World History Chapter 2C Planned Cities on the Indus.
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Transcript of World History Chapter 2C Planned Cities on the Indus.
World HistoryChapter 2C
Planned Cities on the Indus
Geography of the Indian Subcontinent
Rivers, Mountains and Plains
• The Indus Valley is protected by the Himalayas to the north and the Thar desert to the east
• An enormous flat fertile plain is formed by the Ganges and Indus rivers (Indo-Gangetic Plain)
• The Deccan Plateau is located at the center of the peninsula formed by the subcontinent
Monsoons
• Seasonal winds called monsoons dominate India’s climate
• From the middle of June through October the monsoons blow from eastward from the southwest and blow in moist air. The rest of the time the wind blows from the northeast and blows in dry air.
Monsoons
Environmental Challenges
• Yearly floods spread deposits of rich soil over a wide area but the Indus floods are unpredictable
• Rivers sometimes change course• The cycle of wet and dry seasons brought by
the monsoon winds was unpredictable.
Civilization Emerges on the Indus
• Their system of writing has not been deciphered
• The area of influence is larger than Mesopotamia or Egypt
Earliest Arrivals
• No one knows when or where the original settlers came into India
• Settlement has been dated back to 7,000 B.C.
Planned Cities
• Communities with brick buildings have been found that date back to 2,500 B.C.
• The oldest civilization that is dated is called the Harappan Civilization
• They had sophisticated city planning including well laid out city plans, running water, fortified areas called citadels and sewage systems
City Planning
Harappan Planning
• The city is built on mud-brick platforms• Surrounded by a city wall 3.5 miles long• It enclosed a citadel for protection• The citadel also served as a temple• Streets were 30 feet wide• Houses varied in size and some may have been
as tall as three stories• Houses were equipped with plumbing
Harappan
Harappan CultureLanguage
• Their language has been impossible to decipher-No inscriptions have been found that are bilingual
• The language has about 400 symbols• Scientist think that the symbols represent both
objects and phonetic sounds
Harappan Alphabet
Harappan Culture
• They seem to have uniformity in religion and culture
• Housing in cities suggest social divisions• Artifacts that have been found range from
children’s toys to weapons
Artifacts
Role of Religion
• Rulers seemed to have had a close religious ties• Archaeologists believe that they were a
theocracy• No temple sites have been found thus far• Harappan religion seems to have been linked to
Hinduism• There are images that appear to be early
representations of Shiva
Religion
Trade
• A thriving trade seems to have occurred for the Harappan including gold and silver from Afghanistan and semiprecious stones from and the Deccan Plateau
• The rivers provided an excellent means of transportation as well as a link to the sea (Indus River)
• Harappan seals have been found in Sumer
Indus Valley Culture Ends
• Around 1750 B.C., the quality of building in the Indus Valley cities declined
• In the 1970’s A.D. satellite images showed that in the time of the Harappan Civilization tectonic plates had shifted. This would have caused major earthquakes and floods and was strong enough to have caused the Indus River to change its course
Continued
• The Sarswati River dried-up because of the earthquakes
• Trade had to be discontinued because the rivers were no longer navigable
• Fields were destroyed due to irrigation damage• There is a belief that the Harappan may have
exhausted the soil by their farming techniques• The Aryans from the Hindu Kush invaded
Aryans
HWTA2D
• Read Pages 50-55• Copy & Define Terms on page 55
• Copy & Answer Questions 16 & 17 on Page 56