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Friday, December 6, 2013
Mohenjo-daro = oldest civilized city of the world = which is called Sindh Pakistan
Mohenjo-daro
Mohenjo-daro (IPA: [muˑənⁱ dʑoˑ d̪əɽoˑ],
(Sindhi: موئن
جو دڙو), (Urdu: موئن
جودڑو), lit. Mound of the Dead;English pronunciation: /moʊˌhɛn.dʒoʊ ˈdɑː.roʊ/), is an archeological site in the province of Sindh, Pakistan.
Built around 2600
BCE, it was one of the largest settlements of the ancient Indus Valley Civilization, and one of the world's
earliest major urban settlements, contemporaneous
with the civilizations of ancient
Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Crete.
Mohenjo-daro was abandoned in the 19th century BCE, and was not rediscovered
until 1922. Significant excavation has since been conducted at the site of the
city, which was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1980.[1] However, the site is
currently threatened by erosion and improper restoration.[2]
Name
Mohenjo-daro, the modern name for
the site, simply means Mound of the Dead in Sindhi.
The city's original name is unknown, but analysis of a Mohenjo-daro seal
suggests a possible ancient Dravidian name, Kukkutarma ("the city [-rma]
of the cockerel [kukkuta]").[3] Cock-fightingmay
have had ritual and religious significance for the city, with domesticated
chickens bred there for sacred purposes, rather than as a food source.[4]
Mohenjo-daro is located in the Larkana District of Sindh, Pakistan,[5] on a Pleistocene ridge in the middle of
the flood plain of the Indus RiverValley,
around 28 kilometres (17 mi) from the town of Larkana. The ridge
was prominent during the time of the Indus Valley Civilization, allowing the
city to stand above the surrounding plain, but the flooding of the river has
since buried most of the ridge in deposited silt. The site occupies a central
position between the Indus River and the Ghaggar-Hakra
River. The Indus still flows to the east of the site, but the
riverbed of the Ghaggar-Hakra on the western side is now dry.[6]
Historical context[edit]
Mohenjo-daro was built in the 26th
century BCE.[7] It was one of the
largest cities of the ancient Indus Valley Civilization, also known as theHarappan Civilization,[8] which developed around
3000 BCE from the prehistoric Indus culture. At its height, the Indus
Civilization spanned much of what is now Pakistan and North India, extending
westwards to the Iranian border, south to Gujarat in India and northwards
to an outpost in Bactria, with major
urban centers at Harappa, Mohenjo-daro, Lothal, Kalibangan, Dholavira and Rakhigarhi.
Mohenjo-daro was the most advanced city of its time, with remarkably
sophisticated civil engineering and urban planning.[9] When the Indus
civilization went into sudden decline around 1900 BCE, Mohenjo-daro was
abandoned.[7][10]
Rediscovery and excavation[edit]
The ruins of the city remained
undocumented for over 3,700 years, until their discovery in 1922 by Rakhaldas Bandyopadhyay, an officer of theArchaeological Survey of India.[7] He was led to the mound
by a Buddhist monk, who
reportedly believed it to be a stupa. In the 1930s,
major excavations were conducted at the site under the leadership of John Marshall, D. K. Dikshitar and Ernest Mackay.[1] Further excavations were
carried out in 1945 byAhmad
Hasan Dani and Mortimer
Wheeler.
The last major series of excavations
were conducted in 1964 and 1965 by Dr. George
F. Dales. After this date, excavations were banned due to weatheringdamage to
the exposed structures, and the only projects allowed at the site since have
been salvage excavations, surface surveys, and conservation projects. However,
in the 1980s, German and Italian survey groups led by Dr. Michael Jansen and Dr.
Maurizio Tosi used less invasive archeological techniques, such as
architectural documentation, surface surveys, and localized probing, to gather
further information about Mohenjo-daro.[1]
Architecture and urban infrastructure[edit]
Further information: Sanitation of the Indus Valley Civilization
Mohenjo-daro has a planned layout based on a street grid
of rectilinear buildings. Most were
built of fired and mortared brick; some
incorporated sun-dried mud-brick and wooden
superstructures. Estimates of the area covered by the city range from 85 to 200 hectares, with a
"weak" estimate of peak population at around 40,000.[11] The sheer size of the
city, and its provision of public buildings and facilities, suggests a high
level of social organization. The city is divided into two parts, the so-called
Citadel and the Lower City. The Citadel – a mud-brick mound around 12 metres
(39 ft) high – is known to have supported public baths, a large
residential structure designed to house about 5,000 citizens, and two large
assembly halls.
The city had a central marketplace,
with a large central well. Individual households or groups of households
obtained their water from smaller wells. Waste water was channeled to covered
drains that lined the major streets. Some houses, presumably those of wealthier
inhabitants, include rooms that appear to have been set aside for bathing, and
one building had an underground furnace (known as a hypocaust), possibly
for heated bathing. Most houses had inner courtyards, with doors that opened
onto side-lanes. Some buildings had two stories.
In 1950, Sir Mortimer Wheeler
identified one large building in Mohenjo-daro as a "Great Granary".
Certain wall-divisions in its massive wooden superstructure appeared to be
grain storage-bays, complete with air-ducts to dry the grain. According to
Wheeler, carts would have brought grain from the countryside and unloaded them
directly into the bays. However, Jonathan Mark Kenoyer noted the complete lack
of evidence for grain at the "granary", which, he argued, might
therefore be better termed a "Great Hall" of uncertain function.[10] Close to the "Great
Granary" is a large and elaborate public bath, sometimes called the Great Bath. From a colonnaded courtyard, steps lead
down to the brick-built pool, which was waterproofed by a lining of bitumen. The pool
measures 12 metres (39 ft) long, 7 metres (23 ft) wide and 2.4 metres
(7.9 ft) deep. It may have been used for religious purification. Other
large buildings include a "Pillared Hall", thought to be an assembly
hall of some kind, and the so-called "College Hall", a complex of
buildings comprising 78 rooms, thought to have been a priestly residence.
Mohenjo-daro had no circuit of city
walls, but was otherwise well fortified, with guard towers to the west of the
main settlement, and defensive fortifications to the south. Considering these
fortifications and the structure of other major Indus valley cities like Harappa, it is
postulated that Mohenjo-daro was an administrative center. Both Harappa and
Mohenjo-daro share relatively the same architectural layout, and were generally
not heavily fortified like other Indus Valley sites. It is obvious from the
identical city layouts of all Indus sites that there was some kind of political
or administrative centrality, but the extent and functioning of an
administrative center remains unclear.
Mohenjo-daro was successively destroyed
and rebuilt at least seven times. Each time, the new cities were built directly
on top of the old ones. Flooding by the Indus is thought to have been
the cause of destruction.
Notable artifacts[edit]
Numerous objects found in
excavations at Mohenjo-daro include seated and standing figures, copper and
stone tools, carved seals, balance-scales and weights,
gold and jasper jewellery, and
children's toys.[12]
Dancing Girl[edit]
A bronze statuette dubbed the "Dancing Girl", 10.8
centimetres (4.3 in) high and some 4,500 years old, was found in
Mohenjo-daro in 1926. In 1973, British archaeologist Mortimer Wheeler described the item as
his favorite statuette:
"There is her little Balochi-style face
with pouting lips and insolent look in the eyes. She's about fifteen years old
I should think, not more, but she stands there with bangles all the way up her
arm and nothing else on. A girl perfectly, for the moment, perfectly confident
of herself and the world. There's nothing like her, I think, in the
world."
John Marshall, another archeologist
at Mohenjo-daro, described the figure as "a young girl, her hand on her
hip in a half-impudent posture, and legs slightly forward as she beats time to
the music with her legs and feet."[13] The archaeologist Gregory Possehl said of the statuette,
"We may not be certain that she was a dancer, but she was good at what she
did and she knew it".
Priest-King[edit]
In 1927, a seated male soapstone figure was found in a
building with unusually ornamental brickwork and a wall-niche. Though there is
no evidence that priests or monarchs ruled Mohenjo-daro,
archeologists dubbed this dignified figure a "Priest-King"; like the
Dancing Girl, it has become symbolic of the Indus Valley Civilization. It is on
display in the National Museum of Pakistan.
The sculpture is 17.5 centimetres
(6.9 in) tall. It depicts a bearded man, with a fillet around his head, an
armband, and a cloak decorated with trefoil patterns that were
originally filled with red pigment. The two ends of the fillet fall along the
back. The hair is carefully combed towards the back of the head but no bun is
present. The flat back of the head may have held a separately carved bun, or it
could have held a more elaborate horn and plumed headdress.
Two holes beneath the highly
stylized ears suggest that a necklace or other head ornament was attached to
the sculpture. The left shoulder is covered with a cloak decorated with
trefoil, double circle and single circle designs that were originally filled
with red pigment. Drill holes in the center of each circle indicate they were
made with a specialized drill and then touched up with a chisel. The eyes are deeply incised and may
have held inlay. The upper lip is shaved, and a short combed beard frames the
face.
Pashupati seal[edit]
Main article: Pashupati
A seal discovered at the site bears
the image of a seated, cross-legged and possibly ithyphallic figure surrounded by
animals. The figure has been interpreted by some scholars as a yogi, and by others as a three-headed
"proto-Shiva" as
"Lord of Animals".
Conservation and current state[edit]
Preservation work for Mohenjo-daro
was suspended in December 1996 after funding from the Pakistani government and
international organizations stopped. Site conservation work resumed in April
1997, using funds made available by the United Nations Educational,
Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). The 20-year
funding plan provided $10 million to protect the site and standing structures
from flooding. In 2011,
responsibility for the preservation of the site was transferred to the
government of Sindh.[14]
Currently, the site is threatened by
groundwater salinity and improper
restoration. Many walls have already collapsed, while others are crumbling from
the ground up. In 2012, Pakistani archaeologists warned that, without improved
conservation measures, the site could disappear by 2030.[2][15]
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