since i was a kid i have loved visiting historical sites... i have loved my visits to the taj mahal and the ancient city of emperor akbar called fatehpur sikri and the red fort and many more such places... this love started when i was in my 5th grade... every summer out school would plan a trip to a historical or geographical place of importance... and my dad would insist that i go for all of them...
so a month back when i went to gujarat i jumped at the opportunity to visit this old historical site called lothal... and i didnt regret the visit (even though 2 days earlier i was lying sick in the hospital)... for the first time i was in gujarat during the monsoons... and i never knew that my land could be so beautiful.. because in the other seasons it is always brown and has a barren look... this time it was green... as if someone had strewn the land with emerald diamonds... and the soft rains made it look even more beautiful...
heres there history of lothal from wikipedia...
Lothal was one of the most prominent cities of the ancient Indus valley civilization. Located in the modern state of GujarÄt and dating from 2400 BCE, it is one of India's most important archaeological site that dates from that era. Discovered in 1954, Lothal was excavated from February 13, 1955 to May 19, 1960 by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).
Lothal's dock—the world's earliest—connected the city to an ancient course of the Sabarmati river on the trade route between Harappan cities in Sindh and the peninsula of Saurashtra when the surrounding Kutch desert of today was a part of the Arabian Sea. It was a vital and thriving trade centre in ancient times, with its trade of beads, gems and valuable ornaments reaching the far corners of West Asia and Africa. Lothal's people were responsible for the earliest-known portrayals of realism in art and sculpture, telling some of the most well-known fables of today. Its scientists used a shell compass and divided the horizon and sky into 8–12 whole parts, possibly pioneering the study of stars and advanced navigation—2000 years before the Greeks. The techniques and tools they pioneered for bead-making and in metallurgy have stood the test of time for over 4000 years.
Lothal is situated near the village of Saragwala in the Dholka taluka of Ahmedabad district. It is at a distance of six kilometres (south-east) from the Lothal-Bhurkhi railway station on the Ahmedabad-Bhavnagar railway line. It is also connected by all-weather roads to the cities of Ahmedabad (85 km/53 mi), Bhavnagar, Rajkot and Dholka. Nearest cities are Dholka and Bagodara. Resuming excavation in 1961, archaeologists unearthed trenches sunk on the northern, eastern and western flanks of the mound, bringing to light the inlet channels and nullah ("ravine", or "gully") connecting the dock with the river. The findings consist of a mound, a township, a marketplace and the dock. Adjacent to the excavated areas stands the Archaeological Museum, where some of the most prominent collections of Indus-era antiquities in modern India are displayed.
Lothal's dock—the world's earliest—connected the city to an ancient course of the Sabarmati river on the trade route between Harappan cities in Sindh and the peninsula of Saurashtra when the surrounding Kutch desert of today was a part of the Arabian Sea. It was a vital and thriving trade centre in ancient times, with its trade of beads, gems and valuable ornaments reaching the far corners of West Asia and Africa. Lothal's people were responsible for the earliest-known portrayals of realism in art and sculpture, telling some of the most well-known fables of today. Its scientists used a shell compass and divided the horizon and sky into 8–12 whole parts, possibly pioneering the study of stars and advanced navigation—2000 years before the Greeks. The techniques and tools they pioneered for bead-making and in metallurgy have stood the test of time for over 4000 years.
Lothal is situated near the village of Saragwala in the Dholka taluka of Ahmedabad district. It is at a distance of six kilometres (south-east) from the Lothal-Bhurkhi railway station on the Ahmedabad-Bhavnagar railway line. It is also connected by all-weather roads to the cities of Ahmedabad (85 km/53 mi), Bhavnagar, Rajkot and Dholka. Nearest cities are Dholka and Bagodara. Resuming excavation in 1961, archaeologists unearthed trenches sunk on the northern, eastern and western flanks of the mound, bringing to light the inlet channels and nullah ("ravine", or "gully") connecting the dock with the river. The findings consist of a mound, a township, a marketplace and the dock. Adjacent to the excavated areas stands the Archaeological Museum, where some of the most prominent collections of Indus-era antiquities in modern India are displayed.
more information here
the minute i stepped onto the site it felt like i was thrown in another era... as if i was looking at how they lived some 5000 years ago... imagine what you would feel when you step onto some place where you know that people have walked and lived at the same place so many many years back...
and the best part was that i found so many artefacts still buried under the top soil.. since the rains had eroded the top soil the artefacts were lying right on the feet, for us to pick and look at... (the museum there didnt allow us to click pictures).. therefore i was excited to get you some pictures of the artefacts... (i actually held them in my hands... it was so thrilling!)
the place where the ship were docked 5000 years back... the worlds earliest dock...
workplace.. maybe where the beads were made...
a pot.. maybe it was used to fill up fresh drinking water...
a water canal...
workplace again...
parts of jars and pots i found there... (the one with holes is a part of a big vase kind of a jar... a similar one was put up at the museum there)
a shell... terra cotta pieces of bangles... and a toy (the big white thing)...
next place i would like to visit is dholavira, which is in kutch - gujarat... another ancient site of the indus valley civilization and estimated to be older than lothal too...
laterzzz all... hope you like the pictures...
13 comments:
WOW thats really fascinating Messy!
Keshi.
wow!!
will call you to know how rto best reach there!!
i also wanna gooooooooooo
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u look like neena gupta in ur pic below with Arjun!!
:P
now Im off to check who Neena Gupta is...cos Abhi said u look like her :)
Messy come ova to my blog..u'll like my today's post.
Keshi.
my dil goes mmmm mmmmm m mmmmm.... ho ho ... my dil goes mm mm mmmm mm mm ....
HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY Messy!
do check my current post...its for all of u!
Keshi.
nice pics...on my gujarat road trip last year...i came very close to lothal..if i had travelled 3kms off the main road i would have seen the plc..but my itinery was packed to the hilt...so gave it a miss...it's my loss..now i realise...but will try to catch up both dholavira and lothal next time....
When u go to dholavira, also visit Lakhpath in the outskirts of bhuj and ofcourse bhuj as well and infact why only those places, when u r on that belt, u r not supposed to miss mandvi and mundra as well. Actually every where u go in gujarat there's a different essence....places which r not supposed to be missed at any cost wud be Adalaj near Ahmedabad, The shaking minarets, Gandhi Ashram and Siddi Saiyad's jaali in Ahmedabad, Gandhiji's residence in Porbandar, The Palace of the Gaikwad's in Baroda, the gir forest and the lion resort in junagadh....
Excellent ..so you had been to the motherland and mothers generally do not disappoint children.. so there you go... i had been to lothal and cant remember anything from the distant memory!!
and BTW what made you visit the hospital? dont blame the gujju food now:-) Cheers.
interesting pics!
interesting pics!
interesting pics!
good work
good work
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