PREHISTORIC ROCK CAVE PAINTINGS IN INDIA
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The prehistoric period in the early development of human beings
is commonly known as the Old Stone Age or the Palaeolithic Age.
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Prehistoric paintings have been found in many parts of the
world. Subjects of their drawings were human figures, human activities,
geometric designs and symbols.
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In India the earliest paintings have been reported from the
Upper Palaeolithic times.
·
The
first discovery of rock paintings was made in India in 1867–68 by an
archaeologist, Archibald
Carlyle and John Cocksure in Aimer ranges, Madhya Pradesh, found
the rock engravings and cave paintings., twelve years before the
discovery of Altamira in Spain.
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Remnants
of rock paintings have been found on the walls of the caves situated in
several districts of Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka
and Bihar and in Kumaon hills of Uttarakhand.
Major Pre-Historic
Rock Paintings sites in India
BHIMBETKA
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It is the largest and most spectacular Rock Cave Shelter is
located in the Vindhya hills.
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Bhimbetka is located 45 kilometres south east of
Bhopal on the road to Hoshangabad in Madhya Pradesh.
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It has about 800/700 rock shelters, 500/400 of which bear
paintings. (Data: NCERT/ASI)
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The caves of Bhimbetka were discovered in 1957–58 by eminent
archaeologist V.S. Wakankar and later on many more were discovered.
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Bhimbetka is listed in World Heritage list of UNESCO.
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The
themes of paintings found here are events of daily life in those times to
sacred and royal images. These include hunting, dancing, music, horse and
elephant riders, animal fighting, honey collection, decoration of bodies, and
other household scenes.
·
The Auditorium
Rock Shelter, Zoo Rock and Boar Rock are very interesting sites at Bhimbetka
Cluster.
·
The
Auditorium Rock Shelter is dated back to nearly 100000 years. Near the end of
this tunnel there is a cluster of painting depicting a hunter, deer, tiger
cattle and stylised peacock.
·
Further ahead on the same path one comes
across the Zoo Rock Shelter, which qualifies as the most densely painted rock
shelter, paintings spanning from the Mesolithic to the Mediaeval. The paintings here include those of A Mesolithic
boar painted in dark red, animals like: elephant, rhinoceros, boar, Barasingha,
spotted deer and cattle and snake, etc.
·
The
Boar Rock, which is the last among the rock shelters, has a depiction of a
mythical boar with horns that is many more times larger than the human being
chased by it.
·
The cave also has a small inscription of the Maurya /Sunga
period. Within the general area of Bhimbetka Group of rock shelters small Stupas
have been found at Bhimbetka, near Bhoranwali, at Bineka, at Lakhajuar and
midway between Lakhajuar and Bhimbetka.
·
A large number of Shanka Lipi inscriptions have been found here.
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Bhimbetka has three phases viz upper Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and
Chalcolithic periods.
LAKHUDIYAR
·
This
rock shelters is situated on banks of the River Suyal at Lakhudiyar, about 20
kilometres on the Almora–Barechina road in Uttrakhand. Lakhudiyar literally
means one lakh caves.
·
Lakhudiyar
has been acknowledged as the richest cave shelter preserving the scenes and
activities of the primitive inhabitants of the region, which according to
archaeologists belong to the Old Stone Age to the Neo Stone Age.
· The
prehistoric paintings here can be divided into three categories: man, animal
and geometric patterns in white, black and red ochre.
· The
motifs represented are humans, animals and some other signatures. Human
figures are represented in stick-like, stylized as well as in-like forms.
Most of the human figures are shown as rows of dancers.
· A
long-snouted animal, a fox and a multiple legged lizard are the main animal
motifs.
·
Wavy
lines, rectangle-filled geometric designs, and groups of dots can also be
seen here.
·
One
of the interesting scenes depicted here is of hand-linked dancing human
figures.
·
There
is some superimposition of paintings here. The earliest are in black; over
these are Red Ochre Paintings and the last group comprises White Paintings.
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Other
remnants of cultural importance of this region as has been pointed out by
Professor D.D. Sharma are megaliths, menhirs, cup marks (memoirs of dead)
burial graves, cists pottery, beads etc.
·
It
has been noticed here that during that period at least three types of burials
were in practice, (1) complete burial, (2) fractional burial and (3) post
cremation burial. In the first form the whole body was cremated along with
certain funerary objects. In the fractional burial, urns containing skulls and
fragments of bones along with earthen wares and a variety of small objects
for the use of the dead were also placed there.
ROCK CAVE PAINTINGS IN KARNATKA AND TELANGANA
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Paintings of this sites belong to Neolithic man age.
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Important
site are Kupgallu in Nalgonda District of Telangana, Piklihal of Raichur
district in Karnataka and Tekkalkota in Bellary district Karnataka.. Three
types of paintings have been reported from here—paintings in white, paintings
in red ochre over a white background and paintings in red ochre.
·
These paintings belong to late historical, early historical and Neolithic
periods.
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The subjects depicted are bulls, elephants, Sambhars, gazelles,
sheep, goats, horses, stylised humans, tridents, but rarely, vegetal motifs.
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