One might wonder how the world would have looked like to-day if Britain never invaded and colonised so many areas across the world.
Would the natives still have been able to install railways and telephones? Would they think of preserving ancient artefacts that they happened to find rather than use them for themselves? Would they have discovered ancient civilisations on their own and be able to tell the world about them?
I like to think they could, but I have serious doubts about Indians – from what I have observed, most of them seem to not give a shit about their past; instead, they want what’s on the other, seemingly greener side. Or maybe they would’ve been a little more concerned than that.
To-day, I am here to tell the world about a certain civilisation that was discovered accidentally by a British soldier in South Asia, in a land that used to be the Indian subcontinent. Before this discovery, it was thought that the Vedic Age was the oldest civilisation in the region – around 1500 BCE. The discovery of the ancient site at Harappa, in present-day Pakistan, set the history of civilisation in the subcontinent back about two centuries!
Well, yes, India had a civilisation that was one of the oldest in the world. Yes, it came before the Greeks.
Harappa is a place along the Indus river. By nomen clature, this civilisation came to known as ‘Harappan Civilisation’ or ‘Indus Valley Civilisation’.
Its known contemporaries were civilisations in the Mesopotamia and Egypt, regions with which evidence says the Harappans had trade connections.
Not a lot is known about the Harappan culture, economy, and society, because it language still, to this day, remains undeciphered. Historians and linguists have tried attributing it to Sanskrit and Tamil, but neither has stuck. Perhaps it was a whole new language altogether?
Despite this hurdle, there is a lot we have uncovered about the Indus Valley Civilisation. Such as figurines, weights and measures, buildings, and toys – it’s actually a vast chapter in the Ancient Indian History. Through these artefacts, we have come to some conclusions and theories about Harappan lifestyle, society, and economy.
We’ll be looking briefly about the Indus Valley Civilisation in this article.

By Archaeological Survey of India – https://www.indianculture.gov.in/mohenjo-daro-and-indus-civilization-being-official-account-archaeological-excavations-mohenjo-1 (Marshall, John; Mohenjo-daro and the Indus Civilisation, volume III, place XCVII), Fair use (Old-50), https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=68047108
This is the image of what historians have dubbed ‘The Priest King’. We don’t know what kind of a person they were – it is a theory based on the headgear and the clothing. Were there priests or kings in the Harappan Civilisation? Priest kings? Nobody knows, so far. Or maybe, he was just a rich man who loved to indulge in fancy jewellery and clothing. Who knew what fashion was at the time?

https://www.indiamart.com/proddetail/mohenjo-daro-marble-sculpture-12674207533.html – Only representative
The next image is that of what historians have called ‘The Dancing Girl’. By the posture of her limbs, she is quite obviously dancing. She also has a lot of jewellery, so maybe she’s representing fashion trends during her time.

A 3D model of the Citadel and the Lower Town at Kalibangan, a Harappan site. Source: https://www.harappa.com/blog/kalibangan
We have also discovered that almost all the 1500 sites of the Indus Valley Civilisation found have been divided into two zones – or, in rare cases, three: The upper citadel and the lower town. It is assumed that the citadel is occupied by rich people and the lower town by common people. The citadel has, in most cases, been fortified.

Aerial view of Mohenjodaro. (Source: https://www.harappa.com/content/workers-night-and-indus-civilization)
The Indus Valley Civilisation is known for having a great sewage system, unlike cities of the Indian subcontinent to-day. Most of the cities found so far were organised, well-planned, with all the streets build at right angles to each other, like a grid, like the image above of the aerial view of the city of Mohenjodaro.
The two most important and well-known cities of the Indus Valley Civilisation are Harappa and Mohenjodaro – two cities that are situated along the Indus river. These are known to have been at the highest peak of civilisation.
This brings us to the three phases of this ancient civilisation – Early Harappan Phase, Mature Harappan Phase, and Late Harappan Phase. Of course, like all events in History, this division is not definitive; that is, these three phases do not have fixed time periods. The Early Harappan Phase was approximately between 3200 BCE and 2600 BCE; the mature phase was roughly between 2600 BCE and 1800 BCE; the late Harappan phase was around 1900 BCE to 1300 BCE.

By Avantiputra7 – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=33202416
Historians placed Harappa and Mohenjodaro in the Mature Phase of the civilisation. The cities of Lothal and Kalibangan show evidence of Early Phase.
That is all for to-day! We shall learn more about the Indus Valley Civilisation in another post!
(Dates of the Indus Valley Civilisation taken from: “The Ancient Indus Valley: New Perspectives” by Jane R McIntosh)
Reblogged this on Avalon's Scribbles Corner and commented:
Know all about a lost Civilisation here!
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