About a thousand years ago, Al-Muqaddasi, an Arab geographer of the Middle Ages, wrote in his book The Best Divisions in the Knowledge of the Regions that there were 2,200 villages in Mastung, a district in Balochistan. Most of the world’s oldest civilisations grew along rivers because water is a source for fishing and hunting and the land around rivers is fertile. However, ancient civilisations thrived even in areas where there were no rivers.
In Balochistan, except for Mehrgarh, civilisations were completely different from the river civilisations because they were founded around karezes — a system of irrigation via underground tunnels that passed from Makran to Kandahar.
As there were 360 karezes in Mastung at that time when Al-Muqaddasi was writing his book, many villages thrived there with about three to four villages populating around one karez. The world’s largest village system had developed around the karezes in this region, according to Ghulam Farooq Baloch, an archaeologist and assistant professor at Balochistan University’s Balochistan Study Centre. Currently, the number of villages in Mastung is not more than 250. Due to frequent draughts, the karez system has almost vanished.
The province is home to some of the most ancient of civilisations but most of its historical artefacts lie outside the province
The Mehrgarh civilisation along the Bolan River, in Balochistan, and the Indus Valley civilisation in Sindh are included among some of the oldest civilisations of the world such as the Mesopotamian civilisation in present-day Iraq and the Nile River Valley civilisation in Egypt.
Archaeologists are of the view that ancient civilisations of Balochistan have more importance than other civilisations in South Asia because they believe that human communication started from Balochistan in this region. The basis for this belief is formed by the discovery of utensils in Balochistan being similar to the ones found in nearby civilisations such as Mohenjo Daro, Kalibangan in India, Mundigak in Afghanistan, Shar-i-Sokhta in Iran and Nisa in Turkmenistan. Experts also posit that Balochistan was the centre of trade and communication during the Neolithic Period.
In the 1970s, French archaeological teams started work in Mehrgarh and unearthed an 8,000-year-old civilisation. During the excavation, human structures, statues, toys, tools and pottery were recovered. The total area of Mehrgarh is 200-acre feet (an acre foot equals one surface acre one foot deep) and the French archaeologists worked on a quarter of Mehrgarh. Ghulam Farooq Baloch of the Balochistan Study Centre, says “Yahya Amjad, Stuart Piggott, and other famous archaeologists say a huge population of the world was living in the villages of Balochistan.” After discovering Mehrgarh, French archaeologist Jean-François Jarrige claimed that around 8,000 years ago the population of Mehrgarh was 3,000.
According to Jarrige, who specialised in Sindhology and South Asian archaeology, the earliest signs of civilised life were found in Jericho, Israel and Mehrgarh, Balochistan. Earliest signs of civilised life here refer to the time when man came out of the caves and began making settlements.