INDIAN ARCHAEOLOGY 1955-56 —A REVIEW EDITED BY A. GHOSH Director General of Archaeology in India ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF INDIA GOVERNMENT OF INDIA NEW DELHI 1993 First Edition 1956 Reprint Edition 1993 ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF INDIA GOVERNMENT OF INDIA 1993 PRICE Rs. 175 Printed at BENGAL OFFSET WORKS, 335, Khajoor Road, Karol Bagh, New Delhi 110005 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS All the information contained in this annual Review—the third number in the series—is necessarily based on the material received by me from different sources. While the items relating to the Department of Archaeology, Government of India, were supplied by my colleagues in the Department, to whom my thanks are due, the remain- ing ones, considerable in number and value, were obtained from others who are officially connected with the archaeological activities in the country, viz. the directors of explorations and excavations, the heads of the archaeological organizations in the States where they exist and the chiefs of the leading museums. I am immensely grate- ful to them for having readily sent their reports and, in many cases, illustrations for in- clusion in the Review. In almost all such cases, the sources of the material are obvious, and have not been individually acknowledged. I am also deeply obliged to those colleagues of mine who have helped me in the preparation of the text and plates and have seen the publication through the press within a remarkably short time. The 22nd August I956 A. GHOSH CONTENTS PAGE 1. General ... ... ... ... ... … ... 1 2. Explorations and excavations ... ... ... ... ... 4 3. Epigraphy ... … ... ... ... ... 2.9 4. Preservation of monuments ... ... ... ... ... ... 34 5. Archaeological chemistry ... ... ... ... ... ... 53 6. Architectural survey of temples ... ... ... ... ... 58 7. Museums and exhibitions ... ... ... ... ... ... 59 8. Archaeological gardens ... ... ... ... ... ... 65 9. Treasure-trove ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 66 10. Other important discoveries ... ... ... ... ... … 68 11. Publications ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 75 INDIAN ARCHAEOLOGY 1955-56 -A REVIEW 1. GENERAL DURING the year under review, extensive regions were systematically explored and a large number of sites fruitfully excavated. Exploration in the central Indian plateau and the western Deccan brought to light Stone Age tools, which could be divided into three broad categories, chronological as well as typological—Series I and II, respectively representing the Lower and Upper Palaeolithic, and Series III, consisting of microliths. A fresh excavation at Lothal, in Kathiawad, which, along with Rangpur in the same region, has attained a definite place in Indian archaeology by its indicating the southern extension of the Harappa culture, produced further remnants of that culture, including steatite seals and terracotta seals and sealings with the typical Indus script and motifs. Other sites of the culture were identified by surface-exploration in Saurashtra and the northern parts of Bombay State. The chalcolithic culture of central India was further investigated at Nevasa on the Godavari, in continuation of last year's work, and at Nagda on the Chambal. At the former place, inter alia, valuable information was gathered about the burial- practices of the chalcolithic people, and at the latter, which marks the northernmost known limit of the culture, a vast range of painted pottery of diverse types, associated with a mass of mud and mud-brick structures, was found. A renewed excavation at Ahar, near Udaipur, showed that the culture represented by the black-and-red ware must have had a prolonged existence. The ware has now been found in different regions in seemingly different contexts: an intensive typological and technological study is now called for. Nevasa and Nagda contained deposits of the early historical period as well. Sites with remains of habitations exclusively or mainly of the historical period were also excavated. The limited work at Ujjain, the famous historical city, indicated its origin slightly before the introduction of the Northern Black Polished Ware at the site. At Kanauj, the deposit underlying the strata containing that Ware was flimsy but yielded the Painted Grey Ware and pottery associated with it. At Pataliputra, even within the limited areas available for digging, were obtained valuable stratigraphical evidence and antiquities, including the fragment of a probable Asokan pillar-capital. Forti- fications were identified round the medieval towns of Gangaikondacholapuram and Tanjore. 1 INDIAN ARCHAEOLOGY 1955-56 -A REVIEW New urn-field sites, pertaining to the megalithic culture of south India, were located in South Arcot and Tanjore Districts. As a step towards the completion of the exca- vation of diverse megalithic types in Chingleput District, three megaliths, each of a different type, were opened at Kunnattur. Of the Buddhist sites, the work in the Ghoshitarama area at Kausambi was wound up with the identification of as many as sixteen structural sub-periods in the monastic complex, covering a period of over a thousand years. The accelerated excavation at Nagarjunakonda uncovered additional Buddhist establishments, together with a few significant inscriptions and other relics, and an elaborate flight of steps leading down to the river. At Sirpur, two more monasteries, with interesting plans, were exposed. Casual explorations were sometimes no less important in results. Palaeoliths were recovered at Nandikeswar in District Bijapur, at Nagarjunakonda on the Krishna, at Banasandra in Mysore and at places near Poona, Mandasore in Malwa and Chittor in Rajasthan. Microliths were found to exist in the Nilgiris, in Poona District, at Dohad in Panchmahals District, in Kabra Pahar in Madhya Pradesh, at places in the Chambal valley, at Jhalrapatan and in the Berach and Gambhiri basins in Rajasthan and in Kutch. A shouldered stone axe was discovered in West Bengal. Painted red pottery of chalcolithic date was collected from sites along the Chambal. Addi- tional sites with the Painted Grey and Northern Black Polished Wares could be located in Uttar Pradesh, and the latter Ware was also found at two places, one each in Bihar and West Bengal. The abacus of a pillar-capital of Asoka was discovered at Basti. New rock-cut caves were noticed at Bhaja and Ajanta. Of the important epigraphical discoveries, the earliest was a damaged version of the Ninth Rock-edict of Asoka from Sopara, already known as the findspot of a fragment of the Eighth Rock-edict. A record engraved on a wooden ceiling-rib of a cave at Bhaja confirmed the date of the cave as the second century B.C. A few personages unknown before were introduced to history by new inscriptions, e.g. Arya- Visakhamitra, a second-century ruler of east India, and Satrudamana, a fifth-century chief of south-east India. An inscription recorded the pilgrimage of a prince of north Bengal to distant Elleswaram in Andhra land. The names of three unrecorded Chandella queens became known from copper-plates in the Bharat Kala Bhavan. The genealogy of the early Gajapati rulers of Orissa was revealed for the first time by two charters issued by the rulers of that dynasty. Of the Arabic and Persian inscriptions, one, from north Bihar, referred to the reign of Kaika'us, an early ruler of the Delhi Sultanate ignored by the Delhi chroniclers. That Chittorgarh had remained under Delhi till Tughluq times, after its initial conquest by 'Alau'd Din Khalji, was established by a record of Muhammad bin Tughluq. A Bihar Sharif inscription showed the recognition of the authority of the last Tughluq ruler in east India even when he had been losing ground in Delhi. The conquest of Bihar by the Lodis was referred to in another inscription from the same place. The sway of the Bengal Sultans over Bihar was attested by five of their records found at
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