Indian Archeology News And Discussion Thread

Kshatriya87

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Prehistoric art hints at lost Indian civilisation
  • 30 September 2018
  • India
https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/world-asia-india-45559300?__twitter_impression=true

The discovery of rock carvings believed to be tens of thousands of years old in India's western state of Maharashtra has greatly excited archaeologists who believe they hold clues to a previously unknown civilisation, BBC Marathi's Mayuresh Konnur reports.

The rock carvings - known as petroglyphs - have been discovered in their thousands atop hillocks in the Konkan region of western Maharashtra.

Mostly discovered in the Ratnagiri and Rajapur areas, a majority of the images etched on the rocky, flat hilltops remained unnoticed for thousands of years.



Most of them were hidden beneath layers of soil and mud. But a few were in the open - these were considered holy and worshipped by locals in some areas.

The sheer variety of the rock carvings have stunned experts - animals, birds, human figures and geometrical designs are all depicted.

The way the petroglyphs have been drawn, and their similarity to those found in other parts of the world, have led experts to believe that they were created in prehistoric times and are possibly among the oldest ever discovered.



"Our first deduction from examining these petroglyphs is that they were created around 10,000BC," the director of the Maharashtra state archaeology department, Tejas Garge, told the BBC.

The credit for their discovery goes to a group of explorers led by Sudhir Risbood and Manoj Marathe, who began searching for the images in earnest after observing a few in the area. Many were found in village temples and played a part in local folklore.

"We walked thousands of kilometres. People started sending photographs to us and we even enlisted schools in our efforts to find them. We made students ask their grandparents and other village elders if they knew about any other engravings. This provided us with a lot of valuable information," Mr Risbood told the BBC.



Together they found petroglyphs in and around 52 villages in the area. But only around five villages were aware that the images even existed.

Apart from actively searching for them, Mr Risbood and Mr Marathe have also played an important role in documenting the petroglyphs and lobbying authorities to get involved in studying and preserving them.



Mr Garge says the images appear to have been created by a hunter-gatherer community which was not familiar with agriculture.

"We have not found any pictures of farming activities. But the images depict hunted animals and there's detailing of animal forms. So this man knew about animals and sea creatures. That indicates he was dependent on hunting for food."

Dr Shrikant Pradhan, a researcher and art historian at Pune's Deccan College who has studied the petroglyphs closely, said that the art was clearly inspired by things observed by people at the time.



"Most of the petroglyphs show familiar animals. There are images of sharks and whales as well as amphibians like turtles," Mr Garge adds.

But this begs the question of why some of the petroglyphs depict animals like hippos and rhinoceroses which aren't found in this part of India. Did the people who created them migrate to India from Africa? Or were these animals once found in India?



The state government has set aside a fund of 240 million rupees ($3.2m; £2.5m) to further study 400 of the identified petroglyphs.

It is hoped that some of these questions will eventually be answered.
 

Kshatriya87

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ASI studies 'Mahabharata-era' Sanauli relics at Red Fort, tests to unravel more secrets
The weapons and tools are being sent for metallurgical tests to determine the percentage of copper and bronze in them and the mines they may have originated from.



One of the eight royal burial pits discovered by ASI at the Sanuali, Baghpat, excavation site (Picture: Qamar Sibtain).
HIGHLIGHTS
  • Relics from the Pre-Iron or Bronze Age of 2000-1800 BC being closely examined
  • Bone and teeth samples from the 8 burial spots to undergo DNA test
  • Decorated coffins, swords, shields and gold beads to go for metallurgical analyses

History is being rewritten at the Institute of Archaeology, Red Fort, in Delhi!

A slew of landmark findings - including three coffins and skeletal remains, chariots, swords, etc - found at the Archaeological Survey of India's (ASI) Sanauli, Baghpat (UP) excavation site in June, and linked to Mahabharata, have been brought to Lal Qila in the city.


Here, at the institute, experts are closely examining the relics that purportedly belong to a 'royal warrior class' four millennia back, from the Pre-Iron or Bronze Age in 2000-1800 BC.

While archaeologists are still not definitively linking it to any particular race or civilization, Sanauli's proximity to Hastinapur-- the capital of Kauravas-- and Mahabharata's estimated dating to about 2nd millennium BC, has got many guessing!


Swords found at the site
Mail Today caught up with ASI's illustrious archaeologist couple -- Arvin and Sanjay Manjul -- who led the exploration team, at Red Fort. The duo informed us that various tests and studies are now being carried out here to understand who were buried in Sanauli, how they lived and how they died.

"Firstly, these path-breaking discoveries could give a new dimension to our ancient past," claimed Sanjay Manjul, Director of the Institute of Archaeology.

"A chariot has been unearthed for the first time at any excavation site not just in India, but the entire subcontinent. Such raths were previously found only in Greece and Mesopotamia," he said.

Swords with hilts from this period have also been found for the first time, besides four-legged charpoy-like coffins with copper-leaf designs on them. Eight burial pits have been discovered at the site, including a dog and twin-human burial. Pottery with funeral items or food for afterlife, combs and mirrors, gold beads, etc. were found carefully preserved next to them.

"Even the burial pits at Harappan-sites like Rakhigarhi, Lothal and Kalibangan never yielded such elaborate entombments. Sanauli is sure to tell us more about habitations on the Ganga-Yamuna doab, which is not studied so well, and bridge the knowledge gap on the time period between Harappan civilisation and Lord Buddha's birth," Sanjay asserted.

But it is here and now that the real work for ASI begins, said his wife and Superintending Archaeologist with ASI, Arvin Manjul.

"It was for the first time anywhere that we used in-situ CT scan, X-ray and infra-red photography to analyse the burial pits in Sanauli. Now in Red Fort, we are sending out the collected bones and teeth for DNA tests. That will tell us if they belonged to the Indian, Mongoloid or Aryan race; what were their respective age, and if they died in war, that may be revealed by cut marks on bones," explained Arvin.

The weapons and tools are being sent for metallurgical tests to determine the percentage of copper and bronze in them and the mines they may have originated from.

"Soil samples are being analysed for material like cloth shreds in them, and pottery residues to know if they were rice, wheat grains, curd or somras, that could tell us about what they cultivated," she added.

Paleobotanists are being involved to study the animal bones recovered as well.

With nearby Mahabharat-era sites like Chandayan and Mandi in the recent past yielding ancient crowns and kilos of gold, this search will only get more interesting, the couple said.
 

Kshatriya87

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Indians used chariots 4,000 years ago, ASI unearths evidence in UP
The three-month long excavation, which started in March this year, has unearthed eight burial sites and several artifacts including three coffins, antenna swords, daggers, combs, and ornaments, among others.



ASI has unearthed the 'first-ever' physical evidence of Copper-Bronze age chariots. Photo: AajTak
HIGHLIGHTS
  • Findings shed light on progress of Indian civilisation back then
  • Relics make Indian civilisation at par with the 2000 BC Mesopotamia
  • Swords, daggers, shields and a helmet confirmed the existence of a warrior population

The "first ever" physical evidence of chariots dating 2000 BC - 1800 BC have been found by the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) during a trial excavation in Sanauli village near Baghpat in Uttar Pradesh.

Decorated with copper motifs, the findings of the Copper-Bronze age have opened up further research opportunities into the area's civilisation and culture.


The three-month long excavation, which started in March this year, has unearthed eight burial sites and several artifacts including three coffins, antenna swords, daggers, combs, and ornaments, among others.

The three chariots found in the burial pits could remind one of the familiar images of horse-drawn carriages from mythological television shows.

The relics suggest the existence of a two-wheeled open vehicle that may have been driven by one person.

"The wheels rotated on a fixed axle linked by a draft pole to the yoke of a pair of animals. The axle was attached with a superstructure consisting of a platform protected by side-screens and a high dashboard," S K Manjul, director of Delhi-based Institute of Archaeology, said.

The wheels and the pole have been found decorated with copper triangles, symbolic of the rays of the sun.

Manjul termed the digging drive a "path-breaking" one, also because of the copper plated anthropomorphic figures -- having horns and peepal-leafed crowns -- found on the coffins, that indicated a possiblity of "royal burials".

"For the first time in the entire sub-continent we have found this kind of a coffin. The cover is highly decorated with eight anthropomorphic figures. The sides of the coffins are also decorated with floral motifs," Manjul said.

While coffins have been discovered during past excavations in Harappa, Mohenjo-daro and Dholavira (Gujarat), but never with copper decorations, he added.

The findings also shed light on the noteworthy progress the Indian civilisation had made at the time, making it at par with the 2000 BC Mesopotamia.

"We are now certain that when in 2000 BC, the Mesopotamians were using chariots, swords, and helmets in wars, we also had similar things."

The swords, daggers, shields and a helmet confirmed the existence of a warrior population, and the discovery of earthen and copper pots, semi-precious and steatite beads, combs, and a copper mirror from the burial pits point towards a "sophisticated" craftsmanship and lifestyle.

"It is confirmed that they were a warrior class. The swords have copper-covered hilts and a medial ridge making it strong enough for warfare. We have also found shields, a torch and daggers," the archaeologist said.

The current site lies 120 meters from an earlier one in the village, excavated in 2005, where 116 burials were found along with antenna swords and pottery.

While it was difficult to ascertain the exact race of the latest buried remains, Manjul asserted that the chariots and coffins did not belong to the Harappan civilisation.

"The findings of the 2005 excavation -- pottery, beads and other cultural material -- were similar to those of the Harappan civilisation."

Manjul said the similarities could have been an outcome of the migration of the Harappans to the Yamuna and the upper planes during the late mature Harappan era.

However, the recent findings were "completely different" from the ancient civilisation.
 

HindaviSwarajya

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Yes it was read book from PN oak it jas 100s of proof. But congress govt rejected it. If you see the shape its lotus shape abd pond around. There was vishnu statue which was broken and Brahma statue on top signifying creation. Kuttubuddin ruled delhi for 4 yrs only and its immpossible to build it in such short span in those days. Neither he has mentioned in autobiography. Statues were unearthed by ASI.
 

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