The presence of well-planned cities accurately describes the Indus River Valley civilization. This civilization was established in about 2500 BC.
they were a very practical cilvilazation
very practical society.
They did not erect monuments.
the Indus river valley was also called the fertile crescent, it was a huge farming civilization for the people of Mesopotamia
When Sumerians invented irrigation systems.
the indus river made an agriculture and trade based economy possible
The Indus River made an agricultural and trade-based economy possible.
It was a merging of Aryan traditions with those of Indus valley civilizations.
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Well planned cities - APEX
a very practical society
Oldest civilization in
Hinduism was a blend of Aryan traditions and the culture of the cities of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa of the Indus Valley civilizations. The Indus Valley civilizations were already in decline when the Aryans arrived in northern India; however, they were still more advanced than the culture of the Aryans. The Aryans adopted many cultural characteristics of the people they conquered. Archaeological diggings at Mohenjo-daro and Harappa show that religious beliefs were among the Indus Valley cultural characteristics that found their way into Aryan culture.
The problem is not that less is known about the Indus River Valley civilization; the real problem is that much of what we are told by academics about this culture is untrue. We are told that horses, Sanskrit and wheels did not exist in India/Pakistan during Indus valley times, but the truth is that every level of Harappa (and many other IVC sites) have yielded bones of true horses (Equus caballus) verified by the biologist Sandor Bokonyi. Toy oxcarts with wheels have been found at several IVC sites. As for Sanskrit and Prakrit, Indus seals deciphered as long ago as 2010 have been found to encode such common Sanskrit names as Ravi, Mani, Aprian, and so forth. See the Indus Script Dictionary page on Facebook for more details.