NEOLITHIC AGE: Agricultural Revolution and Settlements

April 25, 2024 1481 0

The Neolithic Age, often referred to as the New Stone Age, was a transformative period in human history marked by the shift from hunting and gathering to agriculture and settled life. This epoch laid the groundwork for the rise of complex societies and the dawn of civilization.

Characteristics

  • The period started around 10,000 BC and marked the beginning of agriculture and animal domestication.
  • Early evidence of Neolithic culture is found in the fertile region of Egypt and Mesopotamia, Indus region, Ganges valley of India and also in China.
Neolithic Revolution

  • The development of agriculture led to surplus food production, resulting in the rise of civilisations. 
  • Large villages came to exist, alongwith the development of pottery and the building of permanent residences.
  • Characteristic Tools: Polished stone, stone axes, microlith blades.

Neolithic Age

Neolithic Sites and their Characteristics

  • The Neolithic culture of north-western India is the earliest to have evidence of plant and animal domestication inIndia. 
  • Neolithic sites in Northwest India: Mehrgarh, Rana Ghundai, Sarai Kala and Jalilpur. 
  • Thesesites are now situated in Pakistan.
  •  Mehrgarh has produced evidence of early Neolithic times, dating to 7000 BC. Wheat and Barley were cultivated and sheep, goat and cattle were domesticated. This culture preceded the Indus Civilisation.
  • 1st cultural phase (7000-5500 BC) of Mehrgarh – cultivated crops and domesticated animals, but did not use pottery.
    • They cultivated six-row barley, emmer and einkorn wheat, jujube, ilanthai, and dates.
    • They were semi-nomadic, pastoral groups, built their houses with mud and buried the dead. 
    • They used sea shells, limestone, turquoise, lapis lazuli, and sandstone ornaments.
  • 2nd cultural phase (5500-4800 BC) and 3rd phase (4800-3500 BC) of Mehergarh 
    • They practised long-distance trade (revealed by Lapis Lazuli, which is available only in Badakshan).
    • Evidence for pottery during these periods. 
    • Terracotta figurines and glazed faience beads have been found.

Early Dentistry in the Neolithic Mehrgarh

  • From the Neolithic period, people began to eat ground grain and cooked food, which caused dental and other health problems. 
  • The earliest evidence for drilling human tooth (of a living person) has been found at Mehrgarh. It is seen as a prelude to dentistry.
Valley of Kashmir

  • Burzahom, an important site of this culture, provides evidence for the Megalithic and Early Historic Periods.
  • People lived in pit dwellings to escape the cold weather. The houses were oval in shape, wide at the bottom and narrow at the top. 
  • They used bone & stone tools. There was evidence of menhirs (standing stone) and the use of redware pottery and metal objects. They used copper arrowheads. 
  • The people practised agriculture and domesticated animals.
  • Seeds of wheat, barley, common pea and lentil have been recovered from the excavations. The use of lentils suggests that they had contacts with Central Asia.
  • They were contemporary to Harappa civilization and traded with them.
  • Two phases of Neolithic culture have been identified. They are termed aceramic and ceramic phases. Aceramic phase did not have evidence of ceramics. The ceramic phase shows evidence of pottery.
  • They also used black ware pottery, beads of agate and carnelian and painted pottery
  • A burial site produced wild dog bone and antler horn. An engraving of a hunting scene is depicted on a stone with a dog and sun.
Ganges Valley and Central India

  • Lehuradeva, Chopani Munda, Koldiwa and Mahagara in Uttar Pradesh; Chirand and Senuwar in Bihar are major sites.
  • The site of Lehuradeva (Uttar Pradesh) has produced early evidence of rice cultivation dated to 6500 BC.
  • These sites also have evidence of pottery and plant and animal domestication. These sites are characterised by cord-marked pottery.
  • Evidence for the cultivation of hulled and six-rowed barley, several types of wheat, rice, pea, green gram, and gram/chicken pea, mustard, flax/linseed and jackfruit have been found.
  • Sheep, goat and cattle bones have been found besides bones of wild animals.
East India

  • The Neolithic sites are found at many sites in Bihar and West Bengal.
  • Birbhanpur, Chirand, Kuchai, Golbaisasan, and Sankarjang are important sites.
  • Tools like pointed butt, celts, chisel and shouldered axes have been found.
South India (Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and the North-western part of Tamil Nadu)

  • Tools used include stone axes and blades.
  • Fire-baked earthen figurines are found suggesting cattle keeping.
  • These sites have ash mounds in the centre with settlements around them. Utnur and Palvoy in Andhra Pradesh and Kodekal, Kupgal and Budihal in Karnataka feature ash mound sites.
  • These sites are found near the granite hills with water sources. 
  • These sites are found in the river valleys of Godavari, Krishna, Pennaru, Tungabhadra and Kaveri. 
  • Major sites include:
    • Karnataka: Sanganakallu, Tekkalakota, Brahmagiri, Maski, Piklihal, Watkal, Hemmige and Hallur; 
    • Andhra Pradesh: Nagarjunakonda, Ramapuram, and Veerapuram;
    • Tamil Nadu: Paiyyampalli.
North East India (Assam and Garo Hills)

  • The culture dates from 2500-1500 BC.
  • Tools like shouldered axes and splayed celts were found at the sites in Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh.
  • Daojali Hading and Sarutaru are important sites bearing evidence for shifting cultivation.
  • The cultivation of yams and taro, building stone and wooden memorials for the dead, and the presence of Austro-Asiatic languages are the marked features of this region.
  • Rice cultivation in the sixth millennium BC was found in northern Vindhya spurs, Mirzapur, Allahabad, and Balochistan, suggesting ancient agriculture.
  • The later Neolithic settlers were agriculturists who lived in circular or rectangular houses made of mud and reed, leading a settled life. 
    • Agricultural produce includes Ragi and horse gram (kulathi). 
  • Hand-made pottery is found in the early stages. Later, they used foot wheels to turn up pots.

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On the northern spurs of the Vindhyas in the Belan Valley all three phases of the Palaeolithic, followed by the Mesolithic and Neolithic phases, have been found in sequence.

 

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Conclusion

  • The Neolithic Age represented a profound shift in human lifestyles, sparking the Agricultural Revolution and paving the way for the emergence of civilization. 
    • Through the domestication of plants and animals, humans forged a new relationship with the environment, leading to advancements in technology, social organization, and cultural expression. 
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