Indian Prehistory
• The fossils of the early human being have not been found in India. A
hint of the earliest human presence in India
is
indicated by stone tools of about 250,000 BC obtained from the deposits.
• However, recent reported artifacts from Bori in Maharashtra suggest
the appearance of human beings in India around 1.4 million years ago.
• From their first appearance to around 3000 BC humans used only stone
tools for different purposes.
• This period is, therefore, known as the Stone Age, which has been
divided into Paleolithic (early or Old Stone)
Age,
Mesolithic (Middle Stone) Age, and Neolithic (New Stone) Age.
The Paleolithic Age in
India (500,000 BC – 8000 BC
• In India it developed in the Pleistocene period or the Ice Age.b.
• The earliest traces of human existence in India go back to 500,000
BC.
• The Paleolithic sites are spread in practically all parts of India
except the alluvial plains of Indus and Ganga.
• The people of this age were food gathering people who lived on
hunting and gathering wild fruits and vegetables.
Man
during this period used tools of unpolished, undressed rough stones and lived
in cave and rock shelters.
They
had no knowledge of agriculture, fire or pottery of any material.
• They mainly used hand axes, cleavers, choppers, blades, scrapers and
burin. Their tools were made of hard rock
called ‘quartzite’.
Hence Paleolithic men are also called ‘Quartzite Men’.
• Homo sapiens first appeared in the last of this phase.
• It has been pointed out that Paleolithic men belonged to the Negrito
race.
• The Paleolithic Age in India has been divided into three phases
according to the nature of stone tools used by the
people
and also according to the nature of change in the climate – Early or lower
Paleolithic, Middle Paleolithic
and
Upper Paleolithic.
• The Early Paleolithic Age covers the greater part of the Ice Age.
Its characteristic tools are hand axes, cleavers
and
choppers. Such tools have been found in Soan and Sohan river valley (now in
Pakistan) and in the Belan
Valley
in the Mirzapur district of UP In this period climate became less humid.
• Middle Paleolithic Phase is characterized by the use of stone tools
made of flakes mainly scrapers, borers and
blade
like tools. The sites are found in the valleys of Soan, Narmada and Tungabhadra
rivers.
• In the Upper Paleolithic Phase, the climate became warm and less
humid. This stage is marked by burins and
scrapers.
Such tools have been found in APKarnataka, Maharashtra, Bhopal and Chhota
Nagpur plateau.
The Mesolithic Era
History (8000 BC – 6000 BC
• In this age, climate became warm and dry. Climate changes brought
about changes in fauna and flora and made
it
possible for human beings to move to new areas. Since then, there haven’t been
major changes in the climate.
• The characteristic tools of the Mesolithic Age are known as
Microliths-pointed, cresconic blades, scrapers, etc, all
made of
stone.
• The people lived on hunting, fishing and food gathering; at a later
stage they also domesticated animals.
• The last phase of this age saw the beginning of plane cultivation.
• Various Mesolithic sites are found in the Chhotanagpur region,
Central India and also south of the Krishna River.
• In the Belan valley of Vindhyas, all the three phases of the
Paleolithic followed by the Mesolithic and then by the
Neolithic have been found
in sequence. Similar is the case with the middle part of the Narmada valley
The History of
Neolithic Era (6000 BC – 1000 BC)
• In India Neolithic Age is not earlier than 6000 BC and at some
places in South and Eastern India; it is as late as
1000
BC.
• During this phase people were again depending on stone implements.
But now they used stones other than
quartzite
for making tools, which were more lethal, more finished and more polished.
• Neolithic men cultivated land and grew fruits and corn like ragi and
horse gram. They domesticated cattle, sheep
and
goat.
• They knew about making fire and making pottery, first by hand and
then by potters wheel. They also painted and
decorated
their pottery.
• They lived in caves and decorated their walls with hunting and
dancing scenes. They also knew the art of making
boats.
They could also weave cotton and wool to make cloth.
• In the later phase of Neolithic phase people led a more settled life
and lived in circular and rectangular houses
made of
mud and reed.
• Important sites of this age are Burzahom and Gufkral in J&K
(famous for pit dwelling, stone tools and graveyard in
house),
Maski, Brahmagiri, Tekkalakota in Karnataka, Paiyampatti in Tamil Nadu,
Piklihal and Hallur in AP, Garo
hils in
Meghalaya, Chirand and Senuwar in Bihar (known for remarkable bone tools),
Amri, Kotdiji, etc.
• Koldihawa in UP revealed a three fold cultural sequence: Neolithic,
Chalcolithic and Iron Age.
Chalcolithic Period
• The end of the Neolithic Period saw the use of metals of which
copper was the first. A culture based on the use of
stone and copper arrived.
Such a culture is called Chalcolithic which means the stone-copper phase.
• Apart from stone tools, hand axes and other objects made of
copperware also used.
• The Chalcolithic people used different types of pottery of which
black and red pottery was most popular. It was
wheel
made and painted with white line design.
• These people were not acquainted with burnt bricks. They generally
lived in thatched houses. It was a
village
economy.
• They venerated the mother goddess and worshiped the bull.
• Important sites of this phase are spread in
Rajasthan, Maharashtra, West Bengal,
Bihar, MP, etc.
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