3. Many toys, such as dolls and dice made of teracotta, have been found in Harappan sites. What can we learn about the Harappans from these toys?
Answers
Answer:
The most important [ancient Indus] crafts were in the fields of textiles, ceramic manufacturing, stone carving, household artefacts such as razors, bowls, cups, vases and spindles, and the production of jewelry, statuettes, figurines and children's toys, some of which were mechanical in function. This last category of goods is perhaps the most reliable evidence of the of the sophistication of this society" writes Burjor Avari (India: The Ancient Past, Routledge, London and New York, 2008, p. 46).
Mark Kenoyer writes that "terracotta toys found at most Indus settlements provide a glimpse of the pastimes that might have involved trained animals. Terracotta oxcarts with movable parts are perhaps the most common. Throughout the Indus Valley people still race oxcarts, especially in the regions around Mohenjo-daro where on-track betting ends with large sums of money or land changing hands." (Ancient Cities of the Indus Valley Civilization, p. 130.)
The excavator of Mohenjodaro and Chanhiyun Jo Daro [Chanhu-daro] Ernest Mackay wrote that "like the cities of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa, Chanhu-daro has produced a great variety of toys and playthings. Evidently the people of the Harappa period, like the Indians of today, paid attention to the enjoyment of the younger population; and, though the children of the ancient Indus valley often amused themselves by making their own simple toys in clay, they had many playthings that could have been made only by skilled craftsmen." He then opens the section Toy Carts
"To judge from the number of wheels and broken frames that have been found, toy carts were extremely popular playthings at Chanhu-daro. They seem to have been made as easily as they were broken, and fragments were brought in on most days by our workmen, though few of the frames could be put together or even satisfactorily restored; only two were found unbroken (Pl. LVIII, 19, 21, 22 [Image 4]). Indeed, the pieces were mostly so small that one could only suppose that once the toys were broken they were used for other games until they became so fragmentary that all interest in them was lost. Owing to their solid construction the wheels had rarely suffered much damage."
"The most unusual cart-frame was the type illustrated in Pl. LVIII, 21 [2]. It was strongly made of pottery with four vertically pierced holes on each side to take stakes of wood, exactly as in the little farm carts used in the present day in Middle and Upper Sindh. The four holes in the middle took longer stakes projecting from the underside of the frame in pairs, between which the easily removable axle of the wheels was held. There were also horizontal holes for the shaft through one end of the frame and the middle cross-piece. A reconstructed cart of this type is seen in Plate LVIII, 25 [4], though the wheels with it where not found with this actual frame. With a floor of matting or a ropework net, the open frames of these cars were well adapted for carrying agricultural produce, such as straw, hay, and the like, which the uprights would have kept in place. On No. 18 in Pl. LVIII a meshwork of lines of red paint indicates a net in position."
Ernest Mackay, Chanhu-daro Excavations 1935-36, p. 162.
1. Ox- or water buffalo-drawn cart with driver from Harappa
2. Reconstructed toy cart, Mackkay, Chanhu-daro, 1934, Plate LVIII
3. Terra cotta toy carts from the Harappan period site of Nausharo in Baluchistan.
4. Toys, Harappa Culture, Mackkay, Chanhu-daro, 1934, Plate LVIII
Answer:
We can learn they are so creative to do this
Explanation:
Pls mark as brilliant