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Raymond Allchin

Frank Raymond Allchin, FBA (9 July 1923 – 4 June 2010) was a British archaeologist and Indologist. He and his wife, Bridget Allchin, formed one of the most influential British partnerships in the post-Independence study of South Asian archaeology. Producing a large body of scholarship ranging from archaeological excavations, ethnoarchaeology as well as epigraphy and linguistics, the Allchins made their work and that of others accessible through a series of sole, joint and edited publications. Seminal works include The Birth of Indian Civilisation (1968), which was later superseded by their books The Rise of Indian Civilisation in India and Pakistan (1982) and The Archaeology of Early Historic South Asia (1995).[1]

Dr

Frank Raymond Allchin
Born(1923-07-09)9 July 1923
Harrow, London, United Kingdom
Died4 June 2010(2010-06-04) (aged 86)
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Alma materSOAS University of London
Known forsignificant contribution to the study of the ancient history of Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka
SpouseBridget Allchin
Parents
  • Frank Macdonald Allchin (father)
  • Louise Maude (mother)
Scientific career
Fieldsarcheology

Background edit

Raymond Allchin was born in Harrow, London on 9 July 1923, son of Frank Macdonald Allchin, a doctor, and Louise Maude. His brother was Donald Allchin, an Anglican priest and theologian. Raymond was educated at Westminster and enrolled at the Regent Street Polytechnic, where he studied architecture for three years followed by conscription into the Royal Corps of Signals. Trained as a Line Mechanic, Raymond was posted to India in 1944. On his return, he embarked on a BA in Hindi and Sanskrit at SOAS University of London, followed by a PhD on the prehistory of Raichur District in Hyderabad under the supervision of Professor K. de B. Codrington at the same institution. [2] On completing his PhD, Raymond was appointed Lecturer in Indian archaeology at SOAS in 1954. He left SOAS in 1959 for the post of Lectureship in Indian Studies at Cambridge.[3]

Raymond died in Cambridge on 4 June 2010. He had a wife, Bridget and two children, Sushila and William.[1]

Career edit

Afghanistan and South India edit

Raymond was an active field archaeologist throughout his career and his first introduction to South Asian fieldwork was in the Bamiyan Valley of Afghanistan in 1951. Here, under the direction of Codrington, he studied the standing remains of Shahr-e-Zohak.[4] Later that year, in the company of Bridget, he began his PhD research in Raichur District. Raymond's selected research topic, the Neolithic of Peninsular India, was one of the areas of South Asian archaeology most poorly understood and was a neglected area of research when compared to the Bronze Age Indus cities or those of the Early Historic period in the north of the Subcontinent.[5] After undertaking a survey of sites within the District, he selected the ash-mound of Piklihal for further investigation. Excavating in 1952, and again in 1957, with the assistance of the Andhra Pradesh Department of Archeology and Museums, Raymond demonstrated that the ash mound had a distinct Neolithic sequence with later evidence of Iron Age occupation above.[6]

In order to test some of his earlier theories about Piklihal, Raymond selected Utnur for excavation, one of the best-preserved ash mounds. In a single season, he cut through metres of cinder and ash and discovered that the mounds were contained by series of post-holes, demarking superimposed circular stockades. He again dated this site-type to the Neolithic of South India and to the fourth millennium BC on account of the associated polished stone axes. He interpreted the stockades at Utnur as annual cattle camps, whose accumulations of dung were burnt at the end of each grazing season, thus creating a regular sequence of ash and cinder.[7] He later developed these ideas into a narrative which bound together Hindu ritual tradition and contemporary pastoral practice with the archaeological findings, suggesting that the regular burning of the stockades was not a calamity or the result of raiding but part of an annual fire rite, perhaps surviving today as Holi, Divali or Pongal.[8]

Pakistan and Western India edit

On moving to Cambridge in 1959, Raymond turned his attention to Pakistan and worked at the site of Shaikhan Dheri between 1963 and 1964. Working with Professor A. H. Dani of Peshawar University, Raymond and Bridget supervised the processing of antiquities and pottery drawing during the first season.[9] Although only on site for one season, Raymond later produced research on artefacts from Shaikhan Dheri. He suggested that a number of small iron plates pierced with small holes around their edges, some of which had rusted together, formed part of the scale armour from the cap of a cataphract, based on observations from Gandharan sculpture, excavation reports, textual sources and contemporary examples from Rajput.[10] He also suggested that a number of globular vessels, that Sir John Marshall had interpreted for distillation of water at Sirkap, Taxila, were actually alcohol stills. Basing this hypothesis on ethnographic analogy, Vedic references and Rajput texts he stated that "Considering the importance of alcohol for man-kind . . . it is surprising that comparatively little is known of its early history,'12 and concluding that 'it may well be that the art of distillation was India’s gift to the world!"[11]

Raymond then shifted his focus back to India and undertook an archaeological reconnaissance of the coast of Gujarat in 1967 focused on investigating the presence or absence of sites associated with the Indus civilisation in western India, following this in 1968 with excavations at the site of Malvan with Bridget and Dr J. P. Joshi, of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).[12] Returning to fieldwork in the North West Frontier Province in the Bannu Basin, Raymond and Bridget worked collaboratively between 1977 and 1979, working at Lewan and Tarakai Qila with Professor F. A. Durrani and Professor Farid Khan of Peshawar University, Mr Robert Knox of the British Museum and Professor Ken Thomas of UCL.[13] Later as Joint Director of the British Archaeological Mission to Pakistan with Bridget, the focus shifted away from the Bronze Age to the Early historic period and particularly onto the site of Taxila.

On a walk around the Hathial ridge one February morning in 1980, not far from the Taxila Museum guesthouse, they discovered numerous sherds of a distinctive, highly burnished red ware covering an area of 13 hectares along the foot of the spur. Raymond recognised that these sherds belonged to the category of Burnished Red Ware associated with the Gandhara grave culture, dating to the beginning of the first millennium BC at the end of the Chalcolithic period. Also aware of the parallel presence of such sherds in the basal levels of Wheeler's excavations at the Bala Hisar of Charsadda challenged received wisdom at the time that suggested that such cities had been founded no earlier than the sixth century BC as the Persian Empire expanded eastwards and annexed the satrapy of Gandhara, and that the urban sequences of the region stretched back before Persian contact, possibly back to the late Chalcolithic.[14] Though Raymond never excavated to prove such assertions, he was pivotal to negotiating the return of an archaeological team to Charsadda after a gap of thirty years. Jointly directed by his former students, Professor Robin Coningham and Professor Ihsan Ali of Peshawar University, excavations between 1993 and 1997 confirmed Raymond's hypothesis of a much earlier date for initial settlement at c.1300 BC.[15]

Sri Lanka edit

In 1989 and at the age of 67, Raymond initiated his last major field project in Sri Lanka at the Citadel of Anuradhapura in the island's North Central Province following a joint invitation from Dr Roland Silva, director general of archaeology, and Dr Siran Deraniyagala, one of his former students and then archaeological advisor to the Government of Sri Lanka. Raymond invited his former undergraduate and new research student, Robin Coningham, to accept the role of field director,[16] and the results from excavations between 1989 and 1993, refuted many long held assumptions. Excavating a ten-metre deep cultural sequence stretching from the ninth century BC to the tenth century AD.[17] it provided evidence of urbanism in the fourth century BC but also confirmed Deraniyagala's early claim of evidence of the earliest Early Brahmi script anywhere in South Asia,[18] demonstrating its use to facilitate trade before being later adopted as an imperial tool by the Mauryans.

Legacy edit

The Allchins were also pivotal in promoting and facilitating the study of South Asian archaeology in Europe as well as within the Subcontinent. In the 1970s, aware of the fragmented nature of South Asian scholarship across Europe and seeking to broaden the capacity that was at the time possible and available within Britain, the Allchins, together with colleagues from Europe, created a biannual platform for South Asian archaeologists, numismatists, epigraphers and historians of art and architecture to exchange information from current research. Forming the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists, the Allchins organised the first meeting, which was held at Churchill College in Cambridge in 1971.[19]

In reaction to the lack of institutions, teaching posts or funds devoted to the promotion of popular or scholarly interest in South and Central Asia, the Allchins, along with Professor Sir Harold Bailey, Professor Johanna van Lohuizen-de Leeuw and Dr Jan van Lohuizen, founded the Ancient India and Iran Trust in Cambridge in 1978. The Trust aimed to support and provide a focal point where scholars and members of the public with interests in the cultures of these geographic regions could meet and use its unique library, substantially composed of the collections of its founders.[20] The Trust also organised funds to facilitate Indian and Pakistani visiting fellowships, which included highly distinguished scholars including Dilip Chakrabari, Ravi Korisettar, K. Krishnan, V. N. Misra, Lolita Nehru, K. Paddaya, Gautam Sengupta and Vasant Shinde.

The legacy of the Allchins, and the Trust that they helped found, continues to support the promotion of South Asian scholarship. In December 2013, the first Annual Allchin Symposium, named in their honour, was held at the Trust. Established to commemorate their work and outstanding contribution to the development of South Asian studies in the UK, the Symposium brings together established lecturers, post-doctoral researchers and PhD students working in South Asian Archaeology, History and the History of Art and Architecture, providing a forum for the presentation and discussion of current research.[21] Amongst other collections, the Ancient India and Iran Trust also houses the Allchin archive, comprising the photographic slide collection of both Allchins and the meticulous work diaries which Raymond kept during each of his field seasons, offering great potential to scholars of South Asian archaeology.[22]

Heritage protection edit

As well as undertaking almost forty years of field investigations, Raymond was also motivated by the need to record and protect heritage in the face of the pressures of increasing population and development in South Asia.[23] Raymond was also one of the pioneers for the protection of heritage sites within their cultural landscape, as illustrated by his work for the UN with the Japanese Planner and Architect, K. Matsushita, in 1969.[24] Raymond and Matsushita had been contracted by UNDP with the responsibility to guide the development of Lumbini, the birthplace of the Buddha, following the 1967 visit to the site by U Thant, the UN Secretary General, who wished to see the site transformed from what Raymond called 'little more than a neglected field' to a site worthy of 'a collection of monuments of great importance'. Tasked with assisting in the planning of a sacred garden, pilgrim village and a buffer zone around the site, this report was later used by the Japanese architect, Kenzō Tange, as the core for his masterplan for Lumbini, which has directed the development of the site over the last thirty years into the present.[25]

Academic recognition edit

Recognition of Raymond's contribution to South Asian archaeology was rewarded in Cambridge when he was appointed a Fellow of Churchill College in 1963 and promoted to a Readership in Indian Studies in 1972. Away from Cambridge, his achievements were also recognised through being made a Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society in 1953, a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1957, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 1974 and a Fellow of the British Academy in 1981 as well as having an Honorary D.Litt. conferred by Deccan College, Pune in 2007. He also served on the Governing Council of the Society for Afghan Studies and its successor, the Society for South Asian Studies, as well as being associated with the Charles Wallace Pakistan Trust, the British Academy's Stein-Arnold Committee and the Advisory Council of the Victoria and Albert Museum. Raymond was appointed a Fellow of the British Academy in 1981 and retired with the title of Emeritus Reader in South Asian archaeology in 1989.[26]

Personal life edit

In 1951, Bridget met fellow PhD student Raymond Allchin at the Institute of Archaeology and they married in March of that year.[2][27] Travelling to India for the first time with Raymond in 1951, Bridget steadily but firmly established herself as the most prominent South Asian Prehistorian in the UK. A pioneering female field-archaeologist in South Asia at a time when there were none, Bridget's research interests and publications were to stretch across South Asia from Afghanistan to Sri Lanka.

Like Raymond, Bridget's family also had a long heritage of medical practitioners, including Dr Thomas Monro, an ancestor who had attempted to treat the 'madness' of George III.[28]

Publications edit

Publications: 1950s—1960s edit

Extended content
  • 1954 Development of Early Cultures in the Raichur District of Hyderabad. PhD Dissertation, University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies.
  • 1964 Tulsi Das, Kavitavali, translated with introduction (UNESCO), London, Allen & Unwin, pp 229.
  • 1953 'A flake tool from the Oxus', Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 19, 227.
  • 1955 'Rock paintings and engravings in Raichur, Hyderabad', (with D.H. Gordon), Man, 55, 114, 97–99.
  • 1956 'Stone alignments of Southern Hyderabad', Man, 56, 133–136.
  • 1957 'The Neolithic stone industry of North Karnataka region', Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 19, 321–335.
  • 1957 'The culture sequence of Bactria', Antiquity, 31, 131–141.
  • 1957 'Sanskrit eduka – Pali eduka', Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 20, 1–4.
  • 1959 'Poor men's thalis, a Deccan potter's technique', Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 22, 250–257.
  • 1959 'Upon the contextual significance of certain groups of ancient Indian signs', Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 22, 548–555.
  • 1960 Piklihal Excavations, Andhra Pradesh Archaeological Series, 1, Hyderabad, Government of Andhra Pradesh, pp xvii, 154.
  • 1961 Utnur Excavations, Andhra Pradesh Archaeological Series 5, Hyderabad, Government of Andhra Pradesh, pp 75.
  • 1961 'Ideas of history in Indian archaeological writing', in C. Philips, ed., Historians of India, Pakistan and Ceylon, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 241–259.
  • 1961 'The antiquity and methods of gold mining in ancient India', Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 5, 195–211.
  • 1962 'The Neolithic stone industry of the Santal Parganas', Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 25, 306–330.
  • 1962 'A Neolithic pot from the Billa Surgam caves, Andhra Pradesh, Antiquity, 36, 302–303.
  • 1962 'Painted pottery from Patapad in Andhra Pradesh, Antiquity, 36, 221–224.
  • 1963 Neolithic Cattle Keepers of South India: A study of Deccan ashmounds, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, pp xvi, 189.
  • 1963 'Cattle and economy in the Neolithic of South India', in A.E. Mourant and F.E. Zeuner, eds, Man and Cattle, London 149–155. 1963 'The cultural tradition of India', The Listener, March, 25–39.
  • 1964 'An inscribed weight from Mathura', Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 7, 201–205.
  • 1966 'Pottery and head-rests from Narasipur Sangam', in D. Sen and A.K. Ghosh, eds, Studies in Prehistory, Robert Bruce Foote Memorial Volume, Calcutta, Firma K. L. Mukhopadhyay, 58–63.
  • 1966 'The place of Tulsi Das in North Indian devotional tradition', Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 123–140.
  • 1966 Tulsi Das, The petition to Ram, translation of Vinayapatrika with introduction, notes and glossary, London, Allen & Unwin, pp 365.
  • 1968 'The social thought of Swami Vivekananda', Swami Vivekannanda in East and West, London, Ramakrishna Vedanta Centre, 84–105.
  • 1968 'Archaeology and the date of Kaniska', in A.L. Basham, ed., Papers on the Date of Kaniska, Leiden, E. J. Brill, 4–34.
  • 1968 'Explorations in districts Baroda, Broach and Surat' (with J.P. Joshi), Indian Archaeology 1967–68 – a review, New Delhi, Archaeological Survey of India, 9–13.
  • 1969 'Early domestic animals in India and Pakistan', in P.J. Ucko and G.W. Dimbleby, eds, The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals, London, Duckworth, 317–22.
  • 1969 'Early cultivated plants in India and Pakistan', in P.J. Ucko and G.W. Dimbleby, eds, The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals, London, Duckworth, 323–29.
  • 1969 'Dilmun and the gulf of Cambay', Antiquity, 43, 315–16.

Publications: 1970s—1980s edit

Extended content
  • 1970 'Malvan – further light on the southern extension of the Indus Civilisation' (with J.P. Joshi), Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society¸ 1, 20–28.
  • 1970 'A pottery group from Ayun, Chitral' (in honour of Sir Harold Bailey), Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 33, 1–4.
  • 1971 'The attaining of the void – a review of some recent contributions in English to Virasaiva studies', Religious Studies, 7, 339–59.
  • 1972 'Malvan' (with J.P. Joshi), in S.B. Deo, ed., Archaeological Congress and Seminar Papers, Nagpur, Nagpur University, 36–42.
  • 1972 'A piece of scale armour from Shaikhan Dheri, Charsada', Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2, 113–20.
  • 1972 'A cruciform reliquary from Shaikhan Dheri, Charsada', in P. Pal, ed., Aspects of Indian Art, Leiden, E. J. Brill, 15–26.
  • 1973 'An inscribed reliquary from Shaikhan Dheri, in H.H. Hartel and V. Moeller, eds, Indologen-Tagung, 1971, Wiesbaden, Steiner, 265–72.
  • 1973 'Problems and perspectives in South Asian archaeology', in N. Hammond, ed., South Asian Archaeology, 1971, Park Ridge, Noyes Press, 1–11.
  • 1974 'The emergence of civilisation in North India', Encyclopædia Britannica. London, Encyclopædia Britannica
  • 1974 'Pottery from graves in the Perumal hills near Kodaikanal', in A.K. Ghosh, ed., Perspectives in Palaeoanthropology (Dharani Sen volume), Calcutta, Firma K. L. Mukhopadhyay, 299–308.
  • 1975 'The reconciliation of jnana and bhakti in Ramcaritamanasa', Religious Studies, 12, 81–91.
  • 1976 'The mysterious Path of Love in Tulsi Das', Vedanta for East and West, London, Ramakrishna Vedanta Centre, 152, 3–11.
  • 1976 Preface for reprint of Annual Reports of the Archaeological Survey of Mysore, 1–3.
  • 1977 'Recommendations concerning archaeological sites', in E.F. Sekler, ed., Masterplan for the Conservation of the Cultural Heritage in the Kathmandu Valley, UNESCO, Paris, 147–54.
  • 1977 'Recommendations concerning moveable cultural property', in E.F. Sekler, ed., Masterplan for the Conservation of the Cultural Heritage in the Kathmandu Valley, UNESCO, Paris, 134–47.
  • 1977 'Religious symbols and Indian thought', in H.R.E. Davidson, ed., Symbols of Power, Cambridge, The Folklore Society Mistletoe Series, 1–35.
  • 1977 'A modern Indian potter's technique', in D. Chattopadhyaya, ed., History and Society: Essays in honour of Professor Niharanjan Ray, Calcutta, Firma K. L. Mukhopadhyay, 1–13.
  • 1978 'Surface collections from Pushkar', in B. Allchin, A.S. Goudie and K. Hegde, eds, The Prehistory and Palaeogeography of the Great Indian Desert, New York, Academic Press, 331-1+9.
  • 1978 'Monument conservation and policy in India', Journal of the Royal Society of Arts, 126, 746–65.
  • 1978 'Introduction' (with N. Hammond), in F.R. Allchin and N. Hammond, eds, The Archaeology of Afghanistan, New York, Academic Press, 1–9.
  • 1978 'Conclusion' (with N. Hammond), in F.R. Allchin and N. Hammond, eds, The Archaeology of Afghanistan, New York, Academic Press, 405–14.
  • 1978 The Archaeology of Afghanistan (with N. Hammond, ed. and contributor), London, Academic Press, pp xxiii, 451.
  • 1979 A Source-book of Indian Archaeology (with D.K. Chakrabarti), New Delhi, Munshiram Manoharlal, Vol. 1, pp x, 354.
  • 1979 'India – the ancient home of distillation?’, Man, 14, 55–63.
  • 1979 'Stamped Tangas and condensers: evidence of distillation at Shaikhan Dheri', in M. Taddei, ed., South Asian Archaeology, 1977, Naples, Istituto Universitario Orientale, 755-97.
  • 1980 'A note on the "Asokan" stupas of Patan', in A.L. Dallapiccola, ed., The Stupa, its Religious, Historical and Architectural Significance, Wiesbaden, Frantz Steiner Verlag, 147–56.
  • 1980 'Textile impressions from the South Indian Iron Age', P.E.P. Deraniyagala Commemoration Volume, Sri Lanka, 64–7.
  • 1980 'Archaeological and language evidence for the movement of Indo-Aryan speaking peoples into South Asia', J. K.R. Cama Oriental Institute, Bombay, 48, 68–102; also published in 1981, in M.S. Asimov, B.A. Litvinsky, L.I. Miroshnikov and D.S. Rayevsky, eds, Ethnic Problems of the history of Central Asia in the Early Period (2nd millennium B.C.), Moscow 336–49.
  • 1981 'Preliminary report on the Bannu Basin Project (1977–79) – Introduction', in H. Härtel (ed.), South Asian Archaeology, 1979, Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag, 217–218.
  • 1981 'Preliminary report on the excavations at Lewan (1977–78)’ (with J.R. Knox), in H. Hartel, ed., South Asian Archaeology, 1979, Berlin, Dietrich Reimer Verlag, 241-44.
  • 1981 'Preliminary report on the excavations at Tarakai Qila (1978–79)’ (with J.R. Knox), in H. Hartel, ed., South Asian Archaeology, 1979, Berlin, Dietrich Reimer Verlag, 245–50.
  • 1981 'Antiquity of gold mining in the Gadag region', in M.S. Nagaraja Rao, ed., Madhu, Recent Researches in Indian Archaeology and History, Delhi, Agam Kala Prakashan, 81–3.
  • 1981 'The legacy of the Indus Civilisation', in Gregory L. Possehl, ed., Harappan Civilization, A Contemporary Perspective¸ New Delhi, Oxford & IBH, 325–33.
  • 1981 'Antiquity and continuity', in P. Jayakar et al., eds, The Indian Experience, 125–29.
  • 1981 'Antecedents of the Indus Civilization (10th Annual Mortimer Wheeler Archaeological Lecture)’, Bulletin of the British Academy, 66, 135–60.
  • 1981 'How old is the city of Taxila?’, Antiquity, 56, 8–14.
  • 1982 Indian Monuments through British Eyes, 1780–1980: Handlist of the exhibition in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum, pp 1–18.
  • 1984 'The northern limits of the Harappan culture zone in the light of recent observations', in B.B. Lal and S.P. Gupta, eds, Frontiers of the Indus Civilization, New Delhi, Books and Books, 51–4.
  • 1985 'Guide to the Asokan inscriptions' (with K.R. Norman), in B. Allchin, ed., South Asian Studies, 1, 43–50.
  • 1985 'The interpretation of a seal from Chanhu-daro and its significance for the religion of the Indus Civilization, South Asian Archaeology 1983, in J. Schotsmans, J. and M. Taddei, M., eds. Naples, Instituto Universitario Orientale, Dipartimento di Studi Asiatici, Series Minor 23: 369–84.
  • 1986 'Radiocarbon dating of some early sites in North West Pakistan' (with K.D. Thomas), South Asian Studies, 2: 37–44.
  • 1986 'Drumbeats from the past', Pupul Jayakar Felicitation Volume, Dimensions of Indian Art –Pupul Jayakar Seventy, in L. Candra and J. Jain, eds., Delhi, Agam Kala Prakashan,
  • 1989 The Conservation of the Indian Heritage (with B. Allchin and B. K. Thapar, ed. and contributor), New Delhi, Cosmo Publications, pp 275.
  • 1989 'The aims of the Seminar', introductory remarks, in B. Allchin, F.R. Allchin and B.K. Thapar, eds, The Conservation of the Indian heritage, New Delhi, Cosmo Publications.
  • 1989 'Threats to the conservation of monuments in urban and rural settings', in B. Allchin, F.R. Allchin and B.K. Thapar eds, The Conservation of the Indian heritage, New Delhi.
  • 1989 'City and State Formation in Early Historic South Asia', South Asian Studies 5: 1–16.

Publications: 1990s—2000s edit

Extended content
  • 1990 'Indo-Aryan and Aryan: language, culture and ethnicity'. Ancient Ceylon 10:13–23.
  • 1990 'Patterns of city formation in Early Historic South Asia'. South Asian Studies 6: 163–74.
  • 1990 'The end of the Harappan Urban Phase and its aftermath'. Ancient Ceylon 10: 25–40.
  • 1991 Shahr-i Zohak and the History of the Bamiyan Valley, Afghanistan, with P.H.B. Baker, ed. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports Number 570, Ancient India and Iran Trust Series No. 1: pp. 215
  • 1991 Coningham R.A.E. & Allchin F.R. 'Anuradhapura Citadel Archaeological Project: Preliminary Report of the Second Season of Sri Lankan – British Excavations at Salgha Watta'. South Asian Studies 7: 167–175.
  • 1992 'An Indus ram: a hitherto unrecorded stone sculpture from the Indus Civilization'. South Asian Studies 8: 53–4.
  • 1992 Coningham R.A.E. & Allchin F.R. 'Anuradhapura Citadel Archaeological Project: Preliminary Results of the Third Season of Sri Lankan – British Excavations at Salgaha Watta'. South Asian Studies 8: 155–167.
  • 1993 'The urban position of Taxila and its place in Northwest India-Pakistan', in H. Spodek. and D. M. Srinivasan, eds. Urban Form and Meaning in South Asia. Washington DC: National Gallery of Art. Studies in the History of Art, 31. Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts Symposium Papers 15: 69–81.
  • 1995 The archaeology of Early Historic South Asia: The emergence of cities and states, (ed.), Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, xvii-317.
  • 1995 Excavations at Malvan; report of the collaboration of the Archaeological Survey of India and Cambridge University in 1970, on the Gujarat Plain (with J. P. Joshi) New Delhi, Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India 92, pp vii, 117.
  • 1996 Coningham R.A.E., Allchin F.R., Batt C.M. & Lucy D. Passage to India? Anuradhapura and the Early Use of the Brahmi Script. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 6(1): 73–97.
  • 1997 A Source-book of Indian Archaeology (with D.K. Chakrabarti), New Delhi, Munshiram Manoharlal, Vol. 2: Settlements, Technology and Trade, pp 708.
  • 1997 South Asian archaeology, 1971–1991 : index of the proceedings of the biennal conferences of the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists (formerly, Association of South Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe), (compiler). Naples: Indices, Istituto Universitario Orientale. Dipartimento di Studi Aisatici; 3, pp 109.
  • 1998 'The interface of archaeology and history'. Man and Environment 23, (1): 19–36.
  • 1999 Ancient Buddhist Scrolls from Gandhara: The British Library Kharosthi Fragments (with Richard Salomon and Mark Barnard), London, British Library.
  • 1999 'Preface', in R.A.E. Coningham, ed. Anuradhapura: The British–Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salagha Watta 2. Volume 1: The Site. Oxford: Archaeopress for the Society for South Asian Studies (The British Academy): (BAR international series 824; Society for South Asian Studies monograph no. 3): ix–xi.
  • 2000 The Ancient India and Iran Trust Library. Second, revised edition. Cambridge : Ancient India & Iran Trust Library.
  • 2003 A Source-book of Indian Archaeology (with D.K. Chakrabarti), New Delhi, Munshiram Manoharlal, vol. 3: Prehistoric Roots of Religious Beliefs, Human Remains, The First Steps in Historical Archaeology: Sculpture, Architecture, Coins and Inscriptions. pp 291.
  • 2006 'Inscriptions and graffiti' in R.A.E. Coningham, ed. Anuradhapura: The British – Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salgaha Watta: Volume 2 The Artefacts. Oxford: Archaeopress for the Society for South Asian Studies (The British Academy): 431–450.

Joint publications edit

Extended content

Allchin, Bridget, and F. Raymond Allchin 1968. The Birth of Indian Civilization: India and Pakistan Before 500 B.C. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.

Allchin, Bridget, and F. Raymond Allchin 1982. The Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Allchin, Bridget, and F. Raymond Allchin 1997. Origins of a Civilization: The Prehistory and Early Archaeology of South Asia. New Delhi: Viking.

Allchin, F. Raymond, and Bridget Allchin 2012. From the Oxus to Mysore in 1951: The start of a great partnership in Indian Archaeology. Kilkerran: Hardinge Simpole

Reports for UNESCO and UNDP edit

Extended content

1969 Cultural Tourism in India: its scope and development with special reference to the monumental heritage, UNESCO, pp104.

1969 Report on the Lumbini Development Project (with K. Matsushita), UNDP.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Robin Coningham. "Raymond Allchin obituary | Science". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  2. ^ a b Allchin and Allchin (2012: 90)
  3. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. (2012). Frank Raymond Allchin (1923–2010). In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy. Oxford University Press. IX: 9
  4. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. (2012). Frank Raymond Allchin (1923–2010). In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy. Oxford University Press. IX: 6
  5. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. (2012). Frank Raymond Allchin (1923–2010). In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy. Oxford University Press. IX: 7
  6. ^ Allchin, Raymond (1954) The Development of Early Culture in Raichur District of Hyderabad in the Deccan. PhD Thesis
  7. ^ Allchin, F.R. (1961) Utnur Excavations, Andhra Pradesh Archaeological Series 5, Hyderabad, Government of Andhra Pradesh.
  8. ^ Allchin, F.R. (1963) Neolithic Cattle Keepers of South India: A study of Deccan ashmounds, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press
  9. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. (2012). Frank Raymond Allchin (1923–2010). In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy. Oxford University Press. IX: 9–10
  10. ^ Allchin, F.R. (1970) A piece of scale armour from Shaihkan dheri, Charsada. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 2: 113
  11. ^ Allchin, F.R. (1979) India: the home of ancient distillation. Man 14: 55
  12. ^ Allchin, F.R. (1995) Excavations at Malvan: Report of the collaboration of the Archaeological Survey of India and Cambridge University in 1970, on the Gujarat plan (Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India). Cambridge
  13. ^ Allchin, F.R. et al. (1986) Lewan and the Bannu Basin. Excavation and Survey of Sites and Environments in North West Pakistan. Bar International Series 310
  14. ^ Allchin, F.R. (1981) 'How old is the city of Taxila?’, Antiquity, 56, 8–14.
  15. ^ Coningham R.A.E. & Ali I. (2007). Charsadda: The British – Pakistani Excavations at the Bala Hisar of Charsadda. Oxford: Archaeopress.
  16. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. (2012). Frank Raymond Allchin (1923–2010). In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy. Oxford University Press. IX: 14
  17. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. (1999). Anuradhapura: The British – Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salgaha Watta: Volume 1 The Site. Oxford: Archaeopress for the Society for South Asian Studies Monograph Series; Coningham, R.A.E. (2006). Anuradhapura: The British – Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salgaha Watta: Volume 2 The Artefacts. Oxford: Archaeopress.
  18. ^ R. A. E. Coningham et al. (1996) Passage to India? Anuradhapura and the early use of Brahmi script. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 6: 73–97.
  19. ^ Coningham, R. A. E. (2012). "Frank Raymond Allchin (1923–2010)". In: Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy. Oxford University Press. IX: 19
  20. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. (2012). Frank Raymond Allchin (1923–2010). In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy. Oxford University Press. IX: 22; http://www.indiran.org/
  21. ^ "Authentication Request Failure". Mcdonald.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  22. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. 2013. Review of R. Allchin & B. Allchin, From the Oxus to Mysore in 1951: The Start of a Great Partnership in Indian Scholarship. South Asian Studies 29(2): 242–243
  23. ^ Coningham, R.A.E. (2012). Frank Raymond Allchin (1923–2010). In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy. Oxford University Press. IX: 25
  24. ^ F. R. Allchin and K. Matsushita, Unpublished UNDP Report for the Lumbini Development Project (New York, 1969),
  25. ^ F. R. Allchin and K. Matsushita, Unpublished UNDP Report for the Lumbini Development Project (New York, 1969): 10
  26. ^ Coningham, Robin (28 July 2010). "Raymond Allchin obituary". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 9 August 2023.
  27. ^ Allchin, F. Raymond, and Bridget Allchin (2012). From the Oxus to Mysore in 1951: The start of a great partnership in Indian Archaeology. Kilkerran: Hardinge Simpole, pp. 90
  28. ^ Allchin, F. Raymond, and Bridget Allchin (2012). From the Oxus to Mysore in 1951: The start of a great partnership in Indian Archaeology. Kilkerran: Hardinge Simpole, pp. 35

raymond, allchin, frank, july, 1923, june, 2010, british, archaeologist, indologist, wife, bridget, allchin, formed, most, influential, british, partnerships, post, independence, study, south, asian, archaeology, producing, large, body, scholarship, ranging, f. Frank Raymond Allchin FBA 9 July 1923 4 June 2010 was a British archaeologist and Indologist He and his wife Bridget Allchin formed one of the most influential British partnerships in the post Independence study of South Asian archaeology Producing a large body of scholarship ranging from archaeological excavations ethnoarchaeology as well as epigraphy and linguistics the Allchins made their work and that of others accessible through a series of sole joint and edited publications Seminal works include The Birth of Indian Civilisation 1968 which was later superseded by their books The Rise of Indian Civilisation in India and Pakistan 1982 and The Archaeology of Early Historic South Asia 1995 1 DrFrank Raymond AllchinBorn 1923 07 09 9 July 1923Harrow London United KingdomDied4 June 2010 2010 06 04 aged 86 Cambridge United KingdomAlma materSOAS University of LondonKnown forsignificant contribution to the study of the ancient history of Afghanistan Pakistan India Sri LankaSpouseBridget AllchinParentsFrank Macdonald Allchin father Louise Maude mother Scientific careerFieldsarcheology Contents 1 Background 2 Career 2 1 Afghanistan and South India 2 2 Pakistan and Western India 2 3 Sri Lanka 3 Legacy 3 1 Heritage protection 4 Academic recognition 5 Personal life 6 Publications 6 1 Publications 1950s 1960s 6 2 Publications 1970s 1980s 6 3 Publications 1990s 2000s 6 4 Joint publications 6 5 Reports for UNESCO and UNDP 7 See also 8 ReferencesBackground editRaymond Allchin was born in Harrow London on 9 July 1923 son of Frank Macdonald Allchin a doctor and Louise Maude His brother was Donald Allchin an Anglican priest and theologian Raymond was educated at Westminster and enrolled at the Regent Street Polytechnic where he studied architecture for three years followed by conscription into the Royal Corps of Signals Trained as a Line Mechanic Raymond was posted to India in 1944 On his return he embarked on a BA in Hindi and Sanskrit at SOAS University of London followed by a PhD on the prehistory of Raichur District in Hyderabad under the supervision of Professor K de B Codrington at the same institution 2 On completing his PhD Raymond was appointed Lecturer in Indian archaeology at SOAS in 1954 He left SOAS in 1959 for the post of Lectureship in Indian Studies at Cambridge 3 Raymond died in Cambridge on 4 June 2010 He had a wife Bridget and two children Sushila and William 1 Career editAfghanistan and South India edit Raymond was an active field archaeologist throughout his career and his first introduction to South Asian fieldwork was in the Bamiyan Valley of Afghanistan in 1951 Here under the direction of Codrington he studied the standing remains of Shahr e Zohak 4 Later that year in the company of Bridget he began his PhD research in Raichur District Raymond s selected research topic the Neolithic of Peninsular India was one of the areas of South Asian archaeology most poorly understood and was a neglected area of research when compared to the Bronze Age Indus cities or those of the Early Historic period in the north of the Subcontinent 5 After undertaking a survey of sites within the District he selected the ash mound of Piklihal for further investigation Excavating in 1952 and again in 1957 with the assistance of the Andhra Pradesh Department of Archeology and Museums Raymond demonstrated that the ash mound had a distinct Neolithic sequence with later evidence of Iron Age occupation above 6 In order to test some of his earlier theories about Piklihal Raymond selected Utnur for excavation one of the best preserved ash mounds In a single season he cut through metres of cinder and ash and discovered that the mounds were contained by series of post holes demarking superimposed circular stockades He again dated this site type to the Neolithic of South India and to the fourth millennium BC on account of the associated polished stone axes He interpreted the stockades at Utnur as annual cattle camps whose accumulations of dung were burnt at the end of each grazing season thus creating a regular sequence of ash and cinder 7 He later developed these ideas into a narrative which bound together Hindu ritual tradition and contemporary pastoral practice with the archaeological findings suggesting that the regular burning of the stockades was not a calamity or the result of raiding but part of an annual fire rite perhaps surviving today as Holi Divali or Pongal 8 Pakistan and Western India edit On moving to Cambridge in 1959 Raymond turned his attention to Pakistan and worked at the site of Shaikhan Dheri between 1963 and 1964 Working with Professor A H Dani of Peshawar University Raymond and Bridget supervised the processing of antiquities and pottery drawing during the first season 9 Although only on site for one season Raymond later produced research on artefacts from Shaikhan Dheri He suggested that a number of small iron plates pierced with small holes around their edges some of which had rusted together formed part of the scale armour from the cap of a cataphract based on observations from Gandharan sculpture excavation reports textual sources and contemporary examples from Rajput 10 He also suggested that a number of globular vessels that Sir John Marshall had interpreted for distillation of water at Sirkap Taxila were actually alcohol stills Basing this hypothesis on ethnographic analogy Vedic references and Rajput texts he stated that Considering the importance of alcohol for man kind it is surprising that comparatively little is known of its early history 12 and concluding that it may well be that the art of distillation was India s gift to the world 11 Raymond then shifted his focus back to India and undertook an archaeological reconnaissance of the coast of Gujarat in 1967 focused on investigating the presence or absence of sites associated with the Indus civilisation in western India following this in 1968 with excavations at the site of Malvan with Bridget and Dr J P Joshi of the Archaeological Survey of India ASI 12 Returning to fieldwork in the North West Frontier Province in the Bannu Basin Raymond and Bridget worked collaboratively between 1977 and 1979 working at Lewan and Tarakai Qila with Professor F A Durrani and Professor Farid Khan of Peshawar University Mr Robert Knox of the British Museum and Professor Ken Thomas of UCL 13 Later as Joint Director of the British Archaeological Mission to Pakistan with Bridget the focus shifted away from the Bronze Age to the Early historic period and particularly onto the site of Taxila On a walk around the Hathial ridge one February morning in 1980 not far from the Taxila Museum guesthouse they discovered numerous sherds of a distinctive highly burnished red ware covering an area of 13 hectares along the foot of the spur Raymond recognised that these sherds belonged to the category of Burnished Red Ware associated with the Gandhara grave culture dating to the beginning of the first millennium BC at the end of the Chalcolithic period Also aware of the parallel presence of such sherds in the basal levels of Wheeler s excavations at the Bala Hisar of Charsadda challenged received wisdom at the time that suggested that such cities had been founded no earlier than the sixth century BC as the Persian Empire expanded eastwards and annexed the satrapy of Gandhara and that the urban sequences of the region stretched back before Persian contact possibly back to the late Chalcolithic 14 Though Raymond never excavated to prove such assertions he was pivotal to negotiating the return of an archaeological team to Charsadda after a gap of thirty years Jointly directed by his former students Professor Robin Coningham and Professor Ihsan Ali of Peshawar University excavations between 1993 and 1997 confirmed Raymond s hypothesis of a much earlier date for initial settlement at c 1300 BC 15 Sri Lanka edit In 1989 and at the age of 67 Raymond initiated his last major field project in Sri Lanka at the Citadel of Anuradhapura in the island s North Central Province following a joint invitation from Dr Roland Silva director general of archaeology and Dr Siran Deraniyagala one of his former students and then archaeological advisor to the Government of Sri Lanka Raymond invited his former undergraduate and new research student Robin Coningham to accept the role of field director 16 and the results from excavations between 1989 and 1993 refuted many long held assumptions Excavating a ten metre deep cultural sequence stretching from the ninth century BC to the tenth century AD 17 it provided evidence of urbanism in the fourth century BC but also confirmed Deraniyagala s early claim of evidence of the earliest Early Brahmi script anywhere in South Asia 18 demonstrating its use to facilitate trade before being later adopted as an imperial tool by the Mauryans Legacy editFurther information Ancient India and Iran Trust The Allchins were also pivotal in promoting and facilitating the study of South Asian archaeology in Europe as well as within the Subcontinent In the 1970s aware of the fragmented nature of South Asian scholarship across Europe and seeking to broaden the capacity that was at the time possible and available within Britain the Allchins together with colleagues from Europe created a biannual platform for South Asian archaeologists numismatists epigraphers and historians of art and architecture to exchange information from current research Forming the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists the Allchins organised the first meeting which was held at Churchill College in Cambridge in 1971 19 In reaction to the lack of institutions teaching posts or funds devoted to the promotion of popular or scholarly interest in South and Central Asia the Allchins along with Professor Sir Harold Bailey Professor Johanna van Lohuizen de Leeuw and Dr Jan van Lohuizen founded the Ancient India and Iran Trust in Cambridge in 1978 The Trust aimed to support and provide a focal point where scholars and members of the public with interests in the cultures of these geographic regions could meet and use its unique library substantially composed of the collections of its founders 20 The Trust also organised funds to facilitate Indian and Pakistani visiting fellowships which included highly distinguished scholars including Dilip Chakrabari Ravi Korisettar K Krishnan V N Misra Lolita Nehru K Paddaya Gautam Sengupta and Vasant Shinde The legacy of the Allchins and the Trust that they helped found continues to support the promotion of South Asian scholarship In December 2013 the first Annual Allchin Symposium named in their honour was held at the Trust Established to commemorate their work and outstanding contribution to the development of South Asian studies in the UK the Symposium brings together established lecturers post doctoral researchers and PhD students working in South Asian Archaeology History and the History of Art and Architecture providing a forum for the presentation and discussion of current research 21 Amongst other collections the Ancient India and Iran Trust also houses the Allchin archive comprising the photographic slide collection of both Allchins and the meticulous work diaries which Raymond kept during each of his field seasons offering great potential to scholars of South Asian archaeology 22 Heritage protection edit As well as undertaking almost forty years of field investigations Raymond was also motivated by the need to record and protect heritage in the face of the pressures of increasing population and development in South Asia 23 Raymond was also one of the pioneers for the protection of heritage sites within their cultural landscape as illustrated by his work for the UN with the Japanese Planner and Architect K Matsushita in 1969 24 Raymond and Matsushita had been contracted by UNDP with the responsibility to guide the development of Lumbini the birthplace of the Buddha following the 1967 visit to the site by U Thant the UN Secretary General who wished to see the site transformed from what Raymond called little more than a neglected field to a site worthy of a collection of monuments of great importance Tasked with assisting in the planning of a sacred garden pilgrim village and a buffer zone around the site this report was later used by the Japanese architect Kenzō Tange as the core for his masterplan for Lumbini which has directed the development of the site over the last thirty years into the present 25 Academic recognition editRecognition of Raymond s contribution to South Asian archaeology was rewarded in Cambridge when he was appointed a Fellow of Churchill College in 1963 and promoted to a Readership in Indian Studies in 1972 Away from Cambridge his achievements were also recognised through being made a Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society in 1953 a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1957 a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 1974 and a Fellow of the British Academy in 1981 as well as having an Honorary D Litt conferred by Deccan College Pune in 2007 He also served on the Governing Council of the Society for Afghan Studies and its successor the Society for South Asian Studies as well as being associated with the Charles Wallace Pakistan Trust the British Academy s Stein Arnold Committee and the Advisory Council of the Victoria and Albert Museum Raymond was appointed a Fellow of the British Academy in 1981 and retired with the title of Emeritus Reader in South Asian archaeology in 1989 26 Personal life editMain article Bridget Allchin In 1951 Bridget met fellow PhD student Raymond Allchin at the Institute of Archaeology and they married in March of that year 2 27 Travelling to India for the first time with Raymond in 1951 Bridget steadily but firmly established herself as the most prominent South Asian Prehistorian in the UK A pioneering female field archaeologist in South Asia at a time when there were none Bridget s research interests and publications were to stretch across South Asia from Afghanistan to Sri Lanka Like Raymond Bridget s family also had a long heritage of medical practitioners including Dr Thomas Monro an ancestor who had attempted to treat the madness of George III 28 Publications editPublications 1950s 1960s edit Extended content1954 Development of Early Cultures in the Raichur District of Hyderabad PhD Dissertation University of London School of Oriental and African Studies 1964 Tulsi Das Kavitavali translated with introduction UNESCO London Allen amp Unwin pp 229 1953 A flake tool from the Oxus Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 19 227 1955 Rock paintings and engravings in Raichur Hyderabad with D H Gordon Man 55 114 97 99 1956 Stone alignments of Southern Hyderabad Man 56 133 136 1957 The Neolithic stone industry of North Karnataka region Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 19 321 335 1957 The culture sequence of Bactria Antiquity 31 131 141 1957 Sanskrit eduka Pali eduka Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 20 1 4 1959 Poor men s thalis a Deccan potter s technique Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 22 250 257 1959 Upon the contextual significance of certain groups of ancient Indian signs Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 22 548 555 1960 Piklihal Excavations Andhra Pradesh Archaeological Series 1 Hyderabad Government of Andhra Pradesh pp xvii 154 1961 Utnur Excavations Andhra Pradesh Archaeological Series 5 Hyderabad Government of Andhra Pradesh pp 75 1961 Ideas of history in Indian archaeological writing in C Philips ed Historians of India Pakistan and Ceylon Oxford Oxford University Press 241 259 1961 The antiquity and methods of gold mining in ancient India Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 5 195 211 1962 The Neolithic stone industry of the Santal Parganas Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 25 306 330 1962 A Neolithic pot from the Billa Surgam caves Andhra Pradesh Antiquity 36 302 303 1962 Painted pottery from Patapad in Andhra Pradesh Antiquity 36 221 224 1963 Neolithic Cattle Keepers of South India A study of Deccan ashmounds Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp xvi 189 1963 Cattle and economy in the Neolithic of South India in A E Mourant and F E Zeuner eds Man and Cattle London 149 155 1963 The cultural tradition of India The Listener March 25 39 1964 An inscribed weight from Mathura Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 7 201 205 1966 Pottery and head rests from Narasipur Sangam in D Sen and A K Ghosh eds Studies in Prehistory Robert Bruce Foote Memorial Volume Calcutta Firma K L Mukhopadhyay 58 63 1966 The place of Tulsi Das in North Indian devotional tradition Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 123 140 1966 Tulsi Das The petition to Ram translation of Vinayapatrika with introduction notes and glossary London Allen amp Unwin pp 365 1968 The social thought of Swami Vivekananda Swami Vivekannanda in East and West London Ramakrishna Vedanta Centre 84 105 1968 Archaeology and the date of Kaniska in A L Basham ed Papers on the Date of Kaniska Leiden E J Brill 4 34 1968 Explorations in districts Baroda Broach and Surat with J P Joshi Indian Archaeology 1967 68 a review New Delhi Archaeological Survey of India 9 13 1969 Early domestic animals in India and Pakistan in P J Ucko and G W Dimbleby eds The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals London Duckworth 317 22 1969 Early cultivated plants in India and Pakistan in P J Ucko and G W Dimbleby eds The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals London Duckworth 323 29 1969 Dilmun and the gulf of Cambay Antiquity 43 315 16 Publications 1970s 1980s edit Extended content1970 Malvan further light on the southern extension of the Indus Civilisation with J P Joshi Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1 20 28 1970 A pottery group from Ayun Chitral in honour of Sir Harold Bailey Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 33 1 4 1971 The attaining of the void a review of some recent contributions in English to Virasaiva studies Religious Studies 7 339 59 1972 Malvan with J P Joshi in S B Deo ed Archaeological Congress and Seminar Papers Nagpur Nagpur University 36 42 1972 A piece of scale armour from Shaikhan Dheri Charsada Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 2 113 20 1972 A cruciform reliquary from Shaikhan Dheri Charsada in P Pal ed Aspects of Indian Art Leiden E J Brill 15 26 1973 An inscribed reliquary from Shaikhan Dheri in H H Hartel and V Moeller eds Indologen Tagung 1971 Wiesbaden Steiner 265 72 1973 Problems and perspectives in South Asian archaeology in N Hammond ed South Asian Archaeology 1971 Park Ridge Noyes Press 1 11 1974 The emergence of civilisation in North India Encyclopaedia Britannica London Encyclopaedia Britannica 1974 Pottery from graves in the Perumal hills near Kodaikanal in A K Ghosh ed Perspectives in Palaeoanthropology Dharani Sen volume Calcutta Firma K L Mukhopadhyay 299 308 1975 The reconciliation of jnana and bhakti in Ramcaritamanasa Religious Studies 12 81 91 1976 The mysterious Path of Love in Tulsi Das Vedanta for East and West London Ramakrishna Vedanta Centre 152 3 11 1976 Preface for reprint of Annual Reports of the Archaeological Survey of Mysore 1 3 1977 Recommendations concerning archaeological sites in E F Sekler ed Masterplan for the Conservation of the Cultural Heritage in the Kathmandu Valley UNESCO Paris 147 54 1977 Recommendations concerning moveable cultural property in E F Sekler ed Masterplan for the Conservation of the Cultural Heritage in the Kathmandu Valley UNESCO Paris 134 47 1977 Religious symbols and Indian thought in H R E Davidson ed Symbols of Power Cambridge The Folklore Society Mistletoe Series 1 35 1977 A modern Indian potter s technique in D Chattopadhyaya ed History and Society Essays in honour of Professor Niharanjan Ray Calcutta Firma K L Mukhopadhyay 1 13 1978 Surface collections from Pushkar in B Allchin A S Goudie and K Hegde eds The Prehistory and Palaeogeography of the Great Indian Desert New York Academic Press 331 1 9 1978 Monument conservation and policy in India Journal of the Royal Society of Arts 126 746 65 1978 Introduction with N Hammond in F R Allchin and N Hammond eds The Archaeology of Afghanistan New York Academic Press 1 9 1978 Conclusion with N Hammond in F R Allchin and N Hammond eds The Archaeology of Afghanistan New York Academic Press 405 14 1978 The Archaeology of Afghanistan with N Hammond ed and contributor London Academic Press pp xxiii 451 1979 A Source book of Indian Archaeology with D K Chakrabarti New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal Vol 1 pp x 354 1979 India the ancient home of distillation Man 14 55 63 1979 Stamped Tangas and condensers evidence of distillation at Shaikhan Dheri in M Taddei ed South Asian Archaeology 1977 Naples Istituto Universitario Orientale 755 97 1980 A note on the Asokan stupas of Patan in A L Dallapiccola ed The Stupa its Religious Historical and Architectural Significance Wiesbaden Frantz Steiner Verlag 147 56 1980 Textile impressions from the South Indian Iron Age P E P Deraniyagala Commemoration Volume Sri Lanka 64 7 1980 Archaeological and language evidence for the movement of Indo Aryan speaking peoples into South Asia J K R Cama Oriental Institute Bombay 48 68 102 also published in 1981 in M S Asimov B A Litvinsky L I Miroshnikov and D S Rayevsky eds Ethnic Problems of the history of Central Asia in the Early Period 2nd millennium B C Moscow 336 49 1981 Preliminary report on the Bannu Basin Project 1977 79 Introduction in H Hartel ed South Asian Archaeology 1979 Berlin Dietrich Reimer Verlag 217 218 1981 Preliminary report on the excavations at Lewan 1977 78 with J R Knox in H Hartel ed South Asian Archaeology 1979 Berlin Dietrich Reimer Verlag 241 44 1981 Preliminary report on the excavations at Tarakai Qila 1978 79 with J R Knox in H Hartel ed South Asian Archaeology 1979 Berlin Dietrich Reimer Verlag 245 50 1981 Antiquity of gold mining in the Gadag region in M S Nagaraja Rao ed Madhu Recent Researches in Indian Archaeology and History Delhi Agam Kala Prakashan 81 3 1981 The legacy of the Indus Civilisation in Gregory L Possehl ed Harappan Civilization A Contemporary Perspective New Delhi Oxford amp IBH 325 33 1981 Antiquity and continuity in P Jayakar et al eds The Indian Experience 125 29 1981 Antecedents of the Indus Civilization 10th Annual Mortimer Wheeler Archaeological Lecture Bulletin of the British Academy 66 135 60 1981 How old is the city of Taxila Antiquity 56 8 14 1982 Indian Monuments through British Eyes 1780 1980 Handlist of the exhibition in the Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge Fitzwilliam Museum pp 1 18 1984 The northern limits of the Harappan culture zone in the light of recent observations in B B Lal and S P Gupta eds Frontiers of the Indus Civilization New Delhi Books and Books 51 4 1985 Guide to the Asokan inscriptions with K R Norman in B Allchin ed South Asian Studies 1 43 50 1985 The interpretation of a seal from Chanhu daro and its significance for the religion of the Indus Civilization South Asian Archaeology 1983 in J Schotsmans J and M Taddei M eds Naples Instituto Universitario Orientale Dipartimento di Studi Asiatici Series Minor 23 369 84 1986 Radiocarbon dating of some early sites in North West Pakistan with K D Thomas South Asian Studies 2 37 44 1986 Drumbeats from the past Pupul Jayakar Felicitation Volume Dimensions of Indian Art Pupul Jayakar Seventy in L Candra and J Jain eds Delhi Agam Kala Prakashan 1989 The Conservation of the Indian Heritage with B Allchin and B K Thapar ed and contributor New Delhi Cosmo Publications pp 275 1989 The aims of the Seminar introductory remarks in B Allchin F R Allchin and B K Thapar eds The Conservation of the Indian heritage New Delhi Cosmo Publications 1989 Threats to the conservation of monuments in urban and rural settings in B Allchin F R Allchin and B K Thapar eds The Conservation of the Indian heritage New Delhi 1989 City and State Formation in Early Historic South Asia South Asian Studies 5 1 16 Publications 1990s 2000s edit Extended content1990 Indo Aryan and Aryan language culture and ethnicity Ancient Ceylon 10 13 23 1990 Patterns of city formation in Early Historic South Asia South Asian Studies 6 163 74 1990 The end of the Harappan Urban Phase and its aftermath Ancient Ceylon 10 25 40 1991 Shahr i Zohak and the History of the Bamiyan Valley Afghanistan with P H B Baker ed Oxford British Archaeological Reports Number 570 Ancient India and Iran Trust Series No 1 pp 215 1991 Coningham R A E amp Allchin F R Anuradhapura Citadel Archaeological Project Preliminary Report of the Second Season of Sri Lankan British Excavations at Salgha Watta South Asian Studies 7 167 175 1992 An Indus ram a hitherto unrecorded stone sculpture from the Indus Civilization South Asian Studies 8 53 4 1992 Coningham R A E amp Allchin F R Anuradhapura Citadel Archaeological Project Preliminary Results of the Third Season of Sri Lankan British Excavations at Salgaha Watta South Asian Studies 8 155 167 1993 The urban position of Taxila and its place in Northwest India Pakistan in H Spodek and D M Srinivasan eds Urban Form and Meaning in South Asia Washington DC National Gallery of Art Studies in the History of Art 31 Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts Symposium Papers 15 69 81 1995 The archaeology of Early Historic South Asia The emergence of cities and states ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press xvii 317 1995 Excavations at Malvan report of the collaboration of the Archaeological Survey of India and Cambridge University in 1970 on the Gujarat Plain with J P Joshi New Delhi Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India 92 pp vii 117 1996 Coningham R A E Allchin F R Batt C M amp Lucy D Passage to India Anuradhapura and the Early Use of the Brahmi Script Cambridge Archaeological Journal 6 1 73 97 1997 A Source book of Indian Archaeology with D K Chakrabarti New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal Vol 2 Settlements Technology and Trade pp 708 1997 South Asian archaeology 1971 1991 index of the proceedings of the biennal conferences of the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists formerly Association of South Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe compiler Naples Indices Istituto Universitario Orientale Dipartimento di Studi Aisatici 3 pp 109 1998 The interface of archaeology and history Man and Environment 23 1 19 36 1999 Ancient Buddhist Scrolls from Gandhara The British Library Kharosthi Fragments with Richard Salomon and Mark Barnard London British Library 1999 Preface in R A E Coningham ed Anuradhapura The British Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salagha Watta 2 Volume 1 The Site Oxford Archaeopress for the Society for South Asian Studies The British Academy BAR international series 824 Society for South Asian Studies monograph no 3 ix xi 2000 The Ancient India and Iran Trust Library Second revised edition Cambridge Ancient India amp Iran Trust Library 2003 A Source book of Indian Archaeology with D K Chakrabarti New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal vol 3 Prehistoric Roots of Religious Beliefs Human Remains The First Steps in Historical Archaeology Sculpture Architecture Coins and Inscriptions pp 291 2006 Inscriptions and graffiti in R A E Coningham ed Anuradhapura The British Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salgaha Watta Volume 2 The Artefacts Oxford Archaeopress for the Society for South Asian Studies The British Academy 431 450 Joint publications edit Extended contentAllchin Bridget and F Raymond Allchin 1968 The Birth of Indian Civilization India and Pakistan Before 500 B C Harmondsworth Penguin Books Allchin Bridget and F Raymond Allchin 1982 The Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan Cambridge Cambridge University Press Allchin Bridget and F Raymond Allchin 1997 Origins of a Civilization The Prehistory and Early Archaeology of South Asia New Delhi Viking Allchin F Raymond and Bridget Allchin 2012 From the Oxus to Mysore in 1951 The start of a great partnership in Indian Archaeology Kilkerran Hardinge Simpole Reports for UNESCO and UNDP edit Extended content1969 Cultural Tourism in India its scope and development with special reference to the monumental heritage UNESCO pp104 1969 Report on the Lumbini Development Project with K Matsushita UNDP See also editAhmad Hasan Dani Ihsan Ali Elena Efimovna Kuzmina Yunas Samad Siran Upendra DeraniyagalaReferences edit a b Robin Coningham Raymond Allchin obituary Science The Guardian Retrieved 1 April 2017 a b Allchin and Allchin 2012 90 Coningham R A E 2012 Frank Raymond Allchin 1923 2010 In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy Oxford University Press IX 9 Coningham R A E 2012 Frank Raymond Allchin 1923 2010 In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy Oxford University Press IX 6 Coningham R A E 2012 Frank Raymond Allchin 1923 2010 In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy Oxford University Press IX 7 Allchin Raymond 1954 The Development of Early Culture in Raichur District of Hyderabad in the Deccan PhD Thesis Allchin F R 1961 Utnur Excavations Andhra Pradesh Archaeological Series 5 Hyderabad Government of Andhra Pradesh Allchin F R 1963 Neolithic Cattle Keepers of South India A study of Deccan ashmounds Cambridge Cambridge University Press Coningham R A E 2012 Frank Raymond Allchin 1923 2010 In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy Oxford University Press IX 9 10 Allchin F R 1970 A piece of scale armour from Shaihkan dheri Charsada Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 2 113 Allchin F R 1979 India the home of ancient distillation Man 14 55 Allchin F R 1995 Excavations at Malvan Report of the collaboration of the Archaeological Survey of India and Cambridge University in 1970 on the Gujarat plan Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India Cambridge Allchin F R et al 1986 Lewan and the Bannu Basin Excavation and Survey of Sites and Environments in North West Pakistan Bar International Series 310 Allchin F R 1981 How old is the city of Taxila Antiquity 56 8 14 Coningham R A E amp Ali I 2007 Charsadda The British Pakistani Excavations at the Bala Hisar of Charsadda Oxford Archaeopress Coningham R A E 2012 Frank Raymond Allchin 1923 2010 In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy Oxford University Press IX 14 Coningham R A E 1999 Anuradhapura The British Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salgaha Watta Volume 1 The Site Oxford Archaeopress for the Society for South Asian Studies Monograph Series Coningham R A E 2006 Anuradhapura The British Sri Lankan Excavations at Anuradhapura Salgaha Watta Volume 2 The Artefacts Oxford Archaeopress R A E Coningham et al 1996 Passage to India Anuradhapura and the early use of Brahmi script Cambridge Archaeological Journal 6 73 97 Coningham R A E 2012 Frank Raymond Allchin 1923 2010 In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy Oxford University Press IX 19 Coningham R A E 2012 Frank Raymond Allchin 1923 2010 In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy Oxford University Press IX 22 http www indiran org Authentication Request Failure Mcdonald cam ac uk Retrieved 1 April 2017 Coningham R A E 2013 Review of R Allchin amp B Allchin From the Oxus to Mysore in 1951 The Start of a Great Partnership in Indian Scholarship South Asian Studies 29 2 242 243 Coningham R A E 2012 Frank Raymond Allchin 1923 2010 In Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy Oxford University Press IX 25 F R Allchin and K Matsushita Unpublished UNDP Report for the Lumbini Development Project New York 1969 F R Allchin and K Matsushita Unpublished UNDP Report for the Lumbini Development Project New York 1969 10 Coningham Robin 28 July 2010 Raymond Allchin obituary The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 9 August 2023 Allchin F Raymond and Bridget Allchin 2012 From the Oxus to Mysore in 1951 The start of a great partnership in Indian Archaeology Kilkerran Hardinge Simpole pp 90 Allchin F Raymond and Bridget Allchin 2012 From the Oxus to Mysore in 1951 The start of a great partnership in Indian Archaeology Kilkerran Hardinge Simpole pp 35 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raymond Allchin amp oldid 1175415854, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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