Indus Valley and Atlantis

Ancient civilization in the land of two rivers Saraswati and Indus known in modern times as Indus Valley often because the Saraswati River has mostly been lost since ancient times, from tectonic shifts or climate change or both


Between three and four thousand BC three great river valley civilisations with planned urban areas sprang up in three different parts of the world  - Indus Valley, Sumeria and Nile valley in Egypt. recent archeological findings at Bhirrana near Delhi push back the origins of  the Indus valley civilisation to 7500 BC  i.e the oldest of the three. Even Mehrgarh dates to 7000 BC showing the extent of the early Indus valley civilisation extended from Mehrgarh in the East to at least Bhirana in the west. Recent excavations in the gulf of Kambhat suggest that in the south the civilization extended up to the ocean coast. By 5500 BC all these sites had a fairly developed urban culture that predates Sumerian civilization by around two thousand years.

Rakhigarhi, located around 150 km from Delhi, housed the largest city of the Indus Valley civilisation. Even at a conservative 6,000 years old, it is 1,000 years older than Mohenjodaro, Harappa and Uruk,Sumeria. It is believed that the city was located near the now extinct Saraswati river. Therefore it does seem that urban civilisation marched from this direction first to Sumeria and later Egypt. This is especially evident because it is well known now that Sumerians were dark people of foreign origin with their own language distinct from the language of surrounding people. The contact between the Sumerian and Indus civilisation did not end with the first migration but continued well into later centuries and milleniums. A description of such later interactions can be found at  http://vamadevananda.wordpress.com/2012/12/20/journal-the-river-sarawati-and-its-people/


It has also been established now with near certainty that ancient Sumerian belongs to the Austric group of languages of  South Asia and that it is not a linguistic isolate. There is a separate post on that in this blog. Recent highly rigorous scientific DNA studies by Henryk W. Witas et al. support such a migration theory (http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0073682) from the Indian Sub-continent to ancient Mesopotamia.

The first known examples of writing may have been unearthed at an archaeological dig in Indus valley. and Ttrident-shaped markings have been found on fragments of pottery dating back 5500 years. According to Dr Richard Meadow of Harvard University, the director of the Harappa Archaeological Research Project, these primitive inscriptions found on pottery appear to pre-date all other known writing. Clay tablets containing primitive words were uncovered in southern Egypt at the tomb of a king named Scorpion. They were carbon-dated to 3300-3200 BC. This is about the same time to the primitive writing developed by the Sumerians of the Mesopotamian civilization around 3100 BC. "It's a big question as to if we can call what we have found true writing," he told BBC News Online, "but we have found symbols that have similarities to what became Indus script. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/334517.stm)

The summary as reported here is based on recent findings and there is a silence about some of the new findings amongst many historians because they upset long held and cherished views on the history of human civilization which in the past was based on presumptions in the absence of evidence.

Spread of civilisation in the ancient world

Scholars differ in their opinion about the race of Indus people and more study is needed in this direction. The picture is complicated due to the presence of a racial mix that varied in time and space over the extent of the civilisation. It appears that Indus Valley Civilization had been a combination of diverse racial elements. In fact this peaceful mixing of races is what may have spurred the inventions of early civilisation. Certain anthropological investigations and examinations of  human remains show that four racial types existed in this civilization namely Proto-Australiod, Mediterranean, Alpinoid and the Mongoloid.  The racial diversity is the precise reason why scholars have not been able to arrive at a definite conclusion about the race of the Indus valley people. The Indus valley region was a fertile civilized land with moderate climate attractive for immigrants from all over the old world to come and settle in. Such an immigration into the sub-continent has continued until recent times and the most recent language that has been brought into the sub-continent is English. In early days days of low population density and large portions of the country yet to be discovered, immigrants would have been welcome. The Australoid type and Armenoid types appear to be a prominent strains in early samples in a ratio exceeding four is to one as in early Sumeria. The earliest contribution to urban human civilization may well have been a contribution spurred by a racial mix of Armenian origin and Australoid races. In fact a racial mix is something that has been asserted to in ancient Sanskrit literature as well such as the Mahabharata and the Vedas, with some persons being described as black and others white. It is a racial mix that continues up to modern times in South Asia.

It is possible that just as in Sumeria the language gradually changed from Sumerian Austric to Semetic Akkadian, in the Indus valley it gradually changed from an ancient Austric language similar to archaic Tamil to Indo European languages, not because of any invasion as some early western scholars presumed but becuase of how the numbers fell. Absolutely no archeological evidence of any invasion has been discovered. Some of the early historians had assumed that the advanced Indus valley civilisation disintegrated because of an invasion by barbarians from the north west and that was the reason that the region became less civilized and remained so for another thousand years. These early invasion theories have been ruled out as fanciful now although immigration in small batches appears to have been a continuous process in the region.

The disintegration of the civilization and the movement of its people towards the South,North and East appears to have been because of climatic changes and changes in the course of rivers that sustained the earlier urban civilization of Indus valley. Austric languages still continue in southern India and amongst tribal people of central India. An invasion assumption appears to be a part of western heritage, perhaps because of a history of colonisation. Even in western science fiction, whenever visits of aliens is envisaged, it is often in the form of an invasion, a concept that is viewed as strange in the East since a  friendly entry is by far the more civilized thing to do as compared to war.

"Available evidence as of now in the year 2013 appears to suggest that ancient Indus Valley was the crucible in which people from far away places such as the Armenian Highlands, Catalhouyk, Jericho and other places came together with the local Australoid population as far back as 7500 BC - 3500BC  to pool together their knowledge and develop the earliest innovations of human civilization such as metallurgy, agriculture, animal rearing, trading, irrigation, grain storage, writing, bricked buildings, planned urban areas and a structure for governance of large areas that included both urban centers, that were the hubs of trading, religion and governance along with rural areas as hubs of agriculture; on the fertile and climatically moderate plains of Indus valley."

The abandonment of Indus valley cities by its people, subsequent to the drying up of the region, carried seeds of civilization to other more fertile parts of the sub-continent so that by the time of Buddha around a thousand years later, Eastern India with its centers at Benares and Patna became the most developed and learned part of the sub-continent.

This is presently speculation, and more scientific evidence is awaited, but the mythical Atlantis story may have been the ancient submerged coastal city known as Dwarka in ancient Sanskrit literature. It was surrounded on all sides by water and has been described in Sanskrit texts as the most advanced part of the civilization in this region just prior to its submergence. It is on the coastal portion of Indus civilization as shown on the map. It is coastal cities that often develop the most in many parts of the world because of their greater trade interactions by both land and far away sea ports. Detailed discussion of these topics is available in other posts of this blog as well as in:
It is worth noting that as per archeological findings most early sites were along the now dried up Sarasvati River (see for maps here) rather than the Indus River which was the lesser of the two rivers at the peak of this civilization. Therefore in reality the name of this earliest civilisation is Sarasvati (also spelt Saraswati) Valley civilization rather than the Indus Valley civilization.
Dwarka was then the port city at a point where the Saraswati River met the Ocean


Map adapted from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Spread_of_Oecumene_Mesopotamia.jpg This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. The image has been modified before use here.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Indus valley civilisation is the name given by westerners who started their research on the banks of present day Indus river. Where as the Sarasvati river was the main centre of the acient civilisation. The name Sarsvati vally also became extinct along with the river itself.
Ashok said…
Thanks for your input Anonymous, but it would have been better if we knew your name.
keiko amano said…
That's interesting: The name Sarsvati vally also became extinct along with the river itself.
Ashok said…
Very true Keiko but historians do not all agree where Sarswati valley was located, if it was a part of Indus or if it was elsewhere in Eurasia.
keiko amano said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
keiko amano said…
Hello, Ashok,

How are you?

I was watching a documentary on this subject and thought about this blog. I wonder if any discoveries were made since the last time you wrote on this subject.Well there must be many, I imagine!.

I've been reading about the ancient history of Japan and the scope of my thinking seems expanding more and more and connecting with other parts of the world. So I was wishing that I missed some of your updates and wanted to catch up on new findings.

Please let me know.

Ashok said…
Nice to hear from you after such a long gap Keiko. Hope you are well.

Was that a BBC documentary? They made a nice but brief one on the subject recently.

Yes truly the ancient world was far more connected than we realize. It takes a lot of study to discover these connections.

My attention was diverted by other subjects and it has been some time since it came back to this one. I started a new blog since your last visit but perhaps the content there is not of interest to you. But do glance through and see if you find anything interesting at

https://ashokbabaji.blogspot.com
keiko amano said…
Thank you, Ashok.

It wasn't BBC. I think it was an American tv program for showing India.It was a brief and not deep into the subject. That project must be on going, but I don't hear any progress. Please let me know if you hear anything about it.
Ashok said…
For sure,
i shall update you when i across anything new in the area.
keiko amano said…
Thank you, Ashok. I see only a year old article on the Internet, but the tv program sunded they were following a new discovery.
Ashok said…
I too make lots of typos on the keyboard, and just leave them in at times if the meaning can be deciphered.
Keiko, I have not looked into ancient history of Japan, what are the earliest archeological discoveries there? Had somewhere that they had found something under the ocean near Japan. Some ten thousand years ago sea levels were much lower in the mini ice age and much got submerged after the sea rose again.

Do you spend more time in US or in Japan nowadays?
keiko amano said…
I've been reading especially on the ancient history of Japan and finding out more and more new discoveries based on so many excavation sites. The scientific evidences are amazing and also deciphering more seemingly endless ancient documents and experts' new interpretation based on the new scientific evidence is really exciting. I'm still going back and forth, mainly to avoid extreme hot summer and cold winter of Japan.

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