Monday, 29 September 2014

Mesolithic Period in India

   Mesolithic people are mainly hunters and herders.Their time in between 9000BC - 4000BC.This time beginning of Holocene epoch.Homo sapiens as the only living species of the genus Homo. In this time climate became warm and dry.Change in flora and fauna.This period is otherwise called intermediate stage and transitional period.
Main jobs are:

  • hunting
  • gathering
  • fishing
  • domestication of animals
  • pastoralism
  • primitive cultivation 
  • horticulture
  • nomadic
tools like not morethan 5c.m. in size or 1-8c.m.
Flakes, blades, burins are used. 
major characteristics:

  • pot making: first time make crude pots in chopani mando.
  • habitational settlements were in or near rock shelters in m.p.
  • postholes or circular huts
  • grave goods within the habitational area
  • band of people with some demarcation of families
  • rock cut art: bhimbetka, morhana pahar, pratapgarh, mirzapur, and pachmarhi
  • agriculture in a primitive level
  • kind of stone:quartz,chert, agate, chalcedony
  • life style:evidences of religious belief,art

sites:

  • tilwara
  • budha pushkar
  • sambhar
  • bagor
  • basins of gujarat
  • langhnaj
  • hirapur
  • barasimla
  • sidhpur
  • sarai-nahar-rai
  • mahadaha
  • adamgarh
  • birbhanpur
  • morhana pahar
  • chopani mando
  • teri
  • kibbanhalli
  • nagarjunakonda

Evidences of:


  • pottery
  • domestication
  • primitive cultivation
  • burial practices
  • religious belief
  • rice
  • burned clay
  • settlements


Upper Palaeolithic Period in India


  • 40,000BC - 10,000BC  IN INDIA
  •  many changes in the environment
  • last phase of the Pleistocene
  • climate became comparatively warm
  • end of the ice age
  • appearance of new flint industry
  • lighter and smaller artifacts
  • homo sapience was appeared in this time
  • tools like blades, burins, srapers, harpoons,needles made of both quartzite and bones.
major sites:

  • Riwat
  • Sanghav caves
  • Budha pushkar
  • Rohri hill
  • Belan valley and Son valley
  • Chopani mando in Belan valley
  • Visadi in Gujarat
  • Shorapur and Bijapur in Karnataka
  • Bhimbetka 

This time no clear evidences of religious belief, pottery, metal, cultivation and domestication in Indian scenario.

Friday, 26 September 2014

Middle Palaeolithic Period in India

Middle Palaeolithic Period

  The Middle Paleolithic (or Middle Palaeolithic) is the second subdivision of the Palaeolithic or Old Stone Age as it is understood in EuropeAfrica and Asia. The term Middle Stone Age is used as an equivalent or a synonym for the Middle Paleolithic in African archaeology. The Middle Paleolithic and the Middle Stone Age broadly spanned from 300,000 to 30,000 years ago. There are considerable dating differences between regions. The Middle Paleolithic/Middle Stone Age was succeeded by the Upper Palaeolithic subdivision which first began between 50,000 and 40,000 years ago. According to the Out of Africa Hypothesismodern humans began migrating out of Africa during the Middle Stone Age/Middle Paleolithic around 100,000 or 70,000 years ago and began to replace earlier pre-existent Homo species such as the Neanderthals and Homo erectus.

This was established only in the 1960's. 

  • In india 50,000BC to 40,000BC 
  • free from ice shields
  • based upon flakes
  • tools like blades, points,borers,and scrapers.
  • major industries like luni, rohri and nevasan
  • tool technologies like mousterian and aterian
  • tool shapes like round, rectangular, pointed, tortoise, and parallel sided blade
  • humans: homo heidelbergensis and homo sapience
  • The earliest evidence of behavioral modernity first appears during the Middle Paleolithic/Middle Stone Age; undisputed evidence of behavioral modernity, however, only becomes common during the following Upper Paleolithic period.
  • the earliest undisputed evidence of artistic expression during the Paleolithic period comes from Middle Paleolithic/Middle Stone Agesites such as Blombos Cave in the form of bracelets, beads, art rock, ochre used as body paint and perhaps in ritual.
  • Activities such as catching large fish and hunting large game animals with specialized tools connote increased group-wide cooperation and more elaborate social organization.
  • humans also first began to take part in long distance trade between groups for rare commodities .
  • Evidence from archeology and comparative ethnography indicates that Middle Paleolithic/Middle Stone Age people lived in small egalitarian band societies.
  • The use of fire became widespread for the first time in human prehistory during the Middle Paleolithic.


Tuesday, 23 September 2014

Hindi is not our national language

     The constitution of India does not recognize Hindi as  the national language of India.Under the provision made in Article 343 of the constitution, it has the status of official language of the union.  But the constitution also empowered the President to allow continued use of English even after january 25, 1965, if the country was not ready. So Parliament enacted the official language act by which hindi and english are to be used for all official purposes of the union government.

Please write ur comments ..

Monday, 22 September 2014

UGC NET - Lower Palaeolithic Period in India


     The earth is over 4000 million years old. Man is said to have appeared on the earth in the early pleistocene, when true oxe, elephant, horse also originated in 5000,000 BC. This period is divided into 3 phases according to the nature of stone tools and also nature of change in the climate. Sites  found in many hilly slopes and river valleys.

lower palaeolithic period-5000,000 BC to 50,000 BC

Tools made of pebbles of quartzite( rough stone)

Tools like choppers, hand axes and cleavers

usage of tools: chopping, digging, skinning

major sites are:          las bela, bugti hills, beas to brahmaputra, rohri hills, riwat and siwalik,soan river, thar desert, didwana, kashmir, belan valley, bhimbetka, ganga plains, dina and jabalpur, saurashtra sehwal deposit in son valley, adamgarh, hungsi, attirampakkam, jalore, kuliana, lalitpur, kibbanhalli, pawagarh, chirki, anagawadi and bagalkot.

human beings:

homo habilis, homo erectus, java and peking, neandarthal


Wednesday, 17 September 2014



                                                  MOST RECENT DISCOVERIES IN ARCHAEOLOGY

Headless Vikings of Dorset

 

While digging a railroad in Dorset workers came across a small contingent of viking warriors buried in the ground, all missing their heads. At first archaeologists thought that maybe some villagers had survived a raid and exacted their revenge but upon closer inspection things got a little less clear. The beheadings looked too clean and seemed to have been done from the front rather than the back. They are still not sure what happened.

Baghdad Battery


In the mid 1930′s several plain looking jars were discovered near Baghdad, Iraq. No one paid any notice to them until not long after when a German museum curator published a paper claiming that the jars may have been used as galvanic cells, or batteries. Although it may seem far fetched at first even the Mythbusters got on board and confirmed that it was indeed a good possibility.


Sacsayhuaman


This walled complex just outside of Cusco, Peru is part of what used to be the capital of the Inca Empire. The crazy part about this wall, however, is in the details of its construction. The rock slabs fit together so tightly that it would be impossible to slide even a hair between them. It’s a testament to the precision of ancient Incan architecture.

Gobekli Tepe


Although at first glance it may seem like nothing more than a bunch of rocks, this ancient settlement discovered in 1994 was constructed roughly 9,000 years ago and is currently the one of the oldest examples of complex/monumental architecture in the world, predating the pyramids by thousands of years.


Voynich Manuscript


Described as the “world’s most mysterious manuscript” this piece of literature has been dated back to early 15th century Italy. With most of its pages filled with what seems to be herbal recipes, none of the plants match known species and the language remains undecipherable.


Mount Owen Moa

n 1986 an expedition was making its deeper and deeper into the cave system of Mount Owen in New Zealand when it came across the huge claw you’re now looking at. It was so well preserved that it almost seemed like whatever it belonged to had just died recently. Upon excavation and inspection, however, it was determined to belong to an Upland Moa, a large prehistoric bird that apparently came with a nasty set of claws.


Dead Sea Scrolls


Similar to the Rosetta Stone the Dead Sea Scrolls are one of the major archaeological finds of the last century. They contain the earliest known surviving copies of biblical documents that date all the way back to 150 BC.


The Tomb of Sunken Skulls


While excavating a dry lake bed in Motala, Sweden archaeologists came across several skulls that had stakes driven directly through their craniums. As if that weren’t bad enough one of the skulls even had pieces of the others skulls crammed up inside it. Whatever happened their 8,000 years ago wasn’t pretty.


The Venetian Vampire


Although these days the most surefire method used to slay vampire is a stake through the heart, hundreds of years ago that was not considered sufficient. Allow us to introduce you to the ancient alternative – the brick through the mouth. Think about it. What’s the easiest way to keep a vampire from sucking blood? Cram his face full of cement no doubt. The skull you are looking at here was found by archaeologists just outside Venice in a mass grave.


Teotihuacan Sacrifice


Although it has been known for years that the Aztecs hosted numerous bloody sacrificial festivals, in 2004 a grisly discovery was made outside of modern day Mexico City. Numerous decapitated and mutilated bodies of both humans and animals shed some light on just how horrific the rituals could get.


Terra Cotta Army


While it may not be intense in the same way as the last few discoveries, this vast terracotta army that was buried with Qin Shi Huang, the first Emperor of China, is certainly intense in its own right. Apparently the intention was for the soldiers to protect the emperor in the afterlife.


Ancient Chemical Warfare


In 1933 archaeologist Robert du Mesnil du Buisson was searching beneath the ruins of an ancient Roman/Persian battlefield when he came across some siege tunnels that had been dug under the city. In the tunnels he found the bodies of 19 Roman soldiers that seemingly died while trying to desperately escape from something and one Persian soldier clutching his chest. Apparently when the Romans heard the Persians digging under their walls they began digging a tunnel of their own with the idea of dropping in on the Persians from above. The trouble for them was that the Persians heard it and set a trap. As soon as the Roman soldiers dropped through they were met with burning sulfur and bitumen which has the unfortunate effect of turning to acid in your lungs.


Antikythera Mechanism


Discovered in a shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera around the turn of the 20th century. This 2000 year old device has often been touted as the world’s first scientific calculator. With dozens of gears it can precisely measure the position of the sun, moon, and planets simply by inputting a date. Although there is debate over its exact use it certainly shows that even 2000 years ago civilization was already accomplishing amazingly advanced feats of mechanical engineering.

Lake Ontario, New York


In June 2008, after a 35-year search, electrical engineers Jim Kennard and Dan Scoville discovered the HMS Ontario, the oldest shipwreck in the Great Lakes and the only known fully intact British warship in those waters. The vessel sank in Lake Ontario during a sudden gale on October 31, 1780, with more than 120 passengers aboard, including 30 American prisoners of war. Kennard and Scoville used side-scanning sonar to locate the wreck, which rested in an area of the lake where depths exceed 500 feet. They later explored the vessel with a remotely operated vehicle (ROV).

Min of the Desert,The Red Sea, Egypt


Nearly 3,500 years ago, the female pharaoh Hatshepsut ordered five trading ships built for a voyage over the Red Sea to the legendary Land of Punt. Now, Florida State University maritime archaeologist Cheryl Ward has plied the same waters on a similar vessel, a 66-foot-long, 30-ton reconstruction of an 18th Dynasty trading ship. Called Min of the Desert--in honor of the powerful Egyptian fertility god commemorated in stelae and shrines at the Middle Kingdom lagoon site of Mersa Gawasis--the ship was partly based on a detailed relief depicting Hatshepsut's fleet in her funerary temple. Since 2003 archaeologists have unearthed wooden ship parts, anchors, and ropes still tied in original knots, evidence that ships were dismantled at the site.
 HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE

    Historical perspective is the way that one looks at something in history. It is also an art technique that changes the distance or depth of an object on that particular historical event.And also a way someone looks at something taking into consideration all of the things that have happened with that thing in the past.

    


ARIKAMEDU THE FIRST INDIAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE

             Arikamedu is an archaeological site in KakkayanthopeAriyankuppam CommunePuducherry. It is located at a distance 7 km from its capital Pondicherry, in the Indian territory of Puducherry, where Mortimer Wheeler conducted his best-known excavation in the 1940s. Arikamedu - 'Arikan-medu or Poduke' which literally means, 'eroding mound'. Roman lamps, glassware and gems have also been found at the site.
        According to Wheeler, Arikamedu was a Tamil fishing village which was formerly a major Chola port dedicated to bead making and trading with Roman traders. Various Roman artifacts, such as a large number of bearing the mark of Roman potter schools VIBII, CAMURI and ITTA, have been found at the site, supporting the view on an ancient trade between Rome and the ancient Tamil country of present day . Arikamedu is now a part of Ariyankuppam Commune. Arikamedu was an important bead making centre.

              The first excavation was an amateur French endeavor. R.E.M. Wheeler conducted the second and best-known campaign. J-.M. Casal conducted the third. For years, Wheeler was cited for his view that a sleepy Indian fishing village had been built up by Roman traders into a major port that flourished for a few centuries until the Romans left. The village then fell back into obscurity.


        Beginning around 1980 Vimala Begley of the University of Pennsylvania became interested in the ceramics of Arikamedu. The identification of Western wares and the problems associated with the "rouletted ware" at the site intrigued her. Simultaneously, my interest in Arikamedu began. Visiting the Pondicherry Museum convinced me that Arikamedu was an important beadmaking site, unique because of its production of both stone and glass beads.
Over the next several years Begley and I worked independently on material from the site, visited it several times, wrote papers, worked with the Pondicherry Museum and other depositories and helped make Arikamedu a protected archaeological zone. From 1989 to 1992 Begley directed a joint U. Pennsylvania and U. Madras excavation there; I was the "small finds man." We are currently working on the report. Volume I is just out. Volume II is to be completed in the summer of 1997.

Some of the preliminary results follow:

1. Arikamedu was occupied far longer than had been thought and must be considered a South Indian city rather than principally Roman. The lowest levels we could reach go back to the second century B.C., long before the Romans came. My historical investigations indicate that Arikamedu was occupied down to the seventeenth century, and a date nearly as recent is confirmed archaeologically, at least tentatively.

2. The chief product of Arikamedu must have been beads. It is the first place known to have made small, drawn (cut from a tube) glass beads, the types found almost universally for two millennia. Its stone bead industry was also impressive, and its lapidaries made several important innovations in the field.

3. Workers in the glass bead (Indo-Pacific bead) industry migrated to other places: Mantai, Sri Lanka; Khlong Thom, Thailand; Oc-eo, Vietnam; Srivijaya/Palembang, Sumatra; Sungai Mas, Malaysia; Kuala Selinsing, Malaysia; and Takua Pa, Thailand have now been identified as housing such work. This constituted the largest and longest-lived glass bead industry ever.

4. Instrumental in these moves must have been a power with more influence than the beadmakers themselves. As rich as India is in precious stones, glass has always been considered an inferior substitute and the status of glass beadmakers has always been low. A guild no doubt made the link between the beadmakers and the powers-that-be who would have had to give permission for these moves. Of them, the Manikgramman is the most likely. 

5. The stone beadmakers were in part Pandukal (Megalithic) peoples, who were probably responsible for obtaining the raw materials and making about half of the stone beads. Among the lapidary innovations were the making of black onyx and citrine. 

6. In the sixteenth century when Arikamedu was abandoned, the population split into three groups. The fishermen and farmers merely moved a half-kilometer away to the village of Virampatinam. This name is essentially the same as the ancient name of Arikamedu, Viraipattinam (Arikamedu, "mound of Arakan" is a later name applied to the site because Jain figurines were found there).
The glass beadmakers went to Papanaidupet, Andhra Pradesh, near the Renigunta Gap in the Eastern Ghats. The attraction may have been Guddimalam (Gudar), an old guild center, blessed with good glass sand.
The stone beadmakers went to Vellur, Thanjavur and/or Tiruchchirappalli (large southern cities) to continue their craft.
The fishermen are still at Virampatinam. The glass beadmakers are still at Papanaidupet. Stone beadmaking survived down through the end of the last century, but no trace is now left.

7. The status of Arikamedu must be revised. Wheeler's picture of a sleepy fishing village suddenly awakened by enterprising Romans who built stone buildings and a port, then fell back to sleep when the Romans left is nonsense. The glory of the site is due to local initiative. The place was important and the beadmaking industries well established before the Romans came. The Romans went there precisely because it was an important port. After whatever constituted the Roman "emporium" was gone, Arikamedu was still very much in touch with the West, sending its gems that direction and receiving wine and other amphorae-packed Mediterranean products for centuries.

8. Its impact on world trade (and dare I say culture?) was impressive. Arikamedu products (glass beads, stone beads, ceramics) were in Indonesia by the first century B.C. The West demanded the garnets, prase, citrine and other stone beads and agate cameo blanks produced in Arikamedu. Between ca. A.D. 1 and 1200 Indo-Pacific beads (not all of which were made at Arikamedu proper) account for 62.2% of all beads of all materials excavated at all archaeological sites as far away as the Philippines.
The Arabs took Indo-Pacific beads to East Africa and across North Africa, through the Sahara to the Forest Zone of West Africa. The Portuguese were obliged to get them from Arikamedu (they bought them in nearby Nagapattinam, the major neighboring port) because they were in demand in Mozambique.

9. Thus, a whole new chapter in the history of the World System is being written. The old Euro-centric view that any significant innovation must have a European or at least Mediterranean origin has long been shattered. The role of South India in world commerce has never loomed so large as it does now. There are striking parallels between Indo-Pacific beadmaking and later techniques and technologies in Europe and America


     ARIKAMEDU, ONE OF ONLY TWO SITES OUTSIDE THE ROMAN EMPIRE WHERE ROMAN RED TABLE WARES WERE FOUND. THE OTHER SITE BEING TIMA IN SAUDI ARABIA.

ARIKAMEDU, HAS A UNIQUE SEQUENCE OF ARCHEOLOGICAL CULTURAL DEPOSIT FROM THE IRON AGE TO FRENCH RULE IN 1800 AD.


      Arikamedu was an ancient industrial port city located in the South Eastern coast of India near Pondicherry city. Known to Greco Roman world as Poduk¢e, the city of Arikamedu lay along the eastern bank of River Ariyankuppam near the mouth where it empties to Bay of Bengal. 
The city was a manufacturing hub of textiles particularly of Muslin clothes, fine terracotta objects, jewelries from beads of precious and semi precious stones, glass and gold. The city had an extensive glass bead manufacturing facilities and is considered as “mother of all bead centers” in the world. Most of their productions were aimed for export.

During its peak period, 100 BC to 100 AD, the city enjoyed extensive trade relations with Imperial Rome. The city was connected with several other cities in rest of India both by road and river. The raw material and finished goods were brought to Arikamedu for manufacturing and export. The harbor of Arikamedu used to receive ships from other ancient port cities such as Muziris and Anuradhapura for transshipment of goods to countries in South East Asia such as Indonesia, Thailand, China and rest of north Eastern part of India.


Monday, 15 September 2014


HISTORY OF THE INDIAN SUBCONTINENT

        It begins with the evidence of human activity of Homo sapiens, as long as 75,000 years ago, or with earlier hominids including Homo Erectus from about 500,000 years ago.
        The Indus Valley Civilization, which spread and flourished in the northwestern part of the Indian subcontinent from c. 3300 to 1300 BCE in present-day Pakistan and northwest India, was the first major civilization in South Asia. A sophisticated and technologically advanced urban culture developed in the Mature Harappan period, from 2600 to 1900 BCE. This civilization collapsed at the start of the second millennium BCE and was later followed by the Iron Age Vedic Civilization, which extended over much of the Indo-Gangetic plain and which witness the rise of major polities known as the Mahajanapadas. In one of these kingdoms, Magadha,Mahavira and Gautama Buddha were born in the 6th or 5th century BCE and propagated their Shramanic philosophies.
        Most of the subcontinent was conquered by the Maurya Empire during the 4th and 3rd centuries BCE. Various parts of India were ruled by numerous Middle kingdoms for the next 1,500 years, among which the Gupta Empire stands out. This period, witnessing a Hindu religious and intellectual resurgence, is known as the classical or "Golden Age of India". During this period, aspects of Indian civilization, administration, culture, and religion (Hinduism and Buddhism) spread to much of Asia, while kingdoms in southern India had maritime business links with the Roman Empire from around 77 CE. During this period Indian cultural influence spread over many parts of Southeast Asia which led to the establishment of Indianized kingdoms in Southeast Asia.
        7th-11th centuries saw the Tripartite struggle between the Pala Empire, Rashtrakuta Empire, and Gurjara Pratihara Empire centered around Kannauj. Southern India saw the rule of the Chalukya Empire, Chola Empire, Pallava Empire, Pandyan Empire, and Western Chalukya Empire. The Chola dynasty conquered southern India and successfully invaded parts of Southeast Asia and Sri Lanka in the 11th century. The early medieval period Indian mathematics influenced the development of mathematics and astronomy in the Arab world and the Hindu numerals were introduced.
         Muslim rule started in some parts of north India in the 13th century when the Delhi Sultanate was established in 1206 CE. The Delhi Sultanate ruled the major part of northern India in the early 14th century, but declined in the late 14th century, which saw the emergence of several powerful Hindu states like the Vijayanagara Empire, Gajapati Kingdom, Ahom Kingdom and Mewar dynasty. In the 16th century Mughal rule came from Central Asia to cover most of the northern parts of India. The Mughal Empire suffered a gradual decline in the early 18th century, which provided opportunities for the Maratha Empire, Sikh Empire and Mysore Kingdom to exercise control over large areas in the subcontinent.
           
          Beginning in the late 18th century and over the next century, large areas of India were annexed by the British East India Company. Dissatisfaction with Company rule led to the Indian Rebellion of 1857, after which the British provinces of India were directly administered by the British Crown and witnessed a period of both rapid development of infrastructure and economic stagnation. During the first half of the 20th century, a nationwide struggle for independence was launched with the leading party involved being the Indian National Congress which was later joined by Muslim League as well.
            The subcontinent gained independence from the United Kingdom in 1947, after the British provinces were partitioned into the dominions of India and Pakistan and the princely states all acceded to one of the new states.
ചരിത്രകാഴ്ചപാടുകൾ ഓരോ വ്യക്തിയെ സംബന്ധിച്ച് വ്യത്യാസപ്പെടുന്നു. 

എന്തിനും ഒരു ചരിത്രം ഒണ്ട്‌ . അത്‌ ഓരോ വ്യക്തിയിലും വ്യത്യസ്ത 

കാഴ്ചപാടുകൾ തീർക്കുന്നു .