Moenjodaro (Mound of The Dead)
Moenjodaro (Mound of The Dead)
Moenjodaro (Mound of The Dead)
river Indus. It has one of the earliest and the most developed urban civilizations of
ancient world. It forms a part of the Indus River civilization of Harappa and was
discovered in 1921. It is located 1287.48 km away from Moenjodaro. The Indus River
civilization flourished from somewhere third till the middle of second millenium B.C.
before it vanquished from the world.
Moenjodaro had mud-brick and baked-brick buildings. Covered drainage system in
addition to this, soakpits for disposal bins, a large state grannary, a spacious pillared hall,
a collage of priests, a large and imposing building (probably a palace) and a citadel mound
which incorporates in its margin a system of solid burnt brick tower.
Moenjodaro looks like a planned, organized and master architecture of urban
settlement. Beneath the citadel, parallel streets, some 30 feet wide, stretched away
and are crossed by other straight streets, which divide the town into a great oblong
block, each 400 yards in length, and 200 to 300 yards in width.
The most imposing remains are those of a Great Hall which consisted of an open
quadrangle with verandahs on four sides, galleries and rooms on the back, a group of
halls on the north and a large bathing pool. It was probably used for religious or
ceremonial bathing.
Nearby are the remains of Great Granary, possibly a public treasury where taxes were
paid. We can assume the sensibility of the artistic mind by the discovery of necklaces,
pendants of beads, earrings and ankles of ivory and mother of pearl, vessels of silver and
bronze and stone weights and measures which suggests the existence of stringent civic
regulations.
When the first seal was found in Harappa in 1875 it was thought to be of a foreign origin.
A humpless bull with an illegible inscription comprising six characters, were engraved on
dark brown jasper.
The significance of this, and the multitude of other seals to follow, was felt when it was
realized that the engraved characters and pictures are not only indigenous to the Indus
civilization but a thorough understanding of engravings can give a comprehensive
account of the true nature of the Indus civilization. First it was thought that the
pictograph and the ideograms were related to Brahmi characters or where perhaps the
forerunner of Brahmi. It was also suggested that the seal was ideophonographic and
resembled the Hieroglyphic seal.
On the other hand work was being carried on to prove that Dravdian had inherited many
Indus signs thus proving the Dravdic affinity of the Indus seal. Its destruction was by the
hands of invading Aryan hordes, as some historians believe, or was triggered by an
earthquake, or flood the remains of which are yet to be established. The Moenjodaro
museum, close to the site of excavation, houses price-less relics found there, including
these engraved seals, ornamental utensils, pottery, weapons and toys. Some of the
precious things have been recently shifted from the site museum to the local
government treasury.
Interestingly, the bullock carts, boats, drinking jars, toys used even today in the
adjoining areas, bare strong resemblance to those used by the ancient citizens of
Moenjodaro. Through the discovery of coins and potteries, archeologists believe that
trade and cultural links existed between Moenjodaro and the contemporary civilizations
of Mesopotamia and Egypt.
Various objects d'art found at Moenjodaro include burnt clay male and female figurines,
and models of bird, a steatite bust a noble man or a priest-king, wearing a loose robe on
which the tretoil pattern is engraved and a small dancing girl of bronze with slim figures
and flat negroid features. Steatite seals bearing lifelike representation of animals and
mythological creatures such as the unicorn best illustrate the figural. They bear short
inscription in a remarkable pictographic script, which has yet to be deciphered.
The various layers of the excavated site show that upon the debris of the ancient
civilization rose the buildings and edifices of a much latter settlement dating back to the
Kushan period (between the first and the third centuries A.D.). The remains of the
Buddhist stupa and the monastery, rising to the height of 10.66 meters (35 feet) above
the surrounding area, are of this later period. How this remarkable civilization came to
an end after 1800 B.C. remains a mystery. Human skeletons show signs of violent end.
Weather this came as a result of massacre is not certain.
According to Father Heras the vertical fish sign meant a star, because in most of the
Dravidian languages both the star and the fish are referred to as mint. There are many
other examples of a similar nature quoted in his works. All this inspired many scholars
including, Soviet, Scandinavian and Pakistanis, to start looking into the matter more
seriously. Moenjodaro promises tourists, a journey spread over thousand years in one
single excursion!
The ruins of an immense city, Moenjodaro, which flourished in the valley of the Indus in
the 3rd millennium B.C. were inscribed in the World Heritage List in 1980. The remains of
the city are situated on the western bank of River Indus, about 12 kilometres from
Moenjodaro railway station, in Larkana District of Sind.
The well-planned city, built mostly in baked brick buildings, having public baths, and a
college of priests, elaborate drainage system, soak pits for disposal of sewerage and
large state granary, bears testimony that it was a metropolis of great importance, with
approximately forty thousand inhabitants, enjoying a well-organized civic, economic,
social and cultural life.
Excavations comprising figures of animals like rhinoceros, tigers and elephants on seals
recovered from the site, and the brick-lined street drains, suggest that the region
enjoyed heavier rainfall at that time than at present. Wheat, barely, sesamum, field
peas, dates and cotton appear to have been the main crops. Discovery of precious
stones and other metallic objects, not normally found in this region, indicate trade with
foreign countries.
It is not known for certain, how the great metropolis came to a tragic end. A gradual
decline of the civilization, before the ultimate end is however, clearly noticeable, and an
invasion by the Aryans or the neighbouring hill tribes, appears to have sealed the fate of
Moenjodaro.
The remarkable structural remains of Moenjodaro, when excavated in the early 20s,
were in excellent state of preservation, but the phenomenon of salt efflorescence on
them was soon noticed. Over the years the problem has assumed alarming proportions,
leading to damaging of bricks and disintegration of the structures. Another serious
threat to Moenjodaro is that of inundation, posed by the River Indus, flowing very close
to the site.