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Tags: India, Lang:en
Summary
The early history India to the present, Kingdom, Government,
Tradition, People, Economy, Custom and ethnics. The earliest
imprints of human activities in India go back to the
Paleolithic Age, roughly between 400,000 and 200,000 B.C. Stone
implements and cave paintings from this period have been
discovered in many parts of the South Asia. Evidence of
domestication of animals, the adoption of agriculture,
permanent village settlements, and wheel-turned pottery dating
from the middle of the sixth millennium B.C. has been found in
the foothills of Sindh and Baluchistan (or Balochistan in
current Pakistani usage), both in present-day Pakistan. One of
the first great civilizations--with a writing system, urban
centers, and a diversified social and economic system--appeared
around 3,000 B.C. along the Indus River valley in Punjab (see
Glossary) and Sindh. It covered more than 800,000 square
kilometers, from the borders of Baluchistan to the deserts of
Rajasthan, from the Himalayan foothills to the southern tip of
Gujarat (see fig. 2). The remnants of two major
cities--Mohenjo-daro and Harappa--reveal remarkable engineering
feats of uniform urban planning and carefully executed layout,
water supply, and drainage. Excavations at these sites and
later archaeological digs at about seventy other locations in
India and Pakistan provide a composite picture of what is now
generally known as Harappan culture (2500-1600 B.C.)..