Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T13:05:28.208Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Unhinging Śiva from the Indus civilization1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Extract

When books on Hinduism begin with a discussion of the Indus Valley civilization, one of the main postulates to illustrate the influence of the Indus upon Hinduism is that Śiva originates from this prehistoric civilization. The postulate is based on three types of objects found in the Mature Harappan context (c. 2500–1900 B.C.) which strongly evoke the personality of the great Hindu god. These objects are phallic emblems and baetyls, seals, and some sculptures. As to the first, conical shaped objects of stone, shell, faience, paste or clay were found in the Indus cities and an outpost, and these emblems are found to bear considerable resemblance to the later conventionalized Śivz-lingas. So too the Indus ring stones are likened to the later yonī-rings, objects representing the female organ and located at places holy to the Goddess (her pīṭhas). Regarding the second, a seal from Mohenjo-daro portraying a central figure with ithyphallic and tricephalic features, seated in yogic fashion and surrounded by four animals is identified as a proto-Śiva figure whose paśupati nature is already recognized. This famous seal, Mohenjo-daro seal No. 420, incorporates the most extensive range of symbols shared by a set of Indus seals, which are, on that account, all thought to exhibit proto-Śaivite symbolism. Lastly, two sculptures are suggestive evidence that the Indus region visualized something akin to the aspects that later comprise Śiva's nature. As such, a small, broken stone sculpture from Harappa is conjectured, when its missing limbs are reconstructed by modern scholarship, to assume a dancer's pose; in consequence the piece is understood as evocative of a Śiva Natarāja.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1984

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

2 See SirMarshall, John, Mohenjo-daro and the Indus civilization I, London, 1931, 46; Pl. XI and Fig. 1.Google Scholar

3 Marshall, , Mohenjo-daro III, Pl. 94, Fig. 11.Google Scholar

4 Kramrisch, Stella, The Presence of Śiva, Princeton, 1981, 12.Google Scholar

5 Marshall, , Mohenjo-daro I, Ch. V.Google Scholar

6 Marshall, , Mohenjo-daro I, 52–6.Google Scholar

7 Marshall, , Mohenjo-daro I, 52.Google Scholar

8 For a lengthier discussion and re-examination of these criteria, see my The so-called Proto-Śiva seal from Mohenjo-daro: an iconological assessment”, Archives of Asian Art, XXIX, 19751976, 4758.Google Scholar

9 See Srinivasan, , “So-called Proto-Śiva seal”, Fig. 4.Google Scholar

10 Srinivasan, , “So-called Proto-Śiva seal”, Figs. 2 and 3.Google Scholar

11 Dales, George F., “Excavations at Bakkot, Pakistan, 1973”, Journal of Field Archaeology, I, 1974, 322.Google Scholar I am grateful to George Dales for drawing my attention during the panel discussion to the comparative material at this site.

12 Dales, , “Balakot”, 14.Google Scholar

13 Dales, , “Balakot”, 1417.Google Scholar

14 See Porada, Edith (ed.), Corpus of ancient Near Eastern seals. The collection of the Pierpont Morgan library, Washington, D.C., 1948, I, Pl. XXX, No. 198E.Google Scholar

15 Porada, Edith, Mesopotamian art in cylinder seals of the Pierpont Morgan library, New York, 1947, 34.Google Scholar

16 e.g. Sullivan, H. P., “A re-examination of the religion of the Indus civilization”, History of Religions, IV, 1964, 120.Google Scholar

17 See Pusalker, A. D., Vedic Age, Vol. IGoogle Scholar in Majumdar, R. C. and Pusalker, A. D. (ed.), History and culture of the Indian people, London, 1951, 187.Google Scholar

18 See Srinivasan, , “So-called Proto-Śiva seal”, 55.Google Scholar

19 ibid., Fig. 12.

20 ibid., 56.

21 ibid., Hiltebeitel, Alf, “The Indus Valley ‘Proto-Śiva’, reexamined through reflections on the goddess, the buffalo, and the symbolism of vāhanas”, Anthropos, LXXIII, 1978, especially 769–70.Google Scholar

22 Srinivasan, , “So-called Proto-Śiva seal”.Google Scholar

23 ibid. Fig. 6.

24 For details see Srinivasan, , “So-called Proto-Śiva seal”, 51–5 and Figs. 711.Google Scholar

25 Sankalia, H. D., “Kot Diji and Hissar III”, Antiquity, XLIII, 1969, 142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

26 Hiltebeitel, , “Proto-Śiva, reexamined”, 771–3.Google Scholar

27 Hiltebeitel, , “Proto-Śiva, reexamined”;Google ScholarFairservis, Walter A. Jr., Excavations at Allahdino I: seals and inscribed Material, Papers of the Allahdino Expedition 1976, New York, 1976, 1415;Google Scholar Cf. Kramrisch, Stella, Śiva, 11 ff.;Google ScholarSrinivasan, , “So-called Proto-Śiva seal”, 47 ff.Google Scholar

28 Kramrisch, , Śiva, 14.Google Scholar

29 Allchin, F. R., “The legacy of the Indus civilization”, in Possehl, Gregory L. (ed.), Harappan Civilization, Warminster, England, 1982, 325–33.Google Scholar

30 Sankalia, H. D., Proceedings of the 57th Indian Science Congress,Kharagpur,1970,182–3.Google Scholar

31 Marshall, , Mohenjo-daro, I, pp. 5961; 63; Pls. XIII and XIV.Google Scholar

32 Marshall, , Mohenjo-daro, I, pp. 5960; Pl. XIII, No. 8.Google Scholar

33 For a recent stylistic analysis of the development of the liṅga form see Gritli v. Mitterwallner, “Evolution of the Linga” to appear in Meister, Michael W. (ed.), Discourses on Shiva: proceedings of a seminar on the nature of religious imagery.Google Scholar

34 v. Mitterwallner, “Liṅga”.

35 v. Mitterwallner, “Liṅga”.

36 Additional art-historical and textual information is given in Srinivasan, D., “Significance and scope of pre-Kushan Śaivite iconography” to appear in Meister, Michael W. (ed.), Discourses on Shiva: proceedings of a seminar on the nature of religious imagery.Google Scholar

37 See Sarma, I. K., “New light on art through archaeological conservation”, Journal of the Indian Society of Oriental Art, New Series, X, 19781979, 4854; Pl. XIV–XV.Google Scholar

38 See Sarma, , Pl. XV, 11, 12.Google Scholar

39 Banerjea, J. N. (“The phallic emblem in ancient and mediaeval India”, Journal of the Indian Society of Oriental Art, III, 1935, 39)Google Scholar states that Bhandarkar suggests this in the Lectures, Carmichael, 1921, p. 20.Google Scholar

40 Joshi, N. P., Catalogue of the Brahmanical sculptures in the State Museum, Lucknow, Lucknow, 1972, 103.Google Scholar

41 It is illustrated in Joshi, N. P., Mathurā sculptures, Mathurā, 1966, Fig. 10 and p. 80.Google Scholar

42 It is illustrated in Kramrisch, Stella, Manifestations of Shiva, Philadelphia, 1981, Pl. 1.Google Scholar

43 See Lal, Shiv S., Catalogue and guide to the State Museum, Bharatpur, 19601961, 9.Google Scholar

44 Illustrated in Joshi, , Brahmanical sculptures, Figs. 33–35. It should be noted that No. 15.652 is incorrectly cited as No. 15.657.Google Scholar

45 Published in Rosenfield, John M., The dynastic arts of the Kushans, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1967, Fig. 41.Google Scholar

46 v. Mitterwallner, “Liṅga”, observes that in this phase, the head of the liṅga is differentiated from its shaft only by shallow, incised lines; that is, the head no longer projects beyond the shaft.

47 See v. Mitterwallner, “Liṅga”.

48 MDhs 2.22: “The wise call Āryāvarta the land which lies between these two mountain ranges (i.e. the Vindhya and the Himavat) and which extends to the eastern and western oceans”.

49 The liṅga may be found on coins from Ujjain prior to the Christian era. On the obverse of Allan's “variety e,” of class I Ujjayinī coppers, the liṅga is seen between two different trees in railings. See Allan, John, Catalogue of the coins of ancient India, London, 1936, 243, No. 19; Pl. 36, No. 15.Google Scholar A humped bull faces the liṅga on the reverse of the Ārjunāyana copper coin-type, ‘variety b”. See Allan, , Catalogue, 121,Google Scholar Pl. 14, No. 11. The land of the Ārjunāyanas probably lay within the Delhi-Jaipur-Agra triangle, and the coins date to circa 2nd century B.C.

50 Hein, Norvin, “Kālayavana: a key to Mathurā's cultural self-perception”, in Srinivasan, D. (ed.), Mathurā; a cultural heritage (in press).Google Scholar

51 See Srinivasan, , “Pre-Kushan Śaivite iconography” (of. n. 36 above).Google Scholar

52 For a summary, assessment and relevant further bibliography on this site, see Shaffer, Jim G., “The protohistoric period in Eastern Punjab: a preliminary assessment” in Dani, A. H. (ed.), Indus civilization; new perspectives, Islamabad, 1981, 81–3. I am grateful to Jim Shaffer for informing me about this significant site.Google Scholar

53 See his discussion in Marshall, , Mohenjo-daro, II, 473–5.Google Scholar

54 Mackay, E., Further excavations at Mohenjo-daro, I, Delhi, 1938, 595–8; II, Pl. CXIV.Google Scholar

55 George F. Dales, “A surmise based on mere assumption:” Sex and Stone at Mohenjodaro', Contribution to the Sir Mortimer Wheeler Commemoration Volume. B. B. Lai and S. P. Gupta (Editors). New Delhi, 1983. In press. I wish to express my thanks to the author for generously making this paper available to me.

56 Dales, . “Sex and stone'. In press.Google Scholar