Sunday 11 September 2011

3. Nature’s Fury: the Site of Tiharkhera on Way to Extinction

About 3.5 km to the south of Fatehganj west, on the left bank of river Bahgool or Dojora (a major tributary of the river Ramganga), in District Bareilly, is situated the extensive mound of Tiharkhera (28026 09” N: 7901722’’ E). The site is located about 5km northwest of the site of Gokalpur and 16km northeast of Ahichhatra as the crow flies. The mound stands majestically to a height of 11m above the river basin and presently spreads over an area of 12 acres. It could have been double the size of that we see today. The site has been a natural embankment for the village and protecting from the catastrophic flood of the river.
1. Site of Tiharkhera+R. Bahgool- 2005
2.Site of Tiharkhera+R. Bahgool- 2009
3. Site as a Natural Embankment of the Village, 2011
4.1 Majestic height of the Site, 2011
4.2 Majestic height of the Site, 2011
5. Eroded Section of the Site, 2011

Discovery of the site and its Antiquity

The site was discovered and subsequently reported in IAR by the Department of Ancient History and Culture, M.J.P. Rohilkhand Unviersity, Bareilly. The report says that the site has yielded Kushana and Gupta pottery along with other antiquities and sculptures. A fragmented sculpture of Batuk-Bhairava made of a grey stone belonging to 9th-10th century is noteworthy. The sculpture is displayed in the Panchala museum of the Department. Discovery of another idol of a goddess by the villagers and subsequently its robbery was printed in The Times of India, dated 07th Nov 1987. My repeated visit to the site has brought to light a few potsherds of Painted Grey ware Culture (an early Iron Age culture) on the southeastern part of the mound near the village. This part of the mound is now being cultivated. Finding of PGW pottery has pushed the antiquity of site to 3rd millennium BP.
A few years back, in one of my visits, I had noticed a place of brick robbing near the road side of the mound that looked like a circular foundation of a stupa. There was a pile of wedge-shaped bricks and brickbats. The structure could not be a brick well for its larger size. However, there was no evidence left for me to justify the assumption.

6.Some antiquities given by a villager Mr. Ganesh Misra

7. Brick robbing trench of a large circular structure and the quarried bricks, 2006

8. Burnt brick structure with a window in the section, 2011

9. A circular well peeping out of the section, 2011
10. A burnt brick circular well engulfed by the river, 2011
The Present Condition of Preservation
A metal road cuts the mound in to two halves—northwest and southeast. The modern village occupies the eastern periphery of the site and rest of the southeastern part has been used as agricultural land. There are a few pakad (Ficus virens) and pipal (Ficus religiosa) trees present on the mound on the road side. An adhisthan (chautara or mandapam) of God is made under a pipal tree, which is also used as a sitting or resting place by the villagers. These trees are also used for tethering animals. There are a few abandoned structures present on the mound belonging to a defunct cooperative society. Besides, there is a tube-well present on the road side. 

The mound was like a golf course with a thick grass cover during my first visit in 2002. It was fairly preserved. The river Bahgool that flows directly into the site has been perilous in preservation of the site. Year after year, the river has been cutting down the mound and eroding away in the flood. Large portions of mound collapse into the riverbed during the rainy seasons. In 2005, the mound extended about 71m from the road side to the bank of the river; that was reduced down to about 41m by 2009.  A large portion of the mound was cut away by the river in the flood of 2010. In my last visit after the flood, I noticed burnt brick structure with window and wells constructed of wedge-shaped bricks peeping out of the eroded section. A number of brick wells have already been washed away by the river. One can also notice large dumping pits filled with broken pots in the section. Enormous quantity of broken pots, bones and other antiquities are strewn over the riverbank.

11. The Metal Road running through the site
12. Adhistan and sitting place of the villagers, 2011
13. The River Bahgool flowing directly into the site, 2011

14. Collapsed portion of the mound, 2011
15. Parts of mound rolled down the riverbed
16. Mound parts slided down to the Riverbed
17. Condition of the Site in 2006 and 2011- a comparison

Loss of Bio-diversity
The destruction of site will not only wipe out the villages located in the vicinity but make thousands of birds homeless.


18. Thousands of birds with their nest in the mound section

Who will protect and preserve the ancient sites?
My efforts to draw the attention of authorities have been futile even after repeatedly bringing it to notice and justifying its antiquity and importance in the local news papers. The site has been ignored and left for the natural destruction by the local administration as well as the State Archaeology Department and Archaeological Survey of India. The modern village is small and the people are farmers. “Neither we have money to build a stone revetment nor have a strong vote bank to press the politicians to act for the cause. It is all on the mercy of the almighty to protect us”, quip the villagers.





Big Questions:

Can we (archaeologists and historians) afford to lose such sites?

Can Indian Archaeology progress without such sites?

What will be the future of Archaeology in site-less India?

Think over it................

Urgent Steps Required

1.     Construction of an embankment to protect the site as well as villages from the catastrophic flood

2.     Construction of Speed Breakers or thokkers to arrest the speed of the water

3.     Channelization of the flow of water away from the site

A Pledge…………..
Please ENSURE that all the ANTIQUITIES and DATA including the PHOTOGRAPHS are stored carefully by you or submitted to the Department/Museum to do so. Because, you may be the last person who visited the site and your collected antiquities are the only tangible evidences of that site.
Make sure that you do a bit in your capacity to save a site by reporting in the news papers, writing to the local authorities and placing the matter in different forums/NGOs.

A Request ………..
If you have a similar story, send it to this forum with a few photographs. I also request you to send your comments, grievances and suggestions to this forum which will be circulated widely. Remember that your comment will consolidate our plea.


Mail to…………..

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Reading this reminds me of someone -- chitra subramaniam. a close friend .. taught history at sardar patel vidyalaya, delhi. she'd take students to sites .. get them closer still to history .. attempting to get their fingers onto the puls...
Deepika Shergill

Anonymous said...

Good Job Dr Anup Ranjan Mishra .... keep the good fight alive!!! Kudos!!
Kurush F Dalal