Burial Practices in Ancient India- A Study in the Eschatological Beliefs of Early Man as Revealed by Archaeological Sources (An Old and Rare Book)

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Item Code: NAZ210
Publisher: PRITHIVI PRAKASHAN
Author: Purushottam Singh
Language: English
Edition: 1970
Pages: 204 (Throughout B/W Illustrations)
Cover: HARDCOVER
Other Details 10.00 X 7.50 inch
Weight 680 gm
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Book Description
Foreword
During the last quarter century (1945-70) Indian Archaeology witnessed a phenomenal progress. Universities and Research Institutes, besides the State and Central Departments of Archaeology, carried out small and large excavations and explorations, particularly in a field that had been neglected, viz. the period before definite evidence about writing is available in India. Unfortunately, much of this is not fully published, while only brief accounts have appeared in the Indian Archaeology-a Review. However, it was necessary, that before fresh, extensive work is carried out, the existing knowledge should be systematised and reviewed. Such a step alone would make the future lines of work clear and definite. And this is what Dr. Purushottam Singh has attempted in his book on .13nrial Practices in Ancient India. Rightly he has projected this knowledge against the work done or views expressed in India and abroad, before 1945 and after on this subject. He has then divided the subject period wise and State wise, because the evidence is not of a uniform nature; for instance much more information is available about Western and Southern India than the Central and Eastern. The result is a clear picture of our state of knowledge about the burial practices right from the Late Stone Age (c. 2500 B. C.) up to the advent of the Iron Age (c. 500 B. C.) and its persistence in South India as late as 600 A. D.

In the last but one chapter, Purushottam Singh has reviewed the practice regarding the disposal of the dead among the preliterates or the aborigines. For it is still an unsolved problem of Indian Archaeology, who the author: of these Late Stone Age, Chalcolithic and even the Megalithic Cultures are. Such a review would prove extremely useful for planning explorations and excavations in the tribal areas. For it is certain that one has to prove the antiquity of the existence of burial practices, as well as other aspects of life among the tribal themselves. And this cannot be done without proper excavations. Likewise it would be necessary to prove whether the megalithic-looking monuments, for example those near Poona (p. 121), are megaliths, and if so whether they are memorials to the dead, or true burial structures. This alone can prove their antiquity. Very recent work at Theur, near Poona, has shown that what was regarded as a megalithic monument was not so, and the structure whatever it be is not later than 1200 B. C. at the most. Thus the pressing need, as Purushottam Singh has correctly realised, is for more and planned regional curveys and excavations, like the one which Dr. Sundara carried out for the Northern Karnataka on behalf of the Deccan College. In a country like India there are certainly cultural and chronological differences, but these cannot be assumed without a proper investigation. When such investigations are undertaken Dr. Purushottam Singh's book would need revision, as he very modestly says. Meanwhile, the scholars should be grateful to Purushottam Singh for an exhaustive, critical and up-to-date review of the existing evidence for the burial practices in pre- and proto-historic India.

Preface
Of all the crises in man's life, the crisis of death is most disturbing and devastating. This provokes a violent outburst of complex and mutually contradictory emotions like love and fear, affection and aversion, attraction and repulsion, hcrror and dread of the corpse and love and affection towards the departed soul. These contradictory emotions of the human mind are reflected in his attempts to preserve the dead body by some process of mummification on the one hand and to annihilate it completely by other processes like cremation and xecarnation etc. on the other. This has led the humanity to observe certain taboos and practise some mortuary rituals. In the first case, the bodily relics of the deceased are interred in graves of different types and, as Lewis Mumford has remarked, ' in the uneasy life of primitive man the dead were the first to have a permanent dwelling place. And perhaps, the first form of the city is the cemetery-the city of the dead.' (City Invincible, Chicago, 1960, pp. 226-227.) This attempt of man to provide the dead with permanent dwelling places has given us some of the finest architectural pieces of the world like the Pyramids of Egypt and the Ta) Mahal of India.

The study of graves is important not only to the archaeologist but to others like anthropologists and social and religious historians alike. Thus while the archaeologist studies the contents of the grave to reconstruct the man's past-in fact the existence of some of the cultures is known by their cemeteries alone-the anthropologist studies the skeletal remains and reconstructs the past races. The social historian classifies the contents of the graves to reconstruct the contemporary social structure. In fact, the Marxist prehistorians have tried to show that changes in funerary ritual are mainly the ideological reflection of changes in kinship organisation and property relations. Thus communal burials in collective tombs would correspond to an economy in which the basic means of production are owned communally by a clan and individual interment would be appropriate to pastoral patriarchal societies (V. Gordon Childe, Progress and Archaeology, pp. 74-75).

The study of the grave-goods throws valuable light on other aspects also. The grave-goods indicate, apart from other things like the material culture and technological advancement of a society, social stratification and the division of labour between either sex. Such a study gives an idea of the economy, mode of living and dress and ornaments of the preliterate societies which have left us little or no historical records. However, in the present dissertation, only the eschatological beliefs of early man have been studied.

The present work forms the thesis submitted to the Banaras Hindu University in 1968 for the degree of Ph.D. My grateful thanks are due to Professor A. K. Narain for supervising this work and for other helps. Dr. K. K. Sinha and Professor S. B. Deo kindly read the type-script and offered valuable suggestions. I am also indebted to Shri B. K. Thapar with whom I discussed several problems. To Professor H. D. Sankalia we are greatly obliged for writing a Foreward to the work at a very short notice. Thanks are also due to Shri P. K. Agrawala, the editor of IC. Series of which the work is No. XVII. We are to thank Shri O. P. Khaneja for preparing the photographs and Shri L. Mishra for drawing the maps.

Introduction
The present work deals with burial practices in ancient India as recorded from the archaeological evidences. Several modes of the disposal of the dead have been prevalent in different sections of the humanity from time to time. They include complete inhumation in the graves, cave burial, burial in long or round barrows, preservation of tissues by some process of mummification, and cremation. Besides, some rare methods of the disposal of the dead like throwing the body into the sea, setting it adrift in a canoe, removing the flesh from the bones, disposing it of by eating it, leaving the dead body for the animals to devour, expo-sure of the corpse on a raised platform and the subsequent burial of selected long bones and the skull have also been recorded. So far as India is concerned, inhumation, cremation and post-excarnation burial were the predominant modes of the disposal of the dead. Of these, the former mode in all likelihood had an earlier beginning. The last-named burial was more current in the early Iron Age as it has been recorded from the thousands of megalithic graves of South India. Cremation which is the prevalent mode among the Hindus of modern India must have its roots in remote past, but the very nature of this mode would preclude its susceptibility to archaeological investigations.

Archaeological researches for well over a century have brought to light different methods of the disposal of the dead from different parts of the world. While details regarding these methods can be had from the respective excavation reports, some general surveys of these customs have been presented by a number of scholars. Thus the burial customs of ancient Egyptians and their ideas regarding the next world were studied by John Garstang,2 A. Wiede-mann3 and Mercer4 respectively. Greek burial customs have been studied by Robinson.5 Similarly, the archaeological background of the Hebrew-Christian religion has been presented by Jack Finegan.6 The archaeological evidences obtained from different parts of the Old World have been summarized by V. Gordon Childe.

Book's Contents and Sample Pages








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