This thesis examines the concept of the state in the context of the Indus River Valley, located in northwest India and Pakistan. In the first section, I synthesize several popular trends in state discussion from both inside and outside of archaeological theory. I then apply my synthesized approach to state definition to the archaeological record from the Indus River Valley. The resulting work visits both the concept of the state and the rich cultural history of the Indus Civilization. I determine that there was a state in the Indus River Valley, but that the Indus state was very different from others scholars have identified in the archaeological record
How did the early state-cities develop in the Indo-pakistani Subcontinent? There is an abundant scie...
Thousands of settlements stippled the third millennium B.C. landscape of Pakistan and northwest Indi...
The Harappan civilisation that was discovered in the early 1920s became a matter of intense debate i...
This thesis examines the concept of the state in the context of the Indus River Valley, located in n...
This article explores 'statehood' and argues Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilisation was not a state li...
In most historical literature the conceptual 'state' has become a yardstick for measuring the degree...
This study examines the impact of Sutlej Valley Project (SVP) – a colonial mega canal colonisation s...
The Indus Civilization, otherwise called Harappan or Indus-Sarasvati, is one of the world’s earliest...
The more noteworthy Indus region was home to the biggest of the four old urban civilization establis...
What role do villages play in 'an urban civilisation'? Although it is likely that most of the popula...
India’s Princely States covered nearly 40 per cent of the Indian subcontinent at the time of Indian ...
The Keladi-Ikkeri Nayaka kings (c. 1499-1763 C.E.), emerge in the historical record first as regiona...
This dissertation investigates the constitutive effects that practices of large data collection and ...
This essay considers the history of two commodities, tea in Georgian England and opium in imperial C...
Major attempts to control the natural environment characterized government ‘developmental’ activity ...
How did the early state-cities develop in the Indo-pakistani Subcontinent? There is an abundant scie...
Thousands of settlements stippled the third millennium B.C. landscape of Pakistan and northwest Indi...
The Harappan civilisation that was discovered in the early 1920s became a matter of intense debate i...
This thesis examines the concept of the state in the context of the Indus River Valley, located in n...
This article explores 'statehood' and argues Indus Valley (Harappan) Civilisation was not a state li...
In most historical literature the conceptual 'state' has become a yardstick for measuring the degree...
This study examines the impact of Sutlej Valley Project (SVP) – a colonial mega canal colonisation s...
The Indus Civilization, otherwise called Harappan or Indus-Sarasvati, is one of the world’s earliest...
The more noteworthy Indus region was home to the biggest of the four old urban civilization establis...
What role do villages play in 'an urban civilisation'? Although it is likely that most of the popula...
India’s Princely States covered nearly 40 per cent of the Indian subcontinent at the time of Indian ...
The Keladi-Ikkeri Nayaka kings (c. 1499-1763 C.E.), emerge in the historical record first as regiona...
This dissertation investigates the constitutive effects that practices of large data collection and ...
This essay considers the history of two commodities, tea in Georgian England and opium in imperial C...
Major attempts to control the natural environment characterized government ‘developmental’ activity ...
How did the early state-cities develop in the Indo-pakistani Subcontinent? There is an abundant scie...
Thousands of settlements stippled the third millennium B.C. landscape of Pakistan and northwest Indi...
The Harappan civilisation that was discovered in the early 1920s became a matter of intense debate i...