(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
How Harappa is viewed differently by Islam and Hinduism | India News - Times of India

How Harappa is viewed differently by Islam and Hinduism

This desire to explain an archaeological site using Hindu mythology as proto-history is a trend also seen in Pakistan

It was a hundred years ago, on September 20, 1924, that the world learnt about the Indus (Harappan) civilisation for the very first time. John Marshall, then director general of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), set up by the British Raj, said this in the Illustrated London News.
“Not often has it been given to archaeologists, as it was given to Schliemann at Tiryns and Mycenae, or to Stein in the deserts of Turkestan, to light upon the remains of a long-forgotten civilization. It looks, however, at this moment, as if we are on the threshold of such a discovery in the plains of the Indus… Up to the present our knowledge of Indian antiquities has carried us back hardly further than the third century before Christ… The two sites where these somewhat startling remains have been discovered are some 400 miles apart — the one being at Harappa in the Montgomery District of the Panjab, the other at Mohenjo-Daro in the Larkana District of Sindh. At both these places there is a vast expanse of artificial mounds evidently covering the remains of once-flourishing cities, which… must have been in existence for many hundreds of years.”
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