Context:
The Tamil Nadu Department of Archaeology has declared five ‘menhir’ (single stone) and megalithic burial sites at Kodumanal in Erode district as protected monuments.
Findings at Kodumanal site:
- Potsherds containing names inscribed in Tamil-Brahmi script were found in a large number, apart from Roman silver coins, precious stones and quartz.
- These findings showed that an industrial and trade centre had existed here about 2,300 years ago.
About Menhir:
- Menhirs are the megalithic pillars having small or gigantic height planted vertically in the ground.
- They are commemorative pillars set up at or near a burial site.
- Menhirs are known by various names like Nilskal, Nintikal, Anekallu, Rakkasakal, Garbinikal and so on in South India.
- They are mentioned in ancient Tamil literature as nadukal.
About Megaliths:
- In prehistoric art, a megalith is a large, often undressed stone that has been used in the construction of various types of Neolithic, Chalcolithic or Bronze Age monuments, during the period 4500-1000 BCE.
- Also known as petroforms, these monuments can consist of just one stone (Menhir), most megalithic monuments consist of a number of stones, which are fitted together without the use of mortar or cement.
- The megalithic monuments of peninsular India, believed to have been erected in the Iron Age (1500 BC – 200 AD).
- Though megalithic sites are found all across India, they are concentrated mostly in peninsular India.
News Source: The Hindu
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