
u/Maleficent-Roll-298

Floor tiles of a house at Kalibangan, Rajasthan, India, 3rd Millennium BCE.
Greatest Monument from the times of Ancient India
Sanchi Stupa is one of the best place to explore Ancient Indian History and is a major place to see visuals of Mauryan Era, Shunga Era and Satavahana Era due to its preserved carvings which explore Buddhism, Indian Society, Art and Culture etc.
A vase discovered in southeastern Iran dated to c. 2000-1800 BC shows a warrior riding a chariot pulled by a horse. From the Louvre Museum. [1500x1072]
The Lady of the Spiked Throne is a Harappan terracotta artifact from the 3rd millennium BCE, depicting a central female figure siting on a throne, and accompanied by a crew of about 14 male and female figures. Possibly from Pakistan, now part of a private collection [2544x3199]
The "Sappho" fresco, or Portrait of a Young Woman with Stylus, Pompeii, 1st century AD. It depicts a finely dressed young woman with a writing tablet and stylus, used in Roman paintings to indicate literacy and education. She was identified as the Greek poet Sappho without proof... [1280x1280] [OC]
Archaeological Survey of India decodes 5th century seal from Pakistan - The Times of India
Hyderabad: Archaeological Survey of India's (ASI's) epigraphy division has decoded a 5th century CE Sanskrit inscription in Brahmi characters on a seal from Pakistan, identifying it as belonging to a Saiva temple dedicated to Svami Kotesvara at Devadaruvana, the forest of Himalayan cedar trees.
ASI epigraphy wing head K Muniratnam Reddy said the inscription, incised on the seal, reads: "Devadaruvane Svami Kotesvarah." The seal was shared with ASI by Francoise Mandeville of Hong Kong.
According to the ASI epigraphy division, the seal could be regarded as the oldest inscriptional and artistic depiction of the legend of Siva roaming in the Devadaru forest as described in the Skandapurana. The finding adds to a set of Pakistan-origin inscriptions decoded by ASI epigraphy division in recent months.
In 2024, the division decoded a 4th century CE Sanskrit inscription in Brahmi script from outside Gilgit in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. Muniratnam Reddy translated it as referring to Pushpasingha installing a Mahesvaralinga for the merit of his guru, whose name was partly lost.
Around five months before the Gilgit finding, ASI had also decoded a fragmentary 10th century CE inscription on a slab found near Peshawar. Reddy said it was in Sanskrit using Sharada characters and appeared to refer to Buddhist Dharani chants, with the sixth line mentioning "Da Dha rini".