Harappans’.
It is one of the oldest civilisations in the
world.
Tributary:
A river that
flows into a
larger river
(or lake). For
instance, the
Yamuna is a
tributary of the
Ganga.
DON’T MISS OUT
Why are the inhabitants of this civilisation called ‘Harappans’
today? That is simply because the city of Harappa (today in
Pakistan’s Punjab) was the first of this civilisation to be exca-
vated, way back in 1920–21, over a century ago.
This development is also called the ‘First Urbanisation of
India’.
6-100724_v8.indd 88 6-100724_v8.indd 88 11-Jul-24 4:25:00 PM 11-Jul-24 4:25:00 PM
Page 5
85
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
The Beginnings of
Indian Civilisation
CHAPTER
6
The most ancient civilisation of India, known variously as the
Harappan, Indus or Indus-Sarasvati Civilisation, was indeed
remarkable in many ways. ... [It showed how] a well-balanced
community lives — in which the differences between the rich
and the poor are not glaring. ... In essence, the Harappan
societal scenario was not that of ‘exploitation’, but of mutual
‘accommodation’.
— B.B. Lal
Fig. 6.1. The North Gate entrance
to Dholavira’s ‘Castle’ area.
1. What is a civilisation?
2. What was the earliest
civilisation of the Indian
Subcontinent?
3. What were its major
achievements?
The Big
Questions
6-100724_v8.indd 85 6-100724_v8.indd 85 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
86
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Tapestry of the Past
What Is a Civilisation?
At the end of Chapter 4, we saw the first human groups
settling down, practising agriculture, developing some
technologies (such as construction, metallurgy, transport)
and moving towards ‘civilisation’.
What, then, is civilisation? In general, the term is used for
an advanced stage of human societies. To be precise, we
will consider here that a ‘civilisation’ should have at least
the following characteristics:
? some form of government and administration — to
manage a more complex society and its many activities
? urbanism — town-planning, the growth of cities and
their management, which generally includes water
management and a drainage system
? a variety of crafts — including the management of raw
materials (such as stone or metal) and the production
of finished goods (such as ornaments and tools)
? trade both internal (within a city or a region) and
external (with distant regions or other parts of the
world) — to exchange all sorts of goods
? some form of writing — needed to keep records and to
communicate
? cultural ideas about life and the world, expressed
through art, architecture, literature, oral traditions or
social customs
? a productive agriculture — enough to feed not just
the villages, but also the cities.
THINK ABOUT IT
Which of the above characteristics do you think is the most
fundamental — that is, a characteristic essential to the
development of all others?
Metallurgy:
Includes the
techniques
of extracting
metals from
nature,
purifying or
combining
them, as well
as the scientific
study of metals
and their
properties.
6-100724_v8.indd 86 6-100724_v8.indd 86 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:54 PM
87
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
LET’S EXPLORE
For each characteristic in the list above, can you make a list of
professions or occupations that might exist in such a society?
It is easy enough to see that all these characteristics are
present in most societies in the world today. But when did
civilisation begin, in the sense we have now defined?
Civilisation began at different times in different parts of the
world. In the region known as Mesopotamia (modern Iraq
and Syria), that happened about 6,000 years ago, and the
civilisation in ancient Egypt followed a few centuries later.
You will learn about these and a few more civilisations in a
later grade. In many ways, humanity would not have reached
its present stage without the enormous contributions and
advances of those ancient civilisations.
For now, however, we will only look at the Indian
Subcontinent, and its northwest region is where our story
begins.
Beginning
of Egyptian
civilisation
Indus-Sarasvati
civilisation
3000
BCE
4000
BCE
2000
BCE
Beginning of
Mesopotamian
civilisation
Fig. 6.2. Timeline showing the period of the Indus-Sarasvati civilisation, from
about 2600 to 1900 BCE.
6-100724_v8.indd 87 6-100724_v8.indd 87 11-Jul-24 4:24:57 PM 11-Jul-24 4:24:57 PM
88
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Tapestry of the Past
From Village to City
The vast plains of the Punjab (today
divided between India and Pakistan) and
Sindh (now in Pakistan) are watered by
the Indus River and its tributaries. This
made those plains fertile and, therefore,
favourable to agriculture. A little further
east, a few millenniums ago, another
river, the Sarasvati, used to flow from
the foothills of the Himalayas through
Haryana, Punjab, parts of Rajasthan
and Gujarat (see Fig. 6.3). In this whole
region, from about 3500 BCE, villages
grew into towns, and with increasing
trade and other exchanges, those towns
further grew into cities. This transition
happened around 2600 BCE.
Archaeologists gave this civilisation
several names — ‘Indus’, ‘Harappan’,
‘Indus-Sarasvati’ or ‘Sindhu-Sarasvati’
civilisation. We will use all these terms.
Its inhabitants are called ‘Harappans’.
It is one of the oldest civilisations in the
world.
Tributary:
A river that
flows into a
larger river
(or lake). For
instance, the
Yamuna is a
tributary of the
Ganga.
DON’T MISS OUT
Why are the inhabitants of this civilisation called ‘Harappans’
today? That is simply because the city of Harappa (today in
Pakistan’s Punjab) was the first of this civilisation to be exca-
vated, way back in 1920–21, over a century ago.
This development is also called the ‘First Urbanisation of
India’.
6-100724_v8.indd 88 6-100724_v8.indd 88 11-Jul-24 4:25:00 PM 11-Jul-24 4:25:00 PM
89
6 ? The Beginnings of Indian Civilisation
LET’S EXPLORE
Some of the important cities of this civilisation are marked in
the map (Fig. 6.3). As a class activity, can you try to match these
cities with the modern states or regions in the table on the next
page?
Fig. 6.3. Map of some of the main settlements of the Indus-Sarasvati
civilisation. Notice the natural boundaries formed by the mountain ranges
(in brown colour).
6-100724_v8.indd 89 6-100724_v8.indd 89 11-Jul-24 4:25:03 PM 11-Jul-24 4:25:03 PM
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