The Discovery of Ancient India: Early Archaeologists and the Beginnings of Archaeology

The Discovery of Ancient India: Early Archaeologists and the Beginnings of Archaeology

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Book Specification

Item Code: IDE155
Author: Upinder Singh
Publisher: Permanent Black
Language: English
Edition: 2004
ISBN: 8178240882
Pages: 400 (B & W Illus: 27)
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 8.8" X 5.8"
Weight 630 gm

Book Description

From the Jacket:

This book breaks colonial archaeology down into its specific constituents and examines the ideas, impulses, tensions, and individual contributions that comprised early studies of India's ancient past. It focuses, at the outset, on the ideas and work of Alexander of the Archeological Survey of India in 1871. It also examines the contribution of Cunningham's assistants, Beglar and Carlleyle.

It then looks at a number of related issues - the different definitions of archaeological research; the conflict between field archaeologists and architectural scholars; the debate over whether antiquities should be left in situ or removed to museums; the different approaches and initiatives towards the conversion of historical monuments.

It also reconstructs the history of certain important Buddhist sites - Bodh Gaya, Sanchi, and Bharhut - during the second half of the nineteenth century, while giving a detailed account of the life - history of the site of Amaravati.

Finally, it looks at the contribution made by Indian scholars to the antiquarian and archaeological projects, and at the interaction between the colonial government and the Indian prince vis-o-vis the conservation of historical monuments.

This book is written as much for the general reader interested in India's antiquity and its pioneering archaeologists, as for students of the history of archaeology, colonialism, and constructions of the past.

About the Author:

Upinder Singh teaches ancient history at St Stephen's College, Delhi. She is the author of Kings, Brahmanas and Temples in Orissa: An Epigraphic Study, AD 300-1147 (1994); Ancient Delhi (1999); and a book for children, Mysteries of the Past: Archaeological Sites in India (2002). Her scholars articles have appeared in World Archaeology, The Indian Economic and Social History Review, The Indian Historical Review, Man and Environment, and South Asian Studies.

CONTENTS

Illustrations ix
Abbreviations xi
Acknowledgements xii
Preface

xiii
1 Form Antiquarianism to Archaeology 1
The Surveyors 2
The Antiquarians 6
The Adventurers 17
Early Archaeological Writings

21
2 Alexander Cunningham: Engineer and Antiquarian 23
Cunningham's Career: A Sketch 24
Cunningham and Prinsep 25
Early Numismatic Writings 28
The Journey to the Sources of Punjab's Rivers 30
More Journeys to Remote Places: Ladakh 32
The Temples of Kashmir 34
On the Trail of Chinese Pilgrims 36
Ladakh: Physical, Statistical, and Historical 40
The Bhilsa Topes

44
3 The First Archaeological Survey 53
The Background 53
The Proposal 57
Bihar and the North-Western Provinces 1861-2 60
The North-Western Provinces 1862-3 66
The Punjab 1863-4 70
Rajputana and Malwa 1864-5 73
The Suspension of the Archaeological Survey

75
4 Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India 77
A New Initiative 79
'Investigating, Describing, Protecting ' 81
Cunningham's Plan of Action 83
Report for the Year 1871-2 85
The Punjab and Yusufzai 1872-3 92
The Central Provinces 1873-4 and 1874-5 100
Bundelkhand and Malwa 1874-5 and 1876-7 102
Tours in the Gangetic Provinces 1875-6 and 1877-8 104
Tour in the Punjab 1878-9 107
Tour in Bihar and Bengal 1879-80 111
Tours in North and South Bihar 1880-1 112
Tour in the Central Provinces and Lower Gangetic Doab 1881-2 114
Tour in Eastern Rajputana 1882-3 115
Bundelkhand and Rewa (1883-4), and Rewa, Bundelkhand, Malwa, and Gwalior (1884-5) 117
Other Writings 119
The Promotion of Epigraphic Research 124
Photographic Documentation 127
The Director General and the Government 128
Cunningham and His Contemporaries

131
5 J.D.M. Beglar: Enthusiastic Apprentice 135
Beglar's Survey of Delhi 1871-2 137
Tours in Bundelkhand and Malwa 1871-2 141
Tour through the Bengal Provinces 1872-3 143
Tour in the Central Provinces 1873-4 148
Tour in the South-Eastern Provinces 1874-6 150
The Reorganization of the Survey and the Beglar-Burgess Conflict

153
6 A.C.L. Carlleyle: Amateur Prehistorian 158
Report on Agra 159
The Rajputana Tour 161
Tours in the Central Doab and Gorakhpur 1874-6 166
Further Explorations in the Gorakhpur, Saran and Ghazipur district 1875-7 169
More Tours in Gorakhpur, Saran and Ghazipur Districts, 1877-80 172
Discoveries, and a Time of Trouble 175
AN Estimate: A Rediscovery

181
7 The Description and Care of Monuments 184
Early Conservation Measures 185
James Burgess and the Archaeological Surveys of Western and Southern India 188
H.H. Cole: Curator of Ancient Monuments 199
In situ Preservation versus the Removal of Antiquities to Museums 212
Cunningham and Conservation 215
The Restoration of the Bodh Gaya Temple 218
Sanchi 230
The Bharhut Stupa 239
Postscript

247
8 The Dismembering of the Amaravati Stupa 249
The Discovery of Amaravati and the First Documentation 250
The 'Elliot Marbles' 257
James Fergusson and the 'Elliot Marbles' 260
Boswell's Report 263
Sewell Offers His Services 265
Sewell's Operations 267
Horsfall Steps In 271
Burgess versus Cole 274
Cole's Recommendations 279
Cunningham's Verdict 283
The Removal of the Amaravati Sculptures to the Madras Museum 284
Epilogue

286
9 The 'Ignorant Natives' and Archaeological Research 290
Ancient Remains in the Princely States 292
The Begum of Bhopal and her History 296
Other Princely States 299
The Contribution of Indian Scholars 305
Ram Raz: The First Modern Indian Architectural Scholar 308
The Debate on 'Native' Involvement in the Archaeological Survey 312
P.C. Mukharji: Archeologist 316
Rajendralala Mitra 322
Other Contributions

334
10 Archaeology, Sites, and Monuments in Nineteenth-century India 337
Assessing the Cunningham Era of India Archaeology 341
The Modern History of Ancient Sites and Monuments

349
Bibliography 355
Index 371


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