Chandragupta Maurya: Difference between revisions
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{{Redirect|Sandracottus|the genus of beetle|Sandracottus (beetle)}} | {{Redirect|Sandracottus|the genus of beetle|Sandracottus (beetle)}} | ||
{{other uses|Chandragupta (disambiguation)}} | {{other uses|Chandragupta (disambiguation)}} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2015}} | {{Use dmy dates|date=December 2015}} | ||
{{Use Indian English|date=December 2015}} | {{Use Indian English|date=December 2015}} | ||
{{Infobox royalty | {{Infobox royalty | ||
| name = Chandragupta Maurya | |||
| title = | | title = | ||
| image = | | image = | ||
| image_size = | | image_size = | ||
| alt = | | alt = | ||
| caption = | | caption = Sculpture of Chandragupta Maurya (left) and [[Bhadrabahu]] (right) at [[Chandragupta Basadi]] | ||
| birth_date = possibly {{circa|350–340 BCE}} | | birth_date = possibly {{circa|350–340 BCE}} | ||
| birth_place = [[Pataliputra]], [[Magadha (Mahajanapada)|Magadha]], [[Nanda Empire]]<br/><small>(near present-day [[Patna]])</small> (according to Buddhist legend) | | birth_place = [[Pataliputra]], [[Magadha (Mahajanapada)|Magadha]], [[Nanda Empire]]<br/><small>(near present-day [[Patna]])</small> (according to Buddhist legend) | ||
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}} | }} | ||
{{Maurya}} | {{Maurya}} | ||
[[File:Nanda Empire, c.325 BCE.png|thumb|Possible extent of Nanda Empire, | [[File:Nanda Empire, c.325 BCE.png|thumb|Possible extent of Nanda Empire, c. 325 BCE.]] | ||
[[File:Chandragupta Maurya Empire 303 BCE 2.png|thumb|There are no contemporary records of Chandragupta's military conquests and the reach of his empire. The extent is deduced from Greek and Roman historians and religious Indian texts, all written centuries after his death. Based on these, Chandragupta's empire was extensive,<ref name=britchandrag>[https://www.britannica.com/biography/Chandragupta Chandragupta Maurya, Emperor of India] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180310115220/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Chandragupta |date=10 March 2018 }}, Encyclopædia Britannica</ref>{{sfn|Kulke|Rothermund|2004|p=59-65}}{{sfn|Boesche|2003|p=7-18}} here conceptualized at {{circa|303 BCE}} as a network of core areas and trade- and communication-networks.{{efn-la|name="network_model"|See also [[Maurya Empire#cite note-map network model-1|Maurya Empire, network model]].}}{{efn-la|name="western_extent"}}]] | [[File:Chandragupta Maurya Empire 303 BCE 2.png|thumb|There are no contemporary records of Chandragupta's military conquests and the reach of his empire. The extent is deduced from Greek and Roman historians and religious Indian texts, all written centuries after his death. Based on these, Chandragupta's empire was extensive,<ref name=britchandrag>[https://www.britannica.com/biography/Chandragupta Chandragupta Maurya, Emperor of India] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180310115220/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Chandragupta |date=10 March 2018 }}, Encyclopædia Britannica</ref>{{sfn|Kulke|Rothermund|2004|p=59-65}}{{sfn|Boesche|2003|p=7-18}} here conceptualized at {{circa|303 BCE}} as a network of core areas and trade- and communication-networks.{{efn-la|name="network_model"|See also [[Maurya Empire#cite note-map network model-1|Maurya Empire, network model]].}}{{efn-la|name="western_extent"}}]] | ||
[[File:Chandragupta Maurya Empire 303 BCE 1.png|thumb|Traditional representation of extent of Chandragupta Maurya's empire {{circa|303 BCE}}, as a solid mass of territory.{{efn-la|name="solid_mass"|See also [[Maurya Empire#cite note-map solid mass-2|Mauryan Empire, solid mass.]]}}{{efn-la|name="western_extent"}} Some maps include all of Gedrosia, e.g., south-east Iran.]] | [[File:Chandragupta Maurya Empire 303 BCE 1.png|thumb|Traditional representation of extent of Chandragupta Maurya's empire {{circa|303 BCE}}, as a solid mass of territory.{{efn-la|name="solid_mass"|See also [[Maurya Empire#cite note-map solid mass-2|Mauryan Empire, solid mass.]]}}{{efn-la|name="western_extent"}} Some maps include all of Gedrosia, e.g., south-east Iran.]] | ||
'''Chandragupta Maurya'''{{efn-la|{{langx|sa|चन्द्रगुप्त मौर्य}} {{IAST3|Candragupta Maurya}} | '''Chandragupta Maurya'''{{efn-la|{{langx|sa|चन्द्रगुप्त मौर्य}} {{IAST3|Candragupta Maurya}}; {{langx|pi|चन्दगुत्त मोरीय}}, {{Transliteration|pi|Chandagutta Moriya}}; {{langx|grc|Σανδράκοπτος}}, {{transliteration|grc|Sandrákoptos}}, {{lang|grc|Σανδράκοττος}}, {{transliteration|grc|Sandrákottos}}, {{lang|grc|Ανδροκόττος}}, {{transliteration|grc|Androkóttos}}}} (reigned {{circa|320 BCE}}{{efn-la|name="dating"}} – c. 298 BCE){{efn-la|name="Fisher-2018_p71"}} was the founder and the first [[emperor]] of the [[Maurya Empire]], based in [[Magadha]] (present-day [[Bihar]]) in the [[Indian subcontinent]]. | ||
His rise to power began in the period of unrest and local warfare that arose after [[Alexander the Great]]'s [[Indian campaign of Alexander the Great|Indian campaign]] and early death in 323 BCE, although the exact chronology and sequence of events remains subject to debate among historians. He started a war against the unpopular [[Nanda dynasty]] in Magadha on the [[Ganges|Ganges Valley]],{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=6}} defeated them and established his own dynasty. In addition, he raised an army to resist the Greeks,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=6-8, 22, 31-33}}{{sfn|Hemacandra|1998|pp=175–188}}{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1967|pp=144-145}}{{efn-la|name="Boesche_2003_assassination"}} defeated them, and took control of the eastern [[Indus Valley]].{{sfn|Danielou|2003|p=85-86}} His conquest of Magadha is generally dated to | His rise to power began in the period of unrest and local warfare that arose after [[Alexander the Great]]'s [[Indian campaign of Alexander the Great|Indian campaign]] and early death in 323 BCE, although the exact chronology and sequence of events remains subject to debate among historians. He started a war against the unpopular [[Nanda dynasty]] in Magadha on the [[Ganges|Ganges Valley]],{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=6}} defeated them and established his own dynasty. In addition, he raised an army to resist the Greeks,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=6-8, 22, 31-33}}{{sfn|Hemacandra|1998|pp=175–188}}{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1967|pp=144-145}}{{efn-la|name="Boesche_2003_assassination"}} defeated them, and took control of the eastern [[Indus Valley]].{{sfn|Danielou|2003|p=85-86}} His conquest of Magadha is generally dated to c. 322–319 BCE,{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=27, 61-62}}{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=18}} and his expansion to Punjab subsequently at c. 317–312 BCE,{{efn-la|name="dating_2"}} but some scholars have speculated that he might have initially consolidated his power base in Punjab, before conquering Magadha;{{efn-la|name="dating_2"}} an alternative chronology places these events all in the period c. 311–305 BCE.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=31}}{{efn-la|name="dating"}} According to the play [[Mudrarakshasa]], Chandragupta was assisted by his mentor [[Chanakya]], who later became his minister. He expanded his reach subsequently into parts of the western Indus Valley{{efn-la|name="Haig_1894_LIV"}} and possibly{{sfn|Coningham|Young|2015|p=452-453}} eastern Afghanistan{{efn-la|name="western_extent"}} through a [[Political marriages in India|dynastic marriage alliance]] with [[Seleucus I Nicator]] c. 305–303 BCE.{{sfn|Danielou|2003|p=85-86}} His empire also included [[Gujarat]]{{efn|Corroborated archaeologically at [[Sudarshana Lake]].}} and a geographically extensive network of cities and trade-routes.{{efn-la|name="network_model"}}{{efn-la|name="western_extent"}} | ||
There are no historical facts about Chandragupta's origins and early life, only legends, while the narrative of his reign is mainly deduced from a few fragments in Greek and Roman sources, and a few Indian religious texts, all written centuries after his death. The prevailing levels of technology and infrastructure limited the extent of Chandragupta's rule,{{efn-la|name="Fisher_2018_p72"}} and the administration was decentralised, with provinces and local governments,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=47, 52-53}}{{efn-la|name="Stein_Arnold_2010"}} and large autonomous regions within its limits.{{efn-la|name="Ludden_2013_p29"}} Chandragupta's reign, and the Maurya Empire, which reached its peak under his grandson [[Ashoka|Ashoka the Great]],{{efn-la|name="Maurya_Empire_maximum_extent"}} began an era of economic prosperity, reforms, infrastructure expansions. [[Buddhism]], [[Jainism]] and [[Ājīvika]] prevailed over the non-Maghadian [[Historical Vedic religion|Vedic]] and [[Brahmanism|Brahmanistic]] traditions,{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007}} initiating, under Ashoka, the [[Buddhism#Ashokan Era and the early schools|expansion of Buddhism]], and the [[Hindu synthesis|synthesis]] of Brahmanic and non-Brahmanic religious traditions which converged in [[Hinduism]]. His [[Digvijaya (conquest)|legend]] still inspires visions of an undivided Indian nation. | There are no historical facts about Chandragupta's origins and early life, only legends, while the narrative of his reign is mainly deduced from a few fragments in Greek and Roman sources, and a few Indian religious texts, all written centuries after his death. The prevailing levels of technology and infrastructure limited the extent of Chandragupta's rule,{{efn-la|name="Fisher_2018_p72"}} and the administration was decentralised, with provinces and local governments,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=47, 52-53}}{{efn-la|name="Stein_Arnold_2010"}} and large autonomous regions within its limits.{{efn-la|name="Ludden_2013_p29"}} Chandragupta's reign, and the Maurya Empire, which reached its peak under his grandson [[Ashoka|Ashoka the Great]],{{efn-la|name="Maurya_Empire_maximum_extent"}} began an era of economic prosperity, reforms, infrastructure expansions. [[Buddhism]], [[Jainism]] and [[Ājīvika]] prevailed over the non-Maghadian [[Historical Vedic religion|Vedic]] and [[Brahmanism|Brahmanistic]] traditions,{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007}} initiating, under Ashoka, the [[Buddhism#Ashokan Era and the early schools|expansion of Buddhism]], and the [[Hindu synthesis|synthesis]] of Brahmanic and non-Brahmanic religious traditions which converged in [[Hinduism]]. His [[Digvijaya (conquest)|legend]] still inspires visions of an undivided Indian nation. | ||
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Chandragupta's confrontations with the Greeks and the Nanda king are shortly referred to in a few passages in Greek-Roman sources from the 1st century BCE to the 2nd century CE. Impressions of India at that time are given by a number of other Greek sources. He is further mentioned in Brahmanical, Buddhist, and Jain religious texts and legends, which give impressions of his later reception; they significantly vary in detail.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=2-14, 229-235}} According to Mookerji, the main sources on Chandragupta and his time, in chronological order are:{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=3-14}} | Chandragupta's confrontations with the Greeks and the Nanda king are shortly referred to in a few passages in Greek-Roman sources from the 1st century BCE to the 2nd century CE. Impressions of India at that time are given by a number of other Greek sources. He is further mentioned in Brahmanical, Buddhist, and Jain religious texts and legends, which give impressions of his later reception; they significantly vary in detail.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=2-14, 229-235}} According to Mookerji, the main sources on Chandragupta and his time, in chronological order are:{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=3-14}} | ||
* Greek sources by three companions of Alexander, namely [[Nearchus]], [[Onesicritus]], and [[Aristobulus of Cassandreia]], who write about Alexander and do not mention Chandragupta; | * Greek sources by three companions of Alexander, namely [[Nearchus]], [[Onesicritus]], and [[Aristobulus of Cassandreia]], who write about Alexander and do not mention Chandragupta; | ||
* The Greek ambassador [[Megasthenes|Megasthanes]], a contemporary of Chandragupta, whose works are lost, but fragments are preserved in the works of other authors, namely Greco-Roman authors [[Strabo]] (64 BCE–19 CE), [[Diodorus]] (died | * The Greek ambassador [[Megasthenes|Megasthanes]], a contemporary of Chandragupta, whose works are lost, but fragments are preserved in the works of other authors, namely Greco-Roman authors [[Strabo]] (64 BCE–19 CE), [[Diodorus]] (died c. 36 BCE, wrote about India), [[Arrian]] (c. 130–172 CE, wrote about India), [[Pliny the Elder]] (1st cent. CE, wrote about India), [[Plutarch]] (c. 45–125 CE), and [[Justin (historian)|Justin]] (2nd cent. CE). According to Mookerji, without these sources this period would be "a most obscure chapter of Indian history."{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=3}} | ||
* The Brahmanical [[Puranas]] (Gupta-times), religious texts which viewed the Nandas and Mauryas as illegitimate rulers, because of their [[shudra]] background; | * The Brahmanical [[Puranas]] (Gupta-times), religious texts which viewed the Nandas and Mauryas as illegitimate rulers, because of their [[shudra]] background; | ||
* Later Brahmanical narratives include legends in [[Vishakhadatta]]'s [[Mudrarakshasa]] ( | * Later Brahmanical narratives include legends in [[Vishakhadatta]]'s [[Mudrarakshasa]] (4th–8th cent), [[Somadeva]]'s [[Kathasaritsagara]] (11th cent.) and [[Kshemendra]]'s [[Brihatkathamanjari]] (11th ). Mookerji includes the [[Arthasastra]] as a source, a text now dated to the 1st–3rd century CE, and attributed to Chanakya during Gupta-times.{{sfn|Olivelle|2013}} | ||
* The earliest Buddhist sources are dated to the fourth-century CE or after, including the Sri Lankan Pali texts [[Dipavamsa]] (''Rajavamsa'' section), [[Mahavamsa]], [[Mahavamsa tika]] and [[Mahabodhivamsa]]. | * The earliest Buddhist sources are dated to the fourth-century CE or after, including the Sri Lankan Pali texts [[Dipavamsa]] (''Rajavamsa'' section), [[Mahavamsa]], [[Mahavamsa tika]] and [[Mahabodhivamsa]]. | ||
* 7th to 10th century Jain inscriptions at [[Shravanabelagola|Shravanabelgola]]; these are disputed by scholars as well as the Svetambara Jain tradition.{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}} The second Digambara text interpreted to be mentioning the Maurya emperor is dated to about the 10th-century such as in the ''Brhatkathakosa'' of [[Harisena (Jain monk)]], while the complete Jain legend about Chandragupta is found in the 12th-century [[Parisishtaparvan]] by [[Hemachandra]]. | * 7th to 10th century Jain inscriptions at [[Shravanabelagola|Shravanabelgola]]; these are disputed by scholars as well as the Svetambara Jain tradition.{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}} The second Digambara text interpreted to be mentioning the Maurya emperor is dated to about the 10th-century such as in the ''Brhatkathakosa'' of [[Harisena (Jain monk)]], while the complete Jain legend about Chandragupta is found in the 12th-century [[Parisishtaparvan]] by [[Hemachandra]]. | ||
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=== Date === | === Date === | ||
None of the ancient texts mention when Chandragupta was born. [[Plutarch]] claims that Chandragupta in his youth saw [[Alexander the Great]] during the [[Indian campaign of Alexander the Great|latter's invasion of India]] ({{Circa|326}}–325 BCE): {{blockquote|Androcottus [Chandragupta], when he was a [[wiktionary:stripling|stripling]], saw Alexander himself, and we are told that he often said in later times that Alexander narrowly missed making himself master of the country, since [[Dhana Nanda|its king]] was hated and despised on account of his baseness and low birth.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|pp=28-29}}}} Assuming the Plutarch account is true, Raychaudhuri proposed in 1923 that Chandragupta may have been born after 350 BCE.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1923|p=142}} There is also a passage of Justin's history which had been read as referring to a meeting between Chandragupta and Alexander. However, according to Thomas Trautmann, this was a due to mistranslation in early printed book, and the correct reading was ''Nandrum'' (Nanada king), rather than ''Alexandrum''. {{blockquote|Some early printed editions of Justin's work wrongly mentioned "Alexandrum" instead of "Nandrum"; this error was corrected in philologist [[J. W. McCrindle]]'s 1893 translation. In the 20th century, historians [[Hem Chandra Raychaudhuri]] and [[R. C. Majumdar]] believed "Alexandrum" to be correct reading, and theorized that Justin refers to a meeting between Chandragupta and [[Alexander the Great]] ("Alexandrum"). However, this is incorrect: research by historian [[Alfred von Gutschmid]] in the preceding century had clearly established that "Nandrum" is the correct reading supported by multiple manuscripts: only a single defective manuscript mentions "Alexandrum" in the margin.{{sfn|Trautmann|1970|pp=240-241}}}} | None of the ancient texts mention when Chandragupta was born. [[Plutarch]] claims that Chandragupta in his youth saw [[Alexander the Great]] during the [[Indian campaign of Alexander the Great|latter's invasion of India]] ({{Circa|326}}–325 BCE): {{blockquote|Androcottus [Chandragupta], when he was a [[wiktionary:stripling|stripling]], saw Alexander himself, and we are told that he often said in later times that Alexander narrowly missed making himself master of the country, since [[Dhana Nanda|its king]] was hated and despised on account of his baseness and low birth.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|pp=28-29}}}} Assuming the Plutarch account is true, Raychaudhuri proposed in 1923 that Chandragupta may have been born after 350 BCE.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1923|p=142}} There is also a passage of Justin's history which had been read as referring to a meeting between Chandragupta and Alexander. However, according to Thomas Trautmann, this was a due to mistranslation in early printed book, and the correct reading was ''Nandrum'' (Nanada king), rather than ''Alexandrum''. {{blockquote|Some early printed editions of Justin's work wrongly mentioned "Alexandrum" instead of "Nandrum"; this error was corrected in philologist [[J. W. McCrindle]]'s 1893 translation. In the 20th century, historians [[Hem Chandra Raychaudhuri]] and [[R. C. Majumdar]] believed "Alexandrum" to be correct reading, and theorized that Justin refers to a meeting between Chandragupta and [[Alexander the Great]] ("Alexandrum"). However, this is incorrect: research by historian [[Alfred von Gutschmid]] in the preceding century had clearly established that "Nandrum" is the correct reading supported by multiple manuscripts: only a single defective manuscript mentions "Alexandrum" in the margin.{{sfn|Trautmann|1970|pp=240-241}}}} | ||
According to other Greco-Roman texts, Chandragupta attacked the Greek-Indian governors during a period of unrest and local warfare after Alexander's death (died {{Circa|323 BCE}}), acquiring control of the eastern Indus Valley.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1923|p=137}} The chronology and dating of Chandragupta's | According to other Greco-Roman texts, Chandragupta attacked the Greek-Indian governors during a period of unrest and local warfare after Alexander's death (died {{Circa|323 BCE}}), acquiring control of the eastern Indus Valley.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1923|p=137}} The chronology and dating of Chandragupta's activities in the Punjab is uncertain,{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=36, note 15; p.38, note 67}} either before or after he took the Nanda-throne.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=36, note 15}} The defeat of the Greeks is dated by Mookerji at 323; Jansari dates the arrival of Chandragupta in the Punjab at c. 317, in line with the chronology of Greek history.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=17}}{{efn-la|name="dating"}} | ||
The texts do not include the start or end year of Chandragupta's reign.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1923|p=138}} According to some Hindu and Buddhist texts, Chandragupta ruled for 24 years.{{sfn|Thapar|1961|p=13}} The Buddhist sources state Chandragupta Maurya ruled 162 years after the death of the [[The Buddha|Buddha]].{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1967|pp=134–142}} However, the Buddha's birth and death vary by source and all these lead to a chronology that is significantly different from the Greco-Roman records. Similarly, Jain sources composed give different gaps between [[Mahavira]]'s death and his accession.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1967|pp=134–142}} As with the Buddha's death, the date of Mahavira's death itself is also a matter of debate, and the inconsistencies and lack of unanimity among the Jain authors cast doubt on Jain sources. This Digambara Jain chronology, also, is not reconcilable with the chronology implied in other Indian and non-Indian sources.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1967|pp=134–142}} | The texts do not include the start or end year of Chandragupta's reign.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1923|p=138}} According to some Hindu and Buddhist texts, Chandragupta ruled for 24 years.{{sfn|Thapar|1961|p=13}} The Buddhist sources state Chandragupta Maurya ruled 162 years after the death of the [[The Buddha|Buddha]].{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1967|pp=134–142}} However, the Buddha's birth and death vary by source and all these lead to a chronology that is significantly different from the Greco-Roman records. Similarly, Jain sources composed give different gaps between [[Mahavira]]'s death and his accession.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1967|pp=134–142}} As with the Buddha's death, the date of Mahavira's death itself is also a matter of debate, and the inconsistencies and lack of unanimity among the Jain authors cast doubt on Jain sources. This Digambara Jain chronology, also, is not reconcilable with the chronology implied in other Indian and non-Indian sources.{{sfn|Raychaudhuri|1967|pp=134–142}} | ||
Historians such as [[Irfan Habib]] and Vivekanand Jha assign Chandragupta's reign to c. 322–298 BCE.{{sfn|Habib|Jha|2004|p=15}} [[Upinder Singh]] dates his rule from 324 or 321 BCE to 297 BCE.{{sfn|Upinder Singh|2016|p=331}} Kristi Wiley states he reigned between 320 and 293 BCE.{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}} Jansari, admitting that c.320/319 is the date conventionally accepted by most scholars,{{efn-la|name="dating_2"}} follows Cribb in re-assessing Justin (XV section 4.12-22), who states that Chandragupta's became " | Historians such as [[Irfan Habib]] and Vivekanand Jha assign Chandragupta's reign to c. 322–298 BCE.{{sfn|Habib|Jha|2004|p=15}} [[Upinder Singh]] dates his rule from 324 or 321 BCE to 297 BCE.{{sfn|Upinder Singh|2016|p=331}} Kristi Wiley states he reigned between 320 and 293 BCE.{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}} Jansari, admitting that c.320/319 is the date conventionally accepted by most scholars,{{efn-la|name="dating_2"}} follows Cribb in re-assessing Justin (XV section 4.12-22), who states that Chandragupta's became {{"'}}ruler of India' when Seleucus was 'laying the foundations' of his own empire." According to Jansari, "this reference appears to refer to the period c.311– c.308," implying that "Chandragupta gained power, and was possibly already the first Mauryan king, between c.311 and c.305 BCE."{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=30-31}} | ||
Chandragupta and Seleucus Nicator entered into a dynastic marriage-alliance at | Chandragupta and Seleucus Nicator entered into a dynastic marriage-alliance at c. 305–303 BCE. | ||
The circumstances and year of Chandragupta's death are also unclear and disputed.{{sfn|Dikshitar|1993|pp=264–266}}{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}} According to Roy, Chandragupta's abdication of throne may be dated to c. 298 BCE, and his death between 297 and 293 BCE.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=61–62}} | The circumstances and year of Chandragupta's death are also unclear and disputed.{{sfn|Dikshitar|1993|pp=264–266}}{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}} According to Roy, Chandragupta's abdication of throne may be dated to c. 298 BCE, and his death between 297 and 293 BCE.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=61–62}} | ||
=== Name === | === Name === | ||
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===Historical background=== | ===Historical background=== | ||
[[File:Late Vedic Culture (1100-500 BCE).png|thumb|right|Late Vedic era map showing the boundaries of [[Āryāvarta]] with Janapadas in northern India. Beginning of Iron Age kingdoms in India— [[Kuru (kingdom)|Kuru]], [[Panchala]], [[Kosala]], [[Videha]].]] | [[File:Late Vedic Culture (1100-500 BCE).png|thumb|right|Late Vedic era map showing the boundaries of [[Āryāvarta]] with Janapadas in northern India. Beginning of Iron Age kingdoms in India—[[Kuru (kingdom)|Kuru]], [[Panchala]], [[Kosala]], [[Videha]].]] | ||
Around 350 BCE Magadha, ruled by the [[Nanda dynasty]], emerged as the dominant power after a "process of internecine warfare" between the [[janapadas]].{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=187–194}} | Around 350 BCE Magadha, ruled by the [[Nanda dynasty]], emerged as the dominant power after a "process of internecine warfare" between the [[janapadas]].{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=187–194}} | ||
[[Alexander the Great]] entered the Northwest Indian subcontinent in his [[Indian campaign of Alexander the Great|Indian campaign]], which he aborted in 325 BCE due to a mutiny caused by the prospect of facing another large empire, presumably the [[Nanda Empire]], and before Chandragupta came into power. Alexander left India, and assigned the northwestern (Indus Valley) Indian subcontinent territories to Greek governors.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=2, 25-29}}{{sfn|Sastri|1988|p=26}} He died in 323 BCE in Babylon, whereafter war broke out between his generals. | [[Alexander the Great]] entered the Northwest Indian subcontinent in his [[Indian campaign of Alexander the Great|Indian campaign]], which he aborted in 325 BCE due to a mutiny caused by the prospect of facing another large empire, presumably the [[Nanda Empire]], and before Chandragupta came into power. Alexander left India, and assigned the northwestern (Indus Valley) Indian subcontinent territories to Greek governors.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=2, 25-29}}{{sfn|Sastri|1988|p=26}} He died in 323 BCE in Babylon, whereafter war broke out between his generals. | ||
===Early life=== | ===Early life=== | ||
====Family background==== | ====Family background==== | ||
There is no historical information on Chandragupta's youth. One medieval commentator states Chandragupta to be the son of one of the Nanda's wives with the name Mura.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=7–9}} Other | There is no historical information on Chandragupta's youth. One medieval commentator states Chandragupta to be the son of one of the Nanda's wives with the name Mura.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=7–9}} Other narratives describe Mura as a concubine of the king.<ref name=":1">{{cite book |title=The Cambridge History of India |year=1968 |editor=Edward James Rapson |volume=4 |page=470 |quote="His surname Maurya is explained by Indian authorities as mean 'son of Mura,' who is described as a concubine of the king. |editor2=Wolseley Haig |editor3=Richard Burn |editor4=Henry Dodwell |editor5=Mortimer Wheeler}}</ref> Another Sanskrit dramatic text [[Mudrarakshasa]] uses the terms ''Vrishala'' and ''Kula-Hina'' (meaning - "not descending from a recognized clan or family") to describe Chandragupta.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=9–11}} The word ''Vrishala'' has two meanings: one is the ''son of a [[shudra]]''; the other means the ''best of kings''. A later commentator used the former interpretation to posit that Chandragupta had a Shudra background. However, historian [[Radha Kumud Mukherjee]] opposed this theory, and stated that the word should be interpreted as "the best of kings".{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=9–11}} The same drama also refers to Chandragupta as someone of humble origin, like Justin.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=9–11}} According to the 11th-century texts of the [[Kashmiri Hindus|Kashmiri Hindu]] tradition – [[Kathasaritsagara]] and ''Brihat-Katha-Manjari'' – the Nanda lineage was very short. Chandragupta was a son of Purva-Nanda, the older Nanda based in Ayodhya.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=13}}{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=15-18}}{{efn-la|According to {{harvtxt|Roy|2012|pp=61–62}}, Chandragupta Maurya was a [[Shudra]] lineage, king.}} The common theme in the Hindu sources is that Chandragupta came from a humble background and with Chanakya, he emerged as a dharmic king loved by his subjects.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=7–13}} | ||
====Chanakya==== | ====Chanakya==== | ||
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}}</ref> | }}</ref> | ||
The chronology and dating of Chandragupta's | The chronology and dating of Chandragupta's activities in the Punjab is uncertain.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=36, note 15; p.38, note 67}} This may be either before or after he took the Nanda-throne.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=36, note 15}} The defeat of the Greeks is dated by Mookerji at 323 BCE; Jansari dates the arrival of Chandragupta in the Punjab at c. 317, in line with the chronology of Greek history.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=17}}{{efn-la|name="dating"}} | ||
====Offense of the Nanda-king and flight==== | ====Offense of the Nanda-king and flight==== | ||
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==== War against the Nandas and seizure of Pataliputra ==== | ==== War against the Nandas and seizure of Pataliputra ==== | ||
[[File:Nanda Empire, c.325 BCE.png|thumb|Nanda Empire, | [[File:Nanda Empire, c.325 BCE.png|thumb|Nanda Empire, c. 325 BCE]] | ||
{{Main|Nanda-Mauryan War}} | {{Main|Nanda-Mauryan War}} | ||
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The Buddhist ''Mahavamsa Tika'' and Jain ''Parishishtaparvan'' records Chandragupta's army unsuccessfully attacking the Nanda capital.{{Sfn|Hemacandra|1998|pp=175–188}} Chandragupta and Chanakya then began a campaign at the frontier of the Nanda empire, gradually conquering various territories on their way to the Nanda capital.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=33}} He then refined his strategy by establishing garrisons in the conquered territories, and finally besieged the Nanda capital Pataliputra. There [[Dhana Nanda]] accepted defeat.{{sfn|Malalasekera|2002|p=383}}{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=33-34}} In contrast to the easy victory in Buddhist sources, the Hindu and Jain texts state that the campaign was bitterly fought because the Nanda dynasty had a powerful and well-trained army.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=28–33}}{{sfn|Sen|1895|pp=26–32}} These legends state that the Nanda emperor was defeated, deposed and exiled by some accounts, while Buddhist accounts claim he was killed.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=34}} | The Buddhist ''Mahavamsa Tika'' and Jain ''Parishishtaparvan'' records Chandragupta's army unsuccessfully attacking the Nanda capital.{{Sfn|Hemacandra|1998|pp=175–188}} Chandragupta and Chanakya then began a campaign at the frontier of the Nanda empire, gradually conquering various territories on their way to the Nanda capital.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=33}} He then refined his strategy by establishing garrisons in the conquered territories, and finally besieged the Nanda capital Pataliputra. There [[Dhana Nanda]] accepted defeat.{{sfn|Malalasekera|2002|p=383}}{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=33-34}} In contrast to the easy victory in Buddhist sources, the Hindu and Jain texts state that the campaign was bitterly fought because the Nanda dynasty had a powerful and well-trained army.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=28–33}}{{sfn|Sen|1895|pp=26–32}} These legends state that the Nanda emperor was defeated, deposed and exiled by some accounts, while Buddhist accounts claim he was killed.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=34}} | ||
Historically reliable details of Chandragupta's campaign into Pataliputra are unavailable and the legends written centuries later are inconsistent. While his victory, and | Historically reliable details of Chandragupta's campaign into Pataliputra are unavailable and the legends written centuries later are inconsistent. While his victory, and ascension of the throne, is usually dated at c. 322–319 BCE,{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=27, 61-62}}{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=31}} which would put his war in the Punjab after his ascension, an ascension "between c. 311–305 BCE" is also possible, placing his activity in the Punjab at c. 317 BCE.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=17-18, 31}}{{efn-la|name="dating"}} | ||
The conquest was fictionalised in ''Mudrarakshasa'', in which Chandragupta is said to have acquired [[Punjab]], and then allied with a local king named Parvatka under the Chanakya's advice, where-after they advanced on Pataliputra.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=27, 61-62}}{{efn-la|{{harvtxt|Bhattacharyya|1977|p=8}} states that the empire was built by a gradual conquest of provinces after the initial consolidation of Magadha.}}{{efn-la|{{harvtxt|Hemacandra|1998|pp=176–177}} notes that according to the Digambara Jain version by Hemachandra, the success of Chandragupta and his strategist Chanakya was stopped by a Nanda town that refused to surrender. Chanakya disguised himself as a [[Sannyasa|mendicant]] and found seven mother goddesses ([[Saptamatrika|''saptamatrikas'']]) inside. He concluded these goddesses were protecting the town people. The townspeople sought the disguised mendicant's advice on how to end the blockade of the army surrounding their town. Hemacandra wrote Chanakya swindled them into removing the mother goddesses. The townspeople removed the protective goddesses and an easy victory over the town followed. Thereafter, the alliance of Chandragupta and Parvataka overran the Nanda empire and attacked Pataliputra with an "immeasurable army". With a depleted treasury, exhausted merit, and insufficient intelligence, the Nanda emperor lost.}} | The conquest was fictionalised in ''Mudrarakshasa'', in which Chandragupta is said to have acquired [[Punjab]], and then allied with a local king named Parvatka under the Chanakya's advice, where-after they advanced on Pataliputra.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=27, 61-62}}{{efn-la|{{harvtxt|Bhattacharyya|1977|p=8}} states that the empire was built by a gradual conquest of provinces after the initial consolidation of Magadha.}}{{efn-la|{{harvtxt|Hemacandra|1998|pp=176–177}} notes that according to the Digambara Jain version by Hemachandra, the success of Chandragupta and his strategist Chanakya was stopped by a Nanda town that refused to surrender. Chanakya disguised himself as a [[Sannyasa|mendicant]] and found seven mother goddesses ([[Saptamatrika|''saptamatrikas'']]) inside. He concluded these goddesses were protecting the town people. The townspeople sought the disguised mendicant's advice on how to end the blockade of the army surrounding their town. Hemacandra wrote Chanakya swindled them into removing the mother goddesses. The townspeople removed the protective goddesses and an easy victory over the town followed. Thereafter, the alliance of Chandragupta and Parvataka overran the Nanda empire and attacked Pataliputra with an "immeasurable army". With a depleted treasury, exhausted merit, and insufficient intelligence, the Nanda emperor lost.}} | ||
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===Dynastic marriage-alliance with Seleucus=== | ===Dynastic marriage-alliance with Seleucus=== | ||
[[File:Malan Range.jpg|thumb|right|Malan Range and limit of ceded territory according to Tarn (1922) | [[File:Malan Range.jpg|thumb|right|Malan Range and limit of ceded territory according to Tarn (1922)]] | ||
{{Main|Seleucid-Mauryan war}} | {{Main|Seleucid-Mauryan war}} | ||
According to Appian, [[Seleucus I Nicator]], one of Alexander's Macedonian generals who in 312 BCE established the [[Seleucid Kingdom|Seleucid Empire]] with its capital at [[Babylon]], brought Persia and [[Bactria]] under his own authority, putting his eastern front facing the empire of Chandragupta.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=2-3, 35-38}}{{sfn|Appian|p=55}} | According to Appian, [[Seleucus I Nicator]], one of Alexander's Macedonian generals who in 312 BCE established the [[Seleucid Kingdom|Seleucid Empire]] with its capital at [[Babylon]], brought Persia and [[Bactria]] under his own authority, putting his eastern front facing the empire of Chandragupta.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=2-3, 35-38}}{{sfn|Appian|p=55}} | ||
Somewhere between 305 and 303 BCE Seleucus and Chandragupta confronted each other, Seleucus intending to retake the former satrapies each of the Indus. Yet, Seleucus Nicator and Chandragupta formed a dynastic marriage-alliance, Seleucus receiving five hundred elephants, and Chandragupta gaining control over the regions bordering at the east on the Indus.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=34}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0239&query=head%3D%23120|title=Strabo 15.2.1(9)|access-date=14 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090203225004/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0239&query=head%3D%23120|archive-date=3 February 2009|url-status=live}}</ref> [[Strabo]], in his ''[[Geographica]]'', XV, 2.9 composed about 300 years after Chandragupta's death, describes a number of tribes living along the Indus, and then states that "The Indians occupy [in part] some of the countries situated along the Indus, which formerly belonged to the Persians."<ref>Strabo, Geography, [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0239%3Abook%3D15%3Achapter%3D2%3Asection%3D9 XV, 2, 9]</ref> | Somewhere between 305 and 303 BCE Seleucus and Chandragupta confronted each other, Seleucus intending to retake the former satrapies each of the Indus. Yet, Seleucus Nicator and Chandragupta formed a dynastic marriage-alliance, Seleucus receiving five hundred elephants, and Chandragupta gaining control over the regions bordering at the east on the Indus.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|p=34}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0239&query=head%3D%23120|title=Strabo 15.2.1(9)|access-date=14 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090203225004/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0239&query=head%3D%23120|archive-date=3 February 2009|url-status=live}}</ref> [[Strabo]], in his ''[[Geographica]]'', XV, 2.9 composed about 300 years after Chandragupta's death, describes a number of tribes living along the Indus, and then states that "The Indians occupy [in part] some of the countries situated along the Indus, which formerly belonged to the Persians."<ref>Strabo, Geography, [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0239%3Abook%3D15%3Achapter%3D2%3Asection%3D9 XV, 2, 9]</ref> | ||
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=== Jain accounts of renunciation and retirement in Karnakata === | === Jain accounts of renunciation and retirement in Karnakata === | ||
[[File:Jain Inscription.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|alt=Inscription|1,300 | [[File:Jain Inscription.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|alt=Inscription|1,300-year-old Shravanabelagola relief shows death of Chandragupta after taking the vow of [[Sallekhana]]. Some consider it about the legend of his arrival with Bhadrabahu.{{sfn|Dikshitar|1993|pp=264–266}}{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}}]] | ||
[[File:Chandragupta Maurya and Bhadrabahu.jpg|thumb|A statue depicting Chandragupta Maurya (right) with his spiritual mentor [[Acharya Bhadrabahu]] at [[Shravanabelagola]] | [[File:Chandragupta Maurya and Bhadrabahu.jpg|thumb|A statue depicting Chandragupta Maurya (right) with his spiritual mentor [[Acharya Bhadrabahu]] at [[Shravanabelagola]]]] | ||
[[File:Tijara Jain temple painting 32.jpg|thumb|Chandragupta Maurya having 16 [[auspicious dreams in Jainism]] ]] | [[File:Tijara Jain temple painting 32.jpg|thumb|Chandragupta Maurya having 16 [[auspicious dreams in Jainism]] ]] | ||
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The Digambara Jain accounts are recorded in the ''Brihakathā kośa'' (931 CE) of Harishena, ''Bhadrabāhu charita'' (1450 CE) of Ratnanandi, ''Munivaṃsa bhyudaya'' (1680 CE) and ''Rajavali kathe'',{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=39–40}}{{sfn|Samuel|2010|pp=60}}{{sfn|Thapar|2004|p=178}} | The Digambara Jain accounts are recorded in the ''Brihakathā kośa'' (931 CE) of Harishena, ''Bhadrabāhu charita'' (1450 CE) of Ratnanandi, ''Munivaṃsa bhyudaya'' (1680 CE) and ''Rajavali kathe'',{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=39–40}}{{sfn|Samuel|2010|pp=60}}{{sfn|Thapar|2004|p=178}} | ||
Regarding the inscriptions describing the relation of Bhadrabahu and Chandragupta Maurya, [[Radha Kumud Mukherjee|Radha Kumud Mookerji]] writes,<blockquote>The oldest inscription of about 600 AD associated "the pair (''yugma''), Bhadrabahu along with Chandragupta ''Muni''." Two inscriptions of about 900 AD on the [[Kaveri]] near [[Srirangapatna|Seringapatam]] describe the summit of a hill called [[Chandragiri hill|Chandragiri]] as marked by the footprints of Bhadrabahu and Chandragupta ''munipati''. A [[Shravanabelagola]] inscription of 1129 mentions Bhadrabahu "''Shrutakevali''", and Chandragupta who acquired such merit that he was worshipped by the forest deities. Another inscription of 1163 similarly couples and describes them. A third inscription of the year 1432 speaks of ''Yatindra'' Bhadrabahu, and his disciple Chandragupta, the fame of whose penance spread into other words.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Mookerji|first=Radhakumud|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i-y6ZUheQH8C|title=Chandragupta Maurya and His Times|date=1966|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass Publ.|isbn=978-81-208-0405-0|language=en}}</ref></blockquote>Along with texts, several Digambara Jain inscriptions dating from the 7th–15th century refer to Bhadrabahu and a Prabhacandra. Later Digambara tradition identified the Prabhacandra as Chandragupta, and some modern era scholars have accepted this Digambara tradition while others have not,{{sfn|Dikshitar|1993|pp=264–266}}{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}} Several of the late Digambara inscriptions and texts in Karnataka state the journey started from Ujjain and not Patliputra (as stated in some Digambara texts).{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}} | Regarding the inscriptions describing the relation of Bhadrabahu and Chandragupta Maurya, [[Radha Kumud Mukherjee|Radha Kumud Mookerji]] writes,<blockquote>The oldest inscription of about 600 AD associated "the pair (''yugma''), Bhadrabahu along with Chandragupta ''Muni''." Two inscriptions of about 900 AD on the [[Kaveri]] near [[Srirangapatna|Seringapatam]] describe the summit of a hill called [[Chandragiri hill|Chandragiri]] as marked by the footprints of Bhadrabahu and Chandragupta ''munipati''. A [[Shravanabelagola]] inscription of 1129 mentions Bhadrabahu "''Shrutakevali''", and Chandragupta who acquired such merit that he was worshipped by the forest deities. Another inscription of 1163 similarly couples and describes them. A third inscription of the year 1432 speaks of ''Yatindra'' Bhadrabahu, and his disciple Chandragupta, the fame of whose penance spread into other words.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Mookerji|first=Radhakumud|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i-y6ZUheQH8C|title=Chandragupta Maurya and His Times|date=1966|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass Publ.|isbn=978-81-208-0405-0|language=en}}</ref></blockquote>Along with texts, several Digambara Jain inscriptions dating from the 7th–15th century refer to Bhadrabahu and a Prabhacandra. Later Digambara tradition identified the Prabhacandra as Chandragupta, and some modern era scholars have accepted this Digambara tradition while others have not,{{sfn|Dikshitar|1993|pp=264–266}}{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}} Several of the late Digambara inscriptions and texts in Karnataka state the journey started from Ujjain and not Patliputra (as stated in some Digambara texts).{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Fleet|1892|pp=156–162}} | ||
====Analysis of the sources==== | ====Analysis of the sources==== | ||
[[File:Footprint of Chandragupta Maurya.jpg|thumb|The Footprints of Chandragupta Maurya on [[Chandragiri hill|Chandragiri]] Hill, where Chandragupta (the unifier of India and founder of the [[Maurya Empire|Maurya]] Dynasty) performed [[Sallekhana]] | [[File:Footprint of Chandragupta Maurya.jpg|thumb|The Footprints of Chandragupta Maurya on [[Chandragiri hill|Chandragiri]] Hill, where Chandragupta (the unifier of India and founder of the [[Maurya Empire|Maurya]] Dynasty) performed [[Sallekhana]]]] | ||
According to [[Jeffery D. Long]], in one Digambara version it was Samprati Chandragupta who renounced, migrated and performed ''sallekhana'' in Shravanabelagola. Long notes that scholars attribute the disintegration of the Maurya empire to the times and actions of Samprati Chandragupta, the grandson of Ashoka and great-great-grandson of Chandragupta Maurya, concluding that the two Chandraguptas have been confused to be the same in some Digambara legends.{{sfn|Long|2013|pp=60–61}} | According to [[Jeffery D. Long]], in one Digambara version it was Samprati Chandragupta who renounced, migrated and performed ''sallekhana'' in Shravanabelagola. Long notes that scholars attribute the disintegration of the Maurya empire to the times and actions of Samprati Chandragupta, the grandson of Ashoka and great-great-grandson of Chandragupta Maurya, concluding that the two Chandraguptas have been confused to be the same in some Digambara legends.{{sfn|Long|2013|pp=60–61}} | ||
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====Assumed control of Southern India==== | ====Assumed control of Southern India==== | ||
There is uncertainty about the other conquests that Chandragupta may have achieved, especially in the [[Deccan]] region of southern India.{{sfn|Habib|Jha|2004|p=19}} At the time of his grandson Ashoka's ascension in c. 268 BCE, the empire extended up to present-day [[Karnataka]] in the south, so the southern conquests may be attributed to either Chandragupta or his son Bindusara. | There is uncertainty about the other conquests that Chandragupta may have achieved, especially in the [[Deccan]] region of southern India.{{sfn|Habib|Jha|2004|p=19}} At the time of his grandson Ashoka's ascension in c. 268 BCE, the empire extended up to present-day [[Karnataka]] in the south, so the southern conquests may be attributed to either Chandragupta or his son Bindusara. | ||
According to Mookerji, Chandragupta expanded his empire into the south,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=38-42}} referring to Plutarch, who stated that "Androcottus [...] with an army of six hundred thousand men overran and subdued all India."<ref>Plutrach, ''Alexander''[https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0243%3Achapter%3D62 62]</ref>{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=38}} Mookerji notes that details are lacking, but argues that "there is reliable evidence for it in the inscriptions of Ashoka."{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=38}} Mookerji also refers to the Jain tradition that Chandragupta retired at [[Sravana Belgola]], Karnakata,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=39-41}} and to references in Tamil records.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=41-42}} | According to Mookerji, Chandragupta expanded his empire into the south,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=38-42}} referring to Plutarch, who stated that "Androcottus [...] with an army of six hundred thousand men overran and subdued all India."<ref>Plutrach, ''Alexander''[https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0243%3Achapter%3D62 62]</ref>{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=38}} Mookerji notes that details are lacking, but argues that "there is reliable evidence for it in the inscriptions of Ashoka."{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=38}} Mookerji also refers to the Jain tradition that Chandragupta retired at [[Sravana Belgola]], Karnakata,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=39-41}} and to references in Tamil records.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|p=41-42}} | ||
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According to Kulke and Rothermund, if the Jain tradition about Chandragupta ending his life as a renunciate in Karnakata is considered correct, it appears that Chandragupta initiated the southern conquest.{{sfn|Kulke|Rothermund|2004|p=64}} | According to Kulke and Rothermund, if the Jain tradition about Chandragupta ending his life as a renunciate in Karnakata is considered correct, it appears that Chandragupta initiated the southern conquest.{{sfn|Kulke|Rothermund|2004|p=64}} | ||
Yet, the Digambara Jain accounts are problematic. His conversion and retirement at Śravaṇa Beḷgoḷa with Bhadrabāhu are only attested in Digambara Jain sources, which developed after 600 CE.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|pp=22}} They may actually refer to Samprati Chandragupta the great-great-grandson of Chandragupta Maurya,{{sfn|Long|2013|pp=60–61}} and are contradicted by Svetambaras Jain texts, who situate Bhadrabahunear the Nepalese foothills of the Himalayas in third-century BCE, neither moving nor travelling with Chandragupta Maurya to the south.{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Dundas|2003|pp=46–49, 67–69}}{{sfn|Jyoti Prasad Jain|2005|pp=65–67}} The Digambara legends may also have misidentified Prabhacandra, an important Jain monk scholar who migrated centuries after Chandragupta Maurya's death, as Chandragupta Maurya.{{sfn|Dikshitar|1993|pp=264–266}} | Yet, the Digambara Jain accounts are problematic. His conversion and retirement at Śravaṇa Beḷgoḷa with Bhadrabāhu are only attested in Digambara Jain sources, which developed after 600 CE.{{sfn|Jansari|2023|pp=22}} They may actually refer to Samprati Chandragupta the great-great-grandson of Chandragupta Maurya,{{sfn|Long|2013|pp=60–61}} and are contradicted by Svetambaras Jain texts, who situate Bhadrabahunear the Nepalese foothills of the Himalayas in third-century BCE, neither moving nor travelling with Chandragupta Maurya to the south.{{sfn|Wiley|2009|pp=50–52}}{{sfn|Dundas|2003|pp=46–49, 67–69}}{{sfn|Jyoti Prasad Jain|2005|pp=65–67}} The Digambara legends may also have misidentified Prabhacandra, an important Jain monk scholar who migrated centuries after Chandragupta Maurya's death, as Chandragupta Maurya.{{sfn|Dikshitar|1993|pp=264–266}} | ||
Two poetic anthologies from the Tamil [[Sangam literature]] corpus – ''[[Akananuru]]'' and ''[[Purananuru]]'' – allude to the Nanda rule and Maurya empire. For example, poems 69, 281 and 375 mention the army and chariots of the Mauryas, while poems 251 and 265 may be alluding to the Nandas.{{sfn|Zvelebil|1973|pp=53-54}} However, the poems dated between first-century BCE to fifth-century CE do not mention Chandragupta Maurya by name, and some of them could be referring to a different Moriya dynasty in the [[Deccan Plateau|Deccan]] region in the fifth century CE.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=41–42}} According to Upinder Singh, these poems may be mentioning Mokur and Koshar kingdoms of Vadugars (northerners) in Karnataka and [[History of Andhra Pradesh|Andhra Pradesh]], with one interpretation being that the Maurya Empire had an alliance with these at some point of time.{{sfn|Upinder Singh|2016|pp=330–331}} | Two poetic anthologies from the Tamil [[Sangam literature]] corpus – ''[[Akananuru]]'' and ''[[Purananuru]]'' – allude to the Nanda rule and Maurya empire. For example, poems 69, 281 and 375 mention the army and chariots of the Mauryas, while poems 251 and 265 may be alluding to the Nandas.{{sfn|Zvelebil|1973|pp=53-54}} However, the poems dated between first-century BCE to fifth-century CE do not mention Chandragupta Maurya by name, and some of them could be referring to a different Moriya dynasty in the [[Deccan Plateau|Deccan]] region in the fifth century CE.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=41–42}} According to Upinder Singh, these poems may be mentioning Mokur and Koshar kingdoms of Vadugars (northerners) in Karnataka and [[History of Andhra Pradesh|Andhra Pradesh]], with one interpretation being that the Maurya Empire had an alliance with these at some point of time.{{sfn|Upinder Singh|2016|pp=330–331}} | ||
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=== Administration === | === Administration === | ||
[[File:Mauryan Empire. Circa late 4th-2nd century BC.jpg|thumb|Chandragupta Maurya period [[Karshapana|Karshapana coin]], circa | [[File:Mauryan Empire. Circa late 4th-2nd century BC.jpg|thumb|Chandragupta Maurya period [[Karshapana|Karshapana coin]], circa 315–310 BCE<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cngcoins.com/Coin.aspx?CoinID=335378|title=Auction 396. INDIA, Mauryan Empire , Karshapana (14mm, 3.32 g). circa 315-310 BC|website=www.cngcoins.com|access-date=2024-04-24}}</ref>]] | ||
After conquering northern India, Chandragupta and [[Chanakya]] passed a series of major economic and political reforms.{{citation needed|date=December 2024}} Chandragupta established a decentralised administration with provinces and local governments,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=47, 52-53}} and a ''mantriparishad'' (council of advisers) advising the king.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=80}} While it is often thought that Chandragupta applied the statecraft and economic policies described in ''[[Arthashastra]]'', which was earlierly thought to be written by his minister [[Chanakya]]{{sfn|Boesche|2003|pp=7–18}}<ref>MV Krishna Rao (1958, Reprinted 1979), Studies in Kautilya, 2nd Edition, {{oclc|551238868}}, {{ISBN|978-8121502429}}, pages 13–14, 231–233</ref> but it's now thought by most scholars that the Arthashastra is not of Mauryan origin, and contains prescriptions which are incompatible with Chandragupta's reign.{{sfn|Olivelle|2013|pp=26}}{{efn-la|name="Stein_Arnold_2010"}} | After conquering northern India, Chandragupta and [[Chanakya]] passed a series of major economic and political reforms.{{citation needed|date=December 2024}} Chandragupta established a decentralised administration with provinces and local governments,{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=47, 52-53}} and a ''mantriparishad'' (council of advisers) advising the king.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=80}} While it is often thought that Chandragupta applied the statecraft and economic policies described in ''[[Arthashastra]]'', which was earlierly thought to be written by his minister [[Chanakya]]{{sfn|Boesche|2003|pp=7–18}}<ref>MV Krishna Rao (1958, Reprinted 1979), Studies in Kautilya, 2nd Edition, {{oclc|551238868}}, {{ISBN|978-8121502429}}, pages 13–14, 231–233</ref> but it's now thought by most scholars that the Arthashastra is not of Mauryan origin, and contains prescriptions which are incompatible with Chandragupta's reign.{{sfn|Olivelle|2013|pp=26}}{{efn-la|name="Stein_Arnold_2010"}} | ||
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The empire built a [[Maurya Empire#Economy|strong economy]] from a solid infrastructure such as irrigation, temples, mines, and roads.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=187–195}}{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=62–63}} Ancient epigraphical evidence suggests Chandragupta, under counsel from Chanakya, started and completed many irrigation reservoirs and networks across the Indian subcontinent to ensure food supplies for the civilian population and the army, a practice continued by his dynastic successors.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=187–194}} Regional prosperity in agriculture was one of the required duties of his state officials.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=192–194}} | The empire built a [[Maurya Empire#Economy|strong economy]] from a solid infrastructure such as irrigation, temples, mines, and roads.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=187–195}}{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=62–63}} Ancient epigraphical evidence suggests Chandragupta, under counsel from Chanakya, started and completed many irrigation reservoirs and networks across the Indian subcontinent to ensure food supplies for the civilian population and the army, a practice continued by his dynastic successors.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=187–194}} Regional prosperity in agriculture was one of the required duties of his state officials.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=192–194}} | ||
The strongest evidence of infrastructure development is found in the [[Junagadh rock inscription of Rudradaman]] in Gujarat, dated to about 150 CE. It states, among other things, that [[Rudradaman I|Rudradaman]] repaired and enlarged the reservoir and irrigation conduit infrastructure built by Chandragupta and enhanced by Asoka.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|p=189}} Chandragupta's empire also built mines, manufacturing centres, and networks for trading goods. His rule developed land routes to transport goods across the Indian subcontinent. Chandragupta expanded "roads suitable for carts" as he preferred those over narrow tracks suitable for only pack animals.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=194–195}} | The strongest evidence of infrastructure development is found in the [[Junagadh rock inscription of Rudradaman]] in Gujarat, dated to about 150 CE. It states, among other things, that [[Rudradaman I|Rudradaman]] repaired and enlarged the reservoir and irrigation conduit infrastructure built by Chandragupta and enhanced by Asoka.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|p=189}} Chandragupta's empire also built mines, manufacturing centres, and networks for trading goods. His rule developed land routes to transport goods across the Indian subcontinent. Chandragupta expanded "roads suitable for carts" as he preferred those over narrow tracks suitable for only pack animals.{{sfn|Allchin|Erdosy|1995|pp=194–195}} | ||
According to Kaushik Roy, the Maurya dynasty rulers were "great road builders".{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=62–63}} The Greek ambassador Megasthenes credited this tradition to Chandragupta after the completion of a thousand-mile-long highway connecting Chandragupta's capital [[Pataliputra]] in Bihar to [[Taxila]] in the north-west where he studied. The other major strategic road infrastructure credited to this tradition spread from Pataliputra in various directions, connecting it with [[Ancient Nepal|Nepal]], [[Kapilavastu (ancient city)|Kapilavastu]], [[Dehradun]], [[Mirzapur]], [[History of Odisha|Odisha]], [[History of Andhra Pradesh|Andhra]], and Karnataka.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=62–63}} Roy stated this network boosted trade and commerce, and helped move armies rapidly and efficiently.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=62–63}} | According to Kaushik Roy, the Maurya dynasty rulers were "great road builders".{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=62–63}} The Greek ambassador Megasthenes credited this tradition to Chandragupta after the completion of a thousand-mile-long highway connecting Chandragupta's capital [[Pataliputra]] in Bihar to [[Taxila]] in the north-west where he studied. The other major strategic road infrastructure credited to this tradition spread from Pataliputra in various directions, connecting it with [[Ancient Nepal|Nepal]], [[Kapilavastu (ancient city)|Kapilavastu]], [[Dehradun]], [[Mirzapur]], [[History of Odisha|Odisha]], [[History of Andhra Pradesh|Andhra]], and Karnataka.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=62–63}} Roy stated this network boosted trade and commerce, and helped move armies rapidly and efficiently.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=62–63}} | ||
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Chandragupta sponsored Vedic sacrifices{{sfn|Eraly|2002|pp=414–415}} and Brahmanical rituals,{{sfn|Sastri|1988|pp=163–164}} and hosted major festivals marked by procession of elephants and horses.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=62–63, 79–80, 90, 159–160}} | Chandragupta sponsored Vedic sacrifices{{sfn|Eraly|2002|pp=414–415}} and Brahmanical rituals,{{sfn|Sastri|1988|pp=163–164}} and hosted major festivals marked by procession of elephants and horses.{{sfn|Mookerji|1988|pp=62–63, 79–80, 90, 159–160}} | ||
While many religions thrived within his realms and his descendants' empire, [[Buddhism]], [[Jainism]] and [[Ājīvika]] gained prominence prevailing over [[Historical Vedic religion|Vedic]] and [[Brahmanism|Brahmanistic]] traditions,{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007}} | While many religions thrived within his realms and his descendants' empire, [[Buddhism]], [[Jainism]] and [[Ājīvika]] gained prominence prevailing over [[Historical Vedic religion|Vedic]] and [[Brahmanism|Brahmanistic]] traditions,{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007}} initiating, under Ashoka, the [[Buddhism#Ashokan Era and the early schools|expansion of Buddhism]] and the [[Hindu synthesis|synthesis]] of Brahmanic and non-Brahmanic religious traditions which converged in [[Hinduism]]. Minority religions such as [[Zoroastrianism]] and the [[Greek pantheon]] were respected. | ||
==Legacy== | ==Legacy== | ||
[[File:Chandragupt maurya Birla mandir 6 dec 2009 (31) (cropped).JPG|thumb|A modern statue depicting Chandragupta Maurya, [[Laxminarayan Temple]], Delhi | [[File:Chandragupt maurya Birla mandir 6 dec 2009 (31) (cropped).JPG|thumb|A modern statue depicting Chandragupta Maurya, [[Laxminarayan Temple]], Delhi{{sfn|Jansari|2023|pp=138-140|ps=: It is "idealised" including a [[Chatra (umbrella)|royal parasol]] and halo, as influenced by ancient sculptures from [[Sarnath]], and "brings together a disparate variety of styles and motifs, none of which can easily be attributed to a specific period, region or genre", including "a helmet with a circular disc"; and with "traditional Indian unstitched clothing", intricate jewellry, and a [[yajnopavita|sacred thread]] to mark him as a [[kshatriya]], but also "a European style, hard-cover book". The plinth below depicts a map of India to symbolise Chandragupta's perceived importance to the nation.}}]] | ||
[[File:Chandragupta Maurya stamp.jpg|thumb|Chandragupta Maurya stamp issued by Indian Government in 2001 | [[File:Chandragupta Maurya stamp.jpg|thumb|Chandragupta Maurya stamp issued by Indian Government in 2001{{sfn|Jansari|2023|pp=174-176|ps=. This modern stamp has used symbols from [[punch-marked coins]], and depicts him in "minimalist" manner gesturing the [[abhayamudra]] with one hand and with a sword in the other, and wearing "traditional unstitched Indian clothing" and jewelry drawn from other ancient artworks; and with [[:File:Patna griffin.jpg|throne components]] inspired by [[Ashoka]]'s sculptures.}}]] | ||
A memorial to Chandragupta exists on [[Chandragiri hill]] in [[Shravanabelagola]], [[Karnataka]].{{sfn|Vallely|2018|pp=182–183}} The [[Indian Postal Service]] issued a [[Commemorative stamp|commemorative postage stamp]] honouring Chandragupta Maurya in 2001.<ref name=PIBRelease>[http://pib.nic.in/archieve/lreleng/lyr2001/rjul2001/19072001/r190720012.html Commemorative postage stamp on Chandragupta Maurya] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130427002333/http://pib.nic.in/archieve/lreleng/lyr2001/rjul2001/19072001/r190720012.html |date=27 April 2013 }}, Press Information Bureau, Govt. of India</ref> | A memorial to Chandragupta exists on [[Chandragiri hill]] in [[Shravanabelagola]], [[Karnataka]].{{sfn|Vallely|2018|pp=182–183}} The [[Indian Postal Service]] issued a [[Commemorative stamp|commemorative postage stamp]] honouring Chandragupta Maurya in 2001.<ref name=PIBRelease>[http://pib.nic.in/archieve/lreleng/lyr2001/rjul2001/19072001/r190720012.html Commemorative postage stamp on Chandragupta Maurya] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130427002333/http://pib.nic.in/archieve/lreleng/lyr2001/rjul2001/19072001/r190720012.html |date=27 April 2013 }}, Press Information Bureau, Govt. of India</ref> | ||
Historian Sushma Jansari notes that, in the 20th century, diverging views on Chandragupta have developed between western academics and Indian scholars.{{sfn|Jansari|2023}} While westerners tend to take a reserved view on Chandragupta's accomplishments, Indian authors have portrayed Chandragupta as a very successful king who established the first Indian nation.{{sfn|Jansari|2023}} | |||
==In popular culture== | ==In popular culture== | ||
* ''[[Mudrarakshasa]]'' ("The Signet Ring of [[Rakshasa (amatya)|Rakshasa]]") is a political drama in [[Sanskrit]] by [[Vishakhadatta]] composed 600 years after the conquest of Chandragupta – probably between 300 CE and 700 CE.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=61–62}} | * ''[[Mudrarakshasa]]'' ("The Signet Ring of [[Rakshasa (amatya)|Rakshasa]]") is a political drama in [[Sanskrit]] by [[Vishakhadatta]] composed 600 years after the conquest of Chandragupta – probably between 300 CE and 700 CE.{{sfn|Roy|2012|pp=61–62}} | ||
* [[Dwijendralal Ray|D. L. Roy]] wrote a Bengali drama named ''[[Chandragupta (play)|Chandragupta]]'' based on the life of Chandragupta. The story of the play is loosely borrowed from the [[Puranas]] and the Greek history.{{sfn|Ghosh|2001|pp=44–46}} | * [[Dwijendralal Ray|D. L. Roy]] wrote a Bengali drama named ''[[Chandragupta (play)|Chandragupta]]'' based on the life of Chandragupta. The story of the play is loosely borrowed from the [[Puranas]] and the Greek history.{{sfn|Ghosh|2001|pp=44–46}} | ||
* Chanakya's role in the formation of the Maurya Empire is the essence of a historical/spiritual novel ''The Courtesan and the Sadhu'' by Dr. Mysore N. Prakash.<ref>''The Courtesan and the Sadhu, A Novel about Maya, Dharma, and God'', October 2008, Dharma Vision LLC., {{ISBN|978-0-9818237-0-6}}, Library of Congress Control Number: 2008934274</ref> | * Chanakya's role in the formation of the Maurya Empire is the essence of a historical/spiritual novel ''The Courtesan and the Sadhu'' by Dr. Mysore N. Prakash.<ref>''The Courtesan and the Sadhu, A Novel about Maya, Dharma, and God'', October 2008, Dharma Vision LLC., {{ISBN|978-0-9818237-0-6}}, Library of Congress Control Number: 2008934274</ref> | ||
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{{efn-la|name="dating"|'''Dating | {{efn-la|name="dating"|'''Dating''': like his other dates, the date of Chandragupta's ascencion of the throne is uncertain. {{harvtxt|Jansari|2023|p=18}}: "...widely, and casually, accepted that Chandragupta came to power in c.320/319 bc. However, all of the information concerning Chandragupta’s rise to power and the dates of his reign must be treated with caution: the evidence, such as it is, is based on limited and problematic Graeco-Roman and South Asian sources, little of the content of which is contemporary with the events they report." Chandragupta's conquest of the Punjab happened after a prolonged period of unrest and warfare, and, synchronized with Greek history, happened around 317 BCE {{harv|Jansari|2023|p=17}}. Jansari, admitting that c.320/319 BCE is the date conventionally accepted by most scholars, follows Cribb in re-assessing Justin (XV section 4.12-22), who states that Chandragupta’s became "‘ruler of India’ when Seleucus was ‘laying the foundations’ of his own empire." According to Jansari, "this reference appears to refer to the period c.311– c.308 bc," implying that "Chandragupta gained power, and was possibly already the first Mauryan king, between c.311 and c.305 bc" {{harv|Jansari|2023|pp=30–31}} | ||
* {{harvtxt|Jansari|2023|pp=17–18}}: "Most scholars assert that Chandragupta’s arrival here came after his overthrow of the Nanda dynasty and his establishment of his own dynasty in its place. This timing, however, like many other aspects of Chandragupta’s reign, remains uncertain, and some scholars have also suggested that Chandragupta’s activities in the region preceded the foundation of the Mauryan empire. [note 15] The inconclusive and problematic evidence for Chandragupta’s life and events means that either interpretation is possible." | * {{harvtxt|Jansari|2023|pp=17–18}}: "Most scholars assert that Chandragupta’s arrival here came after his overthrow of the Nanda dynasty and his establishment of his own dynasty in its place. This timing, however, like many other aspects of Chandragupta’s reign, remains uncertain, and some scholars have also suggested that Chandragupta’s activities in the region preceded the foundation of the Mauryan empire. [note 15] The inconclusive and problematic evidence for Chandragupta’s life and events means that either interpretation is possible." | ||
* {{harvtxt|Jansari|2023|p=36, note 15}}: "The commentary alongside this section of Justin in Yardley, Wheatley and Heckel (2011, 278–9) provides a good overview of the arguments, from those put forward by scholars writing in the early nineteenth century to those of recent decades, in relation to the timing of Chandragupta’s arrival in the region before or after he took the Nanda throne." | * {{harvtxt|Jansari|2023|p=36, note 15}}: "The commentary alongside this section of Justin in Yardley, Wheatley and Heckel (2011, 278–9) provides a good overview of the arguments, from those put forward by scholars writing in the early nineteenth century to those of recent decades, in relation to the timing of Chandragupta’s arrival in the region before or after he took the Nanda throne." | ||
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* {{citation|last=Chakrabarty|first=Dilip K.|year=2010|author-link=Dilip K. Chakrabarti|title=The Geopolitical Orbits of Ancient India: The Geographical Frames of the Ancient Indian Dynasties |location=New Delhi, Oxford and New York|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn= 978-0-19-908832-4}} | * {{citation|last=Chakrabarty|first=Dilip K.|year=2010|author-link=Dilip K. Chakrabarti|title=The Geopolitical Orbits of Ancient India: The Geographical Frames of the Ancient Indian Dynasties |location=New Delhi, Oxford and New York|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn= 978-0-19-908832-4}} | ||
* {{cite journal | last1 =Clark | first1 =Walter Eugene | year = 1919 | title = The Importance of Hellenism from the Point of View of Indic-Philology | journal = Classical Philology | volume = 14 | issue = 4| pages = 297–313 | doi = 10.1086/360246 | s2cid = 161613588 }} | * {{cite journal | last1 =Clark | first1 =Walter Eugene | year = 1919 | title = The Importance of Hellenism from the Point of View of Indic-Philology | url =https://archive.org/details/sim_classical-philology_1919-10_14_4/page/n3 | journal = Classical Philology | volume = 14 | issue = 4| pages = 297–313 | doi = 10.1086/360246 | s2cid = 161613588 }} | ||
* {{cite book | last1 =Coningham | first1 =Robin | last2 =Young | first2 =Ruth | year =2015 | title =The Archaeology of South Asia: From the Indus to Asoka, c.6500 BCE–200 CE | publisher =Cambridge University Press | isbn =978-1-316-41898-7}} | * {{cite book | last1 =Coningham | first1 =Robin | last2 =Young | first2 =Ruth | year =2015 | title =The Archaeology of South Asia: From the Indus to Asoka, c.6500 BCE–200 CE | publisher =Cambridge University Press | isbn =978-1-316-41898-7}} | ||
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[[Category:290s BC deaths]] | [[Category:290s BC deaths]] | ||
[[Category:Mauryan dynasty]] | [[Category:Mauryan dynasty]] | ||
[[Category:Founding monarchs]] | [[Category:Founding monarchs in Asia]] | ||
[[Category:3rd-century BC Hindus]] | [[Category:3rd-century BC Hindus]] | ||
[[Category:4th-century BC Hindus]] | [[Category:4th-century BC Hindus]] | ||
Latest revision as of 07:30, 12 November 2025
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Script error: No such module "other uses". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Indian English Template:Infobox royalty Template:Maurya
Chandragupta MauryaTemplate:Efn-la (reigned Template:CircaTemplate:Efn-la – c. 298 BCE)Template:Efn-la was the founder and the first emperor of the Maurya Empire, based in Magadha (present-day Bihar) in the Indian subcontinent.
His rise to power began in the period of unrest and local warfare that arose after Alexander the Great's Indian campaign and early death in 323 BCE, although the exact chronology and sequence of events remains subject to debate among historians. He started a war against the unpopular Nanda dynasty in Magadha on the Ganges Valley,Template:Sfn defeated them and established his own dynasty. In addition, he raised an army to resist the Greeks,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn-la defeated them, and took control of the eastern Indus Valley.Template:Sfn His conquest of Magadha is generally dated to c. 322–319 BCE,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and his expansion to Punjab subsequently at c. 317–312 BCE,Template:Efn-la but some scholars have speculated that he might have initially consolidated his power base in Punjab, before conquering Magadha;Template:Efn-la an alternative chronology places these events all in the period c. 311–305 BCE.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la According to the play Mudrarakshasa, Chandragupta was assisted by his mentor Chanakya, who later became his minister. He expanded his reach subsequently into parts of the western Indus ValleyTemplate:Efn-la and possiblyTemplate:Sfn eastern AfghanistanTemplate:Efn-la through a dynastic marriage alliance with Seleucus I Nicator c. 305–303 BCE.Template:Sfn His empire also included GujaratTemplate:Efn and a geographically extensive network of cities and trade-routes.Template:Efn-laTemplate:Efn-la
There are no historical facts about Chandragupta's origins and early life, only legends, while the narrative of his reign is mainly deduced from a few fragments in Greek and Roman sources, and a few Indian religious texts, all written centuries after his death. The prevailing levels of technology and infrastructure limited the extent of Chandragupta's rule,Template:Efn-la and the administration was decentralised, with provinces and local governments,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la and large autonomous regions within its limits.Template:Efn-la Chandragupta's reign, and the Maurya Empire, which reached its peak under his grandson Ashoka the Great,Template:Efn-la began an era of economic prosperity, reforms, infrastructure expansions. Buddhism, Jainism and Ājīvika prevailed over the non-Maghadian Vedic and Brahmanistic traditions,Template:Sfn initiating, under Ashoka, the expansion of Buddhism, and the synthesis of Brahmanic and non-Brahmanic religious traditions which converged in Hinduism. His legend still inspires visions of an undivided Indian nation.
Historical sources
Chandragupta's confrontations with the Greeks and the Nanda king are shortly referred to in a few passages in Greek-Roman sources from the 1st century BCE to the 2nd century CE. Impressions of India at that time are given by a number of other Greek sources. He is further mentioned in Brahmanical, Buddhist, and Jain religious texts and legends, which give impressions of his later reception; they significantly vary in detail.Template:Sfn According to Mookerji, the main sources on Chandragupta and his time, in chronological order are:Template:Sfn
- Greek sources by three companions of Alexander, namely Nearchus, Onesicritus, and Aristobulus of Cassandreia, who write about Alexander and do not mention Chandragupta;
- The Greek ambassador Megasthanes, a contemporary of Chandragupta, whose works are lost, but fragments are preserved in the works of other authors, namely Greco-Roman authors Strabo (64 BCE–19 CE), Diodorus (died c. 36 BCE, wrote about India), Arrian (c. 130–172 CE, wrote about India), Pliny the Elder (1st cent. CE, wrote about India), Plutarch (c. 45–125 CE), and Justin (2nd cent. CE). According to Mookerji, without these sources this period would be "a most obscure chapter of Indian history."Template:Sfn
- The Brahmanical Puranas (Gupta-times), religious texts which viewed the Nandas and Mauryas as illegitimate rulers, because of their shudra background;
- Later Brahmanical narratives include legends in Vishakhadatta's Mudrarakshasa (4th–8th cent), Somadeva's Kathasaritsagara (11th cent.) and Kshemendra's Brihatkathamanjari (11th ). Mookerji includes the Arthasastra as a source, a text now dated to the 1st–3rd century CE, and attributed to Chanakya during Gupta-times.Template:Sfn
- The earliest Buddhist sources are dated to the fourth-century CE or after, including the Sri Lankan Pali texts Dipavamsa (Rajavamsa section), Mahavamsa, Mahavamsa tika and Mahabodhivamsa.
- 7th to 10th century Jain inscriptions at Shravanabelgola; these are disputed by scholars as well as the Svetambara Jain tradition.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The second Digambara text interpreted to be mentioning the Maurya emperor is dated to about the 10th-century such as in the Brhatkathakosa of Harisena (Jain monk), while the complete Jain legend about Chandragupta is found in the 12th-century Parisishtaparvan by Hemachandra.
The Greek and Roman texts do not mention Chandragupta directly, except for a second-century text written by the Roman historian Justin. They predominantly describe India, or mention the last Nanda emperor, who usurped the throne of the king before him (Curtis, Diodorus, Plutarch).Template:Sfn Justin states that Chandragupta was of humble origin, and includes stories of miraculous legends associated with him, such as a wild elephant appearing and submitting itself to him as a ride to him before a battle. Justin's text states that Chandragupta "achieved [India's] freedom, and "aspired to royalty by all men," as he offended Nanda and was ordered to death, but saved himself "by a speedy flight."Template:Sfn
Plutarch states that Chandragupta, as a young man, saw Alexander the Great.Template:Sfn He is described as a great king, but not as great in power and influence as Porus in northwestern India or Agrammes (Dhana Nanda) in eastern India.Template:Sfn
The Brahmanical Puranic texts do not discuss the details of Chandragupta's ancestry, but rather cover the ancestry of the last Nanda king, and the restoration of just rule by KautilyaTemplate:Sfn (Chanakya; the identification with Kautilya, the author of the Arthashastra, dates from a later periodTemplate:Sfn). The Nanda king is described to be cruel, against dharma and shastras, and born out of an illicit relationship followed by a coup.Template:Sfn According to Mookerji, the Arthasastra refers to the Nanda rule as against the spiritual, cultural, and military interests of the country, a period where intrigue and vice multiplied.Template:Sfn In a later addition,Template:Sfn the Arthasastra states that the text was written by him who returned dharma, nurtured diversity of views, and ruled virtuously that kindled love among the subjects for his rule,Template:Sfn an insertion linking the Guptas to the Mauryans.Template:Sfn
Buddhist texts such as Mahavamsa describe Chandragupta to be of Kshatriya origin.Template:Sfn These sources, written about seven centuries after his dynasty ended, state that both Chandragupta and his grandson Ashoka – a patron of Buddhism Template:En dash were Moriyas, a branch of Gautama Buddha's Shakya noble family.Template:Sfn These Buddhist sources attempt to link the dynasty of their patron Ashoka directly to the Buddha.Template:Sfn The sources claim that the family branched off to escape persecution from a King of Kosala and Chandragupta's ancestors moved into a secluded Himalayan kingdom known for its peacocks. The Buddhist sources explain the epithet maurya comes from these peacocks, or Mora in Pali (Sanskrit: Mayura).Template:Sfn[1] The Buddhist texts are inconsistent; some offer other legends to explain his epithet. For example, they mention a city named "Moriya-nagara" where all buildings were made of bricks colored like the peacock's neck.Template:Sfn The Maha-bodhi-vasa states he hailed from Moriya-nagara, while the Digha-Nikaya states he came from the Maurya clan of Pipphalivana.Template:Sfn The Buddhist sources also mention that "Brahmin Chanakya" was his counselor and with whose support Chandragupta became the king at Patliputra.Template:Sfn He has also been variously identified with Shashigupta (which has same etymology as of Chandragupta) of Paropamisadae on the account of same life events.[2]
The 12th-century Digambara text Parishishtaparvan by Hemachandra is the main and earliest Jain source of the complete legend of Chandragupta. It was written nearly 1,400 years after Chandragupta's death. Canto 8, verses 170 to 469, describes the legend of Chandragupta and Chanakya's influence on him.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Other Digambara Jain sources state he moved to Karnataka after renouncing his kingdom and performed Sallekhana – the Jain religious ritual of peacefully welcoming death by fasting.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The earliest mention of Chandragupta's ritual death is found in Harisena's Brhatkathakosa, a Sanskrit text of stories about Digambara Jains. The Brhatkathakosa describes the legend of Bhadrabahu and mentions Chandragupta in its 131st story.Template:Sfn However, the story makes no mention of the Maurya empire, and mentions that his disciple Chandragupta lived in and migrated from Ujjain – a kingdom (northwest Madhya Pradesh) about a thousand kilometers west of the Magadha and Patliputra (central Bihar). This has led to the proposal that Harisena's Chandragupta may be a later era, different person.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Biographical information
Date
None of the ancient texts mention when Chandragupta was born. Plutarch claims that Chandragupta in his youth saw Alexander the Great during the latter's invasion of India (Template:Circa–325 BCE): <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Androcottus [Chandragupta], when he was a stripling, saw Alexander himself, and we are told that he often said in later times that Alexander narrowly missed making himself master of the country, since its king was hated and despised on account of his baseness and low birth.Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Assuming the Plutarch account is true, Raychaudhuri proposed in 1923 that Chandragupta may have been born after 350 BCE.Template:Sfn There is also a passage of Justin's history which had been read as referring to a meeting between Chandragupta and Alexander. However, according to Thomas Trautmann, this was a due to mistranslation in early printed book, and the correct reading was Nandrum (Nanada king), rather than Alexandrum. <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Some early printed editions of Justin's work wrongly mentioned "Alexandrum" instead of "Nandrum"; this error was corrected in philologist J. W. McCrindle's 1893 translation. In the 20th century, historians Hem Chandra Raychaudhuri and R. C. Majumdar believed "Alexandrum" to be correct reading, and theorized that Justin refers to a meeting between Chandragupta and Alexander the Great ("Alexandrum"). However, this is incorrect: research by historian Alfred von Gutschmid in the preceding century had clearly established that "Nandrum" is the correct reading supported by multiple manuscripts: only a single defective manuscript mentions "Alexandrum" in the margin.Template:Sfn
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According to other Greco-Roman texts, Chandragupta attacked the Greek-Indian governors during a period of unrest and local warfare after Alexander's death (died Template:Circa), acquiring control of the eastern Indus Valley.Template:Sfn The chronology and dating of Chandragupta's activities in the Punjab is uncertain,Template:Sfn either before or after he took the Nanda-throne.Template:Sfn The defeat of the Greeks is dated by Mookerji at 323; Jansari dates the arrival of Chandragupta in the Punjab at c. 317, in line with the chronology of Greek history.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la
The texts do not include the start or end year of Chandragupta's reign.Template:Sfn According to some Hindu and Buddhist texts, Chandragupta ruled for 24 years.Template:Sfn The Buddhist sources state Chandragupta Maurya ruled 162 years after the death of the Buddha.Template:Sfn However, the Buddha's birth and death vary by source and all these lead to a chronology that is significantly different from the Greco-Roman records. Similarly, Jain sources composed give different gaps between Mahavira's death and his accession.Template:Sfn As with the Buddha's death, the date of Mahavira's death itself is also a matter of debate, and the inconsistencies and lack of unanimity among the Jain authors cast doubt on Jain sources. This Digambara Jain chronology, also, is not reconcilable with the chronology implied in other Indian and non-Indian sources.Template:Sfn
Historians such as Irfan Habib and Vivekanand Jha assign Chandragupta's reign to c. 322–298 BCE.Template:Sfn Upinder Singh dates his rule from 324 or 321 BCE to 297 BCE.Template:Sfn Kristi Wiley states he reigned between 320 and 293 BCE.Template:Sfn Jansari, admitting that c.320/319 is the date conventionally accepted by most scholars,Template:Efn-la follows Cribb in re-assessing Justin (XV section 4.12-22), who states that Chandragupta's became Template:"'ruler of India' when Seleucus was 'laying the foundations' of his own empire." According to Jansari, "this reference appears to refer to the period c.311– c.308," implying that "Chandragupta gained power, and was possibly already the first Mauryan king, between c.311 and c.305 BCE."Template:Sfn
Chandragupta and Seleucus Nicator entered into a dynastic marriage-alliance at c. 305–303 BCE.
The circumstances and year of Chandragupta's death are also unclear and disputed.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to Roy, Chandragupta's abdication of throne may be dated to c. 298 BCE, and his death between 297 and 293 BCE.Template:Sfn
Name
Greek writer Phylarchus (c. third century BCE), who is quoted by Athenaeus, calls Chandragupta "Sandrokoptos". The later Greco-Roman writers Strabo, Arrian, and Justin (c. second century) call him "Sandrocottus".Template:Sfn In Greek and Latin accounts, Chandragupta is known as Sandrakottos (Template:Langx) and Androcottus (Template:Langx).Template:Sfn[3]
British orientialist and philologist Sir William Jones (1746–1794) was the first to propose, in 1793, that Chandragupta Maurya known from the Sanskrit literature must be equivalent to the Indian king known as "Sandracottus" in Graeco-Roman historical sources. Jones' discovery "was of vital importance," states historian Sushma Jansari, because "it meant, for the first time, that Indian and Graeco-Roman history could be synchronised and dates assigned to this period of ancient Indian history." Consequently, Chandragupta's reign has been referred to as "the sheet anchor of Indian chronology."Template:Sfn
Titles
The king's epithets mentioned in the Sanskrit play Mudrarakshasa include "Chanda-siri" (Chandra-shri), "Piadamsana" (Priya-darshana), and Vrishala.Template:Sfn Piadamsana is similar to Priyadasi, an epithet of his grandson Ashoka.Template:Sfn The word "Vrishala" is used in Indian epics and law books to refer to non-orthodox people. According to one theory, it may be derived from the Greek royal title Basileus, but there is no concrete evidence of this: the Indian sources apply it to several non-royals, especially wandering teachers and ascetics.Template:Sfn
Religion
In contrast to the Jain legends which developed 900 years later,Template:Sfn contemporary Greek evidence states that Chandragupta did not give up performing the rites of sacrificing animals associated with Vedic Brahminism; he delighted in hunting and otherwise leading a life remote from the Jain practice of ahimsa or nonviolence towards living beings.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la
Biography
Historical background
Around 350 BCE Magadha, ruled by the Nanda dynasty, emerged as the dominant power after a "process of internecine warfare" between the janapadas.Template:Sfn
Alexander the Great entered the Northwest Indian subcontinent in his Indian campaign, which he aborted in 325 BCE due to a mutiny caused by the prospect of facing another large empire, presumably the Nanda Empire, and before Chandragupta came into power. Alexander left India, and assigned the northwestern (Indus Valley) Indian subcontinent territories to Greek governors.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He died in 323 BCE in Babylon, whereafter war broke out between his generals.
Early life
Family background
There is no historical information on Chandragupta's youth. One medieval commentator states Chandragupta to be the son of one of the Nanda's wives with the name Mura.Template:Sfn Other narratives describe Mura as a concubine of the king.[4] Another Sanskrit dramatic text Mudrarakshasa uses the terms Vrishala and Kula-Hina (meaning - "not descending from a recognized clan or family") to describe Chandragupta.Template:Sfn The word Vrishala has two meanings: one is the son of a shudra; the other means the best of kings. A later commentator used the former interpretation to posit that Chandragupta had a Shudra background. However, historian Radha Kumud Mukherjee opposed this theory, and stated that the word should be interpreted as "the best of kings".Template:Sfn The same drama also refers to Chandragupta as someone of humble origin, like Justin.Template:Sfn According to the 11th-century texts of the Kashmiri Hindu tradition – Kathasaritsagara and Brihat-Katha-Manjari – the Nanda lineage was very short. Chandragupta was a son of Purva-Nanda, the older Nanda based in Ayodhya.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn-la The common theme in the Hindu sources is that Chandragupta came from a humble background and with Chanakya, he emerged as a dharmic king loved by his subjects.Template:Sfn
Chanakya
Legends about Chanakya couple him to Chandragupta, acting as his mentor and spiritual teacher, complementing the image of a chakravartin.Template:Efn-la
According to the Digambara legend by Hemachandra, Chanakya was a Jain layperson and a Brahmin. When Chanakya was born, Jain monks prophesied that Chanakya will one day grow up to help make someone an emperor and will be the power behind the throne.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Chanakya believed in the prophecy and fulfilled it by agreeing to help the daughter of a peacock-breeding community chief deliver a baby boy. In exchange, he asked the mother to give up the boy and let him adopt him at a later date.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Jain Brahmin then went about making money through magic, and returned later to claim young Chandragupta,Template:Sfn whom he taught and trained. Together, they recruited soldiers and attacked the Nanda Empire. Eventually, they won and proclaimed Patliputra as their capital.Template:Sfn
The Buddhist and Hindu legends present different versions of how Chandragupta met Chanakya. Broadly, they mention young Chandragupta creating a mock game of a royal court that he and his shepherd friends played near Vinjha forest. Chanakya saw him give orders to the others, bought him from the hunter, and adopted Chandragupta.Template:Sfn Chanakya taught and admitted him in Taxila to study the Vedas, military arts, law, and other shastras.Template:Sfn[5]
According to the Buddhist legend, Chanakya was chosen as president of the samgha which administered the Danasala, a charity foundation, but was dismissed by Dhana Nanda due to his ugliness and manners. Chanaky cursed the king, fled Pataliputra, and then met Chandragupta.Template:Sfn
Rise to power
Unrest and warfare in the Punjab
The Roman historian Justin (2nd Century CE) states, in Epit. 15.4.12-13, that after Alexander's death, Greek governors in India were assassinated, liberating the people of Greek rule. This revolt led by Chandragupta, who in turn established an oppressive regime himself "after taking the throne":Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la
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India, after the death of Alexander, had assassinated his prefects, as if shaking the burden of servitude. The author of this liberation was Sandracottos [Chandragupta], but he had transformed liberation in servitude after victory, since, after taking the throne, he himself oppressed the very people he has liberated from foreign domination."
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Raychaudhuri states that, according to Justin Epitome 15.4.18–19, Chandragupta organized an army. He notes that early translators interpreted Justin's original expression as "body of robbers", but states Raychaudhuri, the original expression used by Justin may mean mercenary soldier, hunter, or robber.Template:Sfn Mookerji refers to McCrindle as stating that "robbers" refers to the people of the Punjab, "kingless people." Mookerju further quotes Rhys Davids, who states that "it was from the Punjab that Chandragupta recruited the nucleus of the force with which he besieged and conquered Dhana-Nanda."Template:Sfn
The nature of early relationship between these governors and Chandragupta is unknown. According to Habib & Jha, Justin mentions Chandragupta as a rival of the Alexander's successors in north-western India.Template:Sfn Alain Daniélou further explains:
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In the Swat, Nicanor was killed. Philip, who was guarding Taxila with Ambhi, replaced Nicanor as satrap of Gandhara, but was himself assassinated in 325 B.C.E.[...] Chandragupta began attacking the Greek principalities. The Brahmans fomented revolts against the unclean foreigners. Peithon withdrew to Arachosia (Kandahar) in 316. After treacherously killing an Indian prince probably Ambhi. Eudemus left India with one hundred and twenty elephants to join Eumenes army. He was beaten and put to death with Eumenes by Antigonus, king of Babylon. It took no great effort for Chandragupta to annex the Greek kingdoms, which had prepared the terrain for him.Template:Sfn
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According to Mookerji, the Buddhist text Mahavamsa Tika describes how Chandragupta and Chanakya raised an army by recruiting soldiers from many places after the former completed his education at Taxila, to resist the Greeks. Chanakya made Chandragupta the leader of the army.Template:Sfn The Digambara Jain text Parishishtaparvan states that this army was raised by Chanakya with coins he minted and an alliance formed with Parvataka.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to Nath Sen, Chandragupta recruited and annexed local military republics such as the Yaudheyas that had resisted Alexander's Empire.[7]
The chronology and dating of Chandragupta's activities in the Punjab is uncertain.Template:Sfn This may be either before or after he took the Nanda-throne.Template:Sfn The defeat of the Greeks is dated by Mookerji at 323 BCE; Jansari dates the arrival of Chandragupta in the Punjab at c. 317, in line with the chronology of Greek history.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la
Offense of the Nanda-king and flight
According to Justin, Chandragupta offended the Nanda king ("Nandrum" or "Nandrus") who ordered his execution.Template:Sfn Mookerji quotes Justin as stating
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Sandracottus (Chandragupta) was the leader who achieved its freedom. He was born in humble life but was prompted to aspire to royalty by an omen. By his insulent behaviour he had offended NandrusTemplate:Efn-la and was ordered to be put to death when he sought safety by a speedy flight.Template:Sfn
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Justin narrates two miraculous incidents as omens and portents of Sandracottus (Chandragupta) fate. In the first incident, when Chandragupta was asleep after having escaped from Nandrum, a big lion came up to him, licked him, and then left. In the second incident, when Chandragupta was readying for war with Alexander's generals, a huge wild elephant approached him and offered itself to be his steed.Template:Sfn
The Mudrarakshasa states that Chanakya felt insulted by the king, whereafter he swore to destroy the Nanda dynasty.Template:Sfn[8] The Jain version states that it was the Nanda king who was publicly insulted by Chanakya.Template:Sfn In either case, Chanakya fled, found Chandragupta, and started a war against the Nanda king.Template:Sfn
War against the Nandas and seizure of Pataliputra
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According to Mookerji, after defeating the Greeks,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la the army of Chandragupta and Chanakya revolted against the unpopular NandasTemplate:Sfn and conquered the Nanda outer territories, and then advanced on Pataliputra, the capital city of the Nanda Empire, which according to Mookerji they conquered deploying guerrilla warfare methods with the help of mercenaries from conquered areas.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn With the defeat of Dhana Nanda, Chandragupta Maurya founded the Maurya Empire.Template:Sfn
The Buddhist Mahavamsa Tika and Jain Parishishtaparvan records Chandragupta's army unsuccessfully attacking the Nanda capital.Template:Sfn Chandragupta and Chanakya then began a campaign at the frontier of the Nanda empire, gradually conquering various territories on their way to the Nanda capital.Template:Sfn He then refined his strategy by establishing garrisons in the conquered territories, and finally besieged the Nanda capital Pataliputra. There Dhana Nanda accepted defeat.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In contrast to the easy victory in Buddhist sources, the Hindu and Jain texts state that the campaign was bitterly fought because the Nanda dynasty had a powerful and well-trained army.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn These legends state that the Nanda emperor was defeated, deposed and exiled by some accounts, while Buddhist accounts claim he was killed.Template:Sfn
Historically reliable details of Chandragupta's campaign into Pataliputra are unavailable and the legends written centuries later are inconsistent. While his victory, and ascension of the throne, is usually dated at c. 322–319 BCE,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn which would put his war in the Punjab after his ascension, an ascension "between c. 311–305 BCE" is also possible, placing his activity in the Punjab at c. 317 BCE.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la
The conquest was fictionalised in Mudrarakshasa, in which Chandragupta is said to have acquired Punjab, and then allied with a local king named Parvatka under the Chanakya's advice, where-after they advanced on Pataliputra.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-laTemplate:Efn-la
In contrast to the easy victory of Buddhist sources, the Hindu and Jain texts state that the campaign was bitterly fought because the Nanda dynasty had a powerful and well-trained army.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnGreco-Roman writer Plutarch stated, in his Life of Alexander, that the Nanda king was so unpopular that had Alexander tried, he could have easily conquered India.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Buddhist texts such as Milindapanha claim Magadha was ruled by the Nanda dynasty, which, with Chanakya's counsel, Chandragupta conquered to restore dhamma.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Legends narrate that the Nanda emperor was defeated, but was allowed to leave Pataliputra alive with a chariot full of items his family needed.Template:Sfn The Jain sources attest that his daughter fell in love at first sight with Chandragupta and married him.Though daughter is not named the source later name mother of Chandragupta's son as Durdhara.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Dynastic marriage-alliance with Seleucus
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According to Appian, Seleucus I Nicator, one of Alexander's Macedonian generals who in 312 BCE established the Seleucid Empire with its capital at Babylon, brought Persia and Bactria under his own authority, putting his eastern front facing the empire of Chandragupta.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Somewhere between 305 and 303 BCE Seleucus and Chandragupta confronted each other, Seleucus intending to retake the former satrapies each of the Indus. Yet, Seleucus Nicator and Chandragupta formed a dynastic marriage-alliance, Seleucus receiving five hundred elephants, and Chandragupta gaining control over the regions bordering at the east on the Indus.Template:Sfn[9] Strabo, in his Geographica, XV, 2.9 composed about 300 years after Chandragupta's death, describes a number of tribes living along the Indus, and then states that "The Indians occupy [in part] some of the countries situated along the Indus, which formerly belonged to the Persians."[10]
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The geographical position of the tribes is as follows: along the Indus are the Paropamisadae, above whom lies the Paropamisus Mountains: then, towards the south, the Arachoti: then next, towards the south, the Gedroseni, with the other tribes that occupy the seaboard; and the Indus lies, latitudinally, alongside all these places; and of these places, in part, some that lie along the Indus are held by Indians, although they formerly belonged to the Persians. Alexander [III 'the Great' of Macedon] took these away from the Arians and established settlements of his own, but Seleucus Nicator gave them to Sandrocottus [Chandragupta], upon terms of intermarriage and of receiving in exchange five hundred elephants.[11]
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The exact extent of the acquired territories is unknown.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la A modest interpretation limits the extension to the western Indus Valley, including the coast of eastern Gedrosia (Balochistan) up to the Malan mountain raing (Hingol river),Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn the Punjab,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn-la and the eastern part of Paropamisadae (Gandhara). Arachosia (Kandahar, present-day Afghanistan), is a possibility,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn while Aria (present-day Herat, Afghanistan) is also often mentioned, but rejected by contemporary scholarship.Template:Efn-la Tarn, writing in 1922,Template:Sfn and Coningham and Young,Template:Sfn have questioned the inclusion of eastern Afghanistan (Kabul-Kandahar), Coningham and Young noting that "a growing number of researchers would now agree that the Ashokan edicts may have represented 'an area of maximum contact rather than streamlined bureaucratic control'."Template:Sfn Coningham & Young also question the extent of control over the lower Indus Valley, following Thapar, noting that this may have been an area of peripheral control.Template:Sfn Raymond Allchin also notes the absence of major cities in the lower Indus valley.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la
The details of the engagement treaty are also not known.Template:Sfn Since the extensive sources available on Seleucus never mention an Indian princess, it is thought that Chandragupta himself or his son Bindusara marrying a Seleucid princess, in accordance with contemporary Greek practices to form dynastic alliances. The Mahavamsa states that Chandragupta married a daughter of Seleucus not long after the latter's defeat.Template:Sfn[12] As well, an Indian Puranic source, the Pratisarga Parva of the Bhavishya Purana, described the marriage of Chandragupta with a Greek ("Yavana") princess, daughter of Seleucus.[13]
Chandragupta sent 500 war elephants to Seleucus, which played a key role in Seleucus' victory at the Battle of Ipsus.[14]Template:Sfn[15] In addition to this treaty, Seleucus dispatched Megasthenes as an ambassador to Chandragupta's court, and later Antiochos sent Deimakos to his son Bindusara at the Maurya court at Patna.Template:Sfn
Megasthenes served as a Greek ambassador in his court for four years.Template:Sfn
Control of Gujarat
In the south-west, Chandragupta's rule over present-day Gujarat is attested to by Ashoka's inscription in Junagadh. On the same rock, about 400 years later, Rudradaman inscribed a longer text sometime about the mid second–century.Template:Sfn Rudradaman's inscription states that the Sudarshana lake in the area was commissioned during the rule of Chandragupta through his governor Vaishya Pushyagupta and conduits were added during Ashoka's rule through Tushaspha. The Mauryan control of the region is further corroborated by the inscription on the rock, which suggests that Chandragupta controlled the Malwa region in Central India, located between Gujarat and Pataliputra.Template:Sfn
Jain accounts of renunciation and retirement in Karnakata
According to Digambara Jain accounts Chandragupta abdicated at an early age and settled as a monk under Bhadrabāhu in Shravanabelagola, in present-day south Karnataka.Template:Sfn According to these accounts, Bhadrabāhu forecast a 12-year famine because of all the killing and violence during the conquests by Chandragupta Maurya. He led a group of Jain monks to south India, where Chandragupta Maurya joined him as a monk after abdicating his empire to his son Bindusara. Together, states a Digambara legend, Chandragupta and Bhadrabahu moved to Shravanabelagola, in present-day south Karnataka.Template:Sfn Chandragupta lived as an ascetic at Shravanabelagola for several years before fasting to death as per the practice of sallekhana, according to the Digambara legend.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn In accordance with the Digambara tradition, the hill on which Chandragupta is stated to have performed asceticism is now known as Chandragiri hill, and Digambaras believe that Chandragupta Maurya erected an ancient temple that now survives as the Chandragupta basadi.Template:Sfn
The 12th-century Svetambara Jain legend by Hemachandra presents a different picture. The Hemachandra version includes stories about Jain monks who could become invisible to steal food from imperial storage and the Jain Brahmin Chanakya using violence and cunning tactics to expand Chandragupta's empire and increase imperial revenues.Template:Sfn It states in verses 8.415 to 8.435, that for 15 years as emperor, Chandragupta was a follower of non-Jain "ascetics with the wrong view of religion" and "lusted for women". Chanakya, who was a Jain convert himself, persuaded Chandragupta to convert to Jainism by showing that Jain ascetics avoided women and focused on their religion.Template:Sfn The legend mentions Chanakya aiding the premature birth of Bindusara,Template:Sfn It states in verse 8.444 that "Chandragupta died in meditation (can possibly be sallekhana.) and went to heaven".Template:Sfn According to Hemachandra's legend, Chanakya also performed sallekhana.Template:Sfn
Textual sources
The Digambara Jain accounts are recorded in the Brihakathā kośa (931 CE) of Harishena, Bhadrabāhu charita (1450 CE) of Ratnanandi, Munivaṃsa bhyudaya (1680 CE) and Rajavali kathe,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Regarding the inscriptions describing the relation of Bhadrabahu and Chandragupta Maurya, Radha Kumud Mookerji writes,
The oldest inscription of about 600 AD associated "the pair (yugma), Bhadrabahu along with Chandragupta Muni." Two inscriptions of about 900 AD on the Kaveri near Seringapatam describe the summit of a hill called Chandragiri as marked by the footprints of Bhadrabahu and Chandragupta munipati. A Shravanabelagola inscription of 1129 mentions Bhadrabahu "Shrutakevali", and Chandragupta who acquired such merit that he was worshipped by the forest deities. Another inscription of 1163 similarly couples and describes them. A third inscription of the year 1432 speaks of Yatindra Bhadrabahu, and his disciple Chandragupta, the fame of whose penance spread into other words.[16]
Along with texts, several Digambara Jain inscriptions dating from the 7th–15th century refer to Bhadrabahu and a Prabhacandra. Later Digambara tradition identified the Prabhacandra as Chandragupta, and some modern era scholars have accepted this Digambara tradition while others have not,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Several of the late Digambara inscriptions and texts in Karnataka state the journey started from Ujjain and not Patliputra (as stated in some Digambara texts).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Analysis of the sources
According to Jeffery D. Long, in one Digambara version it was Samprati Chandragupta who renounced, migrated and performed sallekhana in Shravanabelagola. Long notes that scholars attribute the disintegration of the Maurya empire to the times and actions of Samprati Chandragupta, the grandson of Ashoka and great-great-grandson of Chandragupta Maurya, concluding that the two Chandraguptas have been confused to be the same in some Digambara legends.Template:Sfn
Scholar of Jain studies and Sanskrit Paul Dundas says the Svetambara tradition of Jainism disputes the ancient Digambara legends. According to a fifth-century text of the Svetambara Jains, the Digambara sect of Jainism was founded 609 years after Mahavira's death, or in first-century CE.Template:Sfn Digambaras wrote their own versions and legends after the fifth-century, with their first expanded Digambara version of sectarian split within Jainism appearing in the tenth-century.Template:Sfn The Svetambaras texts describe Bhadrabahu was based near Nepalese foothills of the Himalayas in third-century BCE, who neither moved nor travelled with Chandragupta Maurya to the south; rather, he died near Patliputra, according to the Svetambara Jains.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
According to V. R. Ramachandra Dikshitar – an Indologist and historian, several of the Digambara legends mention Prabhacandra, who had been misidentified as Chandragupta Maurya particularly after the original publication on Shravanabelagola epigraphy by B. Lewis Rice. The earliest and most important inscriptions mention Prabhacandra, which Rice presumed may have been the "clerical name assumed by Chadragupta Maurya" after he renounced and moved with Bhadrabahu from Patliputra. Dikshitar stated there is no evidence to support this and Prabhacandra was an important Jain monk scholar who migrated centuries after Chandragupta Maurya's death.Template:Sfn
According to historian Sushma Jansari, "A closer look at the evidence for Chandragupta's conversion to Jainism and his and Bhadrabāhu's association with Śravaṇa Beḷgoḷa reveals that it is both late and problematic. In addition, except for Jain sources, there is no evidence to support the view of Chandragupta's conversion and migration."Template:Sfn Jansari concludes, "Overall, therefore, the evidence as it currently stands suggests that the story of Chandragupta's conversion to Jainism and abdication (if, indeed, he did abdicate), his migration southwards and his association (or otherwise) with Bhadrabāhu and the site of Śravaṇa Beḷgoḷa developed after c.600 AD."Template:Sfn
Dikshitar has taken Rice's deduction of Chandragupta Maurya retiring and dying in Shravanabelagola as the working hypothesis, since no alternative historical information or evidence is available about Chandragupta's final years and death.Template:Sfn
Assumed control of Southern India
There is uncertainty about the other conquests that Chandragupta may have achieved, especially in the Deccan region of southern India.Template:Sfn At the time of his grandson Ashoka's ascension in c. 268 BCE, the empire extended up to present-day Karnataka in the south, so the southern conquests may be attributed to either Chandragupta or his son Bindusara.
According to Mookerji, Chandragupta expanded his empire into the south,Template:Sfn referring to Plutarch, who stated that "Androcottus [...] with an army of six hundred thousand men overran and subdued all India."[17]Template:Sfn Mookerji notes that details are lacking, but argues that "there is reliable evidence for it in the inscriptions of Ashoka."Template:Sfn Mookerji also refers to the Jain tradition that Chandragupta retired at Sravana Belgola, Karnakata,Template:Sfn and to references in Tamil records.Template:Sfn
According to Kulke and Rothermund, if the Jain tradition about Chandragupta ending his life as a renunciate in Karnakata is considered correct, it appears that Chandragupta initiated the southern conquest.Template:Sfn
Yet, the Digambara Jain accounts are problematic. His conversion and retirement at Śravaṇa Beḷgoḷa with Bhadrabāhu are only attested in Digambara Jain sources, which developed after 600 CE.Template:Sfn They may actually refer to Samprati Chandragupta the great-great-grandson of Chandragupta Maurya,Template:Sfn and are contradicted by Svetambaras Jain texts, who situate Bhadrabahunear the Nepalese foothills of the Himalayas in third-century BCE, neither moving nor travelling with Chandragupta Maurya to the south.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Digambara legends may also have misidentified Prabhacandra, an important Jain monk scholar who migrated centuries after Chandragupta Maurya's death, as Chandragupta Maurya.Template:Sfn
Two poetic anthologies from the Tamil Sangam literature corpus – Akananuru and Purananuru – allude to the Nanda rule and Maurya empire. For example, poems 69, 281 and 375 mention the army and chariots of the Mauryas, while poems 251 and 265 may be alluding to the Nandas.Template:Sfn However, the poems dated between first-century BCE to fifth-century CE do not mention Chandragupta Maurya by name, and some of them could be referring to a different Moriya dynasty in the Deccan region in the fifth century CE.Template:Sfn According to Upinder Singh, these poems may be mentioning Mokur and Koshar kingdoms of Vadugars (northerners) in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, with one interpretation being that the Maurya Empire had an alliance with these at some point of time.Template:Sfn
Empire
Administration
After conquering northern India, Chandragupta and Chanakya passed a series of major economic and political reforms.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Chandragupta established a decentralised administration with provinces and local governments,Template:Sfn and a mantriparishad (council of advisers) advising the king.Template:Sfn While it is often thought that Chandragupta applied the statecraft and economic policies described in Arthashastra, which was earlierly thought to be written by his minister ChanakyaTemplate:Sfn[19] but it's now thought by most scholars that the Arthashastra is not of Mauryan origin, and contains prescriptions which are incompatible with Chandragupta's reign.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn-la
The Maurya rule was a structured administration; Chandragupta had a council of ministers (amatya), with Chanakya was his chief minister.[20]Template:Sfn The empire was organised into territories (janapada), centres of regional power were protected with forts (durga), and state operations were funded with treasury (kosa).Template:Sfn Strabo, in his Geographica composed about 300 years after Chandragupta's death, describes aspects of his rule in his chapter XV.46–69. He had councillors for matters of justice and assessors to collect taxes on commercial activity and trade goods. His officers inspected situations requiring law and order in the cities; the crime rate was low.Template:Sfn
According to Megasthenes, Chandragupta's rule was marked by three parallel administrative structures. One managed the affairs of villages, ensuring irrigation, recording land ownership, monitoring tools supply, enforcing hunting, wood products and forest-related laws, and settling disputes.Template:Sfn Another administrative structure managed city affairs, including all matters related to trade, merchant activity, visit of foreigners, harbors, roads, temples, markets, and industries. They also collected taxes and ensured standardized weights and measures.Template:Sfn The third administrative body overlooked the military, its training, its weapons supply, and the needs of the soldiers.Template:Sfn
Chanakya was concerned about Chandragupta's safety and developed elaborate techniques to prevent assassination attempts. Various sources report Chandragupta frequently changed bedrooms to confuse conspirators. He left his palace only for certain tasks: to go on military expeditions, to visit his court for dispensing justice, to offer sacrifices, for celebrations, and for hunting. During celebrations, he was well-guarded, and on hunts, he was surrounded by female guards who were presumed to be less likely to participate in a coup conspiracy. These strategies may have resulted from the historical context of the Nanda emperor who had come to power by assassinating the previous emperor.Template:Sfn
During Chandragupta's reign and that of his dynasty, many religions thrived in India, with Buddhism, Jainism and Ajivika gaining prominence along with other folk traditions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Infrastructure projects
The empire built a strong economy from a solid infrastructure such as irrigation, temples, mines, and roads.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Ancient epigraphical evidence suggests Chandragupta, under counsel from Chanakya, started and completed many irrigation reservoirs and networks across the Indian subcontinent to ensure food supplies for the civilian population and the army, a practice continued by his dynastic successors.Template:Sfn Regional prosperity in agriculture was one of the required duties of his state officials.Template:Sfn
The strongest evidence of infrastructure development is found in the Junagadh rock inscription of Rudradaman in Gujarat, dated to about 150 CE. It states, among other things, that Rudradaman repaired and enlarged the reservoir and irrigation conduit infrastructure built by Chandragupta and enhanced by Asoka.Template:Sfn Chandragupta's empire also built mines, manufacturing centres, and networks for trading goods. His rule developed land routes to transport goods across the Indian subcontinent. Chandragupta expanded "roads suitable for carts" as he preferred those over narrow tracks suitable for only pack animals.Template:Sfn
According to Kaushik Roy, the Maurya dynasty rulers were "great road builders".Template:Sfn The Greek ambassador Megasthenes credited this tradition to Chandragupta after the completion of a thousand-mile-long highway connecting Chandragupta's capital Pataliputra in Bihar to Taxila in the north-west where he studied. The other major strategic road infrastructure credited to this tradition spread from Pataliputra in various directions, connecting it with Nepal, Kapilavastu, Dehradun, Mirzapur, Odisha, Andhra, and Karnataka.Template:Sfn Roy stated this network boosted trade and commerce, and helped move armies rapidly and efficiently.Template:Sfn
Chandragupta and Chanakya seeded weapon manufacturing centres, and kept them as a state monopoly of the state. The state, however, encouraged competing private parties to operate mines and supply these centres.Template:Sfn They considered economic prosperity essential to the pursuit of dharma (virtuous life) and adopted a policy of avoiding war with diplomacy yet continuously preparing the army for war to defend its interests and other ideas in the Arthashastra.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Arts and architecture
The evidence of arts and architecture during Chandragupta's time is mostly limited to texts such as those by Megasthenese and Kautilya. The edict inscriptions and carvings on monumental pillars are attributed to his grandson Ashoka. The texts imply the existence of cities, public works, and prosperous architecture but the historicity of these is in question.Template:Sfn
Archeological discoveries in the modern age, such as those Didarganj Yakshi discovered in 1917 buried beneath the banks of the Ganges suggest exceptional artisanal accomplishment.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The site was dated to third century BCE by many scholarsTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn but later dates such as the Kushan era (1st-4th century CE) have also been proposed. The competing theories state that the art linked to Chandragupta Maurya's dynasty was learnt from the Greeks and West Asia in the years Alexander the Great waged war; or that these artifacts belong to an older indigenous Indian tradition.Template:Sfn Frederick Asher of the University of Minnesota says "we cannot pretend to have definitive answers; and perhaps, as with most art, we must recognize that there is no single answer or explanation".Template:Sfn
Religion
Chandragupta sponsored Vedic sacrificesTemplate:Sfn and Brahmanical rituals,Template:Sfn and hosted major festivals marked by procession of elephants and horses.Template:Sfn
While many religions thrived within his realms and his descendants' empire, Buddhism, Jainism and Ājīvika gained prominence prevailing over Vedic and Brahmanistic traditions,Template:Sfn initiating, under Ashoka, the expansion of Buddhism and the synthesis of Brahmanic and non-Brahmanic religious traditions which converged in Hinduism. Minority religions such as Zoroastrianism and the Greek pantheon were respected.
Legacy
A memorial to Chandragupta exists on Chandragiri hill in Shravanabelagola, Karnataka.Template:Sfn The Indian Postal Service issued a commemorative postage stamp honouring Chandragupta Maurya in 2001.[21]
Historian Sushma Jansari notes that, in the 20th century, diverging views on Chandragupta have developed between western academics and Indian scholars.Template:Sfn While westerners tend to take a reserved view on Chandragupta's accomplishments, Indian authors have portrayed Chandragupta as a very successful king who established the first Indian nation.Template:Sfn
In popular culture
- Mudrarakshasa ("The Signet Ring of Rakshasa") is a political drama in Sanskrit by Vishakhadatta composed 600 years after the conquest of Chandragupta – probably between 300 CE and 700 CE.Template:Sfn
- D. L. Roy wrote a Bengali drama named Chandragupta based on the life of Chandragupta. The story of the play is loosely borrowed from the Puranas and the Greek history.Template:Sfn
- Chanakya's role in the formation of the Maurya Empire is the essence of a historical/spiritual novel The Courtesan and the Sadhu by Dr. Mysore N. Prakash.[22]
- Chandragupta is a 1920 Indian silent film about the Mauryan king.[23]
- Chandragupta is a 1934 Indian film directed by Abdur Rashid Kardar.
- Chandraguptha Chanakya is an Indian Tamil-language historical drama film directed by C. K. Sachi, starring Bhavani K. Sambamurthy as Chandragupta.
- Samrat Chandragupta is a 1945 Indian historical film by Jayant Desai.[24]
- Samrat Chandragupt is a 1958 Indian historical fiction film by Babubhai Mistry, a remake of the 1945 film. It stars Bharat Bhushan in the titular role of the emperor.[25]
- The story of Chanakya and Chandragupta was made into a film in Telugu in 1977 titled Chanakya Chandragupta.[26]
- The television series Chanakya is an account of the life and times of Chanakya, based on the play Mudrarakshasa.[27]
- In 2011, a television series called Chandragupta Maurya was telecast on Imagine TV.[28][29][30]
- In 2016, the television series Chandra Nandini was a fictionalized romance saga.[31]
- In the 2016 video game Civilization VI, Chandragupta is a playable leader for the Indian civilization.[32]
- In 2018, a television series called Chandragupta Maurya portrays the life of Chandragupta Maurya.[33]
- Nobunaga the Fool, a Japanese stage play and anime, features a character named Chandragupta based on the emperor.
- In the 2001 film Aśoka, directed by Santosh Sivan, Bollywood director and producer Umesh Mehra played the role of Chandragupta Maurya.
See also
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Notes
References
Sources
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Further reading
Template:Library resources box
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External links
Template:Sister project Template:Sister project
- Maurya and Sunga Art, N R Ray
- ↑ a b Chandragupta Maurya, Emperor of India Template:Webarchive, Encyclopædia Britannica
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".; Quote: "Kautilya is believed to have been Chanakya, a Brahmin who served as prime Minister to Chandragupta (321–296 B.C.), the founder of the Mauryan Empire."
- ↑ Template:Usurped
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- ↑ Strabo, Geography, XV, 2, 9
- ↑ Strabo, Geography, xv.2.9
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- ↑ India, the Ancient Past, Burjor Avari, p. 106-107
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- ↑ Plutrach, Alexander62
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ MV Krishna Rao (1958, Reprinted 1979), Studies in Kautilya, 2nd Edition, Template:Oclc, Template:ISBN, pages 13–14, 231–233
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".; Quote: "Kautilya is believed to have been Chanakya, a Brahmin who served as Chief Minister to Chandragupta (321–296 B.C.), the founder of the Mauryan Empire."
- ↑ Commemorative postage stamp on Chandragupta Maurya Template:Webarchive, Press Information Bureau, Govt. of India
- ↑ The Courtesan and the Sadhu, A Novel about Maya, Dharma, and God, October 2008, Dharma Vision LLC., Template:ISBN, Library of Congress Control Number: 2008934274
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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