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Did the iron age on Indian soil start from Tamil Nadu?

Context

  • Tamil Nadu CM M.K. Stalin released a report titled “Antiquity of Iron: Recent radiometric dates from Tamil Nadu”.
  • He proclaimed that the Iron Age began on Tamil soil, dating back 5,300 years ago (4th millennium BCE).
  • Asserted that Indian subcontinent history must acknowledge Tamil Nadus ancient past.

Relevance : GS 1(Culture , Heritage)

 What did earlier research indicate?

  • Earlier belief: Iron usage in India dated to 700-600 BCE.
  • Updated findings: Radiocarbon dating pushed it back to the 16th century BCE.
  • Uttar Pradesh excavations (1996-2001):
    • Sites: Raja Nala-ka-tila, Malhar, Dadupur.
    • Artifacts: Furnaces, tuyeres, slags, finished iron tools.
    • Dates: 1800-1000 BCE, indicating large-scale iron production by 13th century BCE.
  • Conclusion: Iron was used in the Central Ganga Plain and Eastern Vindhyas by early 2nd millennium BCE.

Tamil Nadu’s findings:

  • Mayiladumparai Excavations (2022):
    • Initial date of Iron Age: 4,200 years ago (3rd millennium BCE).
    • Coincided with Copper/Bronze Age in northern India.
  • Recent report (2024):
    • New dates: 3,345 BCE to 2,953 BCE → Mean age places Iron Age at first quarter of 4th millennium BCE.
    • Sites explored: Sivagalai, Adichanallur, Kilnamandi, Mayiladumparai.
    • Finding: Southern regions may have transitioned directly to Iron Age due to scarce copper resources.

 Why did CM M.K. Stalin make this assertion?

  • Aimed to highlight Tamil Nadu’s early technological advancement.
  • Emphasized that Tamil history deserves more national attention.
  • Findings could reshape the timeline of ancient Indian metallurgy and cultural development.

Significance and implications:

  • Challenges the narrative of irons westward diffusion into India.
  • Opens avenues for further archaeological research in Tamil Nadu.
  • Reinforces Tamil Nadu’s role in early agrarian and metallurgical innovations.
  • Invites a pan-Indian historical reevaluation, recognizing regional diversity in technological evolution.

 Caution by scholars:

  • While findings are groundbreaking, it does not conclusively establish that the Iron Age originated in Tamil Nadu.
  • More extensive, peer-reviewed research is essential for global historical acceptance.

February 2025
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