Daya Ram Sahni

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Punjab Province, Pakistan)
Died7 March 1939(1939-03-07) (aged 59)
Known forExcavations in Harappa
Scientific career
FieldsSanskrit, archaeology

Indus valley site at Harappa in 1920 to 1921. The first report on Harappan excavations came out on 29 March 1921, published by John Marshall, which is why various historians have chosen 1921 AD as the period of Harappan excavation. A protege of John Marshall, in 1931 Sahni became the first Indian to be appointed Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India
(ASI), a position which he served in till 1935.

Early life and education

Daya Ram Sahni hailed from the city of Bhera in Shahpur district, Punjab where he was born on 16 December 1879. Sahni graduated in Sanskrit from the Punjab University with a gold medal. He also topped the M. A. examination from the Oriental College in 1903. As a result of this accomplishments, Sahni won the Sanskrit scholarship sponsored by the Archaeological Survey of India and was recruited by the survey after the completion of his education.

Career

In 1903, Sahni was posted to the Punjab and

Rampurva in Champaran district.[1] He also prepared a catalogue of the archaeological ruins at Sarnath, which he had excavated between 1917 and 1922.[2]

In the spring season of 1907 till 1909, along with Marshall, he excavated the sites of Saheth-Maheth, which where thus confirmed to be site for the ancient city of Shravasti. He later excavated the sites as the Director General during 1927–1932.[3] In 1910, he excavated the medieval site of Mandore, the capital of the Pratiharas, in what is now the state of Rajasthan.[4] He was asked by Marshall to guide D.R. Bhandarkar throughout the excavation process, even though Bhandarkar was senior to him.[5]

Sahni worked as the

Avantipur built by the King Avantivarman.[8][9]

Sahni returned to Lahore in 1917 and was made incharge of the United Provinces and Punjab. While working as an Assistant Superintendent, Sahni excavated the Indus Valley site at Harappa, the first of the Indus Valley sites to be excavated.

In the 1920 ASI Reports, Daya Ram Sahni describes his explorations starting from 1917 as he had since conducted preliminary investigations at the ancient site near Harappa in Montgomery District. He excavated Harappa again in 1923–1925, then again in 1930–31 with the assistance of Ernest J. H. Mackay.[10]

In 1920, he had also been involved in the exploration and restoration of the ruined temples at Amb and Kafir Kot, while simultaneously recording & translating inscriptions by pre-Islamic kings in the region corresponding to Gandhara.[11]

In 1925, Sahni was transferred to Delhi as Deputy Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India and in July 1931, he succeeded Harold Hargreaves as the Director-General of the ASI. Sahni was the first native Indian to be appointed to the post.

In the ASI Annual Report for the season 1923–24, Sahni examined the findings from the temple complex at Lakhamandal.[12] During the 1928–1929 season, he edited and published the seven Kushan inscriptions found at Mathura, mostly attributed to Kanishka.[13][14]

After his retirement in 1935, he was appointed by

Jaipur State as the Director of its newly established Department of Archaeology. He went on to publish a book on his excavations at the ancient site of Viratnagar, the capital of the Jaipur region in classical times.[15] He also excavated Naliasar and Sambhar during the 1936–1938 season,[16] where he found, among other things, coins from the Moroli Hoard which belonged to the Gupta period.[17]

He also found prehistoric chert artefacts near the Viratnagar site, which influenced many archaeologists in newly independent India.[18] He also conducted excavations in the districts of Gorakhpur and Saran, unfortunately not much is known about these excavations.[19]

Honours

Sahni was awarded a "Rai Bahadur" medal in March 1920 by the Governor of Punjab at a durbar in Rawalpindi. Soon after his retirement from the ASI in 1935, Sahni was made a Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire. The Banaras Hindu University instituted the Dayaram Sahni Gold Medal in his memory.

References

  1. .
  2. .
  3. . Retrieved 17 December 2023.
  4. ^ Ray, Purnima; Patil, C. B. (2014). Remembering Stalwarts: Biographical Sketches of Scholars from Archaeological Survey of India. Director General, Archaeological Survey of India.
  5. .
  6. .
  7. .
  8. .
  9. .
  10. .
  11. .
  12. .
  13. ^ Obbink, Hendrik Willem (1949). Orientalia Rheno-traiectina. Brill Archive. pp. 302–303.
  14. ^ Vogel, Jean Ph (1947). India antiqua. Brill Archive. p. 303.
  15. ISSN 2051-2066
    .
  16. .
  17. ^ The Researcher. Directorate of Archaeology & Museums, Government of Rajasthan. 1997. p. 1.
  18. .
  19. ^ Rivista degli studi orientali (in Italian). Istituti editoriali e poligrafici internazionali. 1910.

Bibliography

Preceded by Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India
1931-1935
Succeeded by