Jhangar phase
The Jhangar phase was an archaeological culture, named after the type site Jhangar, that followed the Jhukar phase of the Late Harappan culture in Sindh (i.e., the Lower Indus Valley).[1]
Bronze Age |
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↑ Chalcolithic |
↓ Iron Age |
Jhukar and Jhangar phases are collectively called Jhukar and Jhangar culture (1900–1500 BCE). Cemetery H culture (subculture of Late Harrapan IVC phase) in Punjab was contemporaneous to Jhukar-Jhangar culture (subculture of Late Harrapan IVC phase) in Sindh, both have evidence of continuity and change.[2] Rangpur culture in Gujarat, also part of late phase of IVC, was also contemporaneous to both.
It is a non-urban culture, characterised by "crude handmade pottery" and "campsites of a population which was nomadic and mainly pastoralist," and is dated to approximately the late second millennium BCE and early first millennium BCE.[3] In Sindh, urban growth began again after approximately 500 BCE.[4]
See also
- Periodisation of the Indus Valley civilisation
- Ahar–Banas culture (3000 – 1500 BCE)
- Late Harappan phase of IVC (1900 – 1500 BCE)
- Cemetery H culture in Punjab
- Jhukar–Jhangar culture in Punjab
- Rangpur culture in Gujarat
- Vedic period
- Kuru Kingdom (1200 – c. 500 BCE)
- OCP (2000–1500 BCE)
- Copper Hoard culture (2800–1500 BCE), may or may not be independent of vedic culture
References
- Langer, William L., ed. (1972). An Encyclopedia of World History (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company. pp. 17. ISBN 0-395-13592-3.
- Upinder Singh, 2008, A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th century, Pearson Education, p. 211.
- F.R. Allchin (ed.), The Archaeology of Early Historic South Asia: The Emergence of Cities and States (Cambridge University Press, 1995), p.36
- J.M. Kenoyer (2006), "Cultures and Societies of the Indus Tradition. In Historical Roots" in the Making of ‘the Aryan’, R. Thapar (ed.), pp. 21–49. New Delhi, National Book Trust.