Cemetery H culture
Cemetery H culture, by Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=7247 / CC BY SA 3.0
#Archaeological_cultures_of_South_Asia
#Bronze_Age_cultures_of_Asia
#Archaeological_cultures_in_Pakistan
#Prehistoric_India
#History_of_Punjab
#Indus_Valley_Civilisation
#Societal_collapse
#Archaeological_sites_in_Punjab,_India
#Archaeological_cultures_in_India
#Indo-Aryan_archaeological_cultures
Painted pottery urns from Harappa (Cemetery H period) might correspond to a period of shift towards Vedic culture Archaeological cultures associated with Indo-Iranian migrations (after EIEC).
The Andronovo, BMAC and Yaz cultures have often been associated with Indo-Iranian migrations.
The GGC (Swat), Cemetery H, Copper Hoard and PGW cultures are candidates for cultures associated with Indo-Aryan migrations.
The Cemetery H culture was a Bronze Age culture in the Punjab region in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent, from about 1900 BC until about 1300 BC. It is
regarded as a regional form of the late phase of the Harappan (Indus Valley) civilisation (alongside the Jhukar culture of Sindh and Rangpur culture of Gujarat),
but also as the manifestation of a first wave of Indo-Aryan migrations, predating the migrations of the proto-Rig Vedic people.
The Cemetery H culture was located in and around the Punjab region in present-day India and Pakistan.
It was named after a cemetery found in "area H" at Harappa.
Remains of the culture have been dated from about 1900 BC until about 1300 BC. According to Rafique Mughal, the Cemetery H culture developed out of the northern part of the Indus Valley Civilization around 1700 BC,
being part of the Punjab Phase, one of three cultural phases that developed in the Localization Era or "Late Harappan phase" of the Indus Valley Tradition.
According to Kenoyer, the Cemetery H culture "may only reflect a change in the focus of settlement organization from that which was the pattern of the earlier Harappan phase and not cultural discontinuity, urban de...
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