Indus Valley Civilisation: Sites, Features, Script, Decline
Comprehensive study notes on the Indus Valley Civilisation (Harappan Civilisation) covering major sites, town planning, trade, script, religion, and decline theories for Kerala PSC Graduate Level exams.
▶ മലയാളത്തിൽ വായിക്കുകComprehensive study notes on the Indus Valley Civilisation (Harappan Civilisation) covering major sites, town planning, trade, script, religion, and decline theories for Kerala PSC Graduate Level exams.
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The Indus Valley Civilisation (IVC), also called Harappan Civilisation, is one of the oldest urban civilisations in the world. It flourished from approximately 2600 BCE to 1900 BCE along the Indus River system. This topic carries 2-4 marks in Kerala PSC exams consistently.
1. Timeline
| Phase | Period (approx.) | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|
| Early Harappan | 3300–2600 BCE | Village settlements, early farming |
| Mature Harappan | 2600–1900 BCE | Urban phase, town planning, trade |
| Late Harappan | 1900–1300 BCE | Decline, de-urbanisation |
2. Major Sites
| Site | Location (Modern) | River/Water Body | Key Discovery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harappa | Montgomery, Punjab (Pakistan) | Ravi | First discovered site (1921), granaries, coffin burial |
| Mohenjo-daro | Larkana, Sindh (Pakistan) | Indus | Great Bath, Great Granary, bronze Dancing Girl |
| Lothal | Gujarat, India | Bhogava (near Gulf of Khambhat) | Dockyard (world’s earliest), bead-making factory, rice husk |
| Dholavira | Kutch, Gujarat, India | Between Mansar and Manhar rivulets | Signboard with Indus script, three-part division of town, water reservoirs |
| Kalibangan | Rajasthan, India | Ghaggar (dried Saraswati) | Fire altars, earliest ploughed field |
| Rakhigarhi | Hisar, Haryana, India | Ghaggar-Hakra | Largest IVC site in India |
| Chanhudaro | Sindh, Pakistan | Indus | Bead-making, only site without a citadel |
| Banawali | Hisar, Haryana, India | Ghaggar-Hakra | Oval-shaped settlement, toy plough |
| Surkotada | Kutch, Gujarat, India | — | Horse bones (debated) |
| Ropar (Rupnagar) | Punjab, India | Sutlej | First IVC site excavated in independent India |
3. Key Discoverers
| Person | Role |
|---|---|
| Daya Ram Sahni | Excavated Harappa (1921) |
| R.D. Banerji | Excavated Mohenjo-daro (1922) |
| S.R. Rao | Excavated Lothal (1954) |
| R.S. Bisht | Excavated Dholavira (1990) |
| John Marshall | Director General of ASI, announced discovery to the world |
4. Town Planning Features
The IVC is famous for its advanced urban planning:
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Grid pattern | Streets intersected at right angles |
| Citadel and Lower Town | Two-part city division (Dholavira had three parts) |
| Drainage system | Covered drains along streets, soak pits, manholes |
| Standardised bricks | Ratio 4:2:1 (length:breadth:height) |
| Wells | Nearly every house had a private well |
| No temples | No monumental temple structures found |
| Granaries | Large storage structures (Harappa, Mohenjo-daro) |
5. Economy and Trade
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Agriculture | Wheat, barley, peas, sesame, mustard, cotton, rice (Lothal, Rangpur) |
| Animals domesticated | Cattle, buffalo, sheep, goat, pig, dog, cat, fowl |
| Trade partners | Mesopotamia (called ‘Meluha’ in Mesopotamian texts) |
| Weights and measures | 16-based system (16, 32, 64…), cubical chert stones |
| Craft specialisation | Bead-making, shell-working, metallurgy (copper, bronze, gold, silver) |
| Transport | Bullock carts, boats |
6. Script
- The Indus script remains undeciphered to this day
- Written mostly right to left (in longer texts, boustrophedon — alternating directions)
- About 400-450 distinct signs identified
- Found mainly on seals, pottery, and copper tablets
- Longest inscription: about 26 signs
- Iravatham Mahadevan and Asko Parpola are notable scholars who attempted decipherment
7. Religion and Culture
| Aspect | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Proto-Shiva (Pashupati) | Seal showing a horned figure seated in yogic posture, surrounded by animals |
| Mother Goddess | Numerous terracotta female figurines |
| Animal worship | Unicorn bull most common on seals; also humped bull, elephant, tiger |
| Tree worship | Pipal tree depicted on seals |
| Fire altars | Found at Kalibangan and Lothal |
| No weapons of war | Very few military weapons found, suggesting peaceful society |
| Burial practices | Extended burial (most common), pot burial, coffin burial (Harappa) |
8. Art and Craft
| Artefact | Found at | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Bronze Dancing Girl | Mohenjo-daro | Shows lost-wax (cire perdue) technique |
| Priest-King bust | Mohenjo-daro | Steatite sculpture with trefoil-patterned shawl |
| Pashupati Seal | Mohenjo-daro | Most famous seal |
| Unicorn Seal | Multiple sites | Most common seal type |
| Terracotta toys | Multiple sites | Carts, animals, whistles — show daily life |
9. Decline Theories
| Theory | Proposed by | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| Aryan Invasion | Mortimer Wheeler | Destruction by invading Aryans |
| Floods | M.R. Sahni, Raikes | Repeated flooding of Indus |
| Tectonic shifts | M.R. Sahni | Earthquakes altered river courses |
| Climate change / Drought | D.P. Agrawal | Drying of Ghaggar-Hakra (Saraswati) |
| Epidemic | K.U.R. Kennedy | Disease wiped out population |
| Ecological degradation | Fairservis | Overuse of resources, deforestation |
Most modern scholars favour a combination of factors — especially climate change and river drying — rather than any single cause.
10. Important Connections for PSC
| Question Pattern | Answer |
|---|---|
| Father of Indian Archaeology | Alexander Cunningham |
| Largest site of IVC | Rakhigarhi (India); Mohenjo-daro (overall) |
| UNESCO World Heritage (2021) | Dholavira |
| IVC and iron | Iron was NOT known to IVC people |
| Script deciphered? | No, still undeciphered |
| IVC belongs to which age? | Bronze Age (Chalcolithic) |
| Modern countries with IVC sites | India, Pakistan, Afghanistan |
Key Points to Remember
- The civilisation is called Harappan because Harappa was discovered first
- Mohenjo-daro means “Mound of the Dead” in Sindhi
- Lothal means “Mound of the Dead” in Gujarati
- The Great Bath at Mohenjo-daro measured approximately 12m x 7m x 2.4m
- Cotton was first cultivated in the IVC (Greeks called it “sindon” — from Sindh)
- No iron, no horse (except debated Surkotada find), no lion in IVC
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