Keezhadi excavation site explained

Keezhadi excavation site
Alternate Name:Vaigai valley civilization
Map Type:India Tamil Nadu#India
Map Size:270
Coordinates:9.8631°N 78.1821°W
Location:Keezhadi, Tamil Nadu, India
Region:Thiruppuvanam, Sivaganga
Type:Settlement
Area:32.37ha
Built:580 BCE – 200 BCE
Cultures:Sangam period
Excavations:2015–present
Archaeologists:Amarnath Ramakrishna
Management:Archaeological Survey of India, Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department
Public Access:Yes
Relief:y

Keezhadi, or Keeladi, is a Sangam period settlement site, where excavation are carried out by the Archaeological Survey of India and the Tamil Nadu State Department of Archaeology.[1] [2] This site is located near the town of Keezhadi in Sivaganga district, Tamil Nadu, about 12 km southeast of Madurai. The settlement lies on the bank of the Vaigai River and it reflects the ancient culture of Tamil Nadu.[3] Epigraphist V. Vedachalam, who served as a domain expert for the excavation, dated the excavated remains between 6th century BCE and 3rd century BCE.[4]

Location

The excavation was first started in Pallisanthai Thidal which is in the north of Manalur, about a kilometer east of the town of Keezhadi in Sivagangai district. Various archaeological residues were found when plowing the land around the site. A survey was conducted for the study, which found that this ancient settlement was less than two and a half meters below the ground level.[5] The area currently being excavated is spread over 80 acres with a 3.5 km radius. The ancient towns of Kondagai and Manalur are also part of this region.[6]

Dating of site

Initially, this site was estimated to be from the period between 5th century BCE and 3rd century CE. Two samples were sent for carbon dating from this excavation site for confirmation in 2017. The results that came in July 2017 confirmed that the samples were from about 2,200 years ago (3rd century BCE).[7] [8] Radiocarbon dating of samples obtained from the fourth phase of excavation revealed that one of the artifacts was from 6th century BCE.[9] In 2017, the ASI sent two samples from Keezhadi to Beta Analytic, a Miami-based radiocarbon dating laboratory. The laboratory dated the samples to be about 2,300 – 2600 years old (from 3rd century BCE).[10] In 2018, six carbon samples collected from the fourth phase of excavation were sent to Beta Analytic in the United States for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) dating. It was found that one sample collected at a depth of 353 cm goes back to 580 BCE.[11]

Background and status of study

An archaeological survey was first conducted in 2013, by Archaeological Survey of India, in the vicinity of the Vaigai river from Theni district to Ramanathapuram district where the river meets the sea.[12] During the study, 293 sites, including Keezhadi, were identified to have archaeological residues.[13] The first three phases of excavation at Keezhadi were conducted by the Archaeological Survey of India while the phases after that were conducted by the Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department.

Phases of Keezhadi excavation

First phase

In June 2015, an Archaeological Survey of India group led by Amarnath Ramakrishnan started the first phase of the excavation in the area near the Vaigai river in Keezhadi.

Second phase

The second phase began on 2 January 2016. Various documents, including medical jars, antique kitchen wells, and factory and government seals, were found. At the end of the second phase, more than six thousand artifacts were found. It was confirmed that these artifacts were 2,200 years old when they were tested by radiocarbon dating.

Third phase

The third phase of the excavation was conducted under the chairmanship of Sri Ramanan of the Archaeological Survey of India from January 2017. The work ended on 30 September 2017. In the third phase, 16 digging sites were selected, taking up a total area of 400 square meters, which is 80 acres of land.[14]

Fourth phase

The fourth phase of the excavation was conducted between 2017 and 2018, bringing out 5,820 artifacts. This phase was conducted by the Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department while the first three phases were conducted by the Archaeological Survey of India.[15] Six carbon samples collected from the fourth phase of excavation at Keezhadi were sent to Beta Analytic, Miami, Florida, USA for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) dating; samples collected at a depth of 353 cm, were dated between 580 BCE and the 1st century CE.[16] [17] The graffiti marks on the artifacts obtained from the excavation site were said to be similar to the Indus Valley script by the excavators.[18] Bisnupriya Basak questioned whether the sherds actually came from the same level that was dated to the 6th century BCE. Some of the marks might have been made during the pottery-making process. Archaeologist E. Harsha Vardhan commented that “we cannot state scientifically that the Tamil-Brahmi script belongs to the sixth century BC” on the basis of this report.[17]

Fifth phase

In June 2019, the Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department began the fifth phase of the excavation led by Dr R Sivanantham.[15] This phase was completed in four to five months in which 15 trenches was planned to be dug. In the 5th stage of excavation, Sangam-era bricks and more than 700 objects were found and these have been sent for testing.[19] [20] [21], the preliminary report of the fifth phase of excavations was nearing completion.[22]

Sixth phase

Sixth phase of excavation along with simultaneous excavation in neighbouring villages (Manalur, Kondhagai, and Agaram) began on 19 February 2020.[23]

Seventh phase

The seventh phase was launched on February 13 and began on February 19, 2021.[24]

It came to an end on September 20, 2021.[25] [26]

Eighth Phase

On February 11, 2022, the eighth phase of excavations began.[27]

Findings

Almost 48 square pits have been cut and various structures and artifacts have been found, including frosts, brick walls, roof tiles, pottery, mimic accessories, skeletal tools, iron Vel, and Tamil-Brahmi letter-etched plates.[16] This place is considered to be Pandyan dynasty's city called "Perumanalur", the pioneer of literature.[28] The use of fired brick, the size of the building complex, an array of pots placed in such a way that it must have been used either as a lamp or for painting, and other findings suggest that the settlement is of a more civilized population than was previously suspected during the Sangam period.[29] [30]

Ring wells and brick walls

Ancient earthenware and ring wells have been found.[31] Archaeologist Velappan said that this proves the ancient tradition of Tamils indicating that they used these wells in river shores and ponds for water.[32] Brick buildings are considered rare in ancient times but a large number of brick buildings have been found.[33]

Pottery

Ceramic types like Black-and-Red ware, Black ware, Black Polished ware and Red ware were found. Analysis of the Black-and-Red ware pottery revealed that the reason for its black colour is due to the use of carbon material and hematite was used for the red colour. Pottery was fired in kilns at the temperature to 1100°c to produce the typical Black-and-Red ware pottery.[34] The rouletted, arretine-type ceramics brought by merchants demonstrate business connections during Indo-Roman trade. It is noteworthy that such products have been discovered. Furthermore, black and red parchment fragments and white-colored black, red papillae and reddish-pitted pieces have also been unearthed.[35] [33] There are Tamil words engraved on the potteries that mention the names of individuals like 'Aathan', 'Uthiran' and 'Thiesan'.[28] [36]

Tamil-Brahmi script and graffiti marks

In the fourth phase of excavations at Keezhadi, 72 potsherds with Tamil-Brahmi script were discovered at the site. Some of these artifacts have inscribed graffiti marks, similar to graffiti marks which some believe to have evolved from the Indus script.[37] According to T. Udhayachandran, the artifacts found at Keezhadi excavation site may point to a link between the scripts of the Indus Valley civilization and Tamil-Brahmi.[38] Based on these marks, and one Keezhadi findings of the fourth phase which was dated to 580 BCE, R. Sivanantham and M. Seran argue that the date of the earliest attestation of Tamil-Brahmi can be pushed back to the 6th century BCE,[39] [40] a few centuries older than Dhamma Lipi (Prakrit in the Brahmi Script) of Ashokan Edicts, which is stated to be dated from 268 BC to 232 BC.[41] These claims have been challenged. It is not clear whether the potsherds containing inscriptions were found in the same archaeological layer as the 6th century samples, and University of Calcutta archaeologist Bishnupriya Basak said that "This unfortunately is not clear from the report and is very crucial," adding that the issues of "layer, period and absolute dates" needed clarity. Dravidian University archaeologist E. Harsha Vardhan said that a single report was not enough to "state scientifically that the Tamil-Brahmi script belongs to the sixth century BC”.[42]

Ornaments and antiquities

Ornaments have been found including sponges, marble, agate beads, green, yellow and blue glass beads.[43] The findings also include elephant tusks, copper ointment and sheets of wire.[44] Rare artifacts including iron edged corners, gold ornaments,stylus, terracotta stamps, diaphragm tiles, firefly toys have been found as well, along with other tools.

Keeladi Cluster

Keeladi was initially chosen by Amarnath Ramakrishnan and his team at ASI in a search along the banks of Vaigai for the most promising site for a river bank civilization near Madurai and was chosen because of many nearby mounds.

Other sites near Keeladi was jointly brought together with Keeladi as the main site. The Keeladi Cluster includes, Keeladi, Agaram, Manalur, Konthagai (a burial site) and Pasiapuram.[45]

Controversy

In 2017, some Tamil academicians, including V Arasu (the former head of the Department of Tamil Literature at the University of Madras), alleged that the Bharatiya Janata Party-led central government had made deliberate attempts to stall the excavations at Keezhadi. Arasu claimed that the BJP government had a Hindutva agenda, and wanted to stop the Keezhadi project because the excavations at the site provided an "undeniable evidence of a secular culture in South India".[46] [47]

The ASI normally conducts excavations at a major archaeological site for five seasons (years).[48] In 2016–17, after the conclusion of the second season at Keezhadi, the ASI transferred the Superintending Archaeologist (SA) K. Amarnath Ramakrishna to its Guwahati circle.[49] This caused a controversy in Tamil Nadu, leading to allegations that the ASI had deliberately transferred the SA to stall the project.[50] K. Amarnath Ramakrishna stated that he wanted to complete the excavation work at Keezhadi, and challenged his transfer order before the Central Administrative Tribunal.

The ASI clarified that the transfer was ordered in accordance with the organization's policy, which mandates that the maximum tenure of an SA in a particular circle is only for two years. K Amarnath Ramakrishna had completed more than three years at the Excavation Branch VI, located in Bengaluru, under which the Keezhadi site has been excavated. So, the ASI decided to replace him with P S Sriraman, who had earlier served as a Deputy SA in the Jodhpur circle. K Amarnath Ramakrishna was not the only officer to be transferred; 26 other officers had been transferred all over India. Moreover, the newly appointed SA P S Sriraman was a native of Tamil Nadu.

The Union Ministry also clarified that it had no intention to stop or delay the excavations at Keezhadi. It also explained that there was a delay in allocation of funds for the third season of excavation, because the ministry had not received the report for the work done in the past two years on time. Once the report was submitted, the ministry immediately cleared the funds for the third season of excavations at Keezhadi. The reports of the first two years of research will be released as a book.[51]

Gallery

The following photographs were taken at the excavation site on 11 October 2016.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Dennis S. Jesudasan . 20 September 2019 . Keezhadi excavations: Sangam era older than previously thought, finds study . The Hindu .
  2. Web site: Keeladi Department Of Archaeology. 2021-08-12. www.tnarch.gov.in.
  3. News: Keeladi: Unearthing the 'Vaigai Valley' Civilisation of Sangam era Tamil Nadu.
  4. News: அகழ்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டது: பாண்டிய-ரோம வணிகத் தொடர்பு (ஆங்கிலத்தில்). எஸ். அண்ணாமலை. 18 June 2015. 12 September 2015. The Hindu.
  5. News: 2200 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முந்தைய பழங்கால நகரம் மதுரை அருகே கண்டுபிடிப்பு!. 16 June 2015. 12 September 2015. vikatan.com.
  6. News: அகழ்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டது: பாண்டிய-ரோம வணிகத் தொடர்பு (ஆங்கிலத்தில்). எஸ். அண்ணாமலை. 18 June 2015. 12 September 2015. தி இந்து (ஆங்கிலம்).
  7. Web site: Carbon dating confirms Keezhadi site is from Sangam era. Dennis S. Jesudasan. 28 July 2017. thehindu.com. 28 July 2017.
  8. Web site: 2200 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முந்தைய பழங்கால நகரம் மதுரை அருகே கண்டுபிடிப்பு!. 16 July 2015. vikatan.com/. 15 October 2023.
  9. Web site: Kavitha Muralidharan . 20 September 2019 . In 'Rebuttal' to ASI, Tamil Nadu Dig Claims Proof Sangam Era Older Than Thought. The Wire.
  10. News: Carbon dating confirms T.N. site is from Sangam era. Dennis S. Jesudasan. 28 July 2017. The Hindu.
  11. News: Keeladi - An Urban Settlement of Sangam Age on the bank of Vaigai River. 19 September 2019. The Wire.
  12. News: Sruthisagar Yamunan . 11 May 2017 . Sangam-era site at Keezhadi is as complex as Indus Valley, proof of a glorious Tamil civilisation . Scroll.in .
  13. Web site: The Hindu Net Desk . 13 June 2017 . Keezhadi excavation: what was found and what they mean . The Hindu .
  14. Web site: கீழடியில் மூன்றாம் கட்ட ஆய்வுப் பணி துவக்கம்!. பாலமுருகன். தெ. 27 May 2017. www.vikatan.com/. 15 October 2023.
  15. Web site: Padmini Sivarajah . Fifth phase of Keeladi excavations begins. 13 June 2019 . The Times of India.
  16. News: Keeladi - An Urban Settlement of Sangam Age on the bank of Vaigai River. 19 September 2019. The Wire.
  17. Web site: Experts Question Dates of Script in Tamil Nadu's Keeladi Excavation Report . 2022-05-02 . The Wire.
  18. News: Sruthisagar Yamunan . 20 September 2019 . Tamil Nadu: Artefacts dated to 580 BCE hint at script continuity from Indus Valley Civilisation . Scroll.in .
  19. News: 5th phase of Keeladi excavation brings out 2 walls made of Sangam-era bricks. Padmini Sivarajah. 28 June 2019. The Times of India.
  20. News: Findings from Keeladi excavation site have a clear message for modern cities: Cherish your water, or perish. Mridula Ramesh. 14 October 2019. Firstpost.
  21. News: Excavations in Keeladi yields its secrets. T.K. Rohit and B. Jothi Ramalingam. 13 October 2019. The Hindu.
  22. News: Chief Minister inaugurates sixth phase of Keezhadi excavations .
  23. News: Sixth phase of excavation at Keeladi begins .
  24. Web site: Padmini Sivarajah. Feb 13, 2021. Tamil Nadu CM launches seventh phase of Keeladi excavations Chennai News - Times of India. 2022-02-17. The Times of India. en.
  25. Web site: Sep 20, 2021. 7th phase excavation at Keeladi draws to a close Madurai News - Times of India. 2022-02-17. The Times of India. en.
  26. Web site: 2021-09-30. Archaeological excavations in TN come to a close. 2022-02-17. Deccan Herald. en.
  27. Web site: Padmini Sivarajah. Feb 11, 2022. Tamil Nadu CM launches eighth phase of Keeladi excavation Chennai News - Times of India. 2022-02-17. The Times of India. en.
  28. News: உயிரூட்டம் கொண்ட சிற்றூரின் கீழே புதையுண்ட நகரம் (ஆங்கிலத்தில்). ஏ. ஸ்ரீகுமார். 19 August 2015. 12 September 2015. The Hindu.
  29. News: Harappa-like site surfaces in Tamil Nadu. Johnbosco, Arockiaraj. 29 May 2016. The Times of India. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20160529204815/http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/madurai/Harappa-like-site-surfaces-in-Tamil-Nadu/articleshow/52495353.cms. 29 May 2016.
  30. News: சங்க காலத்திலேயே வெளிநாடுகளோடு வர்த்தகம்: வணிகப் பெருவழிப் பாதையில் அமைந்த நகரம். 26 July 2015. The Hindu. ta. Associated with Overseas Trade: Traderoute within City Pandyas.
  31. Ring wells in ancient India . B. M. . Pande . Bulletin of the Deccan College Post-Graduate and Research Institute . 25 . 207–219 . 1966 . 42930851.
  32. News: திருப்புவனம் அருகே கீழடி பள்ளிச்சந்தை புதூரில் சங்ககால மக்களின் சுடுமண் உறைகிணறுகள் கண்டெடுப்பு. சுப.ஜனநாயகச்செல்வம். 14 August 2015. 12 September 2015. The Hindu (Tamil).
  33. News: சங்க காலத்திலேயே வெளிநாடுகளோடு வர்த்தகம்: வணிகப் பெருவழிப் பாதையில் அமைந்த நகரம். சுப. ஜனநாயகச்செல்வம். 26 July 2015. 12 September 2015. The Hindu (Tamil).
  34. Book: Dr. Sivanantham . R. . Seran . M. . Keeladi : An Urban Settlement of Sangam Age on the banks of river Vaigai . 18 September 2019 . Department of Archaeology Government of Tamil Nadu . 61 . 18 September 2019.
  35. News: 2200 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முந்தைய பழங்கால நகரம் மதுரை அருகே கண்டுபிடிப்பு!. ப.சூரியராஜ். 16 June 2015. 12 September 2015. விகடன்.காம்.
  36. News: 2200 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முந்தைய பழங்கால நகரம் மதுரை அருகே கண்டுபிடிப்பு!. ப.சூரியராஜ். 16 June 2015. 12 September 2015. vikatan.com.
  37. News: New study connects Tamil Nadu with Indus Valley civilisation. MC Rajan. 20 September 2019. Hindustan Times.
  38. News: Anna Isaac and Nikhita Venugopal . 19 September 2019 . Major discovery in Tamil Nadu's Keezhadi: A possible link to Indus Valley Civilisation . The News Minute .
  39. News: Keezhadi charcoal and Tamil Brahmi. 2 October 2019. asiaville.
  40. News: Keezhadi -- A goldmine of artefacts. 1 August 2021. indianexpress.
  41. Web site: Carbon dating proves Adichanallur relics from Tamil Nadu are from 905 to 696 BC. 6 April 2019.
  42. Web site: Charuch . Sukanya . Experts Question Dates of Script in Tamil Nadu's Keeladi Excavation Report . The Wire Science . . 12 April 2020 . 17 October 2019.
  43. News: சங்க காலத்திலேயே வெளிநாடுகளோடு வர்த்தகம்: வணிகப் பெருவழிப் பாதையில் அமைந்த நகரம். சுப. ஜனநாயகச்செல்வம். 26 July 2015. 12 September 2015. தி இந்து (தமிழ்).
  44. News: தலைநகராக இருந்த கீழடி அழிந்தது எப்படி? - புத்தக காட்சியில் தொல்லியல் ஆய்வாளர் தெரிவித்த புதிய தகவல். 8 September 2015. 12 September 2015. The Hindu (Tamil).
  45. News: Annamalai. S.. 2019-11-02. Keeladi: Unearthing the 'Vaigai Valley' Civilisation of Sangam era Tamil Nadu. en-IN. The Hindu. 2022-02-17. 0971-751X.
  46. News: Keezhadi dig delayed as it reveals secular culture says academic, TN minister denies. Priyanka Thirumurthy. 7 November 2017. The News Minute.
  47. News: Centre stopped Keezhadi dig due to place's secular culture. M T Saju. 2 November 2017. The Times of India.
  48. News: Centre not for stopping excavation at Keezhadi: Tourism Minister Mahesh Sharma. Rajasekaran RK. 29 April 2017. New Indian Express.
  49. News: Transfer of Keezhadi excavation site archaeologist final, says ASI. Rajasekaran R K. 24 April 2017.
  50. News: Keeladi excavation will be completed in five years, Union minister says. Padmini Sivarajah. 28 April 2017. The Times of India.
  51. Web site: கீழடி அகழ்வாராய்ச்சி பணிகள் 5 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு நீடிக்கும்.. ரூ.40 லட்சம் நிதி ஒதுக்கீடு- மத்திய அமைச்சர் | Keezhadi excavation continues 5 yrs : Minister Mahesh Sharma - Tamil Oneindia. 15 October 2023.