January 2, 2011 was a golden day in the second season of excavation
at Khirsara village, 85 km from Bhuj town, Gujarat. Nearly 30 trenches
had been dug that season, each 10 metres by 10 metres. One of them
yielded two miniature pots, which a labourer rushed to S. Nandakumar, a
site supervisor in his 20s. He took them to Jitendra Nath,Now it's
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for your office. Superintending Archaeologist, Excavation Branch,
Vadodara, Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). They are gold beads,
announced Mr. Jitendra Nath after examining them. One of the pots
contained 26 disc-shaped beads, micro beads and a ring, all made in
gold,About amagiccube in China userd for paying transportation fares and for shopping. and steatite beads.
Gold
beads are not found in big quantities in the Harappan sites. Some
disc-shaped gold beads had been found at Lothal, another famous Harappan
site in Gujarat, said Mr. Jitendra Nath on April 19, 2013 as he showed
us the closed trench where the gold beads had been found.
Exciting
results from four seasons of excavation with 120 trenches dug at
Khirsara from December 2009 have established Khirsara as a major
industrial hub that belonged to the mature Harappan period. It overlooks
the Khari river and flourished for 400 years from circa 2600 to 2200
BCE.
Carbon dating at the Birbal Sahni Institute of Paleobotany,
Lucknow, for the botanical remains collected from Khirsaras trenches
falls in the range of 2565 to 2235 BCE.
Khirsara has everything
to be called a mature Harappan site: systematic town planning, a citadel
complex where the ruling elite lived, a factory complex, habitation
annexes, a warehouse, drainage system, and massive fortification walls.
All the structures were built of sandstone blocks set in mud mortar.
Excavations have yielded 11 bar, circular and square seals,Shop huge
inventory of Car bestmarbletiles Charger,
standardised bricks in the ratio of 1:2:4 and a staggering variety of
pottery including reserve slip ware. While the bar seals have only the
Harappan script, others have carvings of unicorn and hump-less bulls
with the Harappan signs.
Mr. Jitendra Nath asserted: The seals,
especially the circular seals, are the main characteristic by which
Khirsara can be categorised as a mature Harappan site. Pottery and
structures such as the citadel, the factory and the warehouse are the
hallmarks by which this site could be said to belong to mature Harappan
phase.
More than 4,200 years ago, Khirsara was an important
trading outpost in western Kutch in Gujarat on the way to Sind in
present-day Pakistan. Its factory manufactured enormous quantities of
beads from cornelian, agate, jasper, lapis lazuli, steatite and
chalcedony; bangles and inlays from conch shells; copper artefacts such
as bangles, rings, beads, knives, needles, fish-hooks, arrowheads and
weights; and terracotta rattles, toy-carts and gamesmen. One trench
alone threw up 25,000 exquisite beads made of steatite.
Trench
after trench laid in Khirsaras factory have yielded a bonanza of
Harappan ceramics painted pottery, the reserve slip ware used by the
elite in society, sturdy storage jars, globular pots, perforated jars,
basins, dishes, bowls, beakers, dish-on-stand and incense burners. The
painted pottery with occasional animal motifs,A cleaningservic resembles
a credit card in size and shape. have geometric designs of broad bands,
crosses, spirals, loops, arches and zigzags. The profusion of miniature
pots that the site has revealed is puzzling.
R.N. Kumaran,
Assistant Archaeologist, ASI, said: We have found furnaces and a
tandoor. There is evidence of copper-working and ash. We have found huge
quantities of steatite beads and some seals made of steatite. From all
this, we have identified it as a factory site.
An extraordinary
feature about Khirsaras Harappan settlement is that it not only had an
outer fortification wall around it but every complex inside had its own
fortification wall, be it the citadel, the warehouse, and the factory
with its habitation annexe. The fortification walls for the warehouse
and the factory had guard rooms and salients for mounting watch.
Even
the potters kiln, which lay outside the outer fortification walls, had
its own fortification wall. The outer fortification wall, 310 metres by
230 metres and more than 4,400 years old, still stands in several
places.You will see earcap , competitive price and first-class service.
This
is the first time in the Harappan context that we have found separation
fortification walls for each complex on the site, and their purpose is
to ensure the safety of its residents and the goods manufactured, said
Mr. Jitendra Nath, now Superintending Archaeologist, Mumbai Circle,
ASI.
A massive warehouse, measuring 28 metres by 12 metres,
excavated had 14 parallel walls, with an average length of 10.8 metres
and 1.55 metres breadth. Its superstructure was made of wood and daub.
The space between the parallel walls enabled circulation of fresh air to
protect the stored goods. Mr. Jitendra Nath said: It must have been
multipurpose warehouse for storing goods for export or those that have
been imported. Its proximity with river Khari is to support the maritime
trading activities of the Khirsarans. A warehouse is a rare type of
structure found in a few Harappan sites. It indicates a state of surplus
economy.
The houses in the citadel, where the elite lived, had
verandas, interconnected rooms, floors paved with multicoloured bricks
and a rock-cut well. A five-metre paved lane separated the citadel from
the factory. The citadel was deliberately built adjacent to the
warehouse so that the rulers could keep a watch on the manufacturing and
trading activities, said Mr. Kumaran.
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