Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Indus Valley Civilization
Indus Valley Civilization
The Indus Valley civilization is also known as the Harappan Civilization after
the village named Harappa, in what is now Pakistan, where the civilization was
first discovered.
It was very hot in the Indus Valley so people spent a lot of time outside. Most
people had small homes which were also used as workshops. There was not
much space to relax.
Richer families had courtyards. These were nice open spaces. Children could
play there with toys or with pets, such as monkeys and birds.
People who did not have a courtyard would still have a flat roof. These roofs
were strong enough to walk on. Families used them as an extra room. It was a
cool place to sleep on a hot night and somewhere you could sit with friends.
There were no windows onto the main street. This kept out dust and noise.
Side windows let in light and air. From a model house found at Harappa, we
can see that windows may have had wooden shutters with grilles (barred
openings) to let in air and light.
All that are left today are the ground floors of houses that once had two or
three floors. Stairs led to the upper floors and roof. Walls were covered with
mud plaster. It is not clear if people painted the walls.
In the bathroom, people stood on a brick 'shower tray' and tipped water over
themselves from a jar. The clean water came from a well. Dirty water drained
through a pipe out through the wall into the drain in the street.
Toilets had brick seats. The toilet was flushed with water from jars. The waste
flowed out through clay pipes into a drain in the street. Waste was carried
away along the drains to 'soak pits' (cesspits), Cleaners dug out the pit and
took the waste away. They also took away rubbish from bins on the side of
houses.
Poor traders went to market to sell fish, fruit (such as melons) or a few clay
pots. Rich traders loaded their goods on ships sailing off across the sea. They
wore fine clothes, and lived in big houses with servants and perhaps slaves.
Indus people did not use money. It's likely that wealth was measured by how
much land a person had - or how many cattle, or how many sacks of grain.
Writing was done using a pointed stick in soft clay, or with a sharp tool to
scratch marks on stone or metal. It is likely that only a few people could read
and write, like scribes. But perhaps traders could read enough to tell what was
written on seals.
The Indus Valley people did not leave great structures, like the
Pyramids of Egypt or the Great Wall of China. Their cities have almost
vanished. Today, visitors see ruins dug into by archaeologists.
Yet long after the Indus civilization, skills such as trading, farming and
brick-making were passed on. Indus people helped shape the later
cultures of India and Pakistan.
The Indus people's gift to the world was showing us how to live in
peace in cities. Their way of life was based on trade, without money.
With few if any enemies, they did not need large armies. Not
everyone was rich, but even the poor probably got enough to eat. In
their clean, well-run cities the Indus people enjoyed beautiful as well
as useful things. Life was not all work. They made toys and jewellery,
as well as drains.