Amri, Sindh Explained

Amri
Alternate Name:Amri, Sindh
Location:Sindh, Pakistan
Type:Ancient settlement
Area:8 hectares
Built:3600 BC
Epochs:Pre-Harappan, Indus Valley, Jhukar, Jhangar
Condition:Ghost town
Native Name Lang:hi, pa, ur
Native Name:अमरी
ਅਮਰੀ
آمری

Amri is an ancient settlement in modern-day Sindh, Pakistan, that goes back to 3600 BCE. The site is located south of Mohenjo Daro on Hyderabad-Dadu Road more than 100 kilometres north of Hyderabad, Pakistan.

Cultural context

See also: Archaeological culture, Chronological dating, Phase (archaeology) and Pottery in the Indian subcontinent.

The earliest site of this culture is Kunal (4000 BCE) in Haryana which is older than Rehman Dheri (3300 BCE). The type site, the first excavated site of this type of culture is Kot Diji. Rehman Dheri, which was considered oldest example of this culture, is now the second oldest example of this culture after Kunal was excavated and found to be older than Rehman Dher with similar older cultural artifacts then the Rehman Dheri.

Kot Diji and Amri are close to each other in Sindh, they earlier developed indigenous culture which had common elements, later they came in contact with Harappan culture and fully developed into Harappan culture. Earliest examples of artifacts belonging to this culture were found at Rehman Dheri, however, later excavations found the oldest example of this culture at Kunal. These are cultural ancestor to site at Harappa. These sites have pre-Harappan indigenous cultural levels, distinct from the culture of Harappa, these are at Banawali (level I), Kot Diji (level 3A), Amri (level II). Rehman Dheri also has a pre Kot Diji phase (RHD1 3300-28 BCE) which are not part of IVC culture. Kot Diji has two later phases that continue into and alongside Mature Harappan Phase (RHDII and RHDII 2500-2100 BCE). Fortified towns found here are dated as follows.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Archaeology

Prehistoric Amri-Nal culture is attributed to the dual typesites of Amri and Nal. This site had multi-level structures, although it was never a big city.[9]

Pre-Harappan stage

Situated near the foothills of Kirthar Mountains, this was an important earlier urban center in Lower Sindh. Amri is close to Balochistan where development of earlier farming communities from 6000 BC to 4000 BC ultimately led to urbanization. The ancient mounds of 8 hectares on the west bank of Indus River have been extensively excavated. The earliest phase was a fortified town that flourished from 3600 to 3300 BC, and belonged to the Pre-Harappan stage of the Indus Valley civilization. Amri is dated after Rehman Dheri. The pottery discovered here had its own characteristics and is known as Amri Ware. Sohr Damb (Nal) is a related site in Balochistan to the west of Amri. Their pottery is sometimes collectively described as 'Amri-Nal ware'. Like other Pre Harappa towns, no writings were found at this site. Evidence indicates widespread fire at the town around 2500 BCE.

Later phases

Based on the evidence from this site, Indus culture was probably not developed directly from Amri culture. Also, at least at this location, rather than suddenly being replaced by the Amri culture, there was a co-existence of both cultures.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Charles Keith Maisels, Early Civilizations of the Old World: The Formative Histories of Egypt, The Levant, Mesopotamia, India and China. Routledge, 2003
  2. Book: Higham, Charles . [{{google books |plainurl=y |id=H1c1UIEVH9gC|page=9}} Encyclopedia of Ancient Asian Civilizations]. 1 January 2009. Infobase Publishing. 978-1-4381-0996-1. 9–.
  3. Sigfried J. de Laet, Ahmad Hasan Dani, eds. History of Humanity: From the third millennium to the seventh century B.C. UNESCO, 1996 p.674
  4. Tejas Garge (2010), Sothi-Siswal Ceramic Assemblage: A Reappraisal. Ancient Asia. 2, pp.15–40.
  5. http://revenueharyana.gov.in/Portals/0/hr-gaz-ch-5.pdf Haryana Gazateer
  6. Archaeological Survey of. India. Excavations at Kunal,Haryana. Indian Archaeology 1998-99 a Review. 2004. 11–12. 13 July 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120508064754/http://asi.nic.in/nmma_reviews/Indian%20Archaeology%201998-99%20A%20Review.pdf. 8 May 2012. dead.
  7. https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/haryana/museum-at-pre-harappan-site-soon-188106 Museum at pre-Harappan site soon
  8. [UNESCO]
  9. Book: Higham, Charles . [{{google books |plainurl=y |id=H1c1UIEVH9gC|page=9}} Encyclopedia of Ancient Asian Civilizations]. 1 January 2009. Infobase Publishing. 978-1-4381-0996-1. 9–.
  10. Book: Sigfried J. . de Laet. Ahmad Hasan . Dani. [{{google books |plainurl=y |id=BnY0KYbJC6wC|page=674}} History of Humanity: From the third millennium to the seventh century B.C.]. 1994. UNESCO. 978-92-3-102811-3. 674–.