The Silent Cities of The Indus Valley

Unearthing the Mysteries and Marvels of the Ancient Indus Valley Civilization
346 Seiten, Taschenbuch
€ 40,70
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Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

The Silent Cities of The Indus Valley by Matt Morissen explores the complex, enigmatic, and highly sophisticated urban ecosystem of the ancient Indus Valley Civilization during its mature phase (c. 2600-1900 BCE). The book highlights how this ancient society challenges traditional historical models by flourishing without monarchies, grand temples, or military monuments.- Paradigm-Shifting Discovery: Early 20th-century excavations at major sites like Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro by Sir John Marshall and Rakhal Das Banerji pushed back the timeline of South Asian urban antiquity, revealing a civilization centered around public welfare rather than centralized autocratic power.- The Enigma of Silence: The civilization is categorized as "silent" due to a total lack of self-aggrandizing political monuments and an intricate, brief script on seals and pottery that remains entirely undeciphered, leaving its internal historical narrative unspoken.- Dynamic Geography & Adaptability: Set across the volatile floodplains of the Indus River basin, the civilization engineered unique survival strategies to handle seasonal monsoons and shifting river paths, turning environmental risks into agricultural renewal.- Advanced Geometric Grid Cities: Urban centers feature highly structured perpendicular north-south and east-west grid formats. These configurations optimized natural wind ventilation and solar access for uniform blocks of domestic quarters.- Infrastructural Egalitarianism: The civilization relied heavily on standardization, utilizing mass-produced kiln-fired bricks precisely conforming to a 1:2:4 geometric ratio. Residential housing designs share matching layouts, emphasizing open trust and minimal social hierarch.- Hydrological Ingenuity: Street grids seamlessly integrated subterranean, gently sloped covered wastewater drains linked to private household bathrooms, toilets, soak pits, and large public utilities like Mohenjo-Daro's Great Bath to prioritize civic hygiene.