Showing posts with label Life in the Harappa Period. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Life in the Harappa Period. Show all posts

Life in the Harappa Period

Life in the Harappa Period

In the previous lesson , we looked at some of the public facilities and systems in the Harappa civilization . Let us now look at the way people lived .

Food

Wheat , rice , barley and dates were the main items of their food . Their food also included meat , fish , fruits and vegetables .

Clothing

The excavated statues , the pictures on the seals and the remains of cloth show that the Harappan people used to weave cloth . Their dress consisted of a knee - length garment and an upper garment .

Ornaments

Many types of ornaments have been found in excavations . They are made of gold , silver , copper , precious stones , as also shells and seeds . Men and women both used multi - stranded necklaces , rings , armlets , and waistbands . Women wore bangles right upto ornament their upper arm . The Harappan people used mirrors made of shiny copper sheets .

A Harappan ornament


Recreation

Dance and music were important means of recreation . One of the seals depicts a dance . Dice used for board games have also been found .
Harappan toys

Remains of a variety of children's toys have been found . The toys were made of clay . They include carts , bird - shaped whistles , rattles and figures of various animals .

Religious ideas

The various figures on the Harappan seals and the Harappan statues give us a fair idea about their religious beliefs . Many seals bear the pictures of trees and animals which indicates that nature - worship may have been common . Many statues of mother goddess have been found . This indicates that mother goddess was also worshipped . Worship of Pashupati and fire - worship also seem to have been a practice .

The Harappan people buried their dead . Sometimes coffins were used for this purpose . Food , ornaments , weapons and other objects were also buried with the dead . Occasionally , dead bodies were cremated .

Seals

Seals used by the Harappan people have been found . They are mostly square shaped . Manlike figures and animal figures are engraved on them . There appears to be some writing in pictographs at the top of the seal , but we have not yet been able to decipher the script .
Harappan seals

Occupation and industries

The major occupations were agriculture and trade .

Agriculture

The crops cultivated were wheat , barley , sesame , rice , legumes and cotton . Along with agriculture , another occupation was animal husbandry .

Pottery

Pottery was an important occupation . Red terra - cotta pots feature prominently among the remains of Harappa civilization . There are designs of leaves and flowers and animal motifs on some of the pots . Black colour has  been used for the designs and figures . The pots were baked in kilns . The Harappan people made pots and vessels from copper and silver , too .
Harappan pottery


Textiles

In the Harappan settlements , spinning yarn , weaving and dying cloth were large scale industries . Woollen cloth was also produced .

Trade

The goods produced in the Harappan settlements were sent outside India . Earthen bricks bearing some writing in Sumerian script have been found in India . On the other hand , Harappan seals have been found in Mesopotamia . It shows that there was trade between the two countries . The remains of the dock at Lothal in Gujarat show that those people used waterways and sea - routes to trade with other countries . Textiles , aromatic substances , various types of beads and many other objects were exported from the Indus valley to Egypt and West Asia .

Harappa civilization was a rich and prosperous urban civilization . It laid the foundation of the Indian civilization .