A little about MEGALITHS of INDIA
Megaliths of Burjahom. Kashmir. North India |
Birbir. Jharkhand |
That India is a treasure house of megaliths is not known to many. Although from Kashmir to Kerala and from Itanagar to Gandhinagar India is filled with primitive megaliths yet they have been denied recognition as a source of our prehistory perhaps owing to their tribal origin.
As because these ancient monuments are found in almost in the entire expanse of our country, they therefore are our truest archaeological heritage.
A megalith is a grave and a memorial of the dead. The term 'megalith' stems from the confluence of two Greek words 'mega' meaning 'big' and 'lithos' meaning, 'stones'. 'Megalith' therefore means 'big or large stones'. Tribes of India such as the Mundas, Sabaras, Oraons, Asurs, Hos, Gadabas, Maria Gonds, Maravars, Kacharis, Bhils, Garos, Angami Nagas, Bondos, and Garos etc have been building various megalithic architectures since Neolithic/Iron/Chalolithic Ages.
Megaliths have various shapes and forms. Therefore in accordance to their architectures they too have varied names in archaeology such as dolmen, cairn, stone circle, menhir, tumuli, barrow, cromlech, center stone etc. Why this diversity, there is no appropriate answere to this. The variety may have for different tribes, for dead people according to their hierchy, for different causes of death.
A dolmen can have varied shapes but primarily it will have a center stone placed on four or more stones. The center stones could be gargantuan and seem impossible to have been raised by humans therefore they may pass off as natural creations.
But such enormous stones were placed by the primitive folks, we do not have any idea how; the science may have been lost with time. But these dolmens of the later ages saw a little alteration with the coming of flat table-top center stones placed on erect stone stands. Such dolmens could be seen from Shillong to Jharkhand to Kerala. The primitive dolmens were chiefly memorials raised in memory of the chieftain or perhaps a dead priest.
Dolmens in places like Jhakrkhand where there is a continued tradition of megalithism are known locally in austric Mundari as sasandiri . Earlier sasandiris were family vaults having single portholes through which the bones of the later dead were inserted after their cremation. However this custom is fading with dolmens becoming smaller in size and they have ceased to be burials but perform as memorials like in antiquity.
The custom of primary and secondary burials were among many tribes in ancient times and megaliths were raised after the second burial. In excavations often domesticated animals have been revealed buried with humans. Domesticated dogs, horses and even goats too have been found to have received joint or individual burials.
Apart from scarce mentions in the Upanishads, few Dravidian texts and those of the Sangam literature and in the Buddhist Tripitaka, megaliths by and large is not found mentioned in the Brahmanical Sanskrit texts, perhaps for the reason that megaliths were of non Aryan aboriginal origin.
Megaliths were first discovered by the British. Although possibly in 1823 one J.Babington found the Malabar megaliths and brought to light the first megaliths of India but Colin Mackenjie should be credited to have observed the first megaliths in India. The first excavation was conducted by Captain Meadows Taylor who excavated the Sorepur megaliths in 1853. Thereafter the Britishers took sincere efforts to highlight tribal megaliths by writing about them and excavating them.
Chronology : Modern day research has pushed Indian megalithism to early Iron /Neolithic ages. The oldest megaliths till date is perhaps the megalithic urns found from the megalithic graves of Mangdu in kollam Talluk in Kerala which .
The Remains from Excavations :
The burials are of a wide variety as stone lined pits with skeletal remains, terracotta sarcophagi with the dead placed within, urns comprising the skeletal etc. The pits could be having urns with oblong, spit circles or even have fractional burial etc. The dolmenoid cists may have more than one chamber with or without portholes or cists with portholes with a small cist inside.
Skeletal remains also show that many of the dead were buried as one lies within the mother's womb.
Various ritualistic pottery, bangles, beads, ornaments and iron implements have been found from these graves as funerary offerings.
i) Pottery : Black and red ware (BRW), black ware, red ware, grey/black wares, micaceous ware, Russet coated ware have been unearthed from megaliths.These ceramics were also of various shapes.
Few tombs have also revealed graffiti on the pottery. Many have incised designs. The significant icons on the megalithic pottery are horizontal lines, diagonals, triangles, zigzags, spirals, semi circles, loops and many a time animal motifs too have been found on the pottery surfaces. Many ceramics were wheel made, thread marks are also conspicuous.
The pottery assemblage could be from Neolithic/Chalcolithic to Iron ages.
i) Iron implements: Iron has always been associated with megaliths. The graves have revealed iron implements as daggers, arrowheads, lances, tridents, lamps, chisels, sickles, hoes, nails, swords, cooking utensils and ploughs etc.
Asurs, the primitive iron smelting tribe of Jharkhand are a megalithic lot themselves. Whether or not they had invented iron smelting is a dispute among the scholars, but iron slags have been found around many primitive megaliths suggesting the presence of the iron smelting tribes around these primitive temples.
Menhirs or the standing stones are memorials in many states as Chattisgarh, North- East, Jharkhand etc.
Many are seen to have ornamented with cupules. To know more on these cupmarks on the megaliths of India go to: megalithindia.in/p/cupmarks-cupmarks-on-natural-rock-near.html
Modern day research have begun to show that megaliths were not raised only for funerary reasons as normally believed to be but they have also been found to perform as boundary markers, memorials of significant events and even for astronomical purposes to perform as observatories and as calendars.
ASTRONOMY :
Inside a cist burial in Kerala. Credit: Sashi Dharan |
Megaliths have various shapes and forms. Therefore in accordance to their architectures they too have varied names in archaeology such as dolmen, cairn, stone circle, menhir, tumuli, barrow, cromlech, center stone etc. Why this diversity, there is no appropriate answere to this. The variety may have for different tribes, for dead people according to their hierchy, for different causes of death.
A dolmen can have varied shapes but primarily it will have a center stone placed on four or more stones. The center stones could be gargantuan and seem impossible to have been raised by humans therefore they may pass off as natural creations.
A Munda sasandiri dolmen with a table top capstone in Chkahatu. Jharkhand. |
But such enormous stones were placed by the primitive folks, we do not have any idea how; the science may have been lost with time. But these dolmens of the later ages saw a little alteration with the coming of flat table-top center stones placed on erect stone stands. Such dolmens could be seen from Shillong to Jharkhand to Kerala. The primitive dolmens were chiefly memorials raised in memory of the chieftain or perhaps a dead priest.
A dolmen with porthole. Karnataka. Credit: Moti Shem Tov. |
Megaliths of Nartiang. Shillong. Meghalaya. NE India. |
Commemorative menhirs. Chaibasa. Jharkhand |
Apart from scarce mentions in the Upanishads, few Dravidian texts and those of the Sangam literature and in the Buddhist Tripitaka, megaliths by and large is not found mentioned in the Brahmanical Sanskrit texts, perhaps for the reason that megaliths were of non Aryan aboriginal origin.
Megaliths were first discovered by the British. Although possibly in 1823 one J.Babington found the Malabar megaliths and brought to light the first megaliths of India but Colin Mackenjie should be credited to have observed the first megaliths in India. The first excavation was conducted by Captain Meadows Taylor who excavated the Sorepur megaliths in 1853. Thereafter the Britishers took sincere efforts to highlight tribal megaliths by writing about them and excavating them.
Chronology : Modern day research has pushed Indian megalithism to early Iron /Neolithic ages. The oldest megaliths till date is perhaps the megalithic urns found from the megalithic graves of Mangdu in kollam Talluk in Kerala which .
The Remains from Excavations :
The burials are of a wide variety as stone lined pits with skeletal remains, terracotta sarcophagi with the dead placed within, urns comprising the skeletal etc. The pits could be having urns with oblong, spit circles or even have fractional burial etc. The dolmenoid cists may have more than one chamber with or without portholes or cists with portholes with a small cist inside.
A burial from Sanana. Uttrakhand. Credit: ASI |
An Excavated cist burial with port holes. Credit: bharatkalyan.blogspot.com |
Various ritualistic pottery, bangles, beads, ornaments and iron implements have been found from these graves as funerary offerings.
i) Pottery : Black and red ware (BRW), black ware, red ware, grey/black wares, micaceous ware, Russet coated ware have been unearthed from megaliths.These ceramics were also of various shapes.
Various pottery from megalith |
The pottery assemblage could be from Neolithic/Chalcolithic to Iron ages.
i) Iron implements: Iron has always been associated with megaliths. The graves have revealed iron implements as daggers, arrowheads, lances, tridents, lamps, chisels, sickles, hoes, nails, swords, cooking utensils and ploughs etc.
Asurs, the primitive iron smelting tribe of Jharkhand are a megalithic lot themselves. Whether or not they had invented iron smelting is a dispute among the scholars, but iron slags have been found around many primitive megaliths suggesting the presence of the iron smelting tribes around these primitive temples.
Menhirs or the standing stones are memorials in many states as Chattisgarh, North- East, Jharkhand etc.
Many are seen to have ornamented with cupules. To know more on these cupmarks on the megaliths of India go to: megalithindia.in/p/cupmarks-cupmarks-on-natural-rock-near.html
ASTRONOMY :
Many megaliths around the country as the ones of Burjhaom in Kashmir, Asota in Pakistan, Deosa, Hanamsagar etc were not sepulchral tombs as no burials were found in them. Quite a few of these primitive shrines confirmed the presence of profound sciences prevalent during this civilization .
No megaliths is raised with alignments. Many megaliths as the dolmens have either a North-South or an East-West orientations. Megaliths like that of Hanamsagar, Vibhuthihalli, Rola, Punkri Burwadih have been to be aligned to significant sunrises and sets of the equinoxes and the solstices of other significant dates. Menhirs in north Jharkhand is oriented the mid-winter sunrises.
Megaliths of Nilurallu. Andra Pradesh is a non-sepulchral megalithic complex, believed to have astronomical implications. |
People gather at Punkri Burwadih to view the sunrise on Equinox mornings |
The sunrise finally rises from between the "V" of the two menhirs on the equinox mornigs |
Megaliths are the most beautiful creation of our primitive humanity.
Come let us celebrate megaliths.
Comments
Sandip Kashayap
Juliette Hudson
My interest in megaliths began in my childhood, esp after reading "The World's Last Mysteries" from Reader's Digest, and of late, after reading "Underworld" by the controversial author Graham Hancock. I was intrigued by the line of thinking and ideas proposed in these books, and wondered whether there would be any such megalithic structures in India. And a google search for Indian Megaliths led me to this site. what is needed is a list, including accurate GPS coordinates and a small accompanying sketch, if possible, by visitors to the sites, and on Google Earth by armchair-bound enthusiasts. The picture of the AP-based megalith under the electric pylons was quite disturbing. Its only the weight of these stones that has prevented our citizens from pilfering them for the stones, as in the case of so many other archaeological monuments in the sub-continent, including famous ones like Harappa...