Categories: Ancient Times

Mysterious Mohenjo Daro Was Home To An Unknown Advanced Civilization

Thousands of years ago, the mysterious city of Mohenjo Daro was home to an unknown, advanced and prosperous civilization that used  technology and constructed buildings that were unique to the ancient world.

Artifacts, relics and ruins reveal startling evidence that the inhabitants of Mohenjo Daro possessed inventions that were far ahead of their time.

How and from whom did these remarkable people acquire knowledge of such sophisticated technology?

Why did this enigmatic civilization vanish? The history of the ancient world is full of secrets.

Can some of the interesting archaeological discoveries cast more light on what really happened to one of the world’s oldest and advanced civilizations?

The ruined great city of Mohenjo-Daro (“Mound of the Dead”) was once a major urban center of the Harappa  Culture or Indus Civilization, a highly developed civilisation that flourished on the banks of the rivers  Indus and Saraswati, around 3000 BC. (in Pakistan now)

Excavations in 1920-22 at Harappa -Mohenjodaro (which lie in what is now Pakistan) confirmed the existence  of an unknown civilization in the Indus Valley, the home of one of the oldest highly advanced civilizations  of the world.


The sophistication of the infrastructure relating to the water supply and effluent disposal systems  of the mysterious city was unique!

The Dancing Girl, the iconic bronze figurine of Mohenjodaro. (Benoy K. Behl/Collection: National Museum,  New Delhi)
Why was Mohenjo-Daro abandoned?

The Indus Civilization collapsed around 2000 BC Mohenjo-Daro – discovered in 1922 – was a center of  trade and manufacture built on two gigantic artificial mounds; a higher mound the so-called citadel or acropolis overlooked the lower mound considered as residential with hundreds of dwelling houses, larger  buildings and a regular system of streets.

Mohenjo-Daro’s infrastructute displaced very advanced techniques focused on water supply and effluent disposal  systems, extremely important for public health.This prehistoric society valued good roads, clean fresh water and a system of law.

Probably the most impressive building was a bath-house having absolutely no equal in cities until  the Roman period. It was covered with a pool measuring 40 feet by 23 feet, with a steam-bath and a  hot-air heating system.

When the city flourished, fresh water was supplied by a network of over 700 unique wells for drinking water,  constructed in form of cylindrical shafts several meters deep.

 

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Mohenjo-Daro’s citizens used them long before Egypt and Mesopotamia, where water was still fetched  from rivers to be stored in cisterns.

The city’s engineers and masons also built bathrooms in every home while polishing the tiles of its grand  ritual bath to a highly burnished waterproof glaze.

Unique water supply from wells was integrated with a drainage system. Waste water along with sewage from houses was channeled into a complex system of drains running along and below the streets.

The drains had removable covers to give access for cleaning. Cesspools and soakaway pots were commonly used.                                                                                    and each bedroom had running water and a bathroom and lavatory.

The municipal sewerage was so efficient that according to British engineers, they could do no better at the present day.

Some interesting terracotta female figurines of the so called “mother goddess” have been discovered at Mohenjo-Daro.

One of these figurines, dated to approximately 3000 BC, depicts a woman wearing extremely short mini skirt,  a necklace and belt and only her face is rather strange and very unusual.

Was she looking like this, when this clay figurine was formed? Was it her real appearance?

If this was the case, one can say that the civilization of Mohenjo Daro had a lot in common with our modern society.

Among more than 40,000 artefacts unearthed in Mohenjo-Daro, there are hand-carved chess pieces,  perfectly clay toy animals, and clay urns, platters and ovens that highlight a culinary culture and stone  weights and measures.

When the 5,000-year-old ruins of the city were first unearthed, it was one of the greatest archaeological discoveries. Today Mohenjo-Daro is in danger to be completely destroyed and forgotten.

According to archaeologists, Mohenjo-Daro will most probably disappear within 20 years without an urgent rescue plan. If this happens, an important and valuable piece of our history will be lost.

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