- Gandhara grave culture
The Gandhara grave (or Swāt) culture emerges from ca.
1600 BC , and flourishes inGandhara ,Pakistan ca.1500 BC to500 BC (i.e. possibly up to the time ofPāṇini ).Relevant finds, artifacts found primarily in graves, were distributed along the banks of the Swat and Dir rivers in the north,
Taxila in the southeast, along theGomal River to the south. The pottery finds show clear links with contemporary finds from southernCentral Asia (BMAC ) and theIranian Plateau .Simply made terracotta figurines were buried with the pottery, and other items are decorated with simple dot designs.
Horse remains were found in at least one burial.The Gandhara grave people have been associated by some scholars with early Indo-Aryan speakers, and the
Indo-Aryan migration into India, that, fused with indigenous elements of the remnants of theIndus Valley Civilization (OCP, Cemetery H), gave rise to theVedic civilization .The Ghandara Grave culture people shared biological affinities with the population of Neolithic
Mehrgarh , which suggests a "biological continuum" between the ancient populations of Timargarha and Mehrgarh. [Kenneth A.R. Kennedy . 2000, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. p. 339]Asko Parpola (1993: 54), argues that the Gandhara grave culture is "by no means identical with theBronze Age Culture ofBactria andMargiana ". Tulsa (1977: 690-692) argues that this culture and its "new contributions" are "nevertheless in line with the cultural traditions of the previous period", and remarks that "to attribute a historical value to ... the slender links with northwestern Iran and northern Afghanistan ... is a mistake", since "it could well be the spread of particular objects and, as such, objects that could circulate more easily quite apart from any real contacts." Antonini (1973), Stacul and other scholars argue that this culture is not related with theBeshkent and Vakhsh cultures ofTajikistan (Bryant 2001).In the centuries preceding the Gandhara culture, during the
Early Harappan period (roughly 3200–2600 BCE), similarities in pottery, seals, figurines, ornaments etc. document intensive caravan trade betweenSouth Asia andCentral Asia and theIranian plateau . [ Asko Parpola, "Study of the Indus Script", May 2005 p. 2f. ]References
*
*Parpola, Asko: Margiana and the Aryan Problem. 1993. International Association for the Study of the Cultures of Central Asia Information Bulletin 19:41-62.
*Tulsa, Sebastiano: 1977. The Swat Valley in the 2nd and 1st Millennia BC: A Question of Marginality. South Asian Archaeology 6:675-695.External links
*http://pubweb.cc.u-tokai.ac.jp/indus/english/3_1_05.html
*http://pubweb.cc.u-tokai.ac.jp/indus/english/3_1_01.html
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.