Examples of Indus Script in the following topics:
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- Harappans
are believed to have used Indus Script, a language consisting of symbols.
- This Indus Script suggests that writing developed
independently in the Indus River Valley Civilization from the script employed
in Mesopotamia and Ancient Egypt.
- These ten Indus Script symbols were found on a "sign board" in the ancient city of Dholavira.
- A Rosetta Stone for the Indus script, lecture by Rajesh Rao
- View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/a-rosetta-stone-for-the-indus-script-rajesh-rao
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- Harappa and Mohenjo-daro were thought to be the two great
cities of the Indus Valley Civilization, emerging around 2600 BCE along the
Indus River Valley in the Sindh and Punjab provinces of Pakistan.
- At its peak, the Indus Valley
Civilization may had a population of over five million people.
- Mohenjo-daro was abandoned around 1900 BCE
when the Indus Civilization went into sudden decline.
- The Great Bath at Mohenjo-daro, a city in the Indus River Valley Civilization.
- Identify the importance of the discovery of the Indus River Valley Civilization
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- In total, more than 1,052 cities and settlements have been
found, mainly in the general region of the Indus River and its tributaries.
- The
population of the Indus Valley Civilization may have once been as large as five million.
- The ancient Indus systems of
sewerage and drainage developed and used in cities throughout the Indus region
were far more advanced than any found in contemporary urban sites in the Middle
East, and even more efficient than those in many areas of Pakistan and India
today.
- Unlike
Mesopotamia and Ancient Egypt, the inhabitants of the Indus Valley Civilization
did not build large, monumental structures.
- This map shows a cluster of Indus Valley Civilization cities and excavation sites along the course of the Indus River in Pakistan.
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- Called Cyrus the Elder by the Greeks, he founded an empire initially
comprising all the previous civilized states of the ancient Near East and eventually
most of Southwest and Central Asia and the Caucus region, stretching from the
Mediterranean Sea to the Indus River.
- In addition to describing the
genealogy of Cyrus, the declaration in Akkadian cuneiform script on the
cylinder is considered by many Biblical scholars as evidence of Cyrus’s policy
of repatriation of the Jewish people following their captivity in Babylon.
- The Behistun Inscription, the text of which
Darius wrote, came to have great linguistic significance as a crucial clue in
deciphering cuneiform script.
- Researchers were able
to compare the scripts and use it to help decipher ancient languages, in this
way making the Behistun Inscription as valuable to cuneiform as the Rosetta
Stone is to Egyptian hieroglyphs.
- A section of the Behistun Inscription on a limestone cliff of Mount Behistun in western Iran, which became a key in deciphering cuneiform script.
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- The Indus Valley Civilization declined around 1800 BCE due to climate
change and migration.
- The great
Indus Valley Civilization, located in modern-day India and Pakistan, began to
decline around 1800 BCE.
- The Indus
Valley Civilization may have met its demise due to invasion.
- By around 1700 BCE, most of
the Indus Valley Civilization cities had been abandoned.
- Discuss the causes for the disappearance of the Indus Valley Civilization
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- Foreigners
from the north are believed to have migrated to India and settled in the Indus
Valley and Ganges Plain from 1800-1500 BCE.
- Wheeler, who was Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of
India from 1944 to 1948, suggested that a nomadic, Indo-European tribe, called
the Aryans, suddenly overwhelmed and conquered the Indus River Valley.
- Many scholars believe Vedic
Civilization was a composite of the Indo-Aryan and Harappan, or Indus Valley,
cultures.
- The
invasion of Darius I (a Persian ruler of the vast Achaemenid Empire that stretched
into the Indus Valley) in the early 6th century BCE marked the beginning of
outside influence in Vedic society.
- The Ganges Plain is supported by the Indus and Ganges river systems.
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- As in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus River valley, civilization in China developed around a great river.
- These phenomena took place in China about 1000 years later than in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus River valley.
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- Jainism,
one of the world’s major religions, is believed to have roots in the Indus
Valley Civilization, and follows aspects of the Sramana traditions of
asceticism—self-denial and control in order to achieve a higher level of
spirituality.
- Some scholars claim Jainism has its roots in the Indus Valley
Civilization, reflecting native spirituality prior to the Indo-Aryan migration
into India.
- Various seals from Indus Valley Civilizations
bear resemblance to Rishabha, the first Jain as the visual representation of
Vishnu.
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- The Chinese character for "Tian," meaning "heaven," in (from left to right) Bronze script, Seal script, Oracle script, and modern simplified.
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- This expansion continued even further afield with
Anatolia and the Armenian Plateau, much of the Southern Caucasus, Macedonia,
parts of Greece and Thrace, Central Asia as far as the Aral Sea, the Oxus and
Jaxartes areas, the Hindu Kush and the western Indus basin, and
parts of northern Arabia and northern Libya.
- This
unprecedented area of control under a single ruler stretched from the Indus
Valley in the east to Thrace and Macedon on the northeastern border of
Greece.