Clay was used for freight labels and some examples of these have survived after being fired hard by a warehouse fire. They had been stamped with stamp seals. It is possible that Indus valley people wrote on palm leaves or paper made from cotton, or birchbark, but no examples of this have survived.
Recently an palm leaf with seven lines in harappan language found on harappan site in afganistan ,
Fictional stories were usually told orally (by speech), but I recon people started writing for status and intelligence, because ages ago, only certain people were able to read and write - people who had spent their entire lives understanding writing. Perhaps they wrote to honour others - like the Rosetta stone, or warn others of danger, or even to entertain others with a story, like Beowulf, which was written down so it could be remembered.
The Priest-King, in Pakistan sometimes King-Priest, is a small male figure sculpted in steatite and excavated in Mohenjo-daro, a ruined Bronze Age city in Sindh, Pakistan, in 1925–26. It is "the most famous stone sculpture" of the Indus Valley civilization.
please write the answer btc
what is the percentage of people that read and write in china
the poemy ones
The evidence of thousands of Indus inscriptions and seals found over a wide range of south Asia indicates that many Indus valley people could read and write.
The children of Indus Valley were educated by scribes, people who could read and write for a living, and also taught by priests , who taught the religion. It is believed that only the wealthy families sent their child to school.
The children of Indus Valley were educated by scribes, people who could read and write for a living, and also taught by priests , who taught the religion. It is believed that only the wealthy families sent their child to school.
Indus River builders were able to plan and lay out elaborate cities with running water and sewers, and roads in a grid pattern. They could write and use stamp seals to put clay labels on cargo. Bronze, gold, silver, copper and tin were metals that they knew how to mine and use. Indus Valley people grew dates, melons, cotton, and rice, they weaved cloth, they raised animals such as cattle, sheep, goats and chickens, too.
The advantages of living in the Indus Valley Civilization; there was running water, drainage systems, people could read and write, there was trade with other cultures, there was a government, and domestic animals such as cattle, and crops such as rice and cotton. The disadvantages of living in the Indus Valley Civilization; monsoons caused floods, and in the dry season the people and animals were too hot and hungry and thirsty.
that they used clay to write and draw pictuers. and they had good wells
Recently an palm leaf with seven lines in harappan language found on harappan site in afganistan ,
they wrote on papyrus.They are found by the nile river
To write an 'autobiography of a valley you could:Decide on the Name of the Valley.Think about the valley's life, from "birth" (which means including its parents, The Mountains) to the present.Think about what this valley has witnessed: Does it have a river running through it? Was it the site of a battle? Are towns nestled in it?How has the valley "contributed" to others?What are the valley's strongest points? weakest?How does the valley view its future?Do valleys age?How does the valley "live" differently in old age than when young? For example, what is its soil like after generations of farming?Does the valley wish it could just "fold up" and cease to exist? Or does it wish its parents, The Mountains, would move away so the valley becomes wider and can hold more people and wildlife?When looking back over its "life" so far, what does the valley wish for its future and the future of its parents?Make sure to title your essay.Make sure your essay conveys an "autobiographical story".
The early civilization that used Sanskrit writing was the ancient Indus Valley civilization. Sanskrit, which is an ancient Indo-Aryan language, was used to write religious texts and literature in this civilization.
Let's go cruise the valley road. One more valley; and then we'll make camp.