KEEZHADI - ART & CULTURE

News: Keezhadi excavations show people thrived producing textiles and making jewellery

 

What's in the news?

       From among the excavations of the Keezhadi archaeological site, situated 13 km from Madurai, ivory chess pieces, ivory dice and terracotta hopscotch stones were found.

 

Key takeaways:

       The excavations had shown brick structures, ring wells, drainage systems and furnaces belonging to the Sangam age. 

       The people of those times thrived producing textiles, making jewellery using terracotta and semi-precious stones, made terracotta pottery, drilled ivory, made iron implements and used bricks made in kilns for many centuries.

 

Go back to basics:

Keezhadi Civilisation:

       It is also referred to as the Vaigai civilization, named after a nearby river Vaigai.

    Came from IVC - Discoveries at Keezhadi suggest that the people who lived there may have travelled south from the Harappan or Indus Valley civilization (as it declined) to start new lives.

       The civilization was an indigenous, well developed self-sustaining urban culture with an industry and Tamil-Brahmi script, indicating that the people of that era were highly literate.

       Evidence of ancient industrial production are spinning and weaving tools, cloth dyeing operations, brick kilns, and ceramic workshops.

       Keezhadi has added greatly to the credibility of Sangam Literature.

 

Second urbanization:

       Discoveries date to around 500 B.C., when an agricultural surplus allowed people to build urban centers in what’s known as the subcontinent’s “second urbanization.”

       The name reflects a contrast with the much earlier “first urbanization” of the Indus Valley civilization that began 2500 BCE.

       Previously, it was believed that the second urbanization happened along the Central Ganges Plain in northern India.

       But new evidence suggests a similar phenomenon occurred in the south as well.

 

Religion:

       An interesting feature of Keezhadi is that it has not revealed any signs of religious worship in all the five rounds.

 

Economy:

       The fertile nature of the area and cattle rearing played a crucial role in its evolution paving the way for excess production of rice and sea trading of the inhabitants.