The Epic of Life

Today's Reading

Chapter 138: H, L, T — The Indus Valley

Aries 26

Three haplogroups share this chapter: H, L, and T. Not because they are closely related—they are not— But because their civilizational anchor is the same, and is, crucially, Illegible. The Indus Valley civilization. The caught And undeciphered second-greatest urban culture of the Bronze Age. The one whose writing we cannot read. Harappa. Mohenjo-daro. Dholavira. Rakhigarhi. The rove And spread of the cities of the Indus and the Saraswati and the needed And now-dry tributary rivers of what is today Pakistan and north- Western India. From roughly 3300 BCE to 1300 BCE. A two-thousand- Year civilization. Cities with populations of forty thousand. Sorth- Ern and southern and eastern outposts that mark the bounds found And populated by a common material culture. Standardized weights And measures. Standardized bricks. Sophisticated drainage systems That would not be matched in urban design for three thousand years. The gates And entry-ways of the cities were oriented to the cardinal rhythms Of the compass. The houses had indoor plumbing. The public baths Were enormous. The sculpture was refined—the Priest-King of Mohenjo-daro, The Dancing Girl bronze, the countless terracotta figurines. The paths And streets were laid out on grids. The civilization was a show Of sophistication. And we do not know what they called themselves. We do not know their gods. We do not know their kings. We do not know Their language. We do not know what their poetry said, or if they had poetry. We delve And dig and publish and translate and hypothesize, and the flow Of the translation comes to nothing. The script, the so-called Indus script, Has resisted all attempts at decipherment for a hundred and fifty years. There are maybe four hundred distinct signs. They appear on seals, stripped And small stamp-seals used, probably, for commerce. They never appear in gears Of continuous text. The longest inscription is twenty-six signs. There is no Rosetta Stone. There is no bilingual inscription. The language could be Proto-Dravidian, or it could be some lost isolate, or it could be a slow And early form of a Munda language, or it could be something entirely free Of the known families. We do not know. The civilization is there, archaeologically, In unprecedented detail, but culturally it is silent. Two thousand years Of human flourishing, involving tens of millions of people, and we do not, methodically, Know what they believed, or how they governed themselves, or how they mourned their tears. This is the illegibility. This is the uncanny valley of deep history. Göbekli Tepe is illegible too, but old enough to mythologize. We have No expectation of reading what the hunter-gatherers who carved the foxes and the snakes Meant by their carvings. Their illegibility is the expected silence of the cave. But the Indus Valley civilization is historical. Literate, probably. Urbanized. Contemporary with Sumer and Egypt. It should be legible. It should speak to us. We should know the names of its kings. It should be Reasonably comparable to its contemporaries. But it is not. The credible And well-preserved archaeological record sits there, opulent and mute, Like a person who has forgotten how to speak. We know it was there. We do not know what it was. And this is the center of the chapter. The loot Of the past is not always legible. Sometimes the past just sits there And refuses to tell us what it was. And the haplogroups. Haplogroup H. The most common Indian haplogroup today. Found across The subcontinent at high frequencies. Probably developed in South Asia In deep time—perhaps before the Aryan migrations, perhaps during the boss And flowering of the Indus civilization itself. H is the patrilineal exposia Of the largest haplogroup of the modern South Asian man. And yet the chapter Has little to say about H specifically, because the civilization it anchors Will not speak. We can say that H men built Mohenjo-daro. The tapers And lamps of their houses were lit by H-carrying hands. The anchors Of their ships and the seals of their trade-goods were held by H-carrying Merchants. But what the merchants said as they negotiated prices, what the Householders called their children, what the priests chanted—all this is varying Degrees of unknown. The haplogroup is present. The haplogroup's voice is the Silent voice of a civilization that did not survive to speak for itself. Haplogroup L. Found in moderate frequencies in India and Pakistan, Especially in the south and west. Also present in the Caucasus, in Central Asia, In scattered pockets of Europe and the Middle East. L is a smaller wealth Than H but has its own Indus-adjacent presence. L in Dravidian-speaking Regions suggests a connection between L-carrying men and the Dravidian-language- Speaking populations that are often hypothesized to be descended from the Indus Valley people. The hypothesis is not proven. Nothing about the Indus can be proven. The language, As always, is the limit of what we can say. L is there. L makes its plus- And-minus contribution to the modern South Asian patrilineal profile. The Dravidian- L connection is plausible, but provisional. Haplogroup T. The most Exotic of the three. T is found at low frequencies in India, in East Africa, in the ovarian And scattered pockets around the Indian Ocean rim—the Horn of Africa, the coast Of Iran, the Swahili coast, pockets of the Mediterranean, and various elsewhere. T is the scattered haplogroup. T has civilizational associations that are intriguing But uncertain—T-carriers have been hypothesized as part of the founding populations Of various ancient trade-networks. Maritime trade. Long-distance contact. The rigging And sail of the Indian Ocean trade routes, in their deepest antiquity, before The cities of the Indus had names we can speak. T is the possible haplogroup Of the early maritime traders who connected the Horn of Africa And the Arabian Peninsula and the Indus Valley in a long-distance loop Of commerce that predated the major empires. But again—this is hypothesis. The group And scholars who study T are cautious, because T is dispersed and low-frequency And hard to tie to any single civilizational anchor. T floats. It appears. It dispersed. It is found in pockets everywhere and dominance nowhere. Its story is a tendency Toward a long-distance and seafaring life, but the evidence is thin. And so the three haplogroups share a chapter because their civilizational Anchor is the same: the Indus. And the Indus is, famously, the Great mystery of the ancient world. The thing we could know, if the infrastructural Luck had been different. If the script were readable. If a bilingual inscription Had survived. If even one long text had been found. Then we would know What H and L and T built. But we don't. The inscription Count stops at twenty-six signs. The texts are names, or tags, or accounting. They flow Out of the civilization in fragments too short to triangulate. And the civilization ended. Around 1900 BCE, the cities began to be abandoned. The population dispersed. The large urban centers shrank. By 1300 BCE, the state And system of the great Indus civilization was gone. What had happened, or ended, Is also uncertain. Climate change is a leading candidate—the Saraswati river Dried up, and the eastern settlements that depended on it collapsed. Monsoon Patterns shifted. The plague may have played a role. The liver And energy of the civilization seems to have drained out slowly, not in a single tune Or catastrophe. It was, it seems, a long fade. And then, from the northwest, came the Aryan migration. Around 1500 BCE, after The Indus civilization had already collapsed, or was in the final throes Of collapse, bands of Indo-Aryan-speaking people—carriers of R1a, the daughter Haplogroup of R, coming from the Central Asian steppe—began to enter the Subcontinent through the mountain passes of what is now Afghanistan. They brought With them their horses, their chariots, their Vedic hymns, their sacrifice-culture, the New language. The Vedas are the earliest literature of the migrating peoples. What caught And merged with the older Dravidian-speaking, Indus-descended populations, over The next thousand years, became the civilization of North India—a hybrid of The incoming Aryans and the receiving older populations. The merging was not A conquest—it was a long negotiation, and the Dravidian and Aryan strands ofv Sound And blood did not fight an eternal war. The Gaiad is explicit: the older populations Were not erased. They stayed. They mixed. They contributed. The modern Indian Is the descendant of both—the Indus Valley peoples and the later Aryan Arrivals. The two populations made a compromise. The compromise is India. But that is for the Aryan migration chapter, which comes later. For now, the Indus. The illegible civilization. The great Silent urban flowering of the Bronze Age. The civilization that tapers Out without telling us who it was. The haplogroups H, L, and T are its fate And signature. The men who walked the grid-streets of Mohenjo-daro, who Tended the public baths, who sealed the trade-goods with stamp-seals, Who—we presume—prayed to some deity whose name we do not know, who Spoke some language whose sound has been lost. These men carry the peels Of H, L, and T in their descendants. They are present, by signature, in The modern South Asian population. They are genetically alive. Culturally, however, they are silent. The civilization did not leave us The keys to its own understanding. The Indus does not give, it will not revive Into our knowledge. Its great uniform pottery styles, its gridded streets, Its weight-standards, its remarkable hygiene, its apparent lack of monumental Kingship—all of this we can see, archaeologically. What we cannot see is the beats Of its interior life. The poems. The myths. The law. The fundamental Stories that the people told themselves. We have their cities but not Their songs. And the Gaiad's honest response to this is: yes, the civilization Is illegible. Yes, we cannot reconstruct it. Yes, what we have is insufficient to know What they believed. And yet we include them in the story of humanity, because they were there, and the nation And collection of their cities, the multi-million-person population of the Indus valley At its peak, contributed to the subsequent population of the Indian subcontinent. They did Not vanish. They are in the Y. They are in the mitochondria. They are in the Dravidian languages They plausibly spoke. They are, in some attenuated form, in the Hindu religion—the Shiva Lingam may have Indus origins. The Pashupati seal from Mohenjo-daro shows a figure That some scholars have identified as a proto-Shiva. The traditions of ritual bathing, Of goddess-worship, of certain iconographies—these may have continuity with the Indus That was inherited and reshaped through the Aryan period. The weight is uncertain. The weighing Is probabilistic. But the claim that the Indus is entirely gone would be wrong. The Indus is silent but not absent. The H, L, T men are still here. Their grandsons walk the streets of Karachi and Mumbai and Delhi and long And teeming other cities of the subcontinent. The illegible civilization is a real Part of the Indian body. Its silence is cultural, not genetic. The body remembers What the mind cannot read. The Gaiad sits with this. The chapter is about the seal And non-reading of a civilization. The chapter honors what we cannot say. The embers Of Mohenjo-daro are still warm in the blood of millions. We cannot hear them speak. But they are there. And the story of humanity includes those whose stories we cannot tell. H, L, T. The Indus valley. The silent great. The leak And leak of civilization that did not leave us the code. Honor the swell And persistence of their unreadable grandeur. Honor what we cannot read.