Indus Urbanism
Indus Urbanism
What does a 4,500-year-old city reveal about governance, climate adaptation, and collective organization?
This immersive field program centers on Dholavira and the Haryana corridor to explore one of the world's earliest urban civilizations. Students read settlement plans, reservoirs, and material remains as systems- ecological, political, and social. The program balances archaeological interpretation with contemporary heritage realities, asking how ancient design still speaks to modern sustainability debates.
Students will:
-
Apply archaeological field-reading techniques to built environments and settlement patterns.Examine water infrastructure as a civilizational technology rather than a mere utility.Explore the limits of archaeological evidenceβwhat can we truly know about Indus society?Ask: How did early cities balance resilience, hierarchy, and collective life?
Read MoreProduce a structured site dossier integrating observation, mapping, and interpretation.
Anthropology
Archaeology
History
Art History
Religious Studies
Heritage Conservation
Museum Studies
Cultural Geography
Urban Studies
Architecture
Political Science
Public Policy
Development Studies
Environmental Humanities
South Asian Studies
Global Studies
Memory Studies
Education
|
Day |
Location |
Academic Focus & Activities |
Learning Emphasis |
|
1 |
Delhi |
Arrival; safety and research orientation; framing early urban systems |
Cultivating observational discipline and shared inquiry culture |
|
2β3 |
Delhi |
Methods lab: field notebooks, sketch mapping, ethical observation; seminar on Indus evidence and interpretation limits |
Building careful reading practices and intellectual humility |
|
4β6 |
Haryana Corridor |
Settlement immersion; museum dialogue; heritage-governance mapping exercise |
Exploring how archaeology meets community and contemporary policy |
|
7β10 |
Dholavira |
City-plan study; reservoirs and climate adaptation seminar; conservation and visitor management conversation |
Reading water, space, and design as interconnected systems |
|
11β12 |
Ahmedabad |
Comparative studio: ancient and later urban logics; documentation lab |
Translating field insight into clear, interdisciplinary synthesis |
|
13 |
Ahmedabad |
Independent navigation; departure |
Closure and reflection |
| π Day | π Location | ποΈ Academic Focus & Activities | π§ Learning Emphasis |
|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Delhi |
Arrival; safety and research orientation; framing early urban systems |
Cultivating observational discipline and shared inquiry culture |
2β3 2 days |
Delhi |
Methods lab: field notebooks, sketch mapping, ethical observation; seminar on Indus evidence and interpretation limits |
Building careful reading practices and intellectual humility |
4β6 3 days |
Haryana Corridor |
Settlement immersion; museum dialogue; heritage-governance mapping exercise |
Exploring how archaeology meets community and contemporary policy |
7β10 4 days |
Dholavira |
City-plan study; reservoirs and climate adaptation seminar; conservation and visitor management conversation |
Reading water, space, and design as interconnected systems |
11β12 2 days |
Ahmedabad |
Comparative studio: ancient and later urban logics; documentation lab |
Translating field insight into clear, interdisciplinary synthesis |
13 |
Ahmedabad |
Independent navigation; departure |
Closure and reflection |
