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The Indus Seal: Writing We Cannot Read

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, language, geography, ethics, art
Core question How do you study a civilisation when you have its objects but cannot read its writing — and what do we lose when a script falls silent?
A seal from the Indus Valley civilisation, carved about 4,000 years ago. The picture and the row of script above it have survived. Their meaning has not. Photo: Ernest John Henry Mackay (5 July 1880 – 2 October 1943) / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
Introduction

About 4,000 years ago, in what is now Pakistan and northwestern India, one of the world's earliest great civilisations was at its peak. Its cities were huge — Mohenjo-daro had perhaps 40,000 people, with paved streets, public baths, and the world's first known city-wide drainage system. Its merchants traded with Mesopotamia, 2,000 km away. Its weights and measures were perfectly standardised across hundreds of cities and villages. We call these people the Indus Valley civilisation, after the great river along which they lived. They made many things — pottery, jewellery, toys, statues. But the most haunting objects they left behind are small carved stone seals, about the size of a postage stamp. Each one shows a picture — often an animal — and a row of strange symbols above it. The symbols are writing. But no one alive today can read them. Despite over a hundred years of effort, the Indus script has not been deciphered. This lesson asks what we can learn from a civilisation when we have its things but cannot hear its voice.

The object
Origin
The Indus Valley civilisation, in what is now Pakistan and northwestern India. Major cities included Harappa, Mohenjo-daro, Dholavira, and Lothal.
Period
About 2600 to 1900 BCE
Made of
Most are made of steatite — a soft grey-green stone that hardens after firing. Some are of clay, ivory, or copper. Each has a carved picture on one side and a small loop on the back so it could be hung from a cord.
Size
Small. Most are 2 to 4 cm square — about the size of a postage stamp.
Number of objects
More than 4,000 inscribed seals have been found, plus many more without writing.
Where it is now
Major collections are in the National Museum of Pakistan in Karachi, the National Museum of India in Delhi, the British Museum, and many regional museums in Pakistan and India.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Most students think 'ancient civilisation' means Egypt, Greece, or Rome. The Indus Valley civilisation was at least as big and as old, and most students will not have heard of it. How will you give it the place it deserves?
  2. The Indus script is an honest mystery. There is no neat answer. How will you teach this without making students feel cheated, and without inventing closure that does not exist?
  3. The civilisation is in modern Pakistan and India, two countries that have a complicated political relationship today. How will you treat the heritage as something shared, not something to be claimed?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine a small square stone, smaller than a matchbox. On one side is a careful picture — a bull, perhaps, or a unicorn-like animal, or a figure sitting cross-legged with horns. Above the picture is a row of small symbols. There are about 400 different symbols in this writing system, used in many combinations. More than 4,000 of these seals have been found. We have seen them for over a hundred years. No one alive can read them. Why is this so hard?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Decipherment usually needs three things. First: a long enough sample of the script. The Indus inscriptions are very short — the average is just five symbols, and the longest known is only 26 symbols. With so few words, patterns are hard to spot. Second: a key — another version of the same text in a known language. The Rosetta Stone gave us hieroglyphs. Nothing like that has been found for the Indus script. Third: knowing the language the script is written in. We do not know what language the Indus people spoke. Was it an early form of Dravidian (still spoken in southern India)? Was it Sanskrit's ancestor? Was it something else, lost forever? Without knowing the language, we cannot match symbols to sounds. Some scholars argue the marks are not full writing at all but signs of identity or property. Most disagree. The honest answer is: we don't know yet, and we may never know. Students should see that not all puzzles can be solved. The Indus script is one of the great open questions in human history.

2
The Indus Valley civilisation existed at the same time as ancient Egypt's pyramids and the great cities of Mesopotamia. Its biggest cities — Mohenjo-daro and Harappa — had grid-pattern streets, brick houses with bathrooms, and public wells. Mohenjo-daro had a 'Great Bath' lined with bitumen to keep it watertight, perhaps the oldest swimming pool in the world. Most striking: every brick across the whole civilisation, from city to city, was the same shape and size. Every weight used in trade was the same. The whole civilisation, spread across an area larger than modern Pakistan, used one set of standards. What does this tell us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

It tells us the Indus people were extremely good at organisation — perhaps better than any other society of their time. To make every brick and weight the same across 1.25 million square kilometres, you need shared knowledge, careful training, and probably some kind of central coordination. But here is the puzzle: we have found no clear palaces. No throne rooms. No royal tombs full of gold. No huge statues of kings. The Egyptian pyramids and the Sumerian ziggurats both shouted: 'A great king lived here.' The Indus cities are silent on this point. Some archaeologists think this means the civilisation had no kings — that it was run by councils, priests, or merchant guilds. Others think the kings simply did not leave the same kind of monuments. Either way, the Indus civilisation looks different from its contemporaries. Its great achievement was not pyramids or palaces. It was clean water, organised trade, and standardised everyday life. That is a different kind of greatness, and one that older textbooks often missed because they were looking for crowns.

3
Indus seals have been found in places far from the Indus Valley itself. Several have turned up in Mesopotamia, in cities like Ur and Kish, more than 2,000 km away. Mesopotamian writings from the same period mention trade with a place called 'Meluhha' — almost certainly the Indus Valley. The goods that travelled were many: cotton (the Indus people invented cotton cloth), copper, semi-precious stones like carnelian, timber, perhaps spices. The seals probably travelled as marks of ownership on bundles of goods. Why might these seals be useful evidence for us today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because they are dated objects in known places. When an Indus seal is found in a Mesopotamian temple where we can read the local records, we get a date. We learn when Indus traders were active there. We learn what they traded. We learn that the Indus civilisation was not isolated — it was part of a network stretching from Mesopotamia to Central Asia. This challenges another wrong story: that ancient civilisations grew up alone in separate corners of the world. They didn't. They traded, they competed, they borrowed from each other. The Indus seals are some of the clearest physical evidence of long-distance ancient trade. They are also a small reminder that the people who used them had names, jobs, and places they were going. We just cannot read what they wrote on the seal that travelled with them. End the discovery here. The seals connect places we have learned about separately in school. They show that the world has been connected for a very long time.

4
Around 1900 BCE, the great Indus cities began to decline. Within about 200 years, most were abandoned. The writing system stopped being used. The carefully standardised brick sizes were forgotten. Trade with Mesopotamia ended. Why did this happen?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

This is one of the great unsolved questions of archaeology, and the answer is probably 'several things at once'. Climate change played a role — the monsoon weakened, rivers shifted, and one major river (the Saraswati or Ghaggar-Hakra) seems to have dried up. Trade routes broke down, possibly because of changes in Mesopotamia. The civilisation did not vanish in a single event. It slowly came apart, city by city, over generations. Older stories sometimes blamed an 'Aryan invasion' from Central Asia. Modern evidence does not support a violent end. People moved, ways of life changed, and the cities emptied. The descendants of the Indus people are still here — many South Asians today are partly descended from them. The genes survived. The script did not. This is a useful lesson about how civilisations end. Most do not die in fire and blood. Most slowly stop being themselves. Their people become something new. The Indus people are not 'lost'. Their writing is.

What this object teaches

Indus Valley seals are small carved stones, about the size of a postage stamp, made by people of one of the world's earliest great civilisations between about 2600 and 1900 BCE. The civilisation lived in what is now Pakistan and northwestern India. Its cities were huge and well-organised, with planned streets, drainage, and standardised bricks and weights. Most seals show a picture of an animal or a figure, with a row of symbols above. The symbols are a writing system with about 400 signs. Despite a century of effort, the Indus script has not been deciphered — partly because the inscriptions are too short, partly because we have no key like the Rosetta Stone, and partly because we do not know what language the Indus people spoke. The seals were probably used to mark ownership of trade goods. Some have been found in Mesopotamia, 2,000 km away, showing the civilisation was part of a long-distance trade network. Around 1900 BCE the cities slowly declined, probably because of climate change and shifting rivers. The script stopped being used, but the people did not disappear — many South Asians today are partly descended from them.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
How big was the civilisation?Small and localIt covered an area larger than ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia put together
Did it have writing?No, only picturesYes — about 400 signs, used in many combinations. We just cannot read them.
Why has the script not been deciphered?No one has triedMany have tried. The texts are too short, no bilingual key has been found, and we do not know the language.
Did it have kings?Of course — all old civilisations didNo clear evidence. No palaces, throne rooms, or royal tombs have been found. It may have been organised differently.
What happened to the people?They were wiped outThe cities were abandoned slowly, probably because of climate change. The descendants of the Indus people are still alive in South Asia today.
Key words
Indus Valley civilisation
One of the world's earliest urban civilisations, which lived in what is now Pakistan and northwestern India between about 3300 and 1300 BCE. Also called the Harappan civilisation, after one of its main cities.
Example: The Indus Valley civilisation was at its peak between about 2600 and 1900 BCE — the same time as the building of the great Egyptian pyramids.
Seal
A small object with a carved design that is pressed into wet clay or wax to leave a mark. Indus seals have a picture and writing on one side, and a small loop on the back so they could be carried on a cord.
Example: An Indus merchant probably used a seal to mark bundles of goods sent down the river or to Mesopotamia.
Decipherment
Working out the meaning of a writing system that nobody can read any more. Decipherment usually needs a sample of the script, a key (like the Rosetta Stone), and knowledge of the language.
Example: Egyptian hieroglyphs were deciphered in 1822. Mesopotamian cuneiform was deciphered in the 19th century. The Indus script has not been deciphered.
Mohenjo-daro
One of the largest cities of the Indus Valley civilisation, in what is now Sindh province of Pakistan. The name in modern Sindhi means 'Mound of the Dead'. The original name is unknown.
Example: Mohenjo-daro had perhaps 40,000 people. It had grid-pattern streets, brick houses with bathrooms, and a 'Great Bath' which is one of the world's earliest known public pools.
Standardisation
When everything across a wide area is made to the same size and shape. The Indus civilisation had standardised bricks and weights across over a million square kilometres.
Example: An Indus brick from Pakistan and an Indus brick from Gujarat in India are exactly the same shape. This kind of standardisation was unusual in the ancient world.
Meluhha
The name used in Mesopotamian writings for the place we now call the Indus Valley civilisation. It is one of the few clues we have to what the Indus people were called by their neighbours.
Example: Mesopotamian texts mention 'ships from Meluhha' bringing copper, ivory, and beads. We do not know what the Indus people called themselves.
Use this in other subjects
  • Geography: On a world map, find Pakistan and northwestern India. Trace the Indus River from the Himalayas to the Arabian Sea. Mark the four greatest Indus cities: Harappa, Mohenjo-daro, Dholavira, Lothal. Discuss why a great river is a good place for an early civilisation.
  • History: Build a class timeline showing the Indus Valley civilisation alongside ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. All three peaked at roughly the same time, between about 2600 and 1900 BCE. Discuss why most history textbooks talk about Egypt and Mesopotamia but leave out the Indus.
  • Language: Discuss what is needed to decipher a lost writing system. The Rosetta Stone helped with hieroglyphs because it had the same text in three scripts. Without that, what could you do? Try a class exercise: invent a simple symbol system with five rules; let another group try to figure out what your symbols mean using only short examples.
  • Mathematics: The Indus civilisation had standardised weights using a binary system — every weight is double or half the next. The smallest known is about 0.85 g; the largest about 11 kg. Discuss why this kind of system makes trade easier. Try doubling and halving weights using stones in the classroom.
  • Citizenship: The Indus heritage is shared between Pakistan and India today, though most major sites are in Pakistan. Discuss how heritage can be 'shared' between countries that disagree about other things. Are there other examples in the world?
  • Science: The Indus civilisation may have ended partly because of climate change — weakening monsoons, shifting rivers, drier conditions. Discuss what climate change can do to a society over centuries. Compare with what we know about climate change today.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The Indus Valley civilisation was small or unimportant.

Right

It covered an area larger than ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia put together. Its biggest city, Mohenjo-daro, had perhaps 40,000 people. It traded with civilisations 2,000 km away.

Why

Older school textbooks often skipped the Indus, focusing on Egypt and Mesopotamia. The civilisation deserves equal attention.

Wrong

The Indus people had no writing.

Right

They had a writing system with about 400 signs. We have over 4,000 inscriptions. We just cannot read them. 'Cannot read' is very different from 'did not have'.

Why

This wrong story is sometimes used to claim the Indus people were less developed. They were not. They had writing — we just lost the key.

Wrong

All ancient civilisations had kings, palaces, and royal tombs.

Right

We have not found any clear evidence of these things in the Indus civilisation. It may have been organised by councils, priests, or merchants. We genuinely do not know — and the absence is itself important data.

Why

'King and palace' is the model from Egypt and Mesopotamia. The Indus may have done things differently. Honest history holds open the possibility.

Wrong

The Indus people were wiped out by an invasion.

Right

There is no good evidence for an invasion. The cities slowly declined, probably because of climate change and shifting rivers. People moved and adapted. Their descendants are still alive in South Asia today.

Why

'Wiped out' makes a dramatic story but does not match the evidence. Most civilisations do not end suddenly. They slowly become something else.

Teaching this with care

This lesson covers a civilisation that is foundational to South Asia and shared between Pakistan and India today. Treat both countries' heritage as equal — most major sites are in Pakistan, but Indus settlements extended into Gujarat, Haryana, Punjab, and other parts of modern India. Do not present the civilisation as the heritage of one country only. Use the names 'Indus Valley civilisation' or 'Harappan civilisation' interchangeably; both are widely used. Avoid the older 'Aryan invasion' theory of decline — modern evidence does not support it, and the topic has been used in some political contexts to support divisive nationalist claims. Stick to climate and ecological explanations. Do not make wild claims about the script — there are many fringe 'translations' online; none has been accepted by mainstream scholars. Be honest about how much we do not know. Some of your students may be of South Asian descent, and the Indus heritage may matter to them personally. Make space for that. Finally, do not call the civilisation 'mysterious' or 'lost' — its cities, objects, and descendants are all real and present. Only its writing is silent.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about Indus seals.

  1. What is an Indus seal, and what was it probably used for?

    It is a small carved stone, about the size of a postage stamp, with a picture and a row of symbols on one side. It was probably used to stamp marks of ownership on bundles of trade goods.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the size, the carved picture and writing, and a use related to trade or ownership.
  2. Why has the Indus script not been deciphered?

    The inscriptions are very short — only a few signs each. There is no bilingual key like the Rosetta Stone. And we do not know what language the Indus people spoke.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention at least two of these reasons. Accept any answer that shows the student understands decipherment is genuinely hard.
  3. What is unusual about the Indus civilisation compared with ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia?

    It had no clear palaces, throne rooms, or royal tombs. It also had remarkably standardised bricks and weights across a huge area. It looks more like a society organised by councils or merchants than by kings.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the absence of clear royal evidence, or the standardisation, or both. Either point shows the student has noticed what makes the Indus different.
  4. How do we know the Indus civilisation traded over long distances?

    Indus seals have been found in Mesopotamia, more than 2,000 km away. Mesopotamian writings mention trade with a place called 'Meluhha', which is almost certainly the Indus Valley.
    Marking note: Accept any answer that mentions seals found in Mesopotamia, or the name Meluhha, or both. The point is that the seals are physical evidence of long-distance trade.
  5. What probably caused the Indus cities to decline?

    Most likely climate change — weakening monsoons, shifting rivers, and the drying up of one major river. Trade with Mesopotamia also broke down. The cities were slowly abandoned over about 200 years. There is no good evidence of an invasion.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions climate or river changes. Reject answers that blame invasion as the main cause.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. How well can we know a civilisation if we cannot read its writing?

    This is the core question of the lesson. Push students past quick answers. We can learn a lot from objects: how people lived, what they ate, what they traded, how they built their cities. We cannot easily learn what they believed, what stories they told, what they called themselves, or what they thought about their world. Strong answers will see that physical evidence and written evidence each tell different parts of the story, and that missing the writing leaves real gaps. End by saying that this is a real problem archaeologists face for many cultures, not just the Indus.
  2. The Indus civilisation seems to have had no kings. If you were running a city of 40,000 people 4,000 years ago, how could you do it without a king?

    This is a creative question that invites students to think about how societies organise themselves. Possible answers: councils of elders, priests, merchant guilds, family heads, religious teachings, shared traditions. Strong answers will see that 'king' is not the only way to organise a society — and that some modern societies do without kings too. The Indus civilisation may have been one of the earliest experiments in non-monarchical urban government. Or it may have had leaders we just have not recognised. Either way, the question is genuinely open.
  3. The Indus heritage is shared between Pakistan and India today, two countries that disagree about much. Should heritage from before there were countries belong to all of us?

    This is a thoughtful question that connects to many other heritage debates (the Rosetta Stone, the Benin Bronzes, the Parthenon Marbles). Some students may say heritage belongs where the objects are found. Others may say it belongs to descendants — but in this case, the descendants are spread across many modern countries. Strong answers will see that 'whose heritage' is a hard question, and that the Indus civilisation existed long before modern borders. The honest answer may be: it is the heritage of South Asia, and beyond that, of all humanity.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, draw a simple square on the board with a row of made-up symbols above a picture of an animal. Ask: 'What do you think this is? When was it made?' Take guesses. Then say: 'About 4,000 years ago. The picture you can see. The writing — no one alive can read.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the Indus seal: a small carved stone, postage-stamp-sized, with a picture (often an animal) and a row of symbols above. Made by the Indus Valley civilisation, between about 2600 and 1900 BCE, in what is now Pakistan and northwestern India. Pause and place the civilisation in time and space — the same era as the Egyptian pyramids and Mesopotamian ziggurats, but bigger than either, with cities of 40,000 people and standardised bricks across an area larger than modern Pakistan.
  3. UNDO THE WRONG STORIES (15 min)
    On the board, write three statements: (1) The Indus civilisation was small. (2) The Indus people had no writing. (3) The civilisation was wiped out by an invasion. Take each in turn. Replace each with what we now know — the civilisation was huge; the writing exists but cannot be read; the cities slowly declined because of climate change. End by asking: 'Why might these wrong stories have lasted so long?'
  4. THE DECIPHERMENT ACTIVITY (10 min)
    In pairs, students invent a simple writing system. Each pair makes up six symbols and a rule for what they mean (each one represents a word, or a sound, or an idea). They write a four-symbol message and pass it to another pair, with no key. Can the other pair work out the message? Discuss: why is it so hard with so little to go on? This is exactly the problem with the Indus script — short messages, no key, no known language.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'If you could read just one Indus seal, which one would you want to read?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'There are over 4,000 of these messages waiting. Maybe one of you, or one of your students later, will be the person who finally reads them. Or maybe no one ever will. Both are honest possibilities. The seals are still there.'
Classroom materials
The Mystery Script
Instructions: On the board, write a row of five made-up symbols. Tell the class this is a real message in a real language. Their task: try to figure out what it means. They can ask three questions. After three questions, take their best guesses. Then reveal that you do not know either — you just made it up. Discuss: how does it feel to try to read something with no key? Now imagine doing this for 100 years with thousands of real ancient messages. That is what scholars have been doing with the Indus script.
Example: In Mr Khan's class, students invented theories about the symbols — was it food, weather, names? After ten minutes they gave up. The teacher said: 'You used your brains hard for ten minutes and got nowhere. Imagine working on this for your whole career. That is what Indus scholars do. Some of them have spent 40 years trying to read what you tried to read for ten minutes. We are not closer to solving it. We are just sure it is hard.'
What Can We Learn Without Words?
Instructions: In small groups, students imagine that 4,000 years from now, someone finds objects from their school but cannot read any of the writing. The objects are: a chair, a pencil, a book (closed), a water bottle, and a school bag. What can the future archaeologist learn? What can they not learn? Each group writes one paragraph for each side of the question.
Example: In Ms Singh's class, the strongest group wrote: 'They will know we sat down to do something. They will know we drank water. They will know we carried things in bags. They will not know what we were learning, or what stories we read, or why we needed pencils. Without the writing, the heart of school is invisible.' The teacher said: 'Now imagine looking at Indus seals the same way. We know they traded. We do not know what they sang. The objects tell us a lot. They cannot tell us everything.'
Build a Trade Map
Instructions: On a rough world map drawn on the board, mark the Indus Valley (modern Pakistan and northwestern India). Mark Mesopotamia (modern Iraq). Draw arrows showing the trade route. Now mark the goods that travelled: from Indus to Mesopotamia — cotton, copper, semi-precious stones, ivory, timber. From Mesopotamia to Indus — silver, woollen textiles, possibly grain. Discuss: this is one of the world's oldest long-distance trade networks. The seals are some of the strongest physical evidence we have of it.
Example: In one class, students drew a long curved arrow stretching across most of the Middle East. The teacher said: 'Look at this. 4,000 years ago, before any modern country existed, ships were sailing this route, traders were walking it, and people were exchanging goods worth crossing 2,000 kilometres for. The seals are how those traders signed their packages. Some of those signatures are still here. We just cannot read them.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Rosetta Stone for a writing system that was decoded — and see how its decipherment shows what the Indus script is missing.
  • Try a lesson on cuneiform tablets, the writing of Mesopotamia, which was decoded in the 19th century. The Indus and Mesopotamia were trading partners, and seeing both gives a fuller picture.
  • Try a lesson on the Quipu for another record-keeping system that is only partly understood. Both the Indus seal and the Quipu raise the question of what counts as 'reading'.
  • Connect this lesson to geography with a longer project on the Indus River system, which today flows through Pakistan and supplies water to millions of people. The river that fed the civilisation still feeds South Asia.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship with a discussion of how heritage from before modern borders is shared. The Indus civilisation belongs to no single country today.
  • Connect this lesson to language class with a project on writing systems around the world — alphabets, syllabaries, ideographic scripts, and undeciphered scripts. The Indus is one of about a dozen scripts that remain unread.
Key takeaways
  • Indus seals are small carved stones, about the size of a postage stamp, made between about 2600 and 1900 BCE in what is now Pakistan and northwestern India.
  • The Indus Valley civilisation was huge — bigger than ancient Egypt or Mesopotamia at the same time. Its cities had grid streets, drainage, and standardised bricks across over a million square kilometres.
  • The seals carry a writing system with about 400 signs. Despite over a century of effort, no one has been able to decipher it.
  • Decipherment is hard because the inscriptions are too short, there is no bilingual key, and we do not know what language the Indus people spoke.
  • The Indus civilisation traded with Mesopotamia, 2,000 km away. Some seals have been found there. The Mesopotamians called the trade partner 'Meluhha'.
  • Around 1900 BCE the Indus cities slowly declined, probably because of climate change. The script was forgotten. But the descendants of the Indus people are still alive in South Asia today.
Sources
  • The Indus Civilization: A Contemporary Perspective — Gregory L. Possehl (2002) [academic]
  • The Lost River: On the Trail of the Sarasvati — Michel Danino (2010) [academic]
  • Why we still cannot read Indus writing — BBC Future (2017) [news]
  • Indus Valley collection (object pages) — The British Museum (2024) [museum]
  • Harappa and Mohenjo-daro: research and finds — Archaeological Survey of India (2024) [institution]