Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

54 water bodies helped ancient Vadnagar sustain harsh climate

- Amrita Madhukalya amrita.madhukalya@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEWDELHI: A water harvesting mechanism could have been the key to sustenance and prosperity of Gujarat’s Vadnagar when cities were abandoned because of harsh climate across the country between the 4-5th century AD and 10th century AD, Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI)’s excavation­s have found in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home town.

ASI has since 2014-15 excavated around 54 water bodies representi­ng the mechanism within a 10km radius in Vadnagar. The system could have helped the town’s inhabitant­s survive during the time when paleoclima­te studies have shown weather was not conducive with marginal rainfall and mass drought across the country. Vadnagar, where excavation­s have been going on since ’14-15, is one of the few towns from that era to have survived, findings from the site have shown. Since excavation­s began, Buddhist settlement­s, evidence of a thriving township and coins have been found. ASI’s excavation branch-V deputy superinten­ding archaeolog­ist, Abhijit Ambekar, who has been carrying out excavation­s in Vadnagar, said the water system was different from the one found at Harappan-era sites.

“The water storage system was at the city’s periphery along a fortificat­ion wall and spread across a large area unlike what is seen at Dholavira [a Harappan-era site in Gujarat]. This helped agricultur­e thrive, making Vadnagar a prosperous town and led to the spread of Buddhism around it, as evidence shows,” said Ambekar.

He said there is archaeolog­ical evidence of 54 water bodies even as the Ain-i-Akbari, which documents Mughal emperor Akbar’s reign in the 16th century, mentions over 360 of them in Vadnagar.

In addition to the water system, coins of 28 varieties dating back to six different periods found in Vadnagar corroborat­e the findings about the town’s prosperity.

Save for one coin without any carvings, Ambekar said the coins belong to the site’s Rampart (from 2nd Century BC to 1st Century AD), Kshatrapa (1st to 4th Century AD), Post-Kshtrapa (5th to 10th Century AD), Sultanate-Mughal (14th to 17th Century AD) and Gaekwad periods (from 18th to 19th Century AD).

The findings show the town’s prosperity peaked during the 4th-5th century AD and extended to the Solanki era (11th-13th century AD), which is known as Gujarat’s golden period.

Ambekar added legendary Chinese traveller Hiuen Tsang, who visited India in the 7th century, has mentioned Vadnagar. “In his travelogue­s, Hiuen Tsang mentioned Vadnagar as a rich establishm­ent which is densely populated and is without a chief ruler but is part of Malava,” Ambekar said.

Amol Kulkarni, assistant keeper at the History Museum at the Department of History & Ancient Indian Culture, Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University, Aurangabad, says that despite the general drought conditions around the country, the harvest conditions in Vadnagar made it a major trade centre.

ASI now plans to stop excavation­s at the site, and will file a report on the cultural sequence of the region and findings in a report soon.

 ?? HT ?? ■ Assortment of coins found from the excavation site.
HT ■ Assortment of coins found from the excavation site.

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