Mohenjo-daro, the modern name for the site, has been variously interpreted as "Mound of the Dead Men" in Sindhi, and as "Mound of Mohan" (where Mohan is Krishna).The city's original name is unknown. Based on his analysis of a Mohenjo-daro seal, Iravatham Mahadevan speculates that the city's ancient name could have been Kukkutarma ("the city [-rma] of the cockerel [kukkuta]"). Cock-fighting
may have had ritual and religious significance for the city, with
domesticated chickens bred there for sacred purposes, rather than as a
food source. Mohenjo-daro may furthermore have been a point of diffusion for the eventual worldwide domestication of chickens.
The Indus Valley civilization was entirely
unknown until 1921, when excavations in what would become Pakistan
revealed the cities of Harappa and Mohenjo Daro (shown here).
This
mysterious culture emerged nearly 4,500 years ago and thrived for a
thousand years, profiting from the highly fertile lands of the Indus
River floodplain and trade with the civilizations of nearby
Mesopotamia.
Mohenjo-daro was discovered in 1922 by R. D. Banerji, an officer of
the Archaeological Survey of India, two years after major excavations
had begun at Harappa, some 590 km to the north. Large-scale excavations
were carried out at the site under the direction of John Marshall, K. N.
Dikshit, Ernest Mackay, and numerous other directors through the 1930s.
Although
the earlier excavations were not conducted using stratigraphic
approaches or with the types of recording techniques employed by modern
archaeologists they did produce a remarkable amount of information that
is still being studied by scholars today .
The last major excavation project at the site was carried out by the
late Dr. G. F. Dales in 1964-65, after which excavations were banned due
to the problems of conserving the exposed structures from weathering.
Since
1964-65 only salvage excavation, surface surveys and conservation
projects have been allowed at the site. Most of these salvage operations
and conservation projects have been conducted by Pakistani
archaeologists and conservators.
In the 1980's extensive architectural documentation, combined
with detailed surface surveys, surface scraping and probing was done by
German and Italian survey teams led by Dr. Michael Jansen (RWTH) and Dr.
Maurizio Tosi (IsMEO).
Sources: