The
Indian Thar is a region with a fabulously rich prehistory and history. A
range of cultures have coexisted and interacted with one another since
Lower and Upper Paleolithic times more than 15,000 years ago.
Simultaneous developmental and stylistic differences among sites,
incorporating Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Harrapan cultures like
Kalibangan, Rangmahal from 6000 to 1000 BC make up a mosaic typical of
the Thar and extension of the vast Persio- Arabian deserts to the
further west.
Beginning from the 6thA.D
onwards began a process of nomadic upsurges of Rajpoot clan
aristocracies who imposed their territorial supremacy over new tracts of
colonized land. This led to the proliferation of regional centres of
power by different Rajput lineages. In fact much of what is western
Rajasthan today was first colonized by the tenth and eleventh centuries
A.D.
In still early medieval times around the twelfth century onwards all
the dryer areas of Eurasia began to converge as a result of nomadic
expansion, the Arid Zone in South Asia emerged as a vibrant frontier
region that widened the horizon of and opened new channels for highly
mobile pastoralists, warriors, merchants, pilgrims, and others.
The
spread of trading networks in the medieval times favored its growth as a
connecting region between the sea coast in the west, the overland
routes of the northwest and northern India. Right through the Mughal
rule the area was an important transit zone for trade between regions
east of Indus and northern Indian plains. By the 19thcentury
well developed trade routes, garrison fort towns, trading hubs, a
network of periodic fairs, villages and temporary settlements around
which royal lineages and trading networks spread, wide open grasslands
were some of the chief features of the human geography of Thar. These
historic processes of human settlement of Thar were sustained by popular
traditions of ingenious practices for the judicious and community
regulated use and regeneration of water and land resources.
The
last quarter of the twentieth century has seen unprecedented
demographic growth, colonisation and agrarian expansion through gigantic
irrigation projects like the Indira Gandhi Canal in Thar, a successful
cooperative dairy movement, a transport revolution that has altered the
meaning of time and travel, presence of institutions of the modern
Indian state with its imposing manifestations of development as more and
more physical infrastructure, the onslaught for acquiring land in Thar.
The increasing hold of the bewitching glares and lure of the market
gives all encompassing sanction to consumerist ways of life that rest on
the premise of wasteful use rather than frugal and judicious use, a
feature that constituted the core of resource use in Thar for centuries.
All
these could be seen as emergent signs of an important historical
watershed in Thar. Especially regions in the interiors of Thar, where
such claims of the modern Indian state and market were not known less
than half a century back. The on going transformation spearheaded by
private capital and rapacious plunder of the fragile biosphere of Thar
is fast altering the delicate inter relationships of desert communities
with nature over centuries.
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