Harappa
Tourism sites
This was the first of the Indus Valley Civilisation sites to be
discovered, but in size and condition it is inferior to Moenjodaro.
Located 186 km south-west of Lahore, Harappa is reached via the
station at Sahiwal, formerly known as Montgomery.
Situated beside an earlier course of the Ravi River, Harappa was
discovered in 1920/21, but through the ages the site was quarried
for bricks and most of the buildings so far excavated are in poor
condition.
Like Moenjodaro the excavations have revealed a series of cities,
stacked one upon another.
The site, with its citadel and great granary, seems similar in
many ways to Moenjodaro and like its southern sister-city appear
to have thrived around 2000 to 1700 BC with an economy based largely
on agriculture and trade.
The Harappan society seems to have been egalitarian, pursuing a
rather simple way of life.
The cementeries discovered at Harappa confirm that the Indus Valley
people buried their bead, many of them wearing finger rings, necklaces
of steatite beads, anklets of paste bead, earnings and shell bangles.
Copper mirrors, antimony rods, sheer spoons and vessels and urns
of various shapes and size lay in the graves. Some of the female
skeletons had anklets of tiny beads and girdles studded with some-precious
stones. Excavations have recalled evidence of some pre-Harappa material
which shows strong affinity with the Kot Diji finds.
On display at the Museum are excavated material, including terracotta
toys, gamesman, jewellery, animal figurines, bronze utensils statuettes
etc.
Source: Ptv.com.pk
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