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Pashupati seal

The Pashupati seal (also Mahayogi seal,[1] Proto-Śiva seal;[2] the adjective "so-called" sometimes applied to "Pashupati"),[3] is a steatite seal which was uncovered in the 1928–29 Archaeological Survey of India excavations of the Indus Valley civilisation ("IVC") site of Mohenjo-daro, then in the British Raj, and now in Pakistan. The seal depicts a seated figure that is possibly tricephalic (having three heads). The seated figure has been thought to be ithyphallic (having an erect penis), an interpretation that has been questioned by many,[4] but was still held by the IVC specialist Jonathan Mark Kenoyer in a publication of 2003.[5] The man has a horned headdress and is surrounded by animals. He may represent a horned deity.[6][7][8][9]

The Pashupati seal, showing a seated and possibly tricephalic figure, surrounded by animals; circa 2350–2000 BCE

It has one of the more complicated designs in the thousands of seals found from the Indus Valley civilization, and is unusual in having a human figure as the main and largest element; in most seals this is an animal.[10] It had been claimed to be one of the earliest depictions of the Hindu god Shiva—"Pashupati" (Lord of animals) being one of his epithets, or a "proto-Shiva" deity.[9][11]

Though the combination of elements in the Pashupati seal is unique, there are a group of other Indus seals that have some of them. One, also from Mohenjo-daro (find number DK 12050) and now in Islamabad, has a nude three-faced horned deity seated on a throne in a yogic position, wearing bangles on its arms. In this case no animals are depicted, and there is some dispute as to the gender of the figure, despite it seeming to have a beard.[12]

The Pashupati seal is in the National Museum, New Delhi, having been moved there with the other Mohenjo-daro finds before independence. These were reserved for the future national museum, finally founded in 1949,[13] and the seal was allocated to India at Partition in 1947.

Discovery and description

 
A view of the Mohenjo-daro excavation site. The DK-G Area where the seal was found lies north-east of the Great Bath seen in the foreground.[14]

The seal was uncovered in 1928–29, in Block 1, Southern Portion of the DK-G Area of Mohenjo-daro, at a depth of 3.9 meters below the surface.[15] Ernest J. H. Mackay, who directed the excavations at Mohenjo-daro, dated the seal to the Intermediate I Period (now considered to fall around 2350–2000 BCE) in his 1937–38 report in which the seal is numbered 420, giving it its alternate name.[16]

The seal is carved in steatite and measures 3.56 cm by 3.53 cm, with a thickness of 0.76 cm. It has a human figure at the centre seated on a platform and facing forward. The legs of the figure are bent at the knees with the heels touching and the toes pointing downwards. The arms extend outwards and rest lightly on the knees, with the thumbs facing away from the body. Eight small and three large bangles cover the arms. The chest is covered with what appear to be necklaces, and a double band wraps around the waist. The figure wears a tall and elaborate headdress with a central fan-shaped structure flanked by two large striated horns. The human figure is surrounded by four wild animals: an elephant and a tiger to its one side, and a water buffalo (bubalus arnee) and an Indian rhinoceros on the other. Under the dais are two deer or ibexes looking backwards, so that their curved horns almost meet in the centre. At the top of the seal are seven Indus script symbols, with the last apparently displaced downwards for lack of horizontal space.[17][18]

Post-excavation history

 
An impression made from the steatite seal

The finds from Mohenjo-daro were initially deposited in the Lahore Museum, but later moved to the ASI headquarters at New Delhi, where a new "Central Imperial Museum" was being planned for the new capital of the British Raj, in which at least a selection would be displayed. It became apparent that Indian independence was approaching, but the Partition of India was not anticipated until late in the process. The new Pakistani authorities requested the return of the Harappan pieces excavated on their territory, but the Indian authorities refused. Eventually an agreement was reached, whereby the finds, totalling some 12,000 objects (most sherds of pottery), were split equally between the countries; in some cases this was taken very literally, with some necklaces and girdles having their beads separated into two piles. In the case of the "two most celebrated sculpted figures", Pakistan asked for and received the so-called Priest-King figure, while India retained the much smaller Dancing Girl,[19] and also the Pashupati seal.

Interpretations

Marshall's identification with proto-Shiva

The first description and analysis of the seal's iconography was that of the archaeologist John Marshall who had served as the Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India and led the excavations of the Indus Valley sites. In addition to the general features of the seal described above, he also saw the central figure as a male deity; as three-faced, with a possible fourth face towards the back; and, as ithyphallic, while conceding that what appeared to be the exposed phallus could instead be a tassel hanging from the waistband. Most significantly he identified the seal as an early prototype of the Hindu god Shiva (or, his Vedic predecessor, Rudra), who also was known by the title Pashupati ('lord or father of all the animals') in historic times.[20] In a 1928–29 publication, Marshall summarized his reasons for the identification as follows:

My reasons for the identification are four. In the first place the figure has three faces and that Siva was portrayed with three as well as with more usual five faces, there are abundant examples to prove. Secondly, the head is crowned with the horns of a bull and the trisula are characteristic emblems of Siva. Thirdly, the figure is in a typical yoga attitude, and Siva [sic] was and still is, regarded as a mahayogi—the prince of Yogis. Fourthly, he is surrounded by animals, and Siva is par excellence the "Lord of Animals" (Pasupati)—of the wild animals of the jungle, according to the Vedic meaning of the word pashu, no less than that of domesticated cattle.[15]

Later, in 1931, he expanded his reasons to include the fact that Shiva is associated with the phallus in the form of linga, and that in medieval art he is shown with deer or ibexes, as are seen below the throne on the seal.[20][21] Marshall's analysis of the Indus Valley religion, and the Pashupati seal in particular, was very influential and widely accepted for at least the next two generations. Herbert Sullivan, who had significant disagreements with it, recognised in 1964 that Marshall's analysis "has been accepted almost universally and has greatly influenced scholarly understanding of the historical development of Hinduism".[22]

Writing in 1976, Doris Srinivasan introduced an article otherwise critical of Marshall's interpretation by observing that "no matter what position is taken regarding the seal's iconography, it is always prefaced by Marshall's interpretation. On balance the proto-Śiva character of the seal has been accepted."[23] Thomas McEvilley noted, in line with Marshall, that the central figure was in the yoga pose Mulabandhasana, quoting the Kalpa Sutra's description "a squatting position with joined heels" used with meditation and fasting to attain infinite knowledge (kevala).[24]

Alf Hiltebeitel noted in 2011 that, following Marshall's analysis, "nearly all efforts at interpreting the [Indus Valley] religion have centered discussion around [the Pashupati seal] figure".[25] A lot of discussion has taken place about this seal.[26] While Marshall's work has earned some support, many critics and even supporters have raised several objections.[6]

Herbert Sullivan interpreted the figure as a female goddess on the grounds that the so-called erect phallus actually represents the dangling end of a waistband or girdle, a feature found on many undoubtedly female terracotta figurines, and ambiguous on some other seals, including DK 12050 (mentioned above). Marshall himself had admitted this was possible. In the terracottas, males are always nude; in addition, the jewellery worn on the Pashupati seal is characteristic of female rather than male terracottas.[27]

Doris Srinivasan's reinterpretation

 
Mahishasura, the buffalo demon being slayed by the goddess Durga. Durga Temple, Aihole

Doris Srinivasan, a professor of Indian studies, raised objections to Marshall's identification, and provided a interpretation for the figure, where she postulated the lateral projections were cow-like ears rather than faces, which had already been suggested by Sullivan and others.[28] In 1975–76, she published a journal article titled 'The So-Called Proto-śiva Seal from Mohenjo-Daro: An Iconological Assessment' in the academic journal Archives of Asian Art.[23] In 1997, she reiterated her views in a book titled Many Heads, Arms, and Eyes: Origin, Meaning, and Form of Multiplicity in Indian Art.

According to her, the two extra faces could be reinterpreted as possible ears, and the central face has predominant bovine features. She has drawn similarities between the central figure of seal 420, and other artefacts from the Indus Valley such as the horned mask from Mohenjo-Daro, the terracotta bull from Kalibangan, and the depiction of a horned deity on a water pitcher from the archaeological site of Kot Diji. She has also noted that the yogic posture of the figure is repeated on a number of other seals and sealings, some of which indicate that the figure receives worship. On the basis of these observations, she suggests that the figure of seal 420 could be a divine buffalo-man.[29]

Dravidian Interpretations

Scholars who consider the Indus Valley civilisation to be associated with a Dravidian rather than Vedic context have offered other interpretations.[30] Expanding on a mention by D. D. Kosambi in 1962,[31] Alf Hiltebeitel thought the horned figure could be a prototype of Mahishasura, the buffalo demon enemy of the Hindu goddess Durga. He has also argued that the tiger depicted in the seal could relate to the goddess Durga who is often depicted as riding a tiger (or a lion) in the Hindu pantheon. He also suggested that the surrounding animals could represent the vahanas (vehicles, mounts) of deities for the four cardinal directions.[32][33]

Where Marshall's description had "the head is crowned with the horns of a bull", Hiltebeitel is emphatic that the figure has the very different horns of a buffalo, and that IVC people familiar with both species would not have confused the two species: "One might imagine a "proto-Siva" with bull's horns as a prefiguration of Siva's connection with his vahana or riding vehicle Nandin. But a "proto-Siva" with buffalo's horns would take too much explaining to retain credibility".[34]

The American archaeologist Walter Fairservis tried to translate what he considered to be a Dravidian inscription, and was of the view that the seal could be identified with Anil, the paramount chief of four clans represented by the animals. The Finnish Indologist, Asko Parpola has suggested that the yogic pose could be an imitation of the Proto-Elamite way of representing seated bulls. He attempted to translate the inscription which he considers to be an early form of Dravidian, and found that the figure represents a servant of an aquatic deity.[35] He finds that the animals depicted on the seal best resemble those associated with the Hindu god Varuna who could be associated with the aquatic themes which are prominent in the Indus religion.[33]

Vedic Interpretations

 
Agni is the god of fire, and a prominent deity in the Vedas.

M.V.N. Krishna Rao identified the figure with the Hindu god Indra. He argued that the tiger could be ignored since it is much larger than the other animals, and the two deer could also be ignored since they were seated under the table. Then he combined the first phoneme of each of the animals, and the word 'nara' meaning man, and arrived at the term 'makhanasana' which is an epithet of Indra.[33]

Not determinable

Some 21st-century scholars have urged caution in interpretation. The American Indologist Wendy Doniger wrote in 2011 that while "several generations of scholars"[7] had taken up Marshall's suggestion, and while there was "a general resemblance" between the figure on the seal and later Hindu images of Shiva, and while the people of the Indus could have had "a symbolism of the divine phallus",[7] all the same "we cannot know it, [and] it does not mean that the Indus images are the source of the Hindu images, or that they had the same meaning."[7] The scholar of religious studies Geoffrey Samuel wrote that the multiple interpretations "certainly cannot all be right".[8] Since, further, there was no obvious method for choosing between the interpretations, and little was known with certainty about Indus Valley religious practices, "the evidence for the yogic or 'Tantric' practices is so dependent on reading later practices into the material that it is of little or no use for constructing any kind of history of [such] practices".[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Possehl, Gregory L. (2002). The Indus Civilization: A Contemporary Perspective. Rowman Altamira. pp. 114–. ISBN 978-0-7591-0172-2.
  2. ^ Ameri, Marta; Costello, Sarah Kielt; Jamison, Gregg (2018). Seals and Sealing in the Ancient World: Case Studies from the Near East, Egypt, the Aegean, and South Asia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 154–. ISBN 978-1-108-17351-3.
  3. ^ Geer, Alexandra Anna Enrica van der (2008). Animals in Stone: Indian Mammals Sculptured Through Time. BRILL. pp. 27–. ISBN 978-90-04-16819-0.
  4. ^ For example, Wendy Doniger, in The Hindus: An Alternative History, page 34, 2009, Viking: "... the Indus seal we all once interpreted as an ithyphallic Shiva Pashupati is probably just someone sitting cross-legged, as South Asians are inclined to do, with a bulging loincloth knot...".
  5. ^ Kenoyer, 403
  6. ^ a b See e. g. James G. Lochtefeld, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism, vol. 2: N–Z. The Rosen Publishing Group, New York 2002, p. 633, who doubts the connection of the seal to Shiva, given the supposedly late age of the god.
  7. ^ a b c d Doniger 2011, pp. 485–508.
  8. ^ a b c Samuel 2017, pp. 3–4, 6–8.
  9. ^ a b Werness 2006, p. 270
  10. ^ "stamp-seal", British Museum
  11. ^ Witzel 2008, pp. 68–70, 90: "It is known from internal evidence that the Vedic texts were orally composed in northern India, at first in the Greater Punjab and later on also in more eastern areas, including northern Bihar, between ca. 1500 BCE and ca. 500–400 BCE. The oldest text, the Rgveda, must have been more or less contemporary with the Mitanni texts of northern Syria/Iraq (1450–1350 BCE), ..." (p. 70) "a Vedic connection of the so-called Siva Pasupati found on some Harappa seals (D. Srinivasan 1984) cannot be established, this mythological concept is due, rather, to common Eurasian ideas of the “Lord of the Animals” who is already worshipped by many Neolithic hunting societies." (p. 90).
  12. ^ Kenoyer, 402–403
  13. ^ Singh (2015), 111–112
  14. ^ Kenoyer, Jonathan Mark. . Archived from the original on 2013-12-01.
  15. ^ a b Mackay 1928–29, pp. 74–75.
  16. ^ Mackay 1937–38, plate XCIV; no. 420.
  17. ^ Possehl, 141
  18. ^ Marshall 1931, p. 52.
  19. ^ Singh (2015), 111–112 (112 quoted)
  20. ^ a b Marshall 1931, pp. 52–57.
  21. ^ McEvilley 1981, pp. 45–46.
  22. ^ Sullivan 1964.
  23. ^ a b Srinivasan 1975–76, pp. 47–58.
  24. ^ McEvilley 1981, pp. 47–51.
  25. ^ Hiltebeitel 2011, p. 399.
  26. ^ Bryant, Edwin, p.163
  27. ^ Sullivan, 119–120; Hiltebeitel, 229–230 partly concurs
  28. ^ Sullivan, 120; Singh (2008), 172
  29. ^ Srinivasan 1997, p. 181.
  30. ^ Hiltebeitel, 406
  31. ^ Kosambi, 2–3
  32. ^ Hiltebeitel 2011, pp. 399–432.
  33. ^ a b c Bryant, Edwin (2001). The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate. Oxford University Press. pp. 163. ISBN 0199881332.
  34. ^ Hiltebeitel, 405, 430–431
  35. ^ Ratnagar, Shereen (2006). Trading Encounters: From the Euphrates to the Indus in the Bronze Age. Oxford University Press. p. 25. ISBN 9780195666038.

Sources

  • Doniger, Wendy (2011). "God's Body, or, The Lingam Made Flesh: Conflicts over the Representation of the Sexual Body of the Hindu God Shiva". Social Research. 78 (2, Part 1 (Summer 2011)): 485–508. doi:10.1353/sor.2011.0067. JSTOR 23347187.
  • Hiltebeitel, Alf (2011). "The Indus Valley "Proto-Śiva", Reexamined through Reflections on the Goddess, the Buffalo, and the Symbolism of vāhanas". In Adluri, Vishwa; Bagchee, Joydeep (eds.). When the Goddess was a Woman: Mahabharata Ethnographies - Essays by Alf Hiltebeitel. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-19380-2.
  • Kenoyer, J.M., entry by, in: Matthiae, P; Lamberg-Karlovsky, Carl Clifford, Art of the First Cities: The Third Millennium B.C. from the Mediterranean to the Indus, p. 403, 2003, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), google books
  • Kosambi, Damodar Dharmanand, Myth and Reality: Studies in the Formation of Indian Culture, 1962 (2005 reprint), Popular Prakashan, ISBN 9788171548705, 8171548709, google books
  • Mackay, Ernest John Henry (1928–29). "Excavations at Mohenjodaro". Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India: 67–75.
  • Mackay, Earnest John Henry (1937–38). Further excavations at Mohenjo-Daro : being an official account of archaeological excavations at Mohenjo-Daro carried out by the Government of India between the years 1927 and 1931. Delhi: Government of India.
  • McEvilley, Thomas (1981). "An Archaeology of Yoga". RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics. 1 (1): 44–77. doi:10.1086/RESv1n1ms20166655. JSTOR 20166655. S2CID 192221643.
  • Marshall, John (1931). Mohenjo-Daro and the Indus Civilization: Being an Official Account of Archaeological Excavations at Mohenjo-Daro Carried Out by the Government of India Between the Years 1922 and 1927. Asian Educational Services. ISBN 978-81-206-1179-5.
  • Possehl, Gregory L. (2002). The Indus Civilization: A Contemporary Perspective. Rowman Altamira. ISBN 978-0-7591-1642-9.
  • Samuel, Geoffrey (2017) [2008]. The Origins of Yoga and Tantra. Indic Religions to the Thirteenth Century. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521695343.
  • Singh, Kavita, "The Museum Is National", Chapter 4 in: Mathur, Saloni and Singh, Kavita (eds), No Touching, No Spitting, No Praying: The Museum in South Asia, 2015, Routledge, PDF on academia.edu
  • Singh, Upinder, A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century, 2008, Pearson Longman, ISBN 9788131716779
  • Srinivasan, Doris (1975–76). "The So-Called Proto-śiva Seal from Mohenjo-Daro: An Iconological Assessment". Archives of Asian Art. 29: 47–58. JSTOR 20062578.
  • Srinivasan, Doris (1997). Many Heads, Arms, and Eyes: Origin, Meaning, and Form of Multiplicity in Indian Art. Brill. ISBN 9004107584.
  • Sullivan, Herbert P. (1964). "A Re-Examination of the Religion of the Indus Civilization". History of Religions. 4 (1): 115–125. doi:10.1086/462498. JSTOR 1061875. S2CID 162278147.
  • Werness, Hope B. (2006). Continuum Encyclopedia of Animal Symbolism in World Art. A&C Black. p. 270. ISBN 978-0826419132.
  • Witzel, Michael (2008). "Vedas and Upanisads". In Gavin Flood (ed.). The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 68–70. ISBN 978-0-470-99868-7.

Further reading

pashupati, seal, also, mahayogi, seal, proto, Śiva, seal, adjective, called, sometimes, applied, pashupati, steatite, seal, which, uncovered, 1928, archaeological, survey, india, excavations, indus, valley, civilisation, site, mohenjo, daro, then, british, pak. The Pashupati seal also Mahayogi seal 1 Proto Siva seal 2 the adjective so called sometimes applied to Pashupati 3 is a steatite seal which was uncovered in the 1928 29 Archaeological Survey of India excavations of the Indus Valley civilisation IVC site of Mohenjo daro then in the British Raj and now in Pakistan The seal depicts a seated figure that is possibly tricephalic having three heads The seated figure has been thought to be ithyphallic having an erect penis an interpretation that has been questioned by many 4 but was still held by the IVC specialist Jonathan Mark Kenoyer in a publication of 2003 5 The man has a horned headdress and is surrounded by animals He may represent a horned deity 6 7 8 9 The Pashupati seal showing a seated and possibly tricephalic figure surrounded by animals circa 2350 2000 BCE It has one of the more complicated designs in the thousands of seals found from the Indus Valley civilization and is unusual in having a human figure as the main and largest element in most seals this is an animal 10 It had been claimed to be one of the earliest depictions of the Hindu god Shiva Pashupati Lord of animals being one of his epithets or a proto Shiva deity 9 11 Though the combination of elements in the Pashupati seal is unique there are a group of other Indus seals that have some of them One also from Mohenjo daro find number DK 12050 and now in Islamabad has a nude three faced horned deity seated on a throne in a yogic position wearing bangles on its arms In this case no animals are depicted and there is some dispute as to the gender of the figure despite it seeming to have a beard 12 The Pashupati seal is in the National Museum New Delhi having been moved there with the other Mohenjo daro finds before independence These were reserved for the future national museum finally founded in 1949 13 and the seal was allocated to India at Partition in 1947 Contents 1 Discovery and description 2 Post excavation history 3 Interpretations 3 1 Marshall s identification with proto Shiva 3 2 Doris Srinivasan s reinterpretation 3 3 Dravidian Interpretations 3 4 Vedic Interpretations 3 5 Not determinable 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further readingDiscovery and description Edit A view of the Mohenjo daro excavation site The DK G Area where the seal was found lies north east of the Great Bath seen in the foreground 14 The seal was uncovered in 1928 29 in Block 1 Southern Portion of the DK G Area of Mohenjo daro at a depth of 3 9 meters below the surface 15 Ernest J H Mackay who directed the excavations at Mohenjo daro dated the seal to the Intermediate I Period now considered to fall around 2350 2000 BCE in his 1937 38 report in which the seal is numbered 420 giving it its alternate name 16 The seal is carved in steatite and measures 3 56 cm by 3 53 cm with a thickness of 0 76 cm It has a human figure at the centre seated on a platform and facing forward The legs of the figure are bent at the knees with the heels touching and the toes pointing downwards The arms extend outwards and rest lightly on the knees with the thumbs facing away from the body Eight small and three large bangles cover the arms The chest is covered with what appear to be necklaces and a double band wraps around the waist The figure wears a tall and elaborate headdress with a central fan shaped structure flanked by two large striated horns The human figure is surrounded by four wild animals an elephant and a tiger to its one side and a water buffalo bubalus arnee and an Indian rhinoceros on the other Under the dais are two deer or ibexes looking backwards so that their curved horns almost meet in the centre At the top of the seal are seven Indus script symbols with the last apparently displaced downwards for lack of horizontal space 17 18 Post excavation history Edit An impression made from the steatite seal The finds from Mohenjo daro were initially deposited in the Lahore Museum but later moved to the ASI headquarters at New Delhi where a new Central Imperial Museum was being planned for the new capital of the British Raj in which at least a selection would be displayed It became apparent that Indian independence was approaching but the Partition of India was not anticipated until late in the process The new Pakistani authorities requested the return of the Harappan pieces excavated on their territory but the Indian authorities refused Eventually an agreement was reached whereby the finds totalling some 12 000 objects most sherds of pottery were split equally between the countries in some cases this was taken very literally with some necklaces and girdles having their beads separated into two piles In the case of the two most celebrated sculpted figures Pakistan asked for and received the so called Priest King figure while India retained the much smaller Dancing Girl 19 and also the Pashupati seal Mohenjo daro Seated figure 222 Mohenjo daro Seated figure 235Interpretations EditMarshall s identification with proto Shiva Edit The first description and analysis of the seal s iconography was that of the archaeologist John Marshall who had served as the Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India and led the excavations of the Indus Valley sites In addition to the general features of the seal described above he also saw the central figure as a male deity as three faced with a possible fourth face towards the back and as ithyphallic while conceding that what appeared to be the exposed phallus could instead be a tassel hanging from the waistband Most significantly he identified the seal as an early prototype of the Hindu god Shiva or his Vedic predecessor Rudra who also was known by the title Pashupati lord or father of all the animals in historic times 20 In a 1928 29 publication Marshall summarized his reasons for the identification as follows My reasons for the identification are four In the first place the figure has three faces and that Siva was portrayed with three as well as with more usual five faces there are abundant examples to prove Secondly the head is crowned with the horns of a bull and the trisula are characteristic emblems of Siva Thirdly the figure is in a typical yoga attitude and Siva sic was and still is regarded as a mahayogi the prince of Yogis Fourthly he is surrounded by animals and Siva is par excellence the Lord of Animals Pasupati of the wild animals of the jungle according to the Vedic meaning of the word pashu no less than that of domesticated cattle 15 Later in 1931 he expanded his reasons to include the fact that Shiva is associated with the phallus in the form of linga and that in medieval art he is shown with deer or ibexes as are seen below the throne on the seal 20 21 Marshall s analysis of the Indus Valley religion and the Pashupati seal in particular was very influential and widely accepted for at least the next two generations Herbert Sullivan who had significant disagreements with it recognised in 1964 that Marshall s analysis has been accepted almost universally and has greatly influenced scholarly understanding of the historical development of Hinduism 22 Writing in 1976 Doris Srinivasan introduced an article otherwise critical of Marshall s interpretation by observing that no matter what position is taken regarding the seal s iconography it is always prefaced by Marshall s interpretation On balance the proto Siva character of the seal has been accepted 23 Thomas McEvilley noted in line with Marshall that the central figure was in the yoga pose Mulabandhasana quoting the Kalpa Sutra s description a squatting position with joined heels used with meditation and fasting to attain infinite knowledge kevala 24 Alf Hiltebeitel noted in 2011 that following Marshall s analysis nearly all efforts at interpreting the Indus Valley religion have centered discussion around the Pashupati seal figure 25 A lot of discussion has taken place about this seal 26 While Marshall s work has earned some support many critics and even supporters have raised several objections 6 Herbert Sullivan interpreted the figure as a female goddess on the grounds that the so called erect phallus actually represents the dangling end of a waistband or girdle a feature found on many undoubtedly female terracotta figurines and ambiguous on some other seals including DK 12050 mentioned above Marshall himself had admitted this was possible In the terracottas males are always nude in addition the jewellery worn on the Pashupati seal is characteristic of female rather than male terracottas 27 Doris Srinivasan s reinterpretation Edit Mahishasura the buffalo demon being slayed by the goddess Durga Durga Temple Aihole Doris Srinivasan a professor of Indian studies raised objections to Marshall s identification and provided a interpretation for the figure where she postulated the lateral projections were cow like ears rather than faces which had already been suggested by Sullivan and others 28 In 1975 76 she published a journal article titled The So Called Proto siva Seal from Mohenjo Daro An Iconological Assessment in the academic journal Archives of Asian Art 23 In 1997 she reiterated her views in a book titled Many Heads Arms and Eyes Origin Meaning and Form of Multiplicity in Indian Art According to her the two extra faces could be reinterpreted as possible ears and the central face has predominant bovine features She has drawn similarities between the central figure of seal 420 and other artefacts from the Indus Valley such as the horned mask from Mohenjo Daro the terracotta bull from Kalibangan and the depiction of a horned deity on a water pitcher from the archaeological site of Kot Diji She has also noted that the yogic posture of the figure is repeated on a number of other seals and sealings some of which indicate that the figure receives worship On the basis of these observations she suggests that the figure of seal 420 could be a divine buffalo man 29 Dravidian Interpretations Edit Scholars who consider the Indus Valley civilisation to be associated with a Dravidian rather than Vedic context have offered other interpretations 30 Expanding on a mention by D D Kosambi in 1962 31 Alf Hiltebeitel thought the horned figure could be a prototype of Mahishasura the buffalo demon enemy of the Hindu goddess Durga He has also argued that the tiger depicted in the seal could relate to the goddess Durga who is often depicted as riding a tiger or a lion in the Hindu pantheon He also suggested that the surrounding animals could represent the vahanas vehicles mounts of deities for the four cardinal directions 32 33 Where Marshall s description had the head is crowned with the horns of a bull Hiltebeitel is emphatic that the figure has the very different horns of a buffalo and that IVC people familiar with both species would not have confused the two species One might imagine a proto Siva with bull s horns as a prefiguration of Siva s connection with his vahana or riding vehicle Nandin But a proto Siva with buffalo s horns would take too much explaining to retain credibility 34 The American archaeologist Walter Fairservis tried to translate what he considered to be a Dravidian inscription and was of the view that the seal could be identified with Anil the paramount chief of four clans represented by the animals The Finnish Indologist Asko Parpola has suggested that the yogic pose could be an imitation of the Proto Elamite way of representing seated bulls He attempted to translate the inscription which he considers to be an early form of Dravidian and found that the figure represents a servant of an aquatic deity 35 He finds that the animals depicted on the seal best resemble those associated with the Hindu god Varuna who could be associated with the aquatic themes which are prominent in the Indus religion 33 Vedic Interpretations Edit Agni is the god of fire and a prominent deity in the Vedas M V N Krishna Rao identified the figure with the Hindu god Indra He argued that the tiger could be ignored since it is much larger than the other animals and the two deer could also be ignored since they were seated under the table Then he combined the first phoneme of each of the animals and the word nara meaning man and arrived at the term makhanasana which is an epithet of Indra 33 Not determinable Edit Some 21st century scholars have urged caution in interpretation The American Indologist Wendy Doniger wrote in 2011 that while several generations of scholars 7 had taken up Marshall s suggestion and while there was a general resemblance between the figure on the seal and later Hindu images of Shiva and while the people of the Indus could have had a symbolism of the divine phallus 7 all the same we cannot know it and it does not mean that the Indus images are the source of the Hindu images or that they had the same meaning 7 The scholar of religious studies Geoffrey Samuel wrote that the multiple interpretations certainly cannot all be right 8 Since further there was no obvious method for choosing between the interpretations and little was known with certainty about Indus Valley religious practices the evidence for the yogic or Tantric practices is so dependent on reading later practices into the material that it is of little or no use for constructing any kind of history of such practices 8 See also EditGundestrup cauldron Cernunnos GutasagaReferences Edit Possehl Gregory L 2002 The Indus Civilization A Contemporary Perspective Rowman Altamira pp 114 ISBN 978 0 7591 0172 2 Ameri Marta Costello Sarah Kielt Jamison Gregg 2018 Seals and Sealing in the Ancient World Case Studies from the Near East Egypt the Aegean and South Asia Cambridge University Press pp 154 ISBN 978 1 108 17351 3 Geer Alexandra Anna Enrica van der 2008 Animals in Stone Indian Mammals Sculptured Through Time BRILL pp 27 ISBN 978 90 04 16819 0 For example Wendy Doniger in The Hindus An Alternative History page 34 2009 Viking the Indus seal we all once interpreted as an ithyphallic Shiva Pashupati is probably just someone sitting cross legged as South Asians are inclined to do with a bulging loincloth knot Kenoyer 403 a b See e g James G Lochtefeld The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism vol 2 N Z The Rosen Publishing Group New York 2002 p 633 who doubts the connection of the seal to Shiva given the supposedly late age of the god a b c d Doniger 2011 pp 485 508 a b c Samuel 2017 pp 3 4 6 8 a b Werness 2006 p 270 stamp seal British Museum Witzel 2008 pp 68 70 90 It is known from internal evidence that the Vedic texts were orally composed in northern India at first in the Greater Punjab and later on also in more eastern areas including northern Bihar between ca 1500 BCE and ca 500 400 BCE The oldest text the Rgveda must have been more or less contemporary with the Mitanni texts of northern Syria Iraq 1450 1350 BCE p 70 a Vedic connection of the so called Siva Pasupati found on some Harappa seals D Srinivasan 1984 cannot be established this mythological concept is due rather to common Eurasian ideas of the Lord of the Animals who is already worshipped by many Neolithic hunting societies p 90 Kenoyer 402 403 Singh 2015 111 112 Kenoyer Jonathan Mark Mohenjo daro Introduction Archived from the original on 2013 12 01 a b Mackay 1928 29 pp 74 75 Mackay 1937 38 plate XCIV no 420 Possehl 141 Marshall 1931 p 52 Singh 2015 111 112 112 quoted a b Marshall 1931 pp 52 57 McEvilley 1981 pp 45 46 Sullivan 1964 a b Srinivasan 1975 76 pp 47 58 McEvilley 1981 pp 47 51 Hiltebeitel 2011 p 399 Bryant Edwin p 163 Sullivan 119 120 Hiltebeitel 229 230 partly concurs Sullivan 120 Singh 2008 172 Srinivasan 1997 p 181 Hiltebeitel 406 Kosambi 2 3 Hiltebeitel 2011 pp 399 432 a b c Bryant Edwin 2001 The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture The Indo Aryan Migration Debate Oxford University Press pp 163 ISBN 0199881332 Hiltebeitel 405 430 431 Ratnagar Shereen 2006 Trading Encounters From the Euphrates to the Indus in the Bronze Age Oxford University Press p 25 ISBN 9780195666038 Sources EditDoniger Wendy 2011 God s Body or The Lingam Made Flesh Conflicts over the Representation of the Sexual Body of the Hindu God Shiva Social Research 78 2 Part 1 Summer 2011 485 508 doi 10 1353 sor 2011 0067 JSTOR 23347187 Hiltebeitel Alf 2011 The Indus Valley Proto Siva Reexamined through Reflections on the Goddess the Buffalo and the Symbolism of vahanas In Adluri Vishwa Bagchee Joydeep eds When the Goddess was a Woman Mahabharata Ethnographies Essays by Alf Hiltebeitel BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 19380 2 Kenoyer J M entry by in Matthiae P Lamberg Karlovsky Carl Clifford Art of the First Cities The Third Millennium B C from the Mediterranean to the Indus p 403 2003 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York N Y google books Kosambi Damodar Dharmanand Myth and Reality Studies in the Formation of Indian Culture 1962 2005 reprint Popular Prakashan ISBN 9788171548705 8171548709 google books Mackay Ernest John Henry 1928 29 Excavations at Mohenjodaro Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India 67 75 Mackay Earnest John Henry 1937 38 Further excavations at Mohenjo Daro being an official account of archaeological excavations at Mohenjo Daro carried out by the Government of India between the years 1927 and 1931 Delhi Government of India McEvilley Thomas 1981 An Archaeology of Yoga RES Anthropology and Aesthetics 1 1 44 77 doi 10 1086 RESv1n1ms20166655 JSTOR 20166655 S2CID 192221643 Marshall John 1931 Mohenjo Daro and the Indus Civilization Being an Official Account of Archaeological Excavations at Mohenjo Daro Carried Out by the Government of India Between the Years 1922 and 1927 Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 81 206 1179 5 Possehl Gregory L 2002 The Indus Civilization A Contemporary Perspective Rowman Altamira ISBN 978 0 7591 1642 9 Samuel Geoffrey 2017 2008 The Origins of Yoga and Tantra Indic Religions to the Thirteenth Century Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521695343 Singh Kavita The Museum Is National Chapter 4 in Mathur Saloni and Singh Kavita eds No Touching No Spitting No Praying The Museum in South Asia 2015 Routledge PDF on academia edu Singh Upinder A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century 2008 Pearson Longman ISBN 9788131716779 Srinivasan Doris 1975 76 The So Called Proto siva Seal from Mohenjo Daro An Iconological Assessment Archives of Asian Art 29 47 58 JSTOR 20062578 Srinivasan Doris 1997 Many Heads Arms and Eyes Origin Meaning and Form of Multiplicity in Indian Art Brill ISBN 9004107584 Sullivan Herbert P 1964 A Re Examination of the Religion of the Indus Civilization History of Religions 4 1 115 125 doi 10 1086 462498 JSTOR 1061875 S2CID 162278147 Werness Hope B 2006 Continuum Encyclopedia of Animal Symbolism in World Art A amp C Black p 270 ISBN 978 0826419132 Witzel Michael 2008 Vedas and Upanisads In Gavin Flood ed The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism John Wiley amp Sons pp 68 70 ISBN 978 0 470 99868 7 Further reading EditMcIntosh Jane 2001 A Peaceful Realm The Rise And Fall of the Indus Civilization Boulder Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 3532 9 McIntosh Jane 2008 Religion and ideology The Ancient Indus Valley New Perspectives ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 907 2 Thapar Romila 2004 Early India From the Origins to AD 1300 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24225 8 Witzel Michael February 2000 The Languages of Harappa PDF Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies Wright Rita P 2010 The Ancient Indus Urbanism Economy and Society Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57219 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pashupati seal amp oldid 1138309443, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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