Hakra Ware culture

Hakra Ware culture is a material culture which is contemporaneous with the early Harappan Ravi phase culture (3300–2800 BCE) of the Indus Valley.[1][2] Hakra Ware culture is characterized by handmade vessels with mud and grit applied to the surface. The Hakra Wares culture also made structures in the form of subterranean dwelling pits, cut into the natural soil. The walls and floor of these pits were plastered with the yellowish alluvium of the Hakra valley.[3] The first example was found near Jalilpur on the Ravi River about 80 miles (130 km) southwest of Harrappa in 1972.[4] According to Rao, Hakra Ware has been found at Bhirrana, and is pre-Harappan, dating to the 8th–7th millennium BCE.[5][6][7]

See also

References

  1. Coningham & Young 2015, p. 158.
  2. Ahmed 2014, p. 107.
  3. Singh 2008, p. =109, 145, 153.
  4. Mughal, Rafique (Spring 2001). "Resurrecting Sir Aurel Stein from the Cholistan Desert" (PDF). Boston University Center for Archaeological Studies. 15.2.
  5. Dikshit 2013, p. 129-133.
  6. Mani 2008, p. 237-238.
  7. Sarkar 2006, p. 2-3.

Sources


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