The artefacts unearthed reveal an industrial complex that existed around fourth century BCE
One of the two cist burial sites excavated at Kodumanal in Erode district. Photo: K. Ananthan |
Kodumanal in Erode district never stops yielding.
Renewed archaeological excavation in the village in April and May this
year by the Department of History, Pondicherry University, has yielded a
bonanza again. The artefacts unearthed from four trenches in the
habitational mound have revealed an industrial complex that existed
around fourth century BCE. The industries in the complex made iron and
steel, textiles, bangles out of conch-shells and thousands of exquisite
beads from semi-precious stones such as sapphire, beryl, quartz,
lapis-lazuli, agate, onyx, carnelian and black-cat eye, and ivory.
Terracotta spindle whorls for spinning cotton and a thin gold wire were
found in the complex, which has also thrown up 130 potsherds with
Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions, including 30 with Tamil-Brahmi words.
All of them are personal names. They include ‘Saba Magadhai Bammadhan,'
‘Saathan,' ‘Visaki,' ‘Siligan,' ‘Uranan' and ‘Tissan.' A prized artefact
is a big pot with a superbly etched Tamil-Brahmi script in big letters
reading, ‘Samban Sumanan.'
Industrial site
K. Rajan, Professor of History, Pondicherry University, who was director
of excavation at Kodumanal, said: “Nowhere else do we come across such
an industrial complex. The uniqueness of Kodumanal is that it was
entirely an industrial site with a minimum agricultural activity. Though
several Tamil Sangam age sites such as Korkai, Poompuhar, Karur,
Uraiyur, Azhagankulam and Porunthal have been excavated so far, none has
yielded so much of Tamil-Brahmi-inscribed potsherds as Kodumanal.”
He estimated that these inscriptions, especially the ‘Samban Sumanan'
script, belonged to the third century and second century BCE.
While the big pot with ‘Samban Sumanan' was found at the second level of
one of the four trenches, the first level yielded a pot with the
Tamil-Brahmi word ‘Samban.' Several potsherds had either the name
‘Samban' or ‘Sumanan.' Obviously, ‘Samban' was the father and ‘Sumanan'
the son. The industrial complex could have belonged to Samban's family,
Mr. Rajan said.
Dr. Rajan and his team also excavated two megalithic graves this season
at Kodumanal, which revealed cist-burials. The first grave has a cairn
circle (rocks placed in the form of a circle) on the surface, entombing a
double cist below. The cists are box-like structures of granite slabs;
these chambers have granite slabs as roofs. The first grave has an outer
circle of stone slabs planted vertically in the earth. Some of these
stone slabs were actually tall meinheirs, which have been destroyed. The
inner circle is a wall-like structure. Below are two cists with
trapezium-shaped port-holes scooped out of their front slabs. The two
cists have a common passage. The cists contained disintegrated human
bones. The funerary objects found inside are a four-legged jar, ring
stand, dish-on-stand, iron objects and etched or plain carnelian beads.
Broken pots and bowls lay outside the cists.
The second grave has a main cist, and two subsidiary cists. Each has a
capstone roof. While the main cist was of a transepted variety, the
others, erected on either side of the main cist, were simple ones. There
was a cairn-circle on top to mark the graves below, but the stones are
no longer there. Interestingly, one of the cists, facing south, has a
port-hole in the shape of a key-hole. The other two cists have circular
and trapezium-shaped portholes. Inside the cists were button and
barrel-shaped carnelian beads and smoky quartz beads.
“Wherever there are a main cist and subsidiary cists, the south-facing
cist will always have a port-hole looking like a key-hole. Inside the
chamber of the key-holed cist, there will always be a bunch of
arrow-heads. We do not know why,” Dr. Rajan said. True enough, there
were arrow-heads in this cist.
What is remarkable about the industrial complex is that it has a
water-channel in it. Water was used for wetting quartz, agate,
lapis-lazuli, sapphire and beryl before they were cut and made into tiny
beads with holes. Sapphire came from Sivanmalai and Perumalmalai, beryl
from Padiyur and iron ore from Chennimalai, all located within 15 km
from Kodumanal. A quartz mine exits five km from Kodumanal. While
carnelian and agate came from Maharashtra, lapis-lazuli came from
Afghanistan. “Kodumanal lies on the ancient trade route that connects
the Chera capital of Karur [Vanji] in the east with the famous Chera
port of Muciri (the present day Pattnam in Kerala where excavation is
under way) in the west. Roman coins in hoards and singles have been
found in several sites in this region. Beads made at Kodumanal were
exported,” Dr. Rajan said.
Tamil University, Thanjavur, in collaboration with Madras University and
the Tamil Nadu Department of Archaeology, dug 48 trenches and exposed
13 megalithic graves at Kodumanal in 1985, 1986, 1989 and 1990, with Y.
Subbarayalu as director of excavation and Dr. Rajan actively associating
himself with him. The Department of Archaeology dug 15 trenches and
exposed three graves in 1998 and 1999.
Dr. Rajan said: “Kodumanal is one of the major horizontal excavations
done so far in Tamil Nadu. It is one of the sites in India where the
highest number of inscribed potsherds have been found. The highest
number of graves was opened here. The presence of pit-burial with
skeletons in different postures, urn burials and chamber tombs of
different types suggests that multi-ethnic groups lived at Kodumanal.
The availability of Prakrit words such as ‘Tissan' and ‘Visaki' in
Tamil-Brahmi scripts suggests that this industrial-cum-trade centre had
cultural and trade contacts with northern parts of India.”
Thanks
- The Hindu (CHENNAI,
May 28, 2012)
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