Antiquity 2022 page 1 of 17
https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2022.28
Research Article
Grounding texts and theories of societal change
Jason D. Hawkes1,* , Riza Abbas2, Anne Casile3, Jaseera C.M.4, Coline Lefrancq5
& Sitaram Toraskar6
1
Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge, UK
Indian National Historical and Cultural Research Foundation, Anjaneri, India
3
Institut de recherche pour le développement, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France
4
Tamil University, Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu, India
5
Centre d’Études de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud, Paris, France
6
Indian National Historical and Cultural Research Foundation, Anjaneri, India
* Author for correspondence ✉
[email protected]
2
During the mid-first millennium AD, new kingdoms
and states emerged across South Asia. At this time,
land grants made to Hindu temples are thought to
have led to wide-ranging societal transformations.
To date, however, neither the land-grant charters
nor the changes they are said to have driven have
been studied archaeologically. Here, the authors present the results of the first archaeological investigation
of the charters and their landscape context. Bringing
together the textual record with a survey of 268 religious and residential sites, the results establish historical baselines against which the longue durée
developments of South Asian social, political and economic formation can be profitably re-posed.
Keywords: South Asia, first millennium AD, medieval, land grant, Hindu temple, landscape survey, settlement
distribution
Introduction
Mid-first millennium AD South Asia is notable both for the developments that took place
and for the way in which those developments have been studied archaeologically. From
the fourth century AD, new kingdoms and states emerged, including, in north and central
India, the neighbouring Gupta and Vakataka ‘empires’ (Gupta 1974). Patronage of religious
sects associated with the gods Shiva and Vishnu ensured that the institution of the Hindu
temple was well established in the cultural landscape (Bakker 2004). Intertwined with
Received: 19 November 2020; Revised: 14 October 2021; Accepted: 27 October 2021
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antiquity Publications Ltd. This is an
Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Jason D. Hawkes et al.
these developments was an effervescence of scientific study and artistic expression, exemplified by new Sanskrit literary genres (Kieth 1993) and temple sculptures that define our sense
of an ‘Indian’ style (Williams 1982). Together, and due to different historiographic factors,
these transformations are deemed to mark either a ‘Golden Age’ (e.g. Eraly 2011) or the
beginning of an early medieval period in South Asia (Sharma 1965; see also Ali 2012).
The specificities of these developments are unique to South Asia, but the ways in which
they are studied present epistemological (text-archaeology) questions that resonate with
approaches to historical periods in other parts of the world.
Due to a traditional dominance of socioeconomic histories, scholarship on South Asia
has focused on topics of state and society (Sharma 1965; Chattopadhyaya 1994). Within
this arc of enquiry, historical research has been somewhat functionalist, fixating on the
macro level of social structures to explain societal and cultural change (Sharma 1965;
Verma 1992). Of particular concern have been a series of copperplate charters that record
royal grants of land and its agricultural surplus to these new and emerging Hindu temples
and associated religious groups—a practice that began with the Guptas during the fourth
century AD (Shrimali 1987; Verma 1992) (Figure 1). Not only are these charters the
largest corpus of texts for the period, but they are also perceived to have instigated
and to reflect a series of societal changes. For many years, donating land and land rights
was thought to have brought about a ‘feudal’ society (Sharma 1965) characterised by
decentralised power and an agrarian economy. Others have viewed societal developments
in terms of socio-political change (e.g. Mukhia 1981, 1999; Chattopadhyaya 1994). For
these scholars, land grants were part of a political strategy that was central to a process of
integration, whereby different regions were drawn into new, expanding polities distinct
from the earlier ‘ancient’ state (Kulke 1993).
Debates about the nature of the societal changes that took place have now
largely played out, but the idea that
these charters were in some way transformative has persisted. Various suppositions can be identified in both the
historical and archaeological scholarship,
namely that:
Figure 1. Chammak copperplate of Pravarasena II (scale in
cm; British Library Oriental Manuscript shelfmark: Ind.
Ch. no. 16; CC BY 4.0 licence).
(1) the land granted in the
charters was uncultivated
virgin territory and/or that
in granting this land,
‘tribes’ (as they are referred
to in both ancient literature
and modern scholarship)
who existed outside the
state were peasantised;
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Grounding texts and theories of societal change
(2) the marshalling of people and resources to cultivate this land led to a
significant expansion of the agrarian base for the economy, along
with a proliferation of villages; and
(3) the caste system became entrenched in society and religious cults
became integrated into the state.
Despite making repeated recourse to these ideas (e.g. Sawant 2008) or drawing attention to
how they have been shaped by modern politics (Chakrabarti 2020), archaeologists have studied neither these general developments nor the specific transformations supposedly initiated
by the land grants (Kennet 2004; Chakrabarti 2019; Kennet et al. 2020). Archaeological
investigations of the broader medieval period extend only as far as excavating monuments
prized for their artistic merits (e.g. Jayaswal 2001) and one or two large, archaeologically
obtrusive settlements (e.g. Sontakke et al. 2017; see further Hawkes 2014). In many respects,
this situation is the result of an inequitable relationship between textual and material
approaches to the study of historical periods in South Asia that will be familiar to those working on equivalent periods and questions in other regions of the world (Andrén 1998; Moreland 2001), wherein archaeology continues to be excluded from ‘big picture’ conversations
about society and culture (Chakrabarti 2003; Ray & Sinopoli 2004). Yet, beyond these epistemological issues, historians of South Asia are even more constrained than colleagues working in many other parts of the world, as they have no place-specific economic sources
pre-dating the land grants. It is for both of these reasons—the absence of earlier textual
sources and a lack of archaeological investigations—that historical discourse on South Asia
has had no choice but to make recourse to wider interpretative frameworks, continuing to
focus on big-picture concepts such as social formations or ‘Sanskrit culture’, with little or
no understanding of what was happening on the ground. This, in turn, has only widened
the gulf between text and archaeology.
Our research has sought to address this situation by investing the study of the land-grant
charters—the texts that shape our understanding of the period—with a more materially
orientated approach. This not only enables us to assess earlier historical ideas about the
changes that occurred, but also to explore how texts and archaeology might usefully relate
to each other in the study of the transition between social formations. Here, we are mindful
that the land-grant charters were not only texts that can be read, but also objects that were
used intentionally and strategically, and that therefore embody practices and social relationships. In the absence of abundant archaeological data for this period, we decided the most
effective way to ‘read’ these text-objects archaeologically was to ground them in their landscape settings.
Our preliminary work involved mapping the findspots of all copperplate charters
issued between the fourth and seventh centuries AD (Hawkes & Abbas 2016). Investigation of the settings of well-provenienced charters has revealed that they were associated
with rich palimpsests of archaeological evidence that both pre- and post-date the charters
themselves (Hawkes & Abbas 2016; Hawkes et al. 2020a). Subsequently, we have conducted a series of archaeological surveys to contextualise the social-political instruments of
the copperplates in the very landscapes within which they found salience. Our work has
focused on one particular region, Vidarbha, which was ruled by the Vakataka dynasty,
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antiquity Publications Ltd
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Jason D. Hawkes et al.
who moved into this region during the fourth century AD and quickly adopted the new
practice of granting land (Kapur 2005). Following archival research (Hawkes & Casile
2020), we selected three survey areas centred on charter findspots. Two of these are
the sites of Pauni (Deo & Joshi 1972) and Mandhal (Lal 1973: 19; Deshpande
1974: 24), which were centres of habitation and religious practice both before and during
the rule of the Vakatakas. The third zone centred on Chammak, where a copperplate
recording a grant of land to the brahmins, or priests, at ‘Charmanka’ was deposited
(Figure 1) (Mirashi 1963: 22–27). Chammak is also located in the western part of the
region, enabling us to compare results in different geographical areas (Figure 2). Survey
units were defined as 13km radial blocks, designed to identify settlement distribution patterns. The pottery systematically collected from each site was identified with reference to
AMS-dated excavated material, and the assemblages were used to date the sites and to
characterise the range of local activities that took place.
Details of our methods, analyses and data have been described and made openly accessible
elsewhere (Hawkes et al. 2020a; Lefrancq & Hawkes 2020) and are therefore not repeated
here. Instead, now that we have completed our phasing of the archaeological sites, we present
the results and reconstruct the wider societal dynamics of the region before and during the
issue of these charters.
Figure 2. The Vidarbha region and location of survey frames (figure by the authors).
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Grounding texts and theories of societal change
Results
Our surveys identified 268 archaeological sites from multiple time periods (Hawkes et al. 2020a).
These are categorised as: (1) settlements, indicated by the presence of surface scatters and/or visible habitation mounds, and (2) religious sites, indicated by distinct monumental, structural or
carved remains that could be related to particular religious traditions; these include megaliths (an
unsatisfactory collective term applied to cist burials, dolmens, monoliths and stone circles) (see
Basa et al. 2015); Buddhist caves and stupa monuments (see Hawkes & Shimada 2009); and
Hindu sculptures and temples (see Mitra 1971; Michell 1977). Most settlement sites were
located on cultivated land, though with limited disturbance beyond ox-drawn ploughing and
hand-rotavation; relatively good preservation helped to facilitate cross-site comparisons (Figure 3).
The extents of surface scatters were recorded as a rough proxy for the size of settlements
(Hawkes et al. 2020a, 2020b). Some sites were obscured by modern habitations or located on
uncultivated land, which constrained surface visibility. This, together with the fact that surface remains were sampled from the centre of visible scatters, meant that it was not always
possible to determine the maximum extent of each phase of occupation at every site. Instead,
we used sherd densities and variations within the ceramic assemblages from each site as proxies for relative differences in the intensity and range of activities that took place within those
settlements. It is on this basis that our results are visualised and discussed below. While recognising the limitations of such an approach, we note that in almost every instance the highest
levels of sherd density and variation correlate to the maximum extent of settlements in as
much as they could be ascertained on the ground. The only exceptions are Adam, Mandhal
and Pauni, where archaeological remains are obscured by modern habitations (Figure 4). In
these cases, it was already known that Adam and Pauni were fortified urban centres measuring
at least 50 and 170ha respectively (Deo & Joshi 1972; Nath 2016), while Mandhal exceeded
90ha (Hawkes et al. 2020b).
Chronologically, the sites date from the early first millennium BC to the mid-second millennium AD. They fall into four chronological brackets, named with reference to the standard nomenclature for the region (Table 1). These are defined based on our dating of the
regional ceramics with reference, for the first time in India, to stratified AMS-dated assemblages (Lefrancq & Hawkes 2020) and the known dates of religious sites. Significantly—
such are the lacunae that exist in South Asian archaeology—our dating of the ceramics in
Vidarbha represents the first time that remains from the Early Historic period (a period of
almost 1000 years) have been parsed into three distinct phases anywhere in South Asia.
Until now, surveys have had to base the dating of sites on the presence or absence of three
or four visually distinctive ceramic ‘fossil’ types that rarely account for more than 1 per
cent of an entire assemblage. The survey results are discussed below with reference to the
phase-wise spatial distribution of sites.
Early Iron Age (Figure 5)
Pauni survey area
Early Iron Age settlement sites concentrate in the centre of the survey zone, where we also
presume considerable activity at the site of Pauni (PNI01) itself. Although concealed beneath
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Jason D. Hawkes et al.
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antiquity Publications Ltd
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Figure 3. Examples of ploughed field surfaces encountered during surveys, with: a) land recently ploughed; and b) after harvest (photographs by the authors).
Grounding texts and theories of societal change
Figure 4. The site at Pauni: a) the scale of the ancient, fortified settlement and the extent of modern habitation, as
viewed from across the Wainganga River; b) how modern buildings obscure the ground surface (photographs by the
authors).
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antiquity Publications Ltd
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Jason D. Hawkes et al.
Table 1. Chronological periods referred to in this study.
Period Descriptive name
1
2
3
4
Date range
Key developments
Early Iron Age
Tenth to fourth
century BC
Early Historic (early) Third to first century
BC
Early Historic (mid)/ First century BC to
Satavahana
third century AD
Early Historic (late)/ Fourth to sixth
Vakataka
century AD
Appearance/use of iron, early urban
developments
Appearance of coins, Buddhist monuments
and urbanism
The rule of the Satavahanas
The rule of the Vakatakas, copperplate
charters and Hindu temple foundations
a modern-day city, it is clear that Pauni was already a large settlement at this date. There is a
small cluster of settlements 3km north of Pauni and a more dispersed distribution of low
density/range scatters at a radius of approximately 10km from the site; all of these settlements
and scatters are associated with the locations of early megaliths.
Mandhal survey area
A small cluster of settlements and megaliths centre on the larger sites of Mandhal (MND01)
and Wag (WAG01). A high level of activity is also presumed at the fortified settlement at
Adam (ADM01). More broadly, settlements are evenly distributed across the survey area
and consist of two categories: those with a high density of surface remains spaced approximately 5km apart, and those with lower densities approximately 2km apart.
Figure 5. Sites dating to the Early Iron Age (c. tenth to fourth century BC) (figure by the authors).
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antiquity Publications Ltd
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Grounding texts and theories of societal change
Chammak survey area
Compared with the Pauni and Mandhal survey areas, there are significantly more early settlements in the Chammak zone; they are also characterised by higher densities of surface
remains. Settlements with high density/ranges of material are spaced approximately 5km
apart along two of the three main rivers in the area and are interspersed with low density/
range sites.
Early Historic (early) (Figure 6)
Pauni survey area
At this date, there was a marked expansion of settlement, with an increase in activity at most
earlier settlements, plus eight newly founded settlements. Although settlements continued to
cluster around Pauni, new high density/range settlements appeared in the north part of the
survey area, approximately 12–14km from the site, interspersed with low density/range settlements. This settlement expansion was accompanied by the foundation of two Buddhist
stupas close to Pauni and two Buddhist caves to the north-west.
Mandhal survey area
All previous settlements expanded and 13 more were newly founded at this time. These are
distributed differently from those around Pauni, with a greater variation between settlements
and a visible hierarchy of four tiers of settlements ranked by the density and range of artefacts.
Figure 6. Sites dating to the earliest phase of the Early Historic period (c. fourth to first century BC) (figure by the
authors).
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Jason D. Hawkes et al.
Settlement expansion was accompanied by the foundation of seven Buddhist sites: a stupa
adjacent to Adam and six cave sites 10–13km distant.
Chammak survey area
Compared with the Pauni and Mandhal areas, there was only a slight expansion of settlement
around Chammak, evidenced by a smaller increase in the density and range of surface material at most sites and the establishment of a single new settlement. The overall pattern of settlement distribution remained unchanged.
Early Historic (mid) (Figure 7)
Pauni survey area
During this period, settlement further expanded, with the density and range of material
increasing at all but one settlement, and the establishment of three new sites. These developments were accompanied by an extension of the settlement hierarchy in the area, with at least
four tiers now visible, within the same overall distribution pattern. There is also a shift in the
relative scales and intensity of activities that took place at the sites clustering around Pauni.
Mandhal survey area
As at Pauni, there was an expansion of settlement, with all sites growing in terms of the scale
and intensity of activity, and the establishment of three new settlements. The overall
Figure 7. Sites dating to the mid-Early Historic period (c. first century BC to third century AD) (figure by the authors).
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Grounding texts and theories of societal change
settlement distribution remained unchanged, although the new settlement at Bhivkund
(BVK01) was associated with the Buddhist caves in the vicinity.
Chammak survey area
As before, the Chammak area demonstrates some differences from the other two survey areas.
Here, most settlements expanded in terms of the scale and intensity of activity, yet those with
previously high densities of surface remains exhibit a reduction in density, while retaining the
same overall variation of material. There is a shift in the relative scales and intensity of activities that took place at the sites that cluster together.
Early Historic (late) (Figure 8)
Pauni survey area
This period is characterised by variable trajectories of settlement expansion and contraction.
Significant contraction in activity was limited to settlements that previously had high densities/ranges of surface remains. These changes coincided with the granting of a single plot of
land recorded on a copperplate buried at Pauni (Kolte 1969: 53–57; Shastri 1997: 97).
Mandhal survey area
During this period, most settlements either remained the same or expanded—significantly so
at Mandhal (MND02) and Wag (WAG02). Some exhibit a slight reduction in the density of
surface remains. At Adam, this correlates with excavation data showing a contraction of the
Figure 8. Sites dating to the rule of the Vakatakas (c. fourth to sixth century AD) (figure by the authors).
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antiquity Publications Ltd
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Jason D. Hawkes et al.
settlement at this time (Nath 2016). Overall settlement distribution, however, remained the
same. This period also witnessed the construction of three temples at Mandhal and grants of
seven villages recorded on four copperplates buried near the temples (Shastri 1997: 85–103).
Chammak survey area
The density and range of surface material remained unchanged at most sites, with only four settlements expanding and three contracting. The settlements that expanded were all located along
one river, while those contracting were located on another. These changes were contemporaneous with the appearance of a possible temple at Chammak (CMK01), and the issue of a charter
recording the grant of Charmanka village to a large group of brahmins (Mirashi 1963: 23–27).
Discussion
Consideration of the landscape settings of land grants on a regional scale reveals a great deal of
information about the areas where land was granted. These insights allow us to contextualise
the practice of granting land, and to make inferences about the wider societal dynamics that
existed and the transformations that took place over the long term. We see, for example, that
each area was settled from a very early period—long before the Vakataka kings began to
donate land to brahmins. Further, settlement expanded significantly and variably throughout
the region during the later centuries BC. This was most pronounced in the eastern parts of the
region, where it was connected with existing (pre-Vakataka) local centres at Adam and Pauni
and was contemporaneous with the spread of Buddhism into the area—typical of trajectories
of urban development in large parts of India at the time (Chakrabarti 1995). Yet, differences
in urbanism also existed between these neighbouring areas. Settlements around Pauni conform to the ‘classic’ model of early historic urbanism, with a large, fortified city dominating
the immediate area (Erdosy 1988; Allchin 1995); around Mandhal, however, a much smaller
fortified centre at Adam was part of a more diffuse distribution of sites, indicating more localised networks of resourcing, production and exchange. By contrast, developments around
Chammak continued to follow an earlier, Iron Age pattern of settlement. Such marked variations appear to reflect the existence of different social systems at the local level, each with its
own modes of social and economic organisation and possibly even cultural traditions.
Examination of the archaeological landscape also reveals considerable religious dynamism
in the region. Textual studies and histories of art have long since charted the existence of local
cults and their incorporation into the emerging Hindu sects of Shiva and Vishnu under
Vakataka patronage (Shastri 1997; Bakker 2004). Yet, our surveys reveal that these cults
and their incorporation into an emerging Hinduism were only one part of a wider and vibrant
religious history; this involved not only other pre-existing local beliefs and practices manifest
in megalithic monuments and burials, but also a deep-rooted Buddhist monastic presence,
both of which appear to have been part of local political economies and continued well
into the early centuries AD.
These findings allow us to reflect on the forms of social organisation and transformation
that have been associated with these land grants. It is clear that the granting of land did not
lead to the settlement of new areas or of tribal populations. Nor were land grants
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Grounding texts and theories of societal change
accompanied by an expansion of settlement, which, in turn, makes it unlikely that there was
an increase in agricultural production or development of an agrarian economy. Beyond these
obvious discrepancies with certain historical theories, grounding the charters in their landscape context improves our understanding of for whom and with what purpose they were
intended. As noted above, they record grants of land by Vakataka kings, based in the east
of the region, to people referred to as brahmins, or priests. These brahmins are variously portrayed in the historical literature as: an already established part of a uniform ‘Brahmanical
society’ that existed across South Asia; as mobile groups who were thrust into new regions
alongside grants of land; or as people who became brahmins or began to subscribe to that
particular social order—a process formalised through their attribution as such by a dominant
sociocultural group (i.e. the Hindu Vakataka kingdom). The fact that there were clearly different social systems across the region suggests that the latter was indeed the case. The land
grants may therefore have been contractual agreements, wherein groups occupying similar
social roles as brahmins would become part of this new, royal-sanctioned Brahmanical social
order in return for land ownership and land rights. As such, these copperplate charters might
best be thought of as the embodiment of royal investments in different areas in an attempt to
create a new social formation.
The distribution of sites across the region also allows us to reconsider the nature of the state
or polity that adopted the practice of issuing land grants. The absence of a uniform settlement
pattern in the area around Mandhal, the first capital of the Vakatakas, is significant. It suggests that the Vakataka ‘kingdom’ was, at least initially, more of a material project that was
invested in implementing a new social order rather than a regional territory directly ruled
by the Vakataka royal family. The archaeological contexts of the land grants also complicate
our understanding of the relationship(s) between the Vakataka kingdom and the surrounding
polities that received these grants. Whether it is framed in terms of the feudal state or as integrative processes, this relationship is viewed as a power dynamic with the emerging ‘state’,
which placed royal-sanctioned Hindu temples at its core, being the dominant party.
While this may have been the case, however, appreciating the fact that society as a whole
was more ‘pointillistic’ than previously thought forces us to realise one very important
point: an exclusive focus on the Vakatakas can never elucidate the ways in which they related
to the other political economies around them, nor fully expose the effects of granting land to
particular groups within their kingdom (however that kingdom was structured and defined).
Finally, with regard to the societal transformations that accompanied royal land grants, we
have already seen that these took place at least 400 years after the most pronounced expansion
of settlement across the region and their impact was variable in each local area. In the fourth
to sixth century AD, changes in the intensity and variability of activities that took place
within and between settlements may have been due to a reorientation of economic or social
networks brought about by royal grants of land to temples, or may have been the result of
other unidentified factors. Developments are most pronounced in the Mandhal area,
where we see a shift in settlement away from the earlier fortified centre at Adam to Mandhal.
This is accompanied by the foundation of multiple temples, grants of land to priests seemingly associated with those temples, and a contemporaneous increase in activities at the
nearby settlement at Wag. Together, these might reflect a translocation of political and religious institutions to Mandhal and a concomitant movement of economic activities to Wag.
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Jason D. Hawkes et al.
If so, we inevitably arrive at the question of how this archaeological picture of a political
project designed to implement a new social order corresponds with that of integrative processes of state formation, as presented by textual historians such as Chattopadhyaya and
Kulke. On one hand, we can clearly see that the practice of granting land was integrative
in the sense that different parts of the region that fell under the sway of the Vakataka kingdom
were integrated into the dynasty’s new, planned social order. Equally, it is clear that this new
social order was, in certain respects, politically and socioeconomically different to what came
before. Yet, on the other hand, this integration does not appear to have been the only causative factor in wider societal developments, if it was indeed causative at all. The multiple different areas and coeval polities evident in the distribution of settlements across the region
were already interconnected through various networks of interaction. Further, the only social
and economic developments that appear to have stemmed directly from the granting of land
were limited to the immediate core area of Vakataka rule—in particular, around Mandhal. It
is only here that we see a marked shift in settlement patterns, and economic and, presumably,
legal relationships and ritual (for further discussion, see Hawkes 2021).
Analysis of the ceramics recovered during the surveys (Lefrancq & Hawkes 2020) adds nuance
to this picture. As might be expected with the use of local clays and different cultural traditions,
ceramic types varied between survey zones. Yet, during the later centuries BC, a new class of ceramic was produced in the Chammak area that copied the pottery made around Mandhal and
Pauni (Lefrancq & Hawkes 2020: 310). This indicates that the early settlement expansion
that we see in the region may have been accompanied by a degree of cultural coalescence. The
seeds of intra-regional social and cultural rapprochement needed for the Vakataka’s successful
investment in other areas may thus have been sown long before they came to power. During
Vakataka rule, however, ceramic variations between different parts of the region increased,
with people in the Mandhal and Pauni zones making several new types of pottery and vessel
forms that are not found elsewhere. This suggests that any pan-regional social order created by
grants of land existed (at least initially) in a purely political sense. More fundamental societal
and cultural changes, ranging from how people organised themselves to the technological innovations and practices evidenced by the archaeological record, remained localised.
Conclusions
Taking an archaeological approach to the study of land-grant inscriptions is clearly of value.
This methodological intervention in the study of these text-objects and the changes they are
deemed to represent reveals a great deal of new information. Yet, more than this, in grounding
texts and historical theories in multi-temporal and multi-scalar archaeological assessments,
we have established historical baselines over the longue durée unlike anything previously
achieved in the region. Within these frameworks, wider questions of social formation and
the transition to the medieval period in South Asia can now be profitably re-posed, perhaps
leading to more archaeological questions. The hitherto unrecognised variability within social
formations during the early centuries AD is highly significant, and affords great potential for
examining at a local scale the ways in which different political economies related to each other
and to the Brahmanical polities that have so far been the exclusive foci of text-based historical
study.
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Grounding texts and theories of societal change
Beyond the implications for scholarship on South Asia, our material approach to the study
of texts also contributes to wider conversations about the relationships between archaeology
and history, and between objects and texts. Rather than viewing these as complementary yet
distinct fields and data sets that can be interrogated at different scales, we have shown the significant potential in both approaching texts as archaeological objects and in relating archaeology and texts in the study of the transition between social formations. These wider
implications extend beyond the methodological level. Studies of medieval urbanism (and
indeed the medieval period in general) in Europe are gradually confronting the reality that
‘the medieval’ was not limited to Europe. When considered in this light, it is notable that
the patchwork of modes of production and social relations that appears to have characterised
the early medieval social formation in Vidarbha chimes well with Wickham’s (2016) ‘leopard
spot’ view of the transition to the medieval period in Europe. While we do not for one
moment suggest that developments in Europe and South Asia were the same, there is perhaps
potential for exploring the dynamics of network urbanism as an important feature of the early
medieval period at a global scale.
Acknowledgements
The research presented here was carried out in collaboration between the INHCRF, the IFP
and The British Museum. Fieldwork permission was granted by the Archaeological Survey of
India (No. F.1I23/1/2014-EE). Subsequent analyses, research and the writing of this and
other outputs were carried out at the request of the PI, but without promised payment or
furlough, following the end of employment contracts by The British Museum at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, and within the funded term of the project.
Funding statement
The fieldwork formed part of the Asia Beyond Boundaries Project, funded by the ERC (grant
609823), awarded to Michael Willis.
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