In the
year 1923, Sir John Marshall, the Director-General of Archeology in
India, published an article in the Illustrated London News, that
heralded the important discovery of an ancient civilization in
India; at least 4000 year old. The discovered site had a striking
resemblance with the finds made at, already discovered pre-historic
site of Harappa. Marshall concluded that both ruins belong to the
same but so far unknown civilization, which has been found for the
first time. His subsequent excavations revealed a large metropolis,
now popularly known as Mohenjo-daro or Moenjo-daro (Mound of death.)
The archaeological remains at Mohenjo-daro extend to around 300
hectares and make it the biggest and the widest spread ancient city,
of Indus civilization.
In the
year 1963, the Archaeological Survey of India undertook excavation at
a new site near Rakhigarhi village in the basin of the Ghaggar river
in Haryana state of India and stumbled upon remnants of yet another
ancient city. Continuous excavations from year 1997, have revealed a
large lost city. In January 2015, two more earthen mounds (no.8 and
9) concealing ancient structures, artifacts and a cemetery were
discovered. This discovery of these two mounds, led the
archaeologists to establish that this site was even bigger than
Mohenjo-daro and was in fact the biggest Harappan civilisation site.
The total area of the Rakhigarhi site now measures 350 hectares. The
two newly discovered mounds are in addition to the seven mounds
already discovered and are spread over 25 hectares each, situated to
the east and west of the main site. With this discovery, the latest
rankings of the ancient cities from this civilization from their size
is changed with Rakhigarhi being first then Mohenjo-daro, Harappa
and Ganweriwala (all in Pakistan) and finally Dholavira (in India) as
the fifth biggest Harappan site.
Mound number 9
With
Rakhigarhi at least 500 Km away from the Indus river bed and
Dholavira discovered on an island located in Rann of Kutch, much to
the south and no where near the Indus, how these could ever be part
of Indus civilization? It was a perplexing question. Also around that
time, scores of other (small and large) settlements like Kalibangan
and Banawali were discovered ( from the same pre-historic period) all
along Ghaggar-Hakra river basins and like Surkotada in Kutch.
The
ancient Indian scriptures known as the Vedas, composed over 3000
years ago, describe this region of the Indian peninsula, west of the
Ganga basin as “Saptasindhu” or the land of seven rivers. Out of
these 7 rivers, Indus and its five tributaries are easily
recognizable. But the 7th river known as 'Sarasvati' and described in
the Vedas as "surpassing in majesty and might of all other
waters" and "pure in her course from mountains to the
ocean,” has not been discovered in known history.
A
report of a study, published on 28th May 2012 in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences and lead authored by Liviu Giosan, a
geologist with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) claimed
that they have found the answer to this riddle.
The
study suggested that from discovery of very intensive human
settlements of Harappan times in the basin of Ghaggar-Hakra river,
confirm that this was the long lost Sarswati river of the Vedas. It
was a monsoon fed perennial watercourse and the aridification reduced
it to short seasonal flows like at present. However some Indian
scientists do not agree with this analysis. They feel that the
Sarasvati river system can be considered as a separate entity and not
as a part of the Indus basin. It dried up a few thousand years back,
due to tectonic movements, tributary diversions and climate changes.
This thesis is now well documented and accepted by almost all,
barring a few skeptics.
Discovery
of long lost Sarswati river of Vedas and establishing Rakhigarhi as
the largest settlement in the area, makes many believe that the
beginning of the Harappan civilisation took place in the
Ghaggar-Hakra basin in Haryana and not on the banks of Indus,
believed so far. The civilization gradually grew and spread from here
towards the Indus valley. This would mean that the ancient
civilization should be rather known as Sarswati Civilization, instead
of being called as Indus civilization.
Last
week, Archaeological teams from India and South Korea, who have been
digging since 2012, in Rakhigarhi, discovered in an ancient cemetery,
four complete human skeletons, thought to date back some 5,000 years.
The skeletons found were of two men, one woman and a child, along
with items like pottery with grains of food, shell bangles and small
figurines, located near or around skeletons, which helped them to
conclude that the settlers believed in reincarnation. Also found were
toys — mostly figurines of animals as well as of mythical
characters. A figurine of a dog with a leash point suggested their
domestication. Also found were figurines of unicorns giving an
impression about their mythical beliefs. Bones have been given for
DNA testing.
According
to Nilesh Jadhav, project co-director, who says:
“We have nine localities here which we refer to as mounds. The
mounds are numerically named, and the burial site is situated on
mound number 7.” In
the current project, the archaeologists are working on three mounds,
mound number 4, 6, and 7. According to archeologists, the excavations
at the different mounds have different significance. The excavation
at mound number 4 will help them to figure out how and when did the
Harappans settled here while the mound 6 reveals how were they
living. Likewise, the mound number 7 has been established as the
burial place, the archaeologist added. “We
are currently excavating vertically from mound number 4. Our aim is
to try to reconstruct the complete cultural sequence of the
Rakhigahri which includes figuring out when did the first settlers
come here, what changes happened when they entered in the
urbanisation phase.”
Perhaps
the DNA tests and other discoveries will conclusively confirm that
Rakhi Garhi, the biggest settlement of ancient times in India, was
the place, where it all began and this is why Rakhigarhi becomes so
relevant.
18th
April 2015
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