Iron Age India

Iron Age India, the Iron Age in the Indian subcontinent(South Asia), succeeds the Late Harappan (Cemetery H) culture, also known as the last phase of the Indus Valley Tradition. The main Iron Age archaeological cultures of India are the Painted Grey Ware culture (1100 to 350 BC) and the Northern Black Polished Ware (700 to 200 BC).

The earliest Iron Age sites in South India are Hallur, Karnataka and Adichanallur, Tamil Nadu[1] at around 1000 BC. Technical studies on materials dated c. 1000 BCE at Komaranhalli (Karnataka) showed that the smiths of this site could deal with large artifacts, implying that they had already been experimenting for centuries,[2][3] which drew attention to the presence of iron in Chalcolithic deposits at Ahar, and suggested that “the date of the beginning of iron smelting in India may well be placed as early as the sixteenth century BC” and “by about the early decade of thirteenth century BC iron smelting was definitely known in India on a bigger scale”.[4]

Historical states of the Iron Age:

Iron Age India • 1200–272 BC
Vedic Civilization • 2000–500 BCE
-Black and Red ware culture • 1300–1000 BCE
-Painted Grey Ware culture • 1200–600 BCE
-Northern Black Polished Ware • 700–200 BCE
Maha Janapadas • 700–300 BCE
Magadha Empire • 684–424 BCE
Nanda Empire • 424-321 BCE
Chera Kingdom c. 300 BCE–1102 CE
Chola Empire c. 300 BCE–1279 CE
Pandya Kingdom c. 300 BCE–1345 CE
Maurya Empire • 321–184 BCE
Pallava Empire • 250 BCE–800 CE
Sunga Empire • 185–73 BCE
Kanva Empire • 75–26 BCE
Maha-Megha-Vahana Empire • 250s BCE–400s CE
Kuninda Kingdom • 200s BCE–300s CE
Indo-Scythian Kingdom • 200 BC–400 CE
Satavahana Empire • 230 BCE–220 CE
Indo-Greek Kingdom • 180 BCE–10 CE

Most of the Vedic period (excepting the earliest phase of the core of the Rigveda) falls within the early part of the Indian Iron Age (12th to 6th centuries BC). The development of early Buddhism takes place in the Magadha period (5th to 4th centuries BC).

The North Indian Iron Age can be taken to end with the rise of the Maurya Empire and the appearance of literacy (the edicts of Ashoka, r. 272-232 BC) indicating the gradual onset of historicity. South India simultaneously enters historicity with the Sangam period, beginning in the 3rd century BC.

From the 2nd century BC, the cultural landscape of Northern India is transformed with lasting effect with the intrusion of the Indo-Scythians and Indo-Greeks, and the states succeeding this period, up to the medieval Muslim conquests are conventionally grouped as Middle kingdoms of India or Classical India.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ http://www.hindu.com/2007/05/25/stories/2007052502532200.htm
  2. ^ Agrawal et al. 1985: 228-29
  3. ^ Sahi (1979: 366)
  4. ^ The origins of Iron-working in India: New evidence from the Central Ganga Plain and the Eastern Vindhyas, By Rakesh Tewari - Director, U.P. State Archaeological Department, India http://www.archaeologyonline.net/artifacts/iron-ore.html

Iron Age is the age of real development that took place during the past stages of indus valley civilization