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'We are inheritors of a rural civilisation': rural complexity and the ceramic economy in the Indus Civilisation in northwest India.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

What role do villages play in 'an urban civilisation'? Although it is likely that most of the populations of South Asia's ancient Indus Civilisation would not have lived in cities, it is not clear what their rural way of life would have encompassed. Using ceramic assemblages excavated from Indus-period villages in northwest India, alongside ethnographic records on village organization and rural craft production, this paper argues that Indus villages were characterized by rural complexity. This comprised a range of activities, including craft production, as well as short- and long-distance socio-economic links. Drawing on historical narratives, we show how South Asian villages have been essentialized and presented as either ideal or conservative extremes. We argue for the importance of a better understanding of the breadth and nuances of the rural sphere, and for a greater research focus on village life in the Indus context.

Description

Keywords

Indus Civilisation, South Asia, ceramics, complexity, craft production, rural, villages

Journal Title

World Archaeol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0043-8243
1470-1375

Volume Title

51

Publisher

Informa UK Limited
Sponsorship
British Academy (SA-47604)
British Academy (PM120008)
British Council in India (IND/CONT/06-07/172E)
European Research Council (648609)
British Council in India (IND/CONT/G/16-17/75)
British Academy (MD170014)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/P027970/1)
The Land, Water and Settlement project was primarily funded by a Standard Award from the UK India Education and Research Initiative (UKIERI) under the title “From the Collapse of Harappan Urbanism to the Rise of the Great Early Historic Cities: Investigating the Cultural and Geographical Transformation of Northwest India between 2000 and 300 BC.” Smaller grants were also awarded by the British Academy’s Stein Arnold Fund, the Isaac Newton Trust, the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, and the Natural Environment Research Council. The fieldwork and research carried out by Danika Parikh was funded by the Cambridge Commonwealth Trust, the Sadacc Trust, the Sir Richard Stapley Educational Trust, and Newnham and Pembroke Colleges, Cambridge.