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Wari-Bateshwar is the site of an ancient fort city dating back to 450
BC [1] situated in the north-eastern part of Bangladesh. This 2500 years
old site is a significant archaeological discovery. It challenges the
earlier notions about the existence of early urban civilisation in
Bangladesh.
The site is about 75km from Dhaka situated near the Wari and Bateshwar
villages in the Belabo Upazila of Narsingdi District. It was discovered
in the early 1930s by a local school teacher, Hanif Pathan. However,
formal excavation started only recently in 2000. The current scientific
study is being carried out by a team from the Archaeology Department of
Jahangirnagar University led by Professor Sufi Mostafizur Rahman.
Prof. Rahman believes that Wari-Bateshwar is the rich, well planned,
ancient emporium (a commercial city) "Sounagora" mentioned by Greek
geographer, astronomer, mathematician Ptolemy in his book Geographia
[2]. The other emporia mentioned in Ptolemy's work include Arikamedu of
India, Mantai of Sri Lanka, Kion Thom of Thailand. All of these were the
most ancient civilisations in their respective regions, each was a river
port, and all of them produced monochrome glass beads. The artifacts
found at Wari-Bateshwar bear similarity with those found in the other
emporia sites.
According to researchers, the discovery of Rouletted Ware, Knobbed Ware,
stone beads, sandwiched glass beads, gold-foil glass beads, Indo-Pacific
monochrome glass beads and importantly its geographical location
indicates to Southeast Asiatic and Roman contacts
Excavation also unearthed the presence of pit-dwelling. The discovery of
a pit-dwelling is the first of its kind in Bangladesh. People used to
live in these small ditches. The pit-dwelling is a Copper Age or
Chalcolithic artifact. Similar pit-dwellings have been found in India
and Pakistan which are believed to be 4000 years old. The unearthing of
a 180-meter long, six-meter wide and 21-35cm thick road with a by-lane
points to very early urbanisation in this area. Before the discovery of
this, the widely held view was that urbanisation occurred later than
what Wari-Bateshwar ruins indicate. |