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REWRITING HISTORY
- the lost civilization
Rewriting History. Not as the politicians would like
to in our history texts, but in order to set the record of the growth
of villages and cities in the world straight.
Up
until now, the first major urban settlements in the world were believed
to have appeared in the ancient river valleys of Mesopotamia around
4000-3500 B.C. Then came the Nile Valley civilization in Egypt.
This was followed by the Indus Valley civilization, which flourished
around 2500 B.C. Now suddenly the lost city of Cambay throws up
the possibility of a civilization that predates the oldest known
ones by 2000 years! As Dilip Chakrabarti, Cambridge University historian
puts it, "it could completely alter all our notions of history".
A
CHANCE DISCOVERY
As all discoveries, this one too was uncovered by chance. A team
of oceanographers from the National Institute of Ocean Technology
(NIOT), Chennai, were trawling the murky sea 30 km off the coast
of Gujarat in the Gulf of Cambay, measuring the levels of marine
pollution. As part of the routine, they took sonar photographs of
the ocean floor. Months later while analyzing the images, they realized
they had unknowingly photographed the ruins of a vast city submerged
40m under the sea. So back they went to dredge the site and collected
over 2000 artefacts.
When the team first made their
revelations public in May last year, many experienced archaeologists
brushed their theories aside as poppycock. Besides, they were oceanographers,
not archaeologists. Stung by criticism, the team sailed back to
the site in November, but this time armed with a robotic vehicle
fitted with a video camera, a dredge and a scoop. They also took
along marine geologist, S Badrinarayan. Although the camera was
not of much use because of the strong underwater currents that churned
the waters and made it murky, they were able to haul up tonnes of
sludge, from which they retrieved invaluable artefacts.
The
Cambay findings could mean that early Indians were not copycats
Delhi University historian, Nayanjot Lahiri says
that if the Cambian civilization is proved to be the oldest in the
world, that could refute the theory that urbanization spread from
West Asia to the Indus and thence downwards to India.
However, there are many interesting
questions yet to be answered: Historians have little evidence to
show how a predominantly farming community in India took that giant
leap forward and built some of the most well-designed cities in
the world during the Indus period. Where, for instance did the people
of Cambay come from? Were they natives or did they come by sea from
West Asia? When did they transit from hunter gatherers to agriculture
and a mature urban settlement?
Harvard University historian,
Richard Meadow thinks the discovery is important enough to launch
an international collaborative study as was done to uncover the
sunken ruins of the Titanic.
THE
TASK AHEAD
At a press conference in Delhi, last month, the
Union Minister for Human Resources, Murli Manohar Joshi made the
team's findings public. The Government will now launch a national
multi-disciplinary project to uncover the mysteries that the lost
city of Cambay has thrown up.
A host of specialist institutes
will assist the NIOT including the ASI, the NIO,Goa, the Physical
Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad, apart from the NGRI, BSIP and a
host of universities.
The impact of the discovery
will be far reaching. While doubts persist, the findings could revolutionize
history. The sunken city of Cambay might well be the oldest in the
world, thereby pushing back the age of civilizations by 2000 years.
The most important task at hand
now is to conclusively establish the age of the sunken city of Cambay.
Once this is done, history might probably have to be rewritten.
CIVILIZATION DOWN THE AGES
THE
MESOPOTAMIAN: Pottery relics from this cradle of civilization
date back to 7000 B.C., but urban traces emerge in 5500 B.C. When
the Mesopotamians came in 3800 B.C., the tools of civilization were
already in existence.
THE AGEAN: The Cretans
in 6000 B.C. were farmers and their culture primitive. The 1,500
year long civilization reached its peak in 1800 B.C. under the rule
of the legendary King Minos.
THE CHINESE: China cultivation began
in 5000 B.C., but the farmers employed primitive techniques and
shifted their villages as the soils became exhausted. Permanent
settlements emerged only after 1500 B.C.
THE EGYPTIAN: Prior to
the Bronze Age, there were a large number of small farming communities
in Egypt. It was in 3000 B.C. that a conquering family unified the
disparate settlements and set up capital at Memphis.
THE HARAPPAN: The
twin cities of the Indus Valley civilization, Harappa and Mohenjodaro,
reached their peak in 2500 B.C.
THE CAMBIAN: Dated at 7500 B.C., it could be
the oldest civilization yet.
Source: India Today
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