Hakra Ware culture
Appearance
Hakra Ware culture was a material culture which is contemporaneous with the early Harappan Ravi phase culture (3300–2800 BCE) of the Indus Valley in much of Pakistan and some parts of Northern India.
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Quotes
[edit]- Mughal (1990, 1997) considers the Hakra culture to be earlier than Kot Dijian, now designated as Early Harappan by Mughal and others, and earlier than the Harappan. That may be correct. It is also quite likely that some Hakran settlements, like related Kot Dijian ones, persisted and were contemporary with, or even later than, the Harappan (Shaffer 1992). Only more archaeological fieldwork excavations and radiometric dates may resolve these issues.
- Jim Shaffer. South Asian archaeology and the myth of Indo-Aryan invasions in : Bryant, E. F., & Patton, L. L. (2005). The Indo-Aryan controversy : evidence and inference in Indian history. Routledge