![ancient indian glyph ancient eastern india glyph ancient indian glyph ancient eastern india glyph](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/e1/0d/65/e10d659fff9319beff9a6c5fa9eab0bd--glyphs-symbols-indus-valley-civilization.jpg)
![ancient indian glyph ancient eastern india glyph ancient indian glyph ancient eastern india glyph](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/07/14/8d/07148db97908ee666630b7444832d9a2--glyphs-the-soul.jpg)
Thesis: Cire perdue or lost-wax casting metallurgy spread from Meluhha into the Fertile Crescent (Nahal Mishmar). The evidence for the word dhokra/dokra is presented on the following seals/tablets of Indus Script Corpora using rebus Meluhha rendering of hieroglyphs signifying dhokra/dokra. The same artistic tradition of Bhāratam Janam, 'metalcaster folk' continues in the art of dhokra kamar, 'cire perdue (lost-wax) metalcasters' even today, in an abiding, stunning metalwork cultural continuum. See: with evidences of metalwork signified by multiple heads and limbs including superposition of faces on to other limbs. deepa-lakshmi continues in the tradition of dhokra kamar 'cire perdue metalcasters' among Bhāratam Janam. It is posited that the tradition of Sarasvati civilization artificers who produced cire perdue bronze sculptures of 1. dhokra, dokra (Meluhha, Indian sprachbund).
![ancient indian glyph ancient eastern india glyph ancient indian glyph ancient eastern india glyph](https://www.thoughtco.com/thmb/lsmCkw_X1OBGcOlkfP1gny6KJik=/640x589/filters:no_upscale():max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/rao4HR-56a021705f9b58eba4af1a4b-5c5c9fb0c9e77c0001661fcd.jpg)
This evidence for the word dhokra ‘cire Perdue (lost-wax) metal artificers’ derives from Tvaṣṭr̥ > tŏrka (tworka) > metath. The word Tuisto derives from : Tvaṣṭr̥ >Tuisto, (Germanic) This tradition is evidenced among Ancient people of Sarasvati Civilization (4th millennium BCE) who documented the metalwork artificers’ work as dhokra/dokra on Indus Script. This tradition is evidenced among Ancient Germanic people who venerate Tuisto as the Father of the Germanic People. The tradition of artificers dates back to Ṛgvedic times (8th millennium BCE).