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From Indus Valley to coastal Tamil Nadu
Strong resemblances between graffiti symbols in
Tamil Nadu and the Indus script

Continuity of tradition: Megalithic pots with
arrow-work graffiti found at Sembiankandiyur
village in Nagapattinam district.
CHENNAI: In recent excavations in Nagapattinam
district in Tamil Nadu, megalithic pottery with
graffiti symbols that have a strong resemblance
to a sign in the Indus script have been found.
Indus script expert Iravatham Mahadevan says
that what is striking about the arrow-mark
graffiti on the megalithic pottery found at
Sembiyankandiyur and Melaperumpallam villages is
that they are always incised twice and together,
just as they are in the Indus script.
In all the three pots, the arrow-like symbol
appeared two times each and next to each other.
The Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department found
these pots during excavations at
Sembiyankandiyur between February and April 2008
after a school teacher, V. Shanmuganathan,
unearthed a polished neolithic axe from the
garden of his house at Sembiyankandiyur in 2006.
The axe had engravings that resembled the Indus
script.
In May 2007, the Department found several pots
at Melaperumpallam near Poompuhar during a trial
excavation. Some of these had the same
arrow-like symbol occurring twice on them, and
always adjacent to each other.
According to Mr. Mahadevan, seals unearthed at
Mohenjodaro (now in Pakistan) in the 1920s have
similar arrow-like signs that also occur twice
and always together. There are several seals
with the Indus script and engravings of a bull
or a unicorn where the arrow-like sign always
occurs in pairs.
While the megalithic/Iron Age pottery in Tamil
Nadu is datable between the third century B.C.
and third century A.D., the Indus script belongs
to the period 2600 B.C. to 1900 B.C. of the
mature Harappan period.
“In spite of the enormous gap in time and space
between the Indus civilisation sites and [the]
Tamil Nadu [sites], it appears that the
megalithic graffiti of Tamil Nadu have continued
the tradition of the Indus script,” Mr.
Mahadevan said.
“Despite a slight difference in the graphic of
the arrow-like symbol found on the megalithic
pottery of Tamil Nadu and the sign in the Indus
script, the fact is that they always occur in
double and together. So this requires further
study and investigation.”
In 1960, B.B. Lal, former Director General of
the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), wrote
a paper in the publication Ancient India brought
out by the ASI, with a photographic catalogue of
the megalithic and chalcolithic pottery with
graffiti marks and comparing them with the signs
of the Indus script. “Since then, many more
examples of pottery with graffiti marks that
have a strong resemblance to the Indus signs
have been found at Sanur near Tindivanam in
Tamil Nadu and Musiri (Pattanam) in Kerala,” Mr.
Mahadevan said.
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Particularly significant was a large megalithic
terracotta plate found at Sulur near Coimbatore,
with symbols closely resembling an inscription
on a tablet found at Harappa, which is also in
Pakistan now. Hence, “there is distinct
possibility that the megalithic symbols and the
corresponding signs of the Indus script have the
same significance and meaning,” he said. (The
terracotta plate from Sulur is on display at the
British Museum in London).
In his paper, “A megalithic pottery inscription
and a Harappa tablet: a case of extraordinary
resemblance,” published in the Journal of Tamil
Studies, Volume No.71, June 2007, Mr. Mahadevan
said: “I suggest that close resemblances are
possible only if the south Indian megalithic
script is related to the Indus script. Further,
the common sequence found on the Sulur dish and
the Harappa tablet may indicate that the
languages of the two inscriptions are related to
each other.”
Courtesy:
Hindu
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