Indus Valley terracotta cylindrical vessel, Circa 2500–2000 BC
Conservation: Repainted. There are some chips on the edge.
Material: Terracotta
Dimensions: 7 x 10,9 cm
Provenance: Private collection of the late David Gold in the 1970s; Ancient & Oriental Gallery, United Kingdom, 2020; Former collection of Pablo H. Goizauskas, Spain, 2025
Price:
On request
Category Indus Valley
Tag Other-cultures
Description
Delicately moulded cylindrical vessel from the Indus Valley, probably used in ancient times as a storage container. The object has a cylindrical body and a small base, and the entire exterior is decorated with a band of brown-black pigment with geometric motifs, composed of alternating horizontal panels of straight and curved lines.
The Indus Valley culture was a civilisation that developed between 3000 BC and 1300 BC around the Indus River in Afghanistan, Pakistan and north-western India. It spanned a hundred years of settlements, and its two most important cities were Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. By 2400 BC, a complex urban civilisation had developed, comparable to those of Egypt and Mesopotamia.
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