#IndiaAt75 In 1926, British Archaeologist Ernest Mckay dug up a small bronze statue in Mohenjodaro and it changed the way the world looked at India's history!
Join me to know the story of the 'Dancing Girl' from Mohenjodaro - the greatest find of the Indus Valley Civilization 🧵
The first Indus Valley major find was the discovery of Harappa in 1829 on the banks of Ravi river in Punjab. It excited the British a bit but the find was still largely academic that they had found an ancient inhabited town that no one knew existed. 2/n
Over the next 50 years, several such sites were found but more than history, Britishers and locals were interested in the high quality bricks that these sites provided.
They were plundered for building houses, ballast for railway lines all the way between Karachi to Delhi. 3/n
After passing under the crown in 1857, a new organization Archaeological Survey of India was established to protect these sites
It's 1st director Alexander Cunningham was the one who found Harappan seals which showed this was a bigger civilization with a script of its own 4/n
Over the next 50 years, interest in IVC grew as more finds came but still it was a well built township with lot of brick structure, pottery finds, a few seals with undecipherable symbols.
Nothing to show that the civilization was truly advanced. 5/n
In early 20th C, Ancient Monuments Act was passed & John Marshall was appointed director of ASI who started exploring more sites with Mohenjodaro especially a promising one
Multiple great finds came from this one site year after year.
And thats where the Dancing Girl was hidden
Ernest Mckay, a junior archaeologist part of Marshall's team stumbled upon something very new which hadnt been found in IVC until then.
A 10cm * 5cm small bronze statue of a girl wearing around 20 bangles on the left arm, a necklace, styled hair & standing in a confident pose!
Marshall described her as around 15 year old girl with hand on her hip & legs slightly forward as though she is dancing to a beat.
The Dancing Girl of Mohenjodaro was born!
She mesmerized everyone as no such work of confident art had ever come from IVC digs until then.
8/n
Apart from the beauty, the Dancing girl proved 3 important things
1. IVC people knew how to blend and cast metals
2. IVC knew Lost-Wax casting process of making bronze items
3. Most importantly, IVC had entertainment & dance in its culture & not just a group of primitives
9/n
The Dancing Girl became the prize find of ASI and India in general and was shown to all visiting leaders & displayed in the Lahore Museum initially.
The British then moved all IVC finds to Delhi with a plan of building a grand new 'Central Imperial Museum' 10/n
Before that could come up, India gained Independence in 1947 and Pakistan split away from India.
As with many other items, both countries lay claim to all IVC artifacts (by then 12000+ items) and a bitter verbal battle of claiming history ensued for the next 25 years 11/n
The Dancing girl stayed on in the Delhi museum while the 2 countries battled verbally & physically
Eventually in 1972, Indira Gandhi and Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto - leaders of the 2 countries met to sign the Simla Agreement.
Again the topic of IVC artifacts came up. 12/n
By then, another prize find of Mohenjodaro - The statue of the 'Priest King was also in the Delhi Museum.
Along with the Dancing Girl, the Priest King was the most popular art work found from IVC.
They were like the 2 Monalisas of Indus Valley Civilization Artworks. 13/n
Bhutto asked Gandhi for both of these statues for Pakistan initially. Gandhi refused and offered any one of them while the other remained in India.
Bhutto chose the Priest King and not the Dancing Girl!
And off he went to the National Museum in Lahore! 14/n
The Dancing Girl stayed on at the National Museum in Delhi and continues to mesmerize visitors one and all amidst other more recent IVC finds.
Dated back to 2300BC, she is a symbol of Indian heritage that spans 5 milleniums and more. 15/n
All countries want to show their history as ancient & rich. But India doesn't really need to prove anything. The Dancing Girl will do it for us!!
Make it a point to hop in & say hi to her on your next visit to Delhi !
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What is happening in Manipur?
Who is fighting with whom?
Why?
The answer involves history & geography.
A simple explainer 🧵
Manipur is full of mountains. And one large valley in the middle called the Imphal Valley.
The mountains are mainly populated by the Kuki people and the Naga people.
The valley is populated by a third clan - the Meitei people.
2/n
Basis historical evidences, its the Meitei & the Naga who have lived in this area from earlier times. A large expansion of Kuki tribe happened during the British era who encouraged more Kuki settlers to balance power against other tribes as part of their 'Divide and Rule policy'
#OnThisDay July 15th, 1799 - A remarkable discovery of a single slab of stone changed our understanding of human history!
It was the finding of the 'Rosetta Stone' by Napoleon's army while trying to build a fort!
Join me on a history tour to visit this crazy story! 🧵
The story starts all the way around 3000 BC when the ancient Pharaonic Egyptian civilization started. We know the Pyramids & the Sphinx but another major relic from then are the Hieroglyphics - an advanced pictorial script that the Egyptians used in their wall inscriptions!
2/n
It was the main script for communication for those in the Nile Delta for more than 2000 years & it was mainly pictorial mixed with grammar and syllables.
But by 300 BC Egypt was under Greek rule, hieroglyphics was being slowly forgotten for the new Greek & Latin scripts 3/n
Lets say you've a simple well in your backyard. One day suddenly you find out that it's hiding a 1000 yr old historic monument!
Imagine the shock & thrill you'll feel as it unravels
Join me to hear one such actual wonder story in Ep3 of #ArtTreasuresofIndia
Rani Ki Vav! 🧵
First the story. 11thC AD. Modern day Gujarat was ruled by the Chaulukya Dynasty with Bhima I as it's king & Udayamati as it's queen. The landscape was part desert & arid like. Water management was a key priority & creating water bodies was a very royal act! 2/n
As Bhima I died, Udayamati was grieving him. It was the time when everyone built temples. But Udayamati decided to build an inverted temple of sorts. 65m long & 20m wide and 28m deep strucutre!
A step well built by the queen in memory of her king - Rani Ki Vav!
This time we travel back 1000 years ago to look at an artwork of astounding beauty commissioned by Rajendra Chola, the all conquering Chola emperor
Join me on a tour to visit the 'Chandesa Anugraha Murthi' - an Indian art marvel
🧵
First the story. In the Chola country, along the banks of the river Vanni in a small village a pious man Yajnadatta is blessed with a son who is named Vicharasarman.
Vicharasarman was very intelligent & one day he sees the village cowherd beating the cows.
2/n
Angry at him, Vicharasarman takes upon himself to tend the village's cows & his love ends up producing a bounty of milk.
Seeing the excess milk going waste, he builds a sand Linga & starts bathing it with the milk everyday & meditates upon Lord Shiva in front of it
3/n
India is facing a poor monsoon this year with many states with deficit rainfall 😰
One of the main reasons for this worrisome situation is the 'El Nino' weather system which has set in this year
Join me in this Geography Explainer on what El Nino is & how it impacts you! 🧵
First lets understand how monsoons form due to winds from the pacific ocean. The Pacific covers almost half the surface area of earth & affects global climate
In a normal year, warm winds blow across the pacific in western direction - from South America to Aus to Asia
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As summer progresses, these warm winds heat up the ocean near India which leads to more evaporation in these waters & leads to formation of the monsoon cloud systems & we promptly get monsoon rains across the country at the start of June