Create your own website today!
Update your website
Jukebox
Statistics
Refer This Site
To A Friend
Home

Distant Studies
BibleStudies
IslamicStudies
LatinStudies
GreekStudies
HebrewStudies
ArabicStudies
UrduStudies
OccultStudies
Essene Gnostic Studies
What is Gnostic
Gnostic Essene World View
Member's Only
EMail
Vedic Texts
Introduction to Veda
Harappan Civilization
Rig Veda
Sama Veda
Yajur Veda
Atharva Veda
Brahmanas
Aranyakas
Early Upanishads
Kena Katha Isha and Mundaka
Later Upanishads
More About Upanishads
Vedanta
Vedanta2
Learn Sanskrit
Sanskrit Dictionary
Sanskrit
Section One
Section Two




Harappan Civilization


  NEW! Poetry and Doll Maker with Galleries!     [Learn About Our Ecommerce]
Graphics Gallery!


Although they did use some writing with pictographic symbols at Mohenjo-daro, they were not
extensive nor alphabetic nor have they been deciphered yet, and the Indo-European Sanskrit
which did develop in India is probably quite different. Nevertheless the Harappan civilization of
the Indus Valley in what is now Pakistan did borrow many ideas from Mesopotamia and is
considered the third civilization to develop. Two seals of the Mohenjo-daro type were discovered
at Elam and Mesopotamia, and a cuneiform inscription was unearthed at Mohenjo-daro.

The pastoral villages that spread out east of Elam through Iran and Baluchistan prepared the way
for the cities that were to develop around the Indus River particularly at Harappa and
Mohenjo-daro. By about 3000 BC they were building mud-brick houses; burials in the houses
included funereal objects; and pottery had fine designs and the potters' marks. After 2500 BC
farmers moved out into the alluvial plain of the Indus River valley and achieved full-sized villages
using copper and bronze pins, knives, and axes; figurines of women and cattle indicate probable
religious attitudes.

The urban phase began about 2300 BC and lasted for about six hundred years with elaborate
cities like Mohenjo-daro (called locally Mound of the Dead) which was excavated in the 1920s.
This city and others not yet excavated had about 40,000 inhabitants congregated in well-built
houses with private showers and toilets that drained into municipal sewer lines. Suffering from
occasional flooding by the Indus, Mohenjo-daro was rebuilt seven times. The largest structures
were the elevated granary and the great bath or swimming pool which was 12 by 7 meters.
Around the pool were dressing rooms and private baths.

The people of the Harappan culture did not seem to be very warlike although they hunted wild
game and domesticated cattle, sheep, and goats. Wheat and barley were the main food
supplemented by peas, sesame, and other vegetables and fruits, beef, mutton, pork, eggs, fish,
and milk. Compared to other ancient civilizations the houses were of nearly equal size indicating a
more egalitarian social structure. The potter's wheel and carts were used; children played with
miniature toy carts. Cotton, perhaps first used here, and wool were made into clothing. A bronze
figurine was found of an expressive dancing girl with her hand on her hip, naked except for
jewelry. The numerous figurines of the Mother Goddess indicate a likely source for what later
became the Shakti worship of the feminine power in India. A male god in a yoga posture depicted
with three faces and two horns has been identified with Shiva, another important figure in later
Indian religion. Phallic lingams, also associated with Shiva, have been found. A civilization that
endured dangerous flooding for six hundred years very likely had a strong religion to help hold
people together.

With no written histories the decline of this civilization is subject to much speculation. The
traditional theory is that the Aryans invaded from the northwest. Although this is likely, the decline
of Harappan culture was quite gradual and indicates problems beyond foreign conquest. One
theory is deforestation, because of all the wood needed for the kilns to make the bricks used to
keep out the flood waters.

However, a more comprehensive explanation comes from an analysis of the consequences of the
extensive herds of cattle that indicate overgrazing and a general degradation of the ecosystem
including salinization of water supplies. This led farmers to move on to greener pastures, leaving
behind abandoned villages and depopulated cities. Even though fodder was probably grown to
feed the cattle, this would not have been enough; and the overgrazing by the bullocks and milk
cows could have caused the surrounding land to deteriorate. By 1500 BC the Harappan
civilization had faded away into a culture that was spreading throughout India with new ideas from
the west.

The traditional theory well documented by the ancient hymns of the Vedas is that a people calling
themselves Aryans conquered the native peoples of India and destroyed their forts. Because of
language similarities these Aryans are associated particularly with the Iranians and even further
back with the origins of the Indo-European language group. The general consensus seems to be
that this culture must have begun somewhere in the Russian steppes and Central Asia about 2000
BC, though some have put their origin in Lithuania because of similarity to that language. The
branch of these speakers who came to India under the name Aryans, which means "noble ones,"
is the Indo-Iranian group. In fact "Iran" derives from the Persian cognate of the word for Aryan.
Other branches spread into Greece and western Asia as Hittites, Kassites, and Mitanni. A rock
inscription found at Boghaz Koi dated about 1400 BC commemorating a treaty between the
Mitanni and Hittites invokes the Aryan gods Indra, Varuna, Mitra, and the twins Nasatya
(Asvins).

The ancient writings of the Persian Avesta and the Hindu Vedas share many gods and beliefs.
Eventually they must have split, causing later authors to demonize the divinities of their adversaries.
In early Hindu writings the asuras were respected gods, but later they became the demons most
hated, while Ahura Mazda became the chief god of the Zoroastrians. (Persian often uses an h
where Sanskrit uses an s, such as haoma for soma.) On the other hand the Hindu term for
divinities, devas, was used by Zoroastrians to describe the devils from which even our English
word is derived. Some scholars have concluded that the ancient Hindus did not want to admit that
they came from Iran, and therefore the origin of the Aryans is never mentioned in the ancient texts
although they frankly boast of their conquest over the indigenous Dasas or Dasyus in India.

The word Veda means knowledge, and the Vedas are considered the most sacred scripture of
Hinduism referred to as sruti, meaning what was heard by or revealed to the rishis or seers. The
most holy hymns and mantras put together into four collections called the Rig, Sama, Yajur, and
Atharva Vedas are difficult to date, because they were passed on orally for about a thousand
years before they were written down. More recent categories of Vedas include the Brahmanas or
manuals for ritual and prayer, the Aranyakas or forest texts for religious hermits, and the
Upanishads or mystical discourses.



Sign Guestbook

View Guestbook

Click Here to return to Welcome.html
to register for Distant Learning contact: members@divinelivinglight.every1.net
To contact WebMaster: sunfyre@globalnetwork.every1.net

Domain Lookup
         www..
Get www.yourdomainofchoice.com for your site with services!




.

 
Any WordAll WordsExact Phrase
This SiteAll Sites
Visitors: 05296
Page Updated Wed Jan 24, 2001 8:00pm EST