Periodisation of the Indus Valley Civilisation

Several periodisations are employed for the periodisation of the Indus Valley Civilisation.[1][2] While the Indus Valley Civilisation was divided into Early, Mature, and Late Harappan by archaeologists like Mortimer Wheeler,[3] newer periodisations include the Neolithic early farming settlements, and use a stage–phase model,[1][4][3] often combining terminology from various systems.

Periodisations

The most commonly used nomenclature[5][6] classifies the Indus Valley civilisation into early, mature, and late Harappan phases.[3] The Indus Valley Civilisation was preceded by local agricultural villages, from where the river plains were populated when water management became available, creating an integrated civilisation. This broader time range has also been called the Indus Age[7] and the Indus Tradition.[1]

Early, Mature, and Late Harappan

Early surveys by Sir Aurel Stein in Balochistan led to the discovery of numerous prehistoric sites of unknown association.[8] Following excavations at Harappa and Mohenjo Daro, the prehistoric sites in Sindh and Baluchistan were thought to represent a culture that migrated from Baluchistan to the Indus Valley to establish the Indus Valley Civilisation.[9] This notion was refuted by M.R. Mughal based on his discovery of earlier occupational phases in the Cholistan Desert. The term Early Harappan was coined by M. R. Mughal in his dissertation at the University of Pennsylvania which provided a synthesis of his many surveys and studies throughout Pakistan.[10] This classification is primarily based on Harappa and Mohenjo Daro, assuming an evolutionary sequence.[3] According to Manuel, this division "places the Indus Valley within a tripartite evolutionary framework, of the birth, fluorescence, and death of a society in a fashion familiar to the social evolutionary concepts of Elman Service (1971)."[3]

According to Coningham and Young, it was "cemented [...] in common use" due to "the highly influential British archaeologists Raymond and Bridget Allchin [who] used similar subdivisions in their work."[6] According to Coningham and Young, this approach is "limited" and "restricted,"[6] putting too much emphasis on the mature phase.[5]

Shaffer: Harappan Tradition

Scholarship in archaeology commonly uses a variation of the Three-age system developed by Christian Jürgensen Thomsen to divide past societies into a Stone Age, a Bronze Age, and an Iron Age. Although this system is very useful for its original purpose of organizing museum collections, it is unable to fully characterize the dynamic and fluid nature of human inter-settlement relationships. To address this issue, archaeologists Gordon Willey and Philip Phillips developed a system based on Culture-Historical Integration, or a heuristic concept for describing the distribution of "relatedness" across time and space.[11] These concepts were later adapted by Jim G. Shaffer and Diane Liechtenstein as a potential solution to a similar problem in the Greater Indus Valley.

During his archaeological research in Afghanistan, Baluchistan, Pakistan, and India, Shaffer observed the fluid and adaptive nature of local customs in rural South Asia and the many ways that cultural practices interfaced with material culture. Based on both his extensive work in the field and these ethnographic observations, Shaffer developed a series of important critiques of archaeological theory. Shaffer and Liechtenstein argued that the colonial legacy of Mortimer Wheeler and Stuart Piggot led to the projection of colonial stereotypes onto the ancient past.[12] As a result of these critiques, Shaffer adapted the system developed by Willey and Phillips into one suitable for the Indus Valley Civilisation. In his original publication, this complex social formation was termed the Harappan Tradition, after the type site at Harappa, Punjab. This term Tradition stems from his concept of Cultural Tradition or the "persistent configuration of basic technologies, as well as structure, in the context of geographical and temporal continuity".[13]

Shaffer divided the broader Indus Valley Tradition into four eras, the pre-Harappan "Early Food Producing Era," and the Regionalisation, Integration, and Localisation eras, which correspond roughly with the Early Harappan, Mature Harappan, and Late Harappan phases.[14][3] Each era can be divided into various phases. A phase is an archaeological unit possessing traits sufficiently characteristic to distinguish it from all other units similarly conceived.[15] According to Shaffer, there was considerable regional variation, as well as differences in cultural sequences, and these eras and phases are not evolutionary sequences, and cannot uniformly be applied to every site.[3]

According to Coningham and Young,

A critical feature of Shaffer's developmental framework was replacing the traditional Mesolithic/Neolithic, 'Chalcolithic'/Early Harappan, Mature Harappan, and Late Harappan terminology with Eras which were intended to reflect the longer-term changes or processes which provided the platform for eventual complexity and urbanisation [...] Notably, Shaffer's categorisation also allowed scholars to frame sites such as Mehrgarh, accepted by all as partly ancestral to the Indus cities, within a distinctly pervasive Indus tradition rather than lying outside a Pre-Urban or incipient urban phase.[2]

Coningham & Young raise theoretical concerns with Shaffer's periodisation, noting that

...it remains questionable whether there is sufficient difference and distinction between Shaffer’s definitions of Regionalisation and Localisation. Shaffer’s own definition (quoted earlier) observes the similarities of the two eras, with some differentiation in the form of contact between groups.[16]

Eras

The Early Food Producing Era corresponds to ca. 7000-5500 BCE. It is also called the Neolithic period. The economy of this era was based on food production, and agriculture developed in the Indus Valley. Mehrgarh Period I belongs to this era. The Regionalisation Era corresponds to ca. 4000-2500/2300 BCE (Shaffer)[17] or ca. 5000-2600 BCE (Coningham & Young).[18] The Early Harappan phase belongs to this Era. According to Manuel, "the most significant development of this period was the shift in population from the uplands of Baluchistan to the floodplains of the Indus Valley."[17] This era was very productive in arts, and new crafts were invented. The Regionalisation Era includes the Balakot, Amri, Hakra, and Kot Diji Phases.

The Integration Era refers to the period of the "Indus Valley civilisation". It is a period of integration of various smaller cultures. The Localisation Era (1900-1300 BCE) is the fourth and final period of the Indus Valley Tradition. It refers to the fragmentation of the culture of the Integration Era. The Localisation Era comprises several phases:[13]

  • Punjab Phase (Cemetery H, Late Harappan). The Punjab Phase includes the Cemetery H and other cultures. Punjab Phase sites are found in Harappa and in other places.
  • Jhukar Phase (Jhukar and Pirak) The Jhukar Phase refers to Mohenjo-daro and sites in Sindh.
  • Rangpur Phase (Late Harappan and Lustrous Red Ware). The Rangpur Phase sites are in Kachchh, Saurashtra, and mainland Gujarat.
  • The Pirak Phase is a phase of the Localisation Era of both the Indus Valley Tradition and the Baluchistan Tradition.

Possehl: Indus Age

Gregory Possehl includes the Neolithic stage in his periodisation, using the term Indus Age for this broader timespan,[4] Possehl arranged archaeological phases into a seven-stage sequence:[2]

  1. Beginnings of Village Farming Communities and Pastoral camps
  2. Developed Village Farming Communities and Pastoral camps
  3. Early Harappan
  4. Transition from Early Harappan to Mature Harappan
  5. Mature Harappan
  6. Posturban Harappan
  7. Early Iron Age of Northern India and Pakistan

According to Coningham & Young,

Possehl's mixture of older periodisation (Mature Harappan), artefact-based descriptive classifications (Early Iron Age), and socio-economic processes (Developed Village Farming Communities) is not unique and others, such as Singh (2008), have presented similar categories which treat the Indus Valley and the Early Historic Traditions in very different ways and thus reinforce established divisions which prevent easy comparative discussion.[2]

Rita Wright

A "similar framework" as Shaffer's has been used by Rita Wright, looking at the Indus "through a prism influenced by the archaeology of Mesopotamia," using the terms Early Food Producing Phase, Pre-Urban Phase, Urban Phase, and Post-Urban Phase.[19][2]

Datings and alternative proposals

Early Food Producing Era

Rao, who excavated Bhirrana, claims to have found pre-Harappan Hakra Ware in its oldest layers, dated at the 8th-7th millennium BCE.[20][21][22][note 1] He proposes older datings for Bhirrana compared to the conventional Harappan datings,[note 2] yet sticks to the Harappan terminology.[27] This proposal is supported by Sarkar et al. (2016), co-authored by Rao, who also refer to a proposal by Possehl, and various radiocarbon dates from other sites, though giving 800 BCE as the enddate for the Mature Harappan phase:[22][note 3] Rao 2005, and as summarized by Dikshit 2013, compares as follows with the conventional datings, and Shaffer (Eras).[27][22][28][3]

Date Culture
(Rao 2005)
Period
(Dikshit 2013)
Phase
(Sarkar 2016)
Conventional date (HP) Harappan Phase Conventional date (Era) Era
7500-6000 BCE Period IA: Hakra Wares Culture Pre-Harappan Hakra Period (Neolithic) Pre-Harappan 7000-3300 BCE Pre-Harappan c.7000-c.4500 BCE Early Food Producing Era
6000-4500 BCE Period IB: Early Harappan Transitional Period Early Harappan
4500-3000 BCE Period IIA: Early Mature Harappan Early Harappan Period Early Mature Harappan c.4500-2600 BCE Regionalisation Era
3300-2600 BCE Early Harappan
3000-1800 BCE Period IIB: Mature Harappan Mature Harappan Period Mature Harappan
2600-1900 BCE Mature Harappan 2600-1900 BCE Integration Era
1800-1600 BCE
(1800-800 BCE)[29][note 3]
Late Harappan Period Late Harappan Period 1900-1300 BCE Late Harappan 1900-1300 Localisation Era

Regionalisation Era

While the Early Harappan Phase was proposed to start at ca. 3300 BCE,[1] the Regionalisation Era has been proposed to start earlier, at 4000 BCE[5] to ca. 5000 BCE.[16]

S. P. Gupta, taking into account new discoveries, periodised the Harappan Civilisation in a chronological framework that includes the Early, Mature, and Late Harappan Phase, and starts with the same date as the Regionalisation Era:[30]

Date Main phase Subphase Harappan Phase Era
ca. 4000 - 3500 BCE Formative Phase e.g., Mehrgarh-IV-V Pre-Harappan Regionalisation Era
ca. 3500 - 2800 BCE Early Phase e.g., Kalibangan-I Early Harappan
ca. 2800 - 2600 BCE Period of Transition e.g., Dholavira-III
ca. 2600 - 1900 BCE Mature Phase e.g., Harappa-III, Kalibangan-II Mature Harappan Integration Era
ca. 1900 - 1500 BCE Late Phase e.g., Cemetery H, Jhukar Late Harappan Localisation Era
ca. 1500 - 1400 BCE Final Phase e.g., Dholavira

Integration Era

The consensus on the dating of the Integration Era, or Urban, or Mature Harappan Phase, is broadly accepted to be 2600-1900 BC.[1][16]

Durée longue: Harappan Civilisation and Early Historic Period

Jonathan M. Kenoyer, and Coningham & Young, provide an overview of developmental phases of India in which the Indus Valley Civilisation and the Early Historic Period are combined.[31][16] The post-Harappan phase shows renewed regionalisation, culminating in the integration of the Second Urbanisation of the Early Historic Period, starting ca. 600 BC,[32] c.q. the Maurya Empire, ca. 300 BC.[33]

Coningham & Young note that most works on urbanisation in early Indian history focus on either the Indus Valley Civilisation or the Early Historic Period, "thus continuing the long-standing division between the Indus and Early Historic." According to Coningham & Young, this division was introduced in colonial times, with scholars who claimed that "a distinct cultural, linguistic, and social transformation lay between the Indus Civilisation and the Early Historic," and perpetuated by "a number of post-Independence South Asian scholars."[16] Coningham & Young adopt Shaffer's terminology "to better understand and explore the processes which led to the two main urban-focused developments in South Asia,"[16] and

...replace the traditional terminologies of 'Chalcolithic', Iron Age, Proto-Historic, Early Historic, and Mauryan with those of a 'Localisation Era' followed by an Era of 'Regionalisation' and an Era of 'Integration'. We argue that Kenoyer’s (1998) suggestion that the Era of Integration was only reached with the Mauryan period (c. 317 BC) was overcautious and that such a cultural and economic stage became evident in the archaeological record as early as 600 BC [...] This task is likely to be controversial and we acknowledge that not all scholars will be receptive.[16]

They also note that the term "Integration Era" may not be applicable to the whole of South Asia for the period of the Mature Harappan Civilisation, because "large swathes of northern and southern South Asia were unaffected by what was, on a subcontinental scale, a regional feature."[16]

Concordance of periodisations

Dates Main phase Mehrgarh phases Harappan phases Other phases Era
7000–5500 BCE Pre-Harappan Mehrgarh I
(aceramic Neolithic)
Early Food Producing Era
5500–3300 BCE Pre-Harappan/Early Harappan[33] Mehrgarh II-VI
(ceramic Neolithic)
Regionalisation Era
c.4000-2500/2300 BCE (Shaffer)[17]
c.5000-3200 BCE (Coningham & Young)[18]
3300–2800 BCE Early Harappan[33]
c.3300-2800 BCE [34][33][35]
c.5000-2800 BCE (Kenoyer)[33]
Harappan 1
(Ravi Phase; Hakra Ware)
2800–2600 BCE Mehrgarh VII Harappan 2
(Kot Diji Phase,
Nausharo I)
2600–2450 BCE Mature Harappan (Indus Valley Civilisation) Harappan 3A (Nausharo II) Integration Era
2450–2200 BCE Harappan 3B
2200–1900 BCE Harappan 3C
1900–1700 BCE Late Harappan Harappan 4 Cemetery H[36]
Ochre Coloured Pottery[36]
Localisation Era
1700–1300 BCE Harappan 5
1300–600 BCE Post-Harappan
Iron Age India
Painted Grey Ware (1200-600 BCE)
Vedic period (c.1500-500 BCE)
Regionalisation
c.1200-300 BCE (Kenoyer)[33]
c.1500[37]-600 BCE (Coningham & Young)[32]
600-300 BCE Northern Black Polished Ware (Iron Age)(700-200 BCE)
Second urbanisation (c.500-200 BCE)
Integration[32]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ According to Dikshit and Rami, the estimation for the antiquity of Bhirrana as pre-Harappan is based on two calculations of charcoal samples, giving two dates of respectively 7570-7180 BCE, and 6689-6201 BCE.[20][21] Hakra Ware culture is a material culture which is contemporaneous with the early Harappan Ravi phase culture (3300-2800 BCE) of the Indus Valley.[23][24][25]
  2. ^ Sarkar et al. (2016): "Conventionally the Harappan cultural levels have been classified into 1) an Early Ravi Phase (~5.7–4.8 ka BP), 2) Transitional Kot Diji phase (~4.8–4.6 ka BP), 3) Mature phase (~4.6–3.9 ka BP) and 4) Late declining (painted Grey Ware) phase (3.9–3.3 ka BP13,19,20)."[26]
  3. ^ a b According to Sarkar et al. (2016), the various cultural levels at Bhirrana, as deciphered from the archaeological artifacts, are pre-Harappan (~9.5–8 ka BP), Early Harappan (~8–6.5 ka BP), Early mature Harappan (~6.5–5 ka BP) and mature Harappan (~5–2.8 ka BP).[22][dubious ] Compare Madina and Pirak, late Harappan elements until 800 BCE, together with Painted Grey Ware.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Kenoyer 1991.
  2. ^ a b c d e Coningham & Young 2015, p. 27.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Manuel 2010, p. 148.
  4. ^ a b Possehl 2002.
  5. ^ a b c Manuel 2010.
  6. ^ a b c Coningham & Young 2015, p. 25.
  7. ^ Possehl 2002, p. 3.
  8. ^ Stein, Aurel (1905). Report of Archaeological Survey Work in the North-West Frontier Province and Baluchistan. Peshawar: Government Press, N.W. Frontier Province.
  9. ^ Fairservis, Walter Ashlin (1971). Roots of Ancient India. New York: The Macmillan Co.
  10. ^ Kenoyer, Jonathan Mark (2011). "Regional Cultures of the Greater Indus Valley: The Ravi and Kot Diji Phase Assemblages of Harappa, Pakistan". Cultural Relations Between the Indus and the Iranian Plateau During the Third Millennium BCE, Edited by T. Osada and M. Witzel.
  11. ^ Willey, Gordon; Philip, Phillips (1958). Method and Theory in American Archaeology. The University of Alabama Press.
  12. ^ Shafer, Jim G.; Liechtenstein, Diane. "Cultural tradition and Palaeoethnicity in South Asian Archaeology". Indo-Aryans of Ancient South Asia: Language, Material Culture and Ethnicity, Edited by G. Erdosy.
  13. ^ a b Shaffer 1992.
  14. ^ Shaffer 1992, I:441–464, II:425–446.
  15. ^ Willey & Phillips 1958.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h Coningham & Young 2015.
  17. ^ a b c Manuel 2010, p. 149.
  18. ^ a b Coningham & Young 2015, p. 145.
  19. ^ Wright 1999.
  20. ^ a b Dikshit 2013, p. 129-133.
  21. ^ a b Mani 2008, p. 237-238.
  22. ^ a b c d Sarkar 2016, p. 2-3.
  23. ^ Coningham & Young 2015, p. 158.
  24. ^ Ahmed 2014, p. 107.
  25. ^ Law 2008, p. 83.
  26. ^ Sarkar 2016.
  27. ^ a b Dikshit 2013, p. 132.
  28. ^ Shaffer 1992, I:441–464, II:425–446..
  29. ^ Sarkar 2015.
  30. ^ Gupta 1999.
  31. ^ Kenoyer 1007, p. 53.
  32. ^ a b c Coningham & Young 2015, p. 28.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Kenoyer 1997, p. 53.
  34. ^ Kenoyer 1991, p. 335.
  35. ^ Parpola & 2-15, p. 17.
  36. ^ a b Kenoyer 1991, p. 333.
  37. ^ Kenoyer 1991, p. 336.

Sources

Further reading

  • S.P. Gupta. The dawn of civilization, in G.C. Pande (ed.)(History of Science, Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization, ed., D.P. Chattophadhyaya, vol I Part 1) (New Delhi:Centre for Studies in Civilizations, 1999)
  • Kenoyer, J.M. 1998 Ancient Cities of the Indus Valley Civilization. Oxford University Press and American Institute of Pakistan Studies, Karachi.
  • Kenoyer, J. M. 1991a The Indus Valley Tradition of Pakistan and Western India. In Journal of World Prehistory 5(4): 331–385.
  • Kenoyer, J. M. 1995a Interaction Systems, Specialized Crafts and Culture Change: The Indus Valley Tradition and the Indo-Gangetic Tradition in South Asia. In The Indo-Aryans of Ancient South Asia: Language, Material Culture and Ethnicity, edited by G. Erdosy, pp. 213–257. Berlin, W. DeGruyter.
  • Shaffer, J. G. 1992 The Indus Valley, Baluchistan and Helmand Traditions: Neolithic Through Bronze Age. In Chronologies in Old World Archaeology (3rd Edition), edited by R. Ehrich, pp. 441–464. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.

External links