00:00:05
aristois says that when he was sent Upon
00:00:08
A Certain Mission he saw a country of
00:00:10
more than a thousand cities together
00:00:13
with villages that had been deserted
00:00:16
because the indis had abandoned its
00:00:19
proper
00:00:21
bed these words were written by the
00:00:24
famed Greek geographer strabo with
00:00:26
regard to aristois who was one of
00:00:28
Alexander the Great companions during
00:00:31
his conquest of the aamin Persian
00:00:35
Empire aristois wrote extensively of
00:00:38
Alexander's campaigns in Asia and though
00:00:40
his original works are lost to us
00:00:43
fragments of them have been preserved
00:00:45
within the words of later writers of
00:00:47
antiquity who often referenced and
00:00:49
quoted him
00:00:51
extensively this particular passage
00:00:53
refers to a trip down the indis river
00:00:56
where aristobulus claims to have seen
00:00:58
the ruins of several cities as he
00:01:01
explored the
00:01:04
area though he didn't know what he was
00:01:07
looking at reading his eyewitness
00:01:09
account of these abandoned cities today
00:01:11
makes one wonder if he were passing by
00:01:13
the remnants of one of the ancient
00:01:16
world's truly great
00:01:20
civilizations I'm talking specifically
00:01:22
about the indis valley or Haren
00:01:25
civilization which built some of the
00:01:27
world's first truly planned cities in
00:01:29
well organized streets in a grid
00:01:32
formation efficient drainage and sewage
00:01:34
systems that were available to all and
00:01:36
an average standard of living for its
00:01:38
people that was higher than anything
00:01:41
else in the world at the time its
00:01:44
Traders and Merchants journeyed over
00:01:46
vast distances both on land and over the
00:01:49
seas to bring their valued resources and
00:01:51
goods to people as far away as
00:01:54
Mesopotamia and Egypt if not
00:01:58
Beyond they also developed one of the
00:02:00
world's first written scripts as well as
00:02:02
an Innovative system of weights and
00:02:05
measures by what Still Remains of their
00:02:07
cities and towns the people of the Haren
00:02:10
civilization appear to have lived in a
00:02:13
rather ordered prosperous and peaceful
00:02:16
society that at its height may have
00:02:18
contained an estimated 5 million
00:02:22
people but after over five centuries of
00:02:24
unparalleled progress Haren civilization
00:02:28
began to rapidly decline
00:02:30
and by the first millennium BC it had
00:02:33
been all but completely forgotten and
00:02:35
replaced or absorbed into the societies
00:02:38
of new peoples and cultures that had
00:02:41
become prevalent in what was once its
00:02:43
zone of
00:02:45
influence in this video we'll cover the
00:02:48
story of Haren civilization one of the
00:02:51
greatest during the early Bronze
00:02:54
[Music]
00:02:58
Age though a few British officers had
00:03:01
commented on them before in the 1850s
00:03:04
Alexander Cunningham the then director
00:03:07
general of the newly established
00:03:09
archaeological Survey of India visited a
00:03:12
few mysterious Mounds near the village
00:03:14
of haraa in what was then Northwestern
00:03:17
British
00:03:18
India at the time he had no idea how old
00:03:22
the place was Nor its
00:03:25
significance Cunningham thought that he
00:03:28
was standing at top the ruins of some
00:03:30
early medieval
00:03:32
Fortress while he did make some notes
00:03:34
about some of his findings including a
00:03:37
seal with some unidentified characters
00:03:40
he and others didn't think much of
00:03:43
them after a brief survey of the site
00:03:46
Cunningham and his staff
00:03:48
left he made no recommendations or plans
00:03:52
to excavate the mysterious Mounds near
00:03:54
haraa and for the next few decades they
00:03:56
were essentially forgotten
00:04:00
the Mounds were visited once again in
00:04:02
the
00:04:03
1870s not by archaeologists but Railway
00:04:06
contractors who plundered the area for
00:04:09
the old but sturdy bricks hidden within
00:04:13
them in 1902 a young English
00:04:16
archaeologist named John Marshall later
00:04:19
to be Sir John Marshall was appointed as
00:04:22
the new director general of the
00:04:23
archaeological Survey of
00:04:26
India Marshall had read about
00:04:28
Cunningham's supposedly un impressive
00:04:30
finds at haraa including the rather
00:04:33
unusual seal and decided in 1920 to
00:04:36
organize an excavation of the site
00:04:39
digging started the following year not
00:04:43
only did he and his team find more seals
00:04:46
with the same mysterious characters but
00:04:49
also the ruins of streets lined with
00:04:51
brick houses drains and several
00:04:58
figurines in 19 22 around the same time
00:05:01
as harappa was being excavated another
00:05:04
site called moano daru to its Southwest
00:05:07
near the indis river was also under
00:05:10
excavation by a team of archaeologists
00:05:12
led by Rd
00:05:14
banery at first bannery thought that he
00:05:17
was digging at the ruins of an ancient
00:05:19
Buddhist stupa that may have dated to
00:05:22
perhaps the third or 4th Century a but
00:05:26
he soon found similar seals to those
00:05:28
uncovered at
00:05:30
haraa having knowledge of ancient Indian
00:05:33
languages he realized that what was
00:05:35
inscribed on these seals was quite
00:05:38
different than any version of the brahi
00:05:40
script that he would have normally
00:05:42
expected to have found around some third
00:05:44
Century ruins and so he concluded that
00:05:48
whatever he was digging up at mahano
00:05:51
daru was much
00:05:53
older it turns out he was
00:05:57
right in 1924 after examining the site
00:06:01
himself Sir John Marshall concluded that
00:06:04
both haraa and moeno daro were of the
00:06:07
same so far unknown Bronze Age
00:06:10
civilization he called it the indis
00:06:13
valley
00:06:13
[Music]
00:06:15
civilization as the years went by though
00:06:17
the ruins of more cities and towns with
00:06:19
the same street system seals and pottery
00:06:23
were uncovered throughout Northwestern
00:06:25
British India with some of the major
00:06:27
sites quite far from the indis Valley
00:06:29
itself and so the term Haren
00:06:33
civilization named after the place where
00:06:35
it was first discovered was
00:06:38
adopted today some primarily in India
00:06:42
also call it the Indus sarasvati
00:06:45
civilization since harapin is the most
00:06:47
commonly used term for identifying this
00:06:49
civilization today I'll primarily use
00:06:52
that in this
00:06:58
program SC have divided the life of the
00:07:01
Haren civilization into three broad
00:07:03
periods or
00:07:05
phases the first of these is the early
00:07:08
harapin phase from approximately 3,300
00:07:11
to 2600
00:07:13
BC it was during this time that greater
00:07:16
urbanization in the indis valley first
00:07:20
began the second is the mature Haren
00:07:23
phase which lasted roughly between 2600
00:07:27
to 1900 BC
00:07:29
this time frame saw the height of
00:07:31
Harappan civilization with its
00:07:34
development of large well-planned cities
00:07:36
such as haraa moeno daru kalibangan doav
00:07:41
Vera Bal and others it'll also be the
00:07:45
period that we focus on the most in this
00:07:49
program finally there's the late Haren
00:07:52
phase from roughly 1900 to 1300
00:07:57
BC this is when Haren civiliz ation
00:08:00
began to decline with many of its once
00:08:02
great Urban centers being abandoned or
00:08:05
devolving into smaller more rural
00:08:13
settlements at present there are well
00:08:16
over 2,000 known haraan archaeological
00:08:18
sites of all sizes spread out over an
00:08:21
immense area surrounding the indis
00:08:25
valley this Haren Zone extends east to
00:08:29
the upper Ganges River Basin of North
00:08:31
Central India West to the site of Suk
00:08:35
gendor near the Pakistani border with
00:08:38
Iran deep into Afghanistan where smaller
00:08:41
but significant harapan settlements have
00:08:43
been found and finally to the South
00:08:47
where the southernmost harapan
00:08:48
settlement to date has been discovered
00:08:51
just north of the city of Amed nagar in
00:08:53
the state of
00:08:57
Maharashtra it's an area estimated to
00:08:59
Encompass 1.3 million square kilm which
00:09:04
is roughly the size of France Germany
00:09:07
and the United Kingdom
00:09:10
combined like those of ancient Sumer
00:09:13
Egypt the berria margiana complex and
00:09:16
China Haren civilization at least
00:09:19
initially was tied to a major river
00:09:22
system or Valley in this case the indis
00:09:25
river and its many tributaries
00:09:29
the indis is a mighty river whose
00:09:32
primary source is the melting Snows of
00:09:34
the Himalayan Mountains to the Northwest
00:09:37
though it's often augmented by the heavy
00:09:39
rains of the Summer
00:09:41
monsoon today water from the indis and
00:09:44
its several tributaries flows across the
00:09:47
lowlands of the Punjab and Sy to empty
00:09:50
out into the Arabian Sea near the modern
00:09:52
city of Karachi
00:09:55
Pakistan another river that 4500 years
00:09:59
ago may have been even greater than that
00:10:01
of the indis was possibly the gagar
00:10:04
hakra
00:10:05
river with the exception of perhaps
00:10:08
during the monsoon season it's little
00:10:10
more than a dry riverbed for most of the
00:10:13
year however the sheer number of Haren
00:10:16
settlements within its proximity
00:10:18
indicates that at one time the volume of
00:10:21
fresh water that flowed through it was
00:10:23
much greater than it is
00:10:25
today some have theorized that the gagar
00:10:28
hakra may actually have been the
00:10:31
legendary Saraswati River described in
00:10:34
the early Hindu
00:10:36
rveda much like today in prehistoric and
00:10:39
ancient times the annual floods of these
00:10:41
Rivers provided both fresh water and
00:10:44
silt that was well suited for growing
00:10:47
crops these two resources combined with
00:10:51
a relatively long growing season of high
00:10:54
temperatures and constant Sunshine made
00:10:57
the indis valley region the IDE deal
00:10:59
place for large-scale
00:11:03
farming utilizing these river systems
00:11:05
initially proved to be a great challenge
00:11:08
they had to learn how to deal with
00:11:10
unpredictable flooding as well as clear
00:11:12
forests and drain swampy mosquito
00:11:15
infested Wetlands for the purpose of
00:11:18
creating new
00:11:20
Farmland only then could they make use
00:11:23
of the Region's potentially Rich
00:11:25
agricultural resources to grow their
00:11:27
crops which in the beginning
00:11:29
consisted mostly of Wheat and barley but
00:11:32
later included peas and cotton fields
00:11:36
were plowed by oxen and at times even
00:11:40
camels eventually donkeys were also used
00:11:44
there's even evidence that by the third
00:11:46
millennium BC haraan cities in Gujrat
00:11:49
and Maharashtra had domesticated
00:11:53
elephants buffaloes sheep goats and pigs
00:11:57
were eaten regularly and whenever ever
00:11:59
possible their hides or wool was used
00:12:02
for making clothing and of course being
00:12:05
by the river or even the sea fish was
00:12:08
also likely a substantial part of the
00:12:11
harapin
00:12:12
diet like in other parts of the world
00:12:15
consistent agricultural surpluses
00:12:17
allowed for segments of society to
00:12:19
divert time and resources into other
00:12:22
endeavors such as metal working town
00:12:24
planning engineering and the
00:12:28
Arts this this in a nutshell is how
00:12:30
harapan civilization first
00:12:34
began unlike today where much of the
00:12:37
indis valley receives on average less
00:12:39
than 15 cm of rainfall in a given year
00:12:43
scientists have determined that the
00:12:44
monsoons of the third millennium BC were
00:12:47
much stronger and consequently more
00:12:50
dangerous for the area's
00:12:53
inhabitants the melting Snows of the
00:12:55
Himalayas along with annual torrential
00:12:57
rains meant that permanent settlements
00:12:59
in the indis valley needed to have been
00:13:02
constructed out of strong durable
00:13:06
materials given the Region's climate mud
00:13:09
bricks such as those commonly used in
00:13:11
ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt were not
00:13:14
ideal because they could easily break
00:13:16
down or wash away especially during
00:13:19
periods of heavy rain and
00:13:21
flooding the solution to this in Haren
00:13:24
Society was the invention of burnt
00:13:28
bricks burnt bricks were typically made
00:13:30
from locally available materials such as
00:13:33
clay sand and water which was molded
00:13:36
into identical rectangular prisms which
00:13:39
was the shape of each brick and then
00:13:41
dried in the sun before being fired in a
00:13:43
Kil whose temperatures could reach over
00:13:46
800Β°
00:13:48
C the end result was that the brick
00:13:50
became much tougher and more resistant
00:13:53
to harsh weather conditions and erosion
00:13:56
in fact they ultimately proved to be so
00:13:59
sturdy that many of them were used in
00:14:01
the late 19th century as sleepers or
00:14:04
ties in laying local railway tracks
00:14:07
throughout the
00:14:08
Punjab for the Haren people though such
00:14:11
bricks were vital in protecting their
00:14:13
settlements against the annual floods
00:14:16
and Monsoon rains that otherwise could
00:14:18
have literally washed them
00:14:21
away the use of bronze became more
00:14:24
prevalent in the Indus Valley and
00:14:25
surrounding areas during the mature
00:14:28
harapin phase when it was used for
00:14:30
making a variety of objects including
00:14:32
tools ornaments figurines toys needles
00:14:36
for weaving jewelry and weapons among
00:14:40
other
00:14:41
things the large number of bronze forges
00:14:45
discovered in many Haren cities is a
00:14:47
good indicator of just how important
00:14:49
this alloy was in Haren Society though
00:14:52
items made solely from copper were also
00:14:55
still very
00:14:57
common copper and and Tin are essential
00:15:00
in the production of bronze but these
00:15:02
two elements were in relatively short
00:15:04
supply within the indis valley
00:15:07
itself cities such as moano daru and
00:15:10
haraa had to import them copper was
00:15:14
mostly sourced from mines in baluchistan
00:15:17
and the deserts of rajastan While most
00:15:19
of the Region's tin came from
00:15:22
Afghanistan as Haren settlements some of
00:15:25
them quite large have been found in all
00:15:28
of these outlines regions many scholars
00:15:30
believe that long-distance trade
00:15:33
developed in order to obtain such
00:15:35
materials which ultimately may have been
00:15:37
the main cause for Haren outposts and
00:15:40
culture spreading throughout the Indian
00:15:43
subcontinent and Beyond in exchange for
00:15:46
such Commodities Haren Traders are
00:15:48
believed to have supplied their trading
00:15:50
partners with cotton grain wood shells
00:15:54
and finished products such as beads made
00:15:57
from carnelian
00:16:03
with so much trade going on it probably
00:16:06
became necessary to keep track of
00:16:08
inventories and the flow of goods and
00:16:10
services in and out of Haren cities to
00:16:13
destinations abroad and vice versa there
00:16:17
was a need to track all of this
00:16:18
commercial activity and from this it's
00:16:21
believed that a recording system may
00:16:24
have been invented in the form of what
00:16:26
Scholars today have identified as the
00:16:29
Haren writing
00:16:30
system the key word here is May because
00:16:34
unlike the coniform script of
00:16:35
Mesopotamia or the hieroglyphs of Egypt
00:16:38
the Haren script has never been
00:16:41
deciphered it has been determined though
00:16:43
that the language was written from left
00:16:45
to right because on some seals it
00:16:48
appears that the Scribe had run out of
00:16:50
room and had to condense the text so
00:16:52
that it would fit the script also
00:16:55
doesn't appear to be alphabetical but
00:16:57
instead consists of over 400
00:17:01
pictographs most of this writing appears
00:17:03
on small Stone seals which themselves
00:17:06
are quite simple and seemingly contain
00:17:08
few
00:17:09
words there are no large epics or other
00:17:12
works of literature written upon
00:17:15
them there are many theories as to what
00:17:18
the true purpose of these seals was the
00:17:21
most widely accepted one is that they
00:17:23
were somehow used in trade and
00:17:26
commerce for example they could have
00:17:28
been markers of ownership and a means of
00:17:31
identifying Goods in long-distance trade
00:17:34
networks the animals figures and other
00:17:37
objects depicted upon the seals may have
00:17:39
been associated with a particular region
00:17:42
and used to signify the origin or
00:17:44
destination of traded
00:17:47
Goods another theory is that such seals
00:17:50
were used for identifying
00:17:52
individuals it's been suggested that the
00:17:55
inscriptions on the seals may represent
00:17:57
personal or place name names titles and
00:18:00
other information similar to what one
00:18:03
would find on a government ID card
00:18:06
today others have proposed that the
00:18:08
Haren seals had some sort of ritual or
00:18:11
religious function this is because
00:18:14
several of them seem to depict
00:18:16
mythological creatures or scenes that
00:18:18
may have been associated with certain
00:18:21
religious beliefs and
00:18:23
practices they could also have been used
00:18:25
as amulets for protection and good luck
00:18:29
however without being able to decipher
00:18:31
the script the actual purpose of these
00:18:34
mysterious little seals continues to
00:18:36
escape
00:18:38
us you can imagine just what a huge
00:18:40
source of frustration this all must be
00:18:43
for archaeologists and historians
00:18:45
because unlocking this script could help
00:18:47
to confirm their hypotheses as well as
00:18:50
tell us so much more about Hara and way
00:18:52
of life including what they may have
00:18:55
called themselves and their cities har
00:18:58
Papa mohenjodaro doav Vera and loal are
00:19:02
names that archaeologists have given to
00:19:04
these sites often based on the name of
00:19:06
the closest Village or town or the local
00:19:09
name of the mound that once covered
00:19:12
them for example the ruins of haraa are
00:19:16
named after the village just 1 kilometer
00:19:18
away from the site whereas moeno daro in
00:19:22
the regional tongue means mound of the
00:19:25
Dead what the haraan people called these
00:19:28
places is anybody's guess but it's
00:19:30
something that the inscriptions on the
00:19:32
seals found there could one day tell
00:19:35
us it's possible though that the answer
00:19:38
might already be in front of
00:19:41
us most the serologists are quite
00:19:43
certain that Sumerian and Acadian texts
00:19:46
when mentioning a land called malua also
00:19:49
sometimes read as maluka are referring
00:19:52
specifically to a place within the
00:19:54
confines of the Haren
00:19:56
civilization as the word by itself has
00:19:59
no other meaning in the Sumerian and
00:20:01
Acadian languages it's possible that
00:20:04
there's a relation between the name
00:20:06
Melua and what the harapan people may
00:20:08
have called themselves or their
00:20:11
country one inscription of Sargon aakad
00:20:15
also known as Sargon the Great the man
00:20:17
credited with forming the world's first
00:20:20
true Empire mentions at least three
00:20:22
countries outside of Mesopotamia whose
00:20:25
ships docked at his capital city of
00:20:28
agade
00:20:30
Sargon king of the world was victorious
00:20:33
in 34 battles he destroyed City walls
00:20:37
all the way to the shore of the sea he
00:20:40
moed boats of Melua Magan and dmon at
00:20:44
the warf of
00:20:47
agade as just mentioned Melua is
00:20:50
believed to be somewhere within the
00:20:52
borders of the haraan civilization while
00:20:55
Magan was located in what's today Oman
00:20:58
in the easternmost parts of the United
00:21:01
Arab Emirates the country of dillmon is
00:21:04
agreed by most to have been the Persian
00:21:07
Gulf Island today known as
00:21:10
Bahrain during the old Acadian and Neo
00:21:12
Sumerian periods of the late third
00:21:15
millennium BC malua was understood to
00:21:18
have been a country far to the east
00:21:20
where fine wood gold Ivory Carnelian and
00:21:25
Lapis Lazuli came from and perhaps APS
00:21:29
Haren settlers as
00:21:31
well there's a text from the 34th year
00:21:34
of the Neo Sumerian king Shuli
00:21:37
discovered amongst the ruins of the city
00:21:38
of lagash which in those days was
00:21:41
arguably the premier trade hub for goods
00:21:43
coming from the
00:21:45
East it mentions a meluan village within
00:21:49
its
00:21:50
territory seals with text written in the
00:21:52
harapin script have also been found
00:21:54
there as well as the cities of Kish Ur
00:21:58
and the CI of Susa in the neighboring
00:22:00
country of ilam today part of
00:22:02
Southwestern
00:22:04
Iran seals and objects there with
00:22:06
harapin script have also been uncovered
00:22:08
on the island of Bahrain as well as the
00:22:11
site of Ras Al Kima in Oman which in
00:22:14
ancient times were part of dillmon and
00:22:16
Magan
00:22:19
respectively another fascinating find is
00:22:21
a cylinder seal belonging to a scribe
00:22:24
named Shu iluu who lived around 2020 BC
00:22:28
and in the text is identified as a meua
00:22:33
translator now in the Lou the exact
00:22:36
place within Mesopotamia where the
00:22:38
cylinder seal was uncovered isn't
00:22:41
known assuming that meua is indeed
00:22:44
somewhere within the harapin world such
00:22:46
evidence leads us to conclude that not
00:22:49
only did trade contacts exist between it
00:22:52
and the near East but also that there
00:22:54
may have been harapin living in
00:22:56
Mesopotamia in early antiquity
00:22:59
the mention of a harapin translator is
00:23:02
especially
00:23:03
encouraging imagine how incredible it
00:23:05
would be if a bilingual Acadian harapin
00:23:08
document much like the Rosetta Stone
00:23:11
were uncovered beneath the Sands of
00:23:13
ancient Sumer and
00:23:14
aad such a text could be the key that
00:23:17
unlocks the meaning of the Haren script
00:23:20
and gives us more insight into their
00:23:23
society it's believed that Haren Traders
00:23:26
often acting as middlemen were
00:23:28
instrumental in transporting items such
00:23:30
as beads made of Carnelian Fine Jewelry
00:23:33
ornaments wood Ivory spices copper and
00:23:38
Lapis Lazuli to destinations further to
00:23:41
the
00:23:42
West the evidence of har Robins in
00:23:45
Mesopotamia mentioned earlier indicates
00:23:47
that while some of them may have
00:23:49
actually transported the items
00:23:51
themselves in most cases it's likely
00:23:53
that they handed them off to other
00:23:55
Traders from places such as marashi El
00:23:58
Nam Magan and dmon who then brought them
00:24:02
to their final destination which often
00:24:05
was one of the cities of
00:24:07
Mesopotamia the reverse though is much
00:24:10
less understood for it's not known what
00:24:12
haraan Traders may have received in
00:24:15
return from their counterparts in
00:24:17
Mesopotamia there doesn't seem to have
00:24:19
been any written or material evidence of
00:24:22
goods from Mesopotamia reaching the
00:24:24
indis valley though some have speculated
00:24:26
that they may have exchanged Tex and
00:24:29
food stuffs such as
00:24:30
[Music]
00:24:32
dates there's an interesting Haren seal
00:24:35
in the National Museum in New Delhi
00:24:37
India called by archaeologists the
00:24:39
Gilgamesh seal it's not actually a seal
00:24:43
of Gilgamesh but it's called that
00:24:45
because it depicts a man firmly grasping
00:24:47
two ferocious Tigers similar to the
00:24:50
so-called master of animals Motif that
00:24:53
is common in ancient near Eastern art
00:24:56
while this seal doesn't prove that
00:24:58
travelers from Mesopotamia or another
00:25:00
place in the near East ever visited a
00:25:03
haraan city it might hint at cultural
00:25:05
influence and exchanges between the two
00:25:14
civilizations more than anything else
00:25:16
what had really distinguished the
00:25:18
harapin culture from others during the
00:25:20
Bronze Age was its emphasis and
00:25:22
expertise when it came to urban planning
00:25:26
while there were a few other large Urban
00:25:27
societ ities in the world at the time
00:25:30
none of them seem to have had the
00:25:32
organization standardization and
00:25:34
efficiency overall as the Haren
00:25:37
civilization most of the larger Haren
00:25:40
sites had what archaeologists have
00:25:41
identified as a citadel or a coropolis
00:25:44
that was usually set a top an
00:25:46
artificially constructed platform where
00:25:49
it's believed that the more Elite or
00:25:51
ruling class
00:25:53
lived such elevated ground was
00:25:55
especially advantageous during monsoon
00:25:58
rain s and the flooding of nearby
00:26:01
Rivers below the Acropolis was the Lower
00:26:04
Town inhabited by The Common People the
00:26:08
buildings here were more modest in
00:26:10
comparison to those on the Acropolis but
00:26:12
still made out of sturdy uniform burnt
00:26:16
bricks houses which could be one or two
00:26:19
stories were arranged in a grid system
00:26:22
whose streets were lined with drains and
00:26:25
sewers the latter part was the most
00:26:27
impressive for archaeologists as they
00:26:29
found that dwellings in nearly every
00:26:31
Haren City regardless of its size had
00:26:34
their own Courtyard and a bathroom many
00:26:37
with raised platforms so that one could
00:26:39
pour water over another much like a
00:26:42
modern
00:26:43
shower some houses even had their own
00:26:46
private
00:26:47
Wells water would flow out of the house
00:26:50
through a rather simple but efficient
00:26:52
drainage system which especially on the
00:26:55
Acropolis was often covered by bricks or
00:26:58
stone
00:26:59
slabs there is no other Bronze Age
00:27:02
Society on record that seems to have
00:27:04
been concerned with cleanliness and
00:27:06
personal hygiene as the Haren mahano
00:27:10
daro had a great bath measuring 39x 23
00:27:14
ft with a depth of 8 ft which most
00:27:17
scholars believe was used for ritual
00:27:19
bathing though some have suggested that
00:27:22
it may have been for recreational use
00:27:24
and a place for people to relax like a
00:27:27
swimming pool today
00:27:29
though made of bricks the bath was also
00:27:31
coated with tar to help waterproof
00:27:34
it like other buildings it was connected
00:27:37
to both a relatively complex water
00:27:40
supply system as well as sewers to drain
00:27:42
any new waste to the east of this paath
00:27:45
was a large building measuring 230 by 78
00:27:49
ft that many archaeologists believe may
00:27:52
have functioned as a palace for the king
00:27:55
or political leader of the city and his
00:27:57
family
00:27:59
if there was an established priesthood
00:28:01
then the high priest and his Entourage
00:28:03
may have lived there as
00:28:06
well some have tried to portray haraan
00:28:09
society as being very egalitarian
00:28:12
because most of the people living in its
00:28:13
cities especially during the mature
00:28:15
Haren period seem to have enjoyed a high
00:28:18
standard of living relative to other
00:28:20
Bronze Age
00:28:22
cultures as mentioned earlier the
00:28:24
average household had access to
00:28:26
amenities such as Wells the
00:28:28
sophisticated drainage system and
00:28:30
perhaps even public baths in some
00:28:33
locations the number and sheer size of
00:28:36
City granaries implies that food
00:28:38
shortages were rare and the absence of
00:28:41
clearly identifiable large palaces or
00:28:44
gigantic temples has convinced many that
00:28:47
power was not concentrated in the hands
00:28:49
of a few Elite
00:28:52
individuals on the other hand the
00:28:54
presence of large buildings on lofty
00:28:56
platforms such as as the Citadel at
00:28:59
moeno daro versus the smaller and more
00:29:02
modest dwellings in the lower City
00:29:04
suggests that some individuals or groups
00:29:07
definitely had access to more resources
00:29:09
than others some houses consisted of a
00:29:13
single room while others may have had up
00:29:15
to
00:29:16
12 in addition the discovery of burials
00:29:20
with elaborate grave Goods versus more
00:29:22
simple Graves for presumed commoners
00:29:24
also suggest that select individuals may
00:29:27
have enjoyed ened the Privileges of
00:29:29
wealth and higher status in
00:29:32
death if there was a social and
00:29:34
political hierarchy then who was at the
00:29:37
top was it a king a priest who served as
00:29:41
both spiritual and temporal ruler or
00:29:44
some sort of governing Council there's
00:29:47
no way to know for certain but Scholars
00:29:49
have proposed many
00:29:51
theories whoever was in charge most
00:29:54
likely was based within the Acropolis
00:29:57
area of the the city and specifically in
00:30:00
the Citadel if there was
00:30:03
one another question is how powerful was
00:30:06
this ruling class within the typical
00:30:08
Haren City since there's little evidence
00:30:11
of any sort of military culture or
00:30:14
standing army in most Haren cities how
00:30:16
was the leadership's will imposed upon
00:30:19
the general
00:30:20
population as far as we can tell by the
00:30:23
mature Haren period political and
00:30:25
economic stability had been well
00:30:28
established throughout
00:30:30
Society most today believe that this
00:30:32
would have been nearly impossible
00:30:34
without someone or at least a group of
00:30:37
people possessing the authority to
00:30:39
enforce law and
00:30:41
order the other question is what was the
00:30:44
political relationship between Haren
00:30:47
cities did they function as individual
00:30:50
city states or did one or two have
00:30:53
hemony over the
00:30:56
others one possibility is that belief in
00:31:00
some higher power may have compelled the
00:31:02
Haren people to maintain peace and Order
00:31:05
within their society but even here
00:31:07
Scholars have little conclusive evidence
00:31:09
to work
00:31:11
with unlike in ancient Mesopotamia or
00:31:14
Egypt no clearly identifiable temples or
00:31:17
religious structures have been
00:31:19
discovered at any Haren site the
00:31:21
exception possibly being the great bath
00:31:24
at moano daro if it indeed was built for
00:31:27
an an expressly religious
00:31:30
purpose however absence of such
00:31:33
structures does not mean an absence of
00:31:35
religion or spirituality just that
00:31:38
perhaps a special man-made building or
00:31:40
public space wasn't
00:31:43
needed daily devotion and rituals could
00:31:46
have been done in the home making
00:31:48
Worship in a temple
00:31:52
unnecessary the so-called pashupati seal
00:31:55
which depicts a three-headed man wearing
00:31:57
a horn head covering in a meditation or
00:32:00
yogic position is often used by many
00:32:02
scholars as evidence that the Haren
00:32:05
people did have some sort of
00:32:08
religion this particular figure might
00:32:10
have been a God or some sort of Shaman
00:32:13
looking around him we can see that he's
00:32:16
surrounded by several animals that could
00:32:18
also have had some religious
00:32:25
significance one thing that archaeolog
00:32:28
did discover at many harabin sites were
00:32:30
numerous terracota figurines mostly in
00:32:33
the form of women men Birds dogs sheep
00:32:38
cattle and
00:32:42
monkeys for roughly 600 years between
00:32:45
2500 and 1900 BC the civilization of the
00:32:49
indis valley and its surroundings was at
00:32:52
its Zenith the Haren people as a whole
00:32:55
had an average quality of life that at
00:32:57
least least on the surface seems to have
00:32:59
exceeded that of their Bronze Age peers
00:33:01
in Mesopotamia Egypt China and other
00:33:05
parts of the world their fondness for
00:33:08
Commerce and active participation in the
00:33:11
great International Trade networks of
00:33:12
the day allowed them to become extremely
00:33:16
prosperous while armed conflicts between
00:33:18
neighbors probably did occur from time
00:33:20
to time the little that we know about
00:33:22
their culture as well as information
00:33:24
confirmed by archaeologists suggests
00:33:27
that Mass Ence and campaigns of conquest
00:33:29
such as those glorified by NE Eastern
00:33:31
rulers were rare to
00:33:35
non-existent this may have been because
00:33:37
there was really no need for it as we've
00:33:40
seen for the most part there was little
00:33:42
that differentiated one Haren City from
00:33:46
another as far as we can tell they were
00:33:48
quite similar in their General culture
00:33:51
urban planning architecture weights and
00:33:53
measures written language bricks the
00:33:56
tools they Ed
00:33:58
the crops they grew and the Beautiful
00:34:00
seals and small figurines that they
00:34:03
created while flooding was a constant
00:34:05
threat Haren civilization and Society
00:34:08
was one that was generally in harmony
00:34:11
with itself and its
00:34:13
surroundings so then merely within a
00:34:16
century of its golden age how did
00:34:18
harapan civilization begin to
00:34:20
precipitously decline and in most areas
00:34:23
ultimately
00:34:25
collapse this is a mystery that has
00:34:27
riddled archaeologists and Scholars
00:34:29
since the ruins of harappa and moano
00:34:32
daro were first
00:34:34
excavated as you might expect there are
00:34:36
many ideas that have been proposed as to
00:34:39
how this might have
00:34:41
happened most Scholars today don't
00:34:44
believe that there was just one cause
00:34:46
but a series of factors occurring within
00:34:48
the span of a few Generations that may
00:34:51
have greatly contributed to the end of
00:34:54
many Haren cities and smaller
00:34:56
settlements
00:34:57
while in the past Scholars had
00:34:59
confidently made the assertion that the
00:35:01
decline and destruction was due to
00:35:03
foreign Invaders specifically a people
00:35:06
from Central Asia known as the Arians
00:35:09
this today is rejected by most as the
00:35:11
primary cause since it's believed that
00:35:14
they arrived on the scene a few
00:35:16
centuries
00:35:18
later modern archaeologists as well as
00:35:20
the broader scientific Community
00:35:22
attribute the fall of harapan
00:35:24
civilization to changes in the climate
00:35:26
the degradation and deforestation of the
00:35:29
local environment and perhaps also
00:35:31
tectonic activity that may have caused
00:35:33
the courses of various important rivers
00:35:36
to
00:35:37
shift consider this
00:35:39
scenario in the late 1900s BC there may
00:35:43
have been less rain causing parts of the
00:35:46
mighty Indus gagar hakra and other
00:35:49
rivers to change course or completely
00:35:51
dry
00:35:52
up as such bodies of water were the
00:35:55
lifeline of most Haren cities when when
00:35:57
they vanished so too did their
00:36:01
citizens the loss or fatal reduction of
00:36:03
their primary source of water would have
00:36:05
brought about the mass failure of their
00:36:07
farms and forced them to move elsewhere
00:36:11
but where would they have gone most
00:36:14
likely to other haraan cities and towns
00:36:17
whose people shared the same culture
00:36:19
language and a similar way of
00:36:22
life but this would have created another
00:36:26
massive problem
00:36:29
overpopulation even in places that may
00:36:31
have sustained the effects of drought
00:36:33
the huge influx of people into these
00:36:35
areas would have created food shortages
00:36:38
and increased population density with
00:36:40
the latter facilitating outbreaks of
00:36:47
disease Haren civilization relied
00:36:50
heavily on agriculture which required
00:36:52
clearing forests to make way for new
00:36:54
Farmland to grow additional crops and
00:36:57
pastures for animals to Graz in as the
00:37:00
population grew and agricultural demands
00:37:03
skyrocketed more land would have needed
00:37:05
to be
00:37:06
cleared at the same time the demand for
00:37:09
wood used as fuel for the kils making
00:37:11
burnt bricks would have also accelerated
00:37:15
all this would have led to widespread
00:37:17
deforestation which can have several
00:37:19
negative effects on the environment and
00:37:21
society as a
00:37:25
whole one of the most significant ific
00:37:27
an impacts of deforestation is soil
00:37:31
erosion trees help to stabilize the soil
00:37:34
and prevent such erosion without them
00:37:37
the soil can be easily washed away by
00:37:39
rain wind and especially in the indis
00:37:42
valley
00:37:44
flooding this then leads to declines in
00:37:46
soil fertility making it more difficult
00:37:49
to grow crops which ultimately leads to
00:37:52
food shortages economic collapse and
00:37:55
often social unrest
00:37:58
with the rivers drying up and the trees
00:38:01
disappearing the land would no longer
00:38:03
have been able to support the general
00:38:05
Haren population and so those who didn't
00:38:08
starve to death left in search of food
00:38:11
and opportunities elsewhere such as
00:38:13
further to the East and the fertile
00:38:15
Plains along the Ganges River or down
00:38:18
south where the local environment may
00:38:21
have been a bit more hospitable and less
00:38:24
unpredictable this is at least one
00:38:27
hypoth ois that many scholars more or
00:38:29
less accept today there are several
00:38:32
others but we don't have time to go into
00:38:34
all of them
00:38:36
here though the great cities of moeno
00:38:38
daro and haraa may have been all but
00:38:41
completely abandoned by 1800 BC pockets
00:38:45
of haraan culture still survived in
00:38:47
other areas for a few more
00:38:50
centuries but as often happens over time
00:38:54
new peoples migrate into new regions and
00:38:57
what was once the harapan cultural Zone
00:38:59
and its people merged with or were
00:39:02
absorbed into the new vadic society that
00:39:04
was taking root on the subcontinent
00:39:06
during the second millennium BC but that
00:39:10
is a story for another time so I hope
00:39:14
that you learned something about the
00:39:15
great haraan civilization of the early
00:39:18
Bronze Age there will definitely be more
00:39:21
on the way so stay tuned and don't
00:39:24
forget to
00:39:25
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[Laughter]