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Chandragupta Maurya

Chandragupta Maurya[a] (350-295 BCE) was the first emperor of the Mauryan Empire in Ancient India who expanded a geographically extensive kingdom based in Magadha and founded the Maurya dynasty.[7] He reigned from 320 BCE to 298 BCE.[8] The Maurya kingdom expanded to become an empire that reached its peak under the reign of his grandson, Ashoka, from 268 BCE to 231 BCE.[9] The nature of the political formation that existed in Chandragupta's time is not certain.[10] The Mauryan empire was a loose-knit empire.[11]

Chandragupta Maurya
Chakravartin
Medieval stone relief at Digambara pilgrimage site Shravanabelagola, Karnataka. It has been interpreted as Bhadrabahu and Chandragupta Maurya,[1] but some disagree.[2]
1st Mauryan Emperor
Reignc. 324 or 321 – c. 297 BCE[3][4]
Coronationc. 324 or 321 BCE
PredecessorDhana Nanda
SuccessorEmperor Bindusara Maurya (son)[5]
Amatya
Spouses
  • Empress Consort Durdhara
  • Seleucid princess
IssueBindusara
DynastyMaurya
FatherSarvarthasiddhi
MotherMura
ReligionHinduism[6]
Jainism[6]

Chandragupta Maurya was an important figure in the history of India, laying the foundations of the first state to unite most of India. Chandragupta, under the tutelage of Chanakya, created a new empire based on the principles of statecraft, built a large army, and continued expanding the boundaries of his empire until ultimately renouncing it for an ascetic life in his final years.

Prior to his consolidation of power, Alexander the Great had invaded the North-West Indian subcontinent before abandoning his campaign in 324 BCE due to a mutiny caused by the prospect of facing another large empire, presumably the Nanda Empire. Chandragupta defeated and conquered both the Nanda Empire and the Greek satraps that were appointed or formed from Alexander's Empire in South Asia. He set out to conquer the Nanda Empire centered in Pataliputra, Magadha. Afterwards, Chandragupta expanded and secured his western border, where he was confronted by Seleucus I Nicator in the Seleucid–Mauryan war. After two years of war, Chandragupta was considered to have gained the upper hand in the conflict and annexed satrapies up to the Hindu Kush. Instead of prolonging the war, both parties settled on a marriage treaty between Chandragupta and Seleucus I Nicator's daughter Helena.

Chandragupta's empire extended throughout most of the Indian subcontinent, spanning from modern day Bengal to Afghanistan across North India as well as making inroads into Central and South India. Contemporary Greek evidence states that Chandragupta did not give up performing the rites of sacrificing animals associated with Vedic Brahminism, an ancient form of Hinduism; he delighted in hunting and otherwise leading a life remote from the Jain practice of Ahimsa or nonviolence towards living beings.[6][12] Chandragupta's reign, and the Maurya Empire, set an era of economic prosperity, reforms, infrastructure expansions, and tolerance. Many religions thrived within his realms and his descendants' empire. Buddhism, Jainism and Ājīvika gained prominence alongside Vedic and Brahmanistic traditions, and minority religions such as Zoroastrianism and the Greek pantheon were respected. A memorial for Chandragupta Maurya exists on the Chandragiri hill along with a seventh-century hagiographic inscription.

Historical sources

Chandragupta's life and accomplishments are described in ancient and historical Greek, Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts, though they significantly vary in detail.[13] The historical sources which describe the life of Chandragupta Maurya vary considerably in detail. Chandragupta was born about 340 BC and died at about 295 BC. His main biographical sources in chronological order are:[14]

 
Statue of Shepherd Chandragupta Maurya at Parliament of India

The Greek and Roman texts do not mention Chandragupta directly, except for a second-century text written by the Roman historian Justin. They predominantly mention the last Nanda Empire, which usurped the king before him. Justin states Chandragupta was of humble origin and includes stories of miraculous legends associated with him, such as a wild elephant appearing and submitting itself as a ride to him before a war. Justin's text notes Chandragupta and Chanakya defeated and removed Nanda from his rule. [17] Megasthenes' account, as it has survived in Greek texts that quote him, states that Alexander the Great and Chandragupta met, which if true would mean his rule started earlier than 321 BCE. 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. As Alexander did not cross the Beas river, Chandragupta's territory probably included the Punjab region.[18]

The pre-4th century Hindu Puranic texts mostly mirror the Greek sources. These texts do not discuss the details of Chandragupta's ancestry, but rather cover the ancestry of the last Nanda king. The Nanda king is described to be cruel, against dharma and shastras, and born out of an illicit relationship followed by a coup.[19] The Chanakya's Arthasastra refers to the Nanda rule as against the spiritual, cultural, and military interests of the country, a period where intrigue and vice multiplied.[19] Chanakya states that Chandragupta returned dharma, nurtured diversity of views, and ruled virtuously that kindled love among the subjects for his rule. [19]

One medieval commentator states Chandragupta to be the son of one of the Nanda's wives with the name Mura.[19] Other sources describe Mura as a concubine of the king.[20] Another Sanskrit dramatic text Mudrarakshasa uses the terms Vrishala and Kula-Hina (meaning - "not descending from a recognized clan or family.") to describe Chandragupta.[21] 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".[21] The same drama also refers to Chandragupta as someone of humble origin, like Justin.[21] 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. [22][23][24] 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.[25]

The Buddhist texts such as Mahavamsa describe Chandragupta to be of Kshatriya origin.[26] These sources, written about seven centuries after his dynasty ended, state that both Chandragupta and his grandson Ashoka – a patron of Buddhism – were from a branch of the Shakya noble family, from which Gautama Buddha descended from.[27] These Buddhist sources attempt to link the dynasty of their patron Ashoka directly to the Buddha.[28] The sources claim that the family branched off to escape persecution from a king of the Kosala Kingdom 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). [27][3] 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.[29] The Maha-bodhi-vasa states he hailed from Moriya-nagara, while the Digha-Nikaya states he came from the maurya clan of Pipphalivana.[26] The Buddhist sources also mention that "Brahmin Chanakya" was his counselor and with whose support Chandragupta became the king at Patliputra. .[29] He has also been variously identified with Shashigupta (who has same etymology as of Chandragupta) of Paropamisadae on the account of same life events.[30]

 
7th-century Bhadrabahu inscription at Shravanabelagola (Sanskrit, Purvahale Kannada script). This is the oldest inscription at the site, and it mentions Bhadrabahu and Prabhacandra. Lewis Rice and Digambara Jains interpret Prabhacandra to be Chandragupta Maurya, while others such as J F Fleet, V. R. Ramachandra Dikshitar, and Svetambara Jains state this interpretation is wrong. [2][15][16]

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. [26][31] 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.[32][33] 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.[34] 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.[34][2][35]

Date

None of the ancient texts mention when Chandragupta was born. Plutarch claims that he was a young man when he met Alexander during the latter's invasion of India (c. 326-325 BCE). Assuming the Plutarch account is true, Raychaudhuri proposed in 1923 that Chandragupta may have been born after 350 BCE.[36] According to other Greco-Roman texts, Chandragupta attacked the Greek-Indian governors after Alexander's death (c. 323 BCE) with Seleucus I Nicator entering into a treaty with Chandragupta years later.[37] Seleucus Nicator, under this treaty, gave up Arachosia (Kandahar), Gedrosia (Makran), and Paropanisadai (Paropamisadae, Kabul) to Chandragupta, in exchange for 500 war elephants. [18]

The texts do not include the start or end year of Chandragupta's reign.[38] According to some Hindu and Buddhist texts, Chandragupta ruled for 24 years.[39] The Buddhist sources state Chandragupta Maurya ruled 162 years after the death of the Buddha.[40] However, the Buddha's birth and death vary by source and all these lead to a chronology that is significantly different than the Greek-Roman records. Similarly, Jain sources composed give different gaps between Mahavira's death and his accession.[40] 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.[40]

Historians such as Irfan Habib and Vivekanand Jha assign Chandragupta's reign to c. 322-298 BCE.[41] Upinder Singh dates his rule from 324 or 321 BCE to 297 BCE.[5] Kristi Wiley states he reigned between 320 and 293 BCE.[15]

Early life

One medieval commentator states Chandragupta to be the son of one of the Nanda's wives with the name Mura.[19] Other sources describe Mura as a concubine of the king.[20] Another Sanskrit dramatic text Mudrarakshasa uses the terms Vrishala and Kula-Hina (meaning - "not descending from a recognized clan or family.") to describe Chandragupta.[21] 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".[21] The same drama also refers to Chandragupta as someone of humble origin, like Justin.[21] 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. [22][23][42] 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.[25]

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.[43][31] 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.[26][31] The Jain Brahmin then went about making money through magic, and returned later to claim young Chandragupta,[31] whom he taught and trained. Together, they recruited soldiers and attacked the Nanda kingdom. Eventually, they won and proclaimed Patliputra as their capital.[31]

Career

Influence of Chanakya (Kautilya or Vishnugupta)

 
Chandragupta's guru was Chanakya, with whom he studied as a child and with whose counsel he built the Empire. This image is a 1915 artistic portrait of Chanakya.

The Buddhist and Hindu sources 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 cowherd friends played near Vinjha forest. Chanakya saw him give orders to the others, bought him from the hunter, and adopted Chandragupta.[44] Chanakya taught and admitted him in Taxila to study the Vedas, military arts, law, and other sastras.[44][45]

After Taxila, Chandragupta and Chanakya moved to Pataliputra, the capital and a historic learning center in the eastern Magadha kingdom of India. They met Nanda there according to Hindu sources, and Dhana Nanda according to Pali-language Buddhist sources.[46] Chandragupta became a commander of the Nanda army, but according to Justin, Chandragupta offended the Nanda king ("Nandrum" or "Nandrus") who ordered his execution.[43] An alternative version states that it was the Nanda king who was publicly insulted by Chanakya.[47] Chandragupta and Chanakya escaped and became rebels who planned to remove the Nanda king from power.[48][note 1] The Mudrarakshasa also states that Chanakya swore to destroy the Nanda dynasty after he felt insulted by the king.[50][47]

The Roman text by Justin mentions a couple of miraculous incidents that involved Sandracottus (Chandragupta) and presents these legends as omens and portents of his 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.[51]

Building the empire

According to the Buddhist text Mahavamsa Tika, Chandragupta and Chanakya raised an army by recruiting soldiers from many places after the former completed his education at Taxila. Chanakya made Chandragupta the leader of the army.[52] The Digambara Jain text Parishishtaparvan states that this army was raised by Chanakya with coins he minted and an alliance formed with Parvataka.[53][54] According to Justin, Chandragupta organized an army. 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.[55]

The Buddhist Mahavamsa Tika and Jain Parishishtaparvan records Chandragupta's army unsuccessfully attacking the Nanda capital. [53] 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.[56] He then refined his strategy by establishing garrisons in the conquered territories, and finally besieged the Nanda capital Pataliputra. There Dhana Nanda accepted defeat, and was killed by Buddhist accounts,[57] or deposed and exiled by Hindu accounts.[58]

Conquest of the Nanda empire

Greco-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.[48][59] After Alexander ended his campaign and left, Chandragupta's army conquered the Nanda capital Pataliputra around 322 BCE with Chanakya's counsel.[43]

Historically reliable details of Chandragupta's campaign into Pataliputra are unavailable and legends written centuries later are inconsistent. Buddhist texts such as Milindapanha claim Magadha was ruled by the Nanda dynasty, which, with Chanakya's counsel, Chandragupta conquered to restore dhamma.[60][61] The army of Chandragupta and Chanakya first conquered the Nanda outer territories before invading Pataliputra. 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.[62][61]

The conquest was fictionalised in Mudrarakshasa, in which Chandragupta is said to have first acquired Punjab and allied with a local king named Parvatka under the Chanakya's advice before advancing on the Nanda Empire.[63] Chandragupta laid siege to Kusumapura (now Patna), the capital of Magadha, by deploying guerrilla warfare methods with the help of mercenaries from conquered areas.[64][65] Historian P. K. Bhattacharyya states that the empire was built by a gradual conquest of provinces after the initial consolidation of Magadha.[66]

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.[67] Chanakya disguised himself as a mendicant and found seven mother goddesses (saptamatrika) inside. He concluded these goddesses were protecting the town people.[67] 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 kingdom and attacked Patliputra with an "immeasurable army".[67] With a depleted treasury, exhausted merit, and insufficient intelligence, the Nanda king lost.[67]

These legends state that the Nanda king was defeated, but allowed to leave Pataliputra alive with a chariot full of items his family needed.[68] The Jain sources attest that his daughter fell in love at first sight with Chandragupta and married him.[67][26] With the defeat of Nanda, Chandragupta Maurya founded the Maurya Empire in ancient India.[3][69]

Conquest of north-west regions

 
Chandragupta had defeated the remaining Macedonian satrapies in the northwest of the Indian subcontinent by 317 BCE.

The Indian campaign of Alexander the Great ended before Chandragupta came into power. Alexander had left India in 325 BCE and assigned the northwestern Indian subcontinent territories to Greek governors.[70][71] The nature of early relationship between these governors and Chandragupta is unknown. Justin mentions Chandragupta as a rival of the Alexander's successors in north-western India.[41] He states that after Alexander's death, Chandragupta freed Indian territories from the Greeks and executed some of the governors.[72] According to Boesche, this war with the northwestern territories was in part fought by mercenaries hired by Chandragupta and Chanakya, and these wars may have been the cause of the demise of two of Alexander's governors, Nicanor and Philip.[73] Megasthenes served as a Greek ambassador in his court for four years.[69]

War and marriage alliance with Seleucus

According to Appian, Seleucus I Nicator, one of Alexander's Macedonian generals who in 312 BCE established the Seleucid Kingdom with its capital at Babylon, brought Persia and Bactria under his own authority, putting his eastern front facing the empire of Chandragupta.[74][75] Seleucus and Chandragupta waged war until they came to an understanding with each other. Seleucus married off his daughter, Berenice, to Chandragupta to forge an alliance.[75]

R. C. Majumdar and D. D. Kosambi note that Seleucus appeared to have fared poorly after ceding large territories west of the Indus to Chandragupta. The Maurya Empire added Arachosia (Kandahar), Gedrosia (Balochistan), and Paropamisadae (Gandhara).[76][77][b] According to Strabo, Seleucus Nicator gave these regions to Chandragupta along with a marriage treaty, and in return received five hundred elephants.[78] The details of the engagement treaty are not known.[79] However, since the extensive sources available on Seleucus never mention an Indian princess, it is thought that the marital alliance went the other way, with Chandragupta himself or his son Bindusara marrying a Seleucid princess, in accordance with contemporary Greek practices to form dynastic alliances. An Indian Puranic source, the Pratisarga Parva of the Bhavishya Purana, described the marriage of Chandragupta with a Greek ("Yavana") princess, daughter of Seleucus.[80] The Mahavamsa also states that, seven months after the war ended, Seleucus gave one of his daughters, Berenice (known in Pali as Suvarnnaksi) in marriage to Chandragupta.[81]

Chandragupta sent 500 war elephants to Seleucus, which played a key role in Seleucus' victory at the Battle of Ipsus.[82][83][84] 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.[85]

Southern conquest

After annexing Seleucus' provinces west of the Indus river, Chandragupta had a vast empire extending across the northern Indian sub-continent from the Bay of Bengal to the Arabian Sea. Chandragupta began expanding his empire southwards beyond the Vindhya Range and into the Deccan Plateau.[43] By the time his conquests were complete, Chandragupta's empire extended over most of the subcontinent.[86]

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.[87] 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.[88] 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.[89]

Names and titles

 
A modern statue depicting Chandragupta Maurya, Laxminarayan Temple, Delhi

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".[90] In Greek and Latin accounts, Chandragupta is known as Sandrakottos (Greek: Σανδράκοττος) and Androcottus (Greek: Ανδροκόττος).[91][92]

The king's epithets mentioned in the Sanskrit play Mudrarakshasa include "Chanda-siri" (Chandra-shri), "Piadamsana" (Priya-darshana), and Vrishala.[90] Piadamsana is similar to Piyadasi, an epithet of his grandson Ashoka.[93] 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.[94]

Empire

There are no records of Chandragupta's military conquests and the reach of his empire. It is based on inferences from Greek and Roman historians and the religious Indian texts written centuries after his death. Based on these, the North-West reach of his empire included parts of present-day Afghanistan that Seleucus I Nicator ceded to him including Kabul, Kandahar, Taxila and Gandhara.[76][95] These are the areas where his grandson Ashoka left the major Kandahar rock edict and other edicts in the Greek and Aramaic languages.[96][97]

In the 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.[98] 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.[99]

There is uncertainty about the other conquests that Chandragupta may have achieved, especially in the Deccan region of southern India.[99] 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. 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.[100]

Maurya with his counsellor Chanakya together built one of the largest empires ever on the Indian subcontinent.[3][33][101] Chandragupta's empire extended from Bengal to central Afghanistan encompassing most of the Indian subcontinent except for parts that are now Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Odisha.[102][33]

Rule

After unifying much of India, Chandragupta and Chanakya passed a series of major economic and political reforms. Chandragupta established a strong central administration from Pataliputra (now Patna).[103] Chandragupta applied the statecraft and economic policies described in Chanakya's text Arthashastra.[104][105][106] There are varying accounts in the historic, legendary, and hagiographic literature of various Indian religions about Chandragupta's rule, but Allchin and Erdosy' are suspect; they state, "one cannot but be struck by the many close correspondences between the (Hindu) Arthashastra and the two other major sources the (Buddhist) Asokan inscriptions and (Greek) Megasthenes text".[107]

The Maurya rule was a structured administration; Chandragupta had a council of ministers (amatya), with Chanakya was his chief minister.[108][109] The empire was organised into territories (janapada), centres of regional power were protected with forts (durga), and state operations were funded with treasury (kosa).[110] 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. He routinely performed Vedic sacrifices,[111] Brahmanical rituals,[112][failed verification] and hosted major festivals marked by procession of elephants and horses. His officers inspected situations requiring law and order in the cities; the crime rate was low.[113]

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.[114] 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.[114] The third administrative body overlooked the military, its training, its weapons supply, and the needs of the soldiers.[114]

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 king who had come to power by assassinating the previous king.[115]

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.[116][117]

Infrastructure projects

 
Silver punch mark coin of the Maurya empire, with symbols of wheel and elephant (3rd century BCE)

The empire built a strong economy from a solid infrastructure such as irrigation, temples, mines, and roads.[118][119] 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.[107] Regional prosperity in agriculture was one of the required duties of his state officials.[120]

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.[121] 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.[122]

According to Kaushik Roy, the Maurya dynasty rulers were "great road builders".[119] 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.[119] Roy stated this network boosted trade and commerce, and helped move armies rapidly and efficiently.[119]

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.[123] 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.[124][125]

Arts and architecture

The evidence of arts and architecture during Chandragupta's time is mostly limited to texts such as those by Megasthenes 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.[126]

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.[127][128] The site was dated to third century BCE by many scholars[127][128] 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.[129] 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".[130]

Succession, renunciation, and death (Sallekhana)

 
1,300 years Old Shravanabelagola relief shows death of Chandragupta after taking the vow of Sallekhana. Some consider it about the legend of his arrival with Bhadrabahu.[2][15][16]
 
A statue depicting Chandragupta Maurya (right) with his spiritual mentor Acharya Bhadrabahu at Shravanabelagola.
 
Chandragupta Maurya having 16 auspicious dreams in Jainism

The circumstances and year of Chandragupta's death are unclear and disputed.[2][15][16] According to Digambara Jain accounts, Bhadrabahu 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 kingdom to his son Bindusara. Together, states a Digambara legend, Chandragupta and Bhadrabahu moved to Shravanabelagola, in present-day south Karnataka.[131] These Jain accounts appeared in texts such as Brihakathā kośa (931 CE) of Harishena, Bhadrabāhu charita (1450 CE) of Ratnanandi, Munivaṃsa bhyudaya (1680 CE) and Rajavali kathe.[132][133][134] Chandragupta lived as an ascetic at Shravanabelagola for several years before fasting to death as per the Jain practice of sallekhana, according to the Digambara legend.[135][32][136]

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.[1] According to Roy, Chandragupta's abdication of throne may be dated to c. 298 BCE, and his death between 297 BCE and 293 BCE.[64] His grandson was emperor Ashoka who is famed for his historic pillars and his role in helping spread Buddhism outside of ancient India.[137][136]

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.[138]

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, [2][15][16] 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).[15][16]

Jeffery D. Long – a scholar of Jain and Hindu studies – says in one Digambara version, it was Samprati Chandragupta who renounced, migrated and performed sallekhana in Shravanabelagola. Long states 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. The two Chandraguptas have been confused to be the same in some Digambara legends.[139]

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.[140] 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.[140] 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.[15][141][142]

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 royal storage and the Jain Brahmin Chanakya using violence and cunning tactics to expand Chandragupta's kingdom and increase royal revenues.[31] It states in verses 8.415 to 8.435, that for 15 years as king, Chandragupta was a follower of non-Jain "ascetics with the wrong view of religion" (non-Jain) and "lusted for women". Chanakya, who was a Jain follower, persuaded Chandragupta to convert to Jainism by showing that Jain ascetics avoided women and focused on their religion.[31] The legend mentions Chanakya aiding the premature birth of Bindusara,[31] It states in verse 8.444 that "Chandragupta died in meditation (can possibly be sallekhana.) and went to heaven".[143] According to Hemachandra's legend, Chanakya also performed sallekhana. [143]

 
The Footprints of Chandragupta Maurya on Chandragiri Hill, where Chandragupta (the unifier of India and founder of the Maurya Dynasty) performed Sallekhana.

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.[2] Other scholars have 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.[2]

Legacy

A memorial to Chandragupta Maurya exists on Chandragiri hill in Shravanabelagola, Karnataka.[144] The Indian Postal Service issued a commemorative postage stamp honouring Chandragupta Maurya in 2001.[145]

In popular culture

See also

Notes

  1. ^
    • Pāli:चन्दगुत्त मोरीय Candagutta Mōrīya
    • Sanskrit: चन्द्रगुप्त मौर्य Candragupta Maurya
    • Ancient Greek: Σανδράκοπτος Sandrákoptos Σανδράκοττος Sandrákottos Ανδροκόττος Androkóttos
  2. ^ According to Grainger, Seleucus "must ... have held Aria" (Herat), and furthermore, his "son Antiochos was active there fifteen years later". (Grainger, John D. 1990, 2014. Seleukos Nikator: Constructing a Hellenistic Kingdom. Routledge. p. 109).
  1. ^ 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.[49]

References

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  4. ^ Upinder Singh 2016, p. 330.
  5. ^ a b Upinder Singh 2016, p. 331.
  6. ^ a b c Majumdar, R. C.; Raychauduhuri, H. C.; Datta, Kalikinkar (1960), An Advanced History of India, London: Macmillan & Company Ltd; New York: St Martin's Press, If the Jaina tradition is to be believed, Chandragupta was converted to the religion of Mahavira. He is said to have abdicated his throne and passed his last days at Sravana Belgola in Mysore. Greek evidence, however, suggests that the first Maurya did not give up the performance of sacrificial rites and was far from following the Jaina creed of Ahimsa or non-injury to animals. He took delight in hunting, a practice that was continued by his son and alluded to by his grandson in his eighth Rock Edict. It is, however, possible that in his last days he showed some predilection for Jainism ...
  7. ^ Chakrabarty, Dilip K. (2010), The Geopolitical Orbits of Ancient India: The Geographical Frames of the Ancient Indian Dynasties, New Delhi, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, p. 29, ISBN 978-0-19-908832-4, We are assuming that the basic historical-geographical configuration of the Magadhan power was achieved before the beginning of the Maurya dynasty, whose founder Chandragupta Maurya simply added to it the stretch from the Indus valley to the southern foot of the Hindukush, giving the Mauryan India a strong foothold in the Oxus to the Indus interaction zone of Indian history. The evidence is in some cases, as in the cases of Gujarat, Bengal, and Assam, shadowy, but if Chandragupta had undertaken expeditions in these directions, there would have been echoes of these expeditions in the literary traditions.
  8. ^ Fisher, Michael (2018), An Environmental History of India, From the Earliest Times to the Twenty-First-Century, New Approaches in Asian History Series, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, p. 71, ISBN 9781107111622, Chandragupta (r. 320 – c. 298 BCE) led a rebellion that seized power in Magadha and founded the Maurya Dynasty. He located his capital Pataliputra (today's Patna) at an especially strategic trading and defensive location, on the south bank of the Ganges where the Son River joined it. The actual origins of the Maurya family remain uncertain, but consensus holds that Chandragupta was low-born. One popular account asserts he was the previous king's son by a low-ranked queen or concubine and overthrew his royal half-brothers. Maurya means "peacock," and some Jain texts identify his family as low peacock herders, ranked by Brahmans as Shudra at best.
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Further reading

External links

  • Maurya and Sunga Art, N R Ray
Chandragupta Maurya
Maurya dynasty
Preceded by Emperor of the Maurya Empire
322–297 BCE
Succeeded by

chandragupta, maurya, sandracottus, redirects, here, genus, beetle, sandracottus, beetle, other, uses, chandragupta, disambiguation, first, emperor, mauryan, empire, ancient, india, expanded, geographically, extensive, kingdom, based, magadha, founded, maurya,. Sandracottus redirects here For the genus of beetle see Sandracottus beetle For other uses see Chandragupta disambiguation Chandragupta Maurya a 350 295 BCE was the first emperor of the Mauryan Empire in Ancient India who expanded a geographically extensive kingdom based in Magadha and founded the Maurya dynasty 7 He reigned from 320 BCE to 298 BCE 8 The Maurya kingdom expanded to become an empire that reached its peak under the reign of his grandson Ashoka from 268 BCE to 231 BCE 9 The nature of the political formation that existed in Chandragupta s time is not certain 10 The Mauryan empire was a loose knit empire 11 Chandragupta MauryaChakravartinMedieval stone relief at Digambara pilgrimage site Shravanabelagola Karnataka It has been interpreted as Bhadrabahu and Chandragupta Maurya 1 but some disagree 2 1st Mauryan EmperorReignc 324 or 321 c 297 BCE 3 4 Coronationc 324 or 321 BCEPredecessorDhana NandaSuccessorEmperor Bindusara Maurya son 5 AmatyaChanakya RakshasSpousesEmpress Consort Durdhara Seleucid princessIssueBindusaraDynastyMauryaFatherSarvarthasiddhiMotherMuraReligionHinduism 6 Jainism 6 Chandragupta Maurya was an important figure in the history of India laying the foundations of the first state to unite most of India Chandragupta under the tutelage of Chanakya created a new empire based on the principles of statecraft built a large army and continued expanding the boundaries of his empire until ultimately renouncing it for an ascetic life in his final years Prior to his consolidation of power Alexander the Great had invaded the North West Indian subcontinent before abandoning his campaign in 324 BCE due to a mutiny caused by the prospect of facing another large empire presumably the Nanda Empire Chandragupta defeated and conquered both the Nanda Empire and the Greek satraps that were appointed or formed from Alexander s Empire in South Asia He set out to conquer the Nanda Empire centered in Pataliputra Magadha Afterwards Chandragupta expanded and secured his western border where he was confronted by Seleucus I Nicator in the Seleucid Mauryan war After two years of war Chandragupta was considered to have gained the upper hand in the conflict and annexed satrapies up to the Hindu Kush Instead of prolonging the war both parties settled on a marriage treaty between Chandragupta and Seleucus I Nicator s daughter Helena Chandragupta s empire extended throughout most of the Indian subcontinent spanning from modern day Bengal to Afghanistan across North India as well as making inroads into Central and South India Contemporary Greek evidence states that Chandragupta did not give up performing the rites of sacrificing animals associated with Vedic Brahminism an ancient form of Hinduism he delighted in hunting and otherwise leading a life remote from the Jain practice of Ahimsa or nonviolence towards living beings 6 12 Chandragupta s reign and the Maurya Empire set an era of economic prosperity reforms infrastructure expansions and tolerance Many religions thrived within his realms and his descendants empire Buddhism Jainism and Ajivika gained prominence alongside Vedic and Brahmanistic traditions and minority religions such as Zoroastrianism and the Greek pantheon were respected A memorial for Chandragupta Maurya exists on the Chandragiri hill along with a seventh century hagiographic inscription Contents 1 Historical sources 2 Date 3 Early life 4 Career 4 1 Influence of Chanakya Kautilya or Vishnugupta 4 2 Building the empire 4 3 Conquest of the Nanda empire 4 4 Conquest of north west regions 4 5 War and marriage alliance with Seleucus 4 6 Southern conquest 4 7 Names and titles 5 Empire 6 Rule 7 Infrastructure projects 8 Arts and architecture 9 Succession renunciation and death Sallekhana 10 Legacy 11 In popular culture 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Sources 16 Further reading 17 External linksHistorical sources EditChandragupta s life and accomplishments are described in ancient and historical Greek Hindu Buddhist and Jain texts though they significantly vary in detail 13 The historical sources which describe the life of Chandragupta Maurya vary considerably in detail Chandragupta was born about 340 BC and died at about 295 BC His main biographical sources in chronological order are 14 Statue of Shepherd Chandragupta Maurya at Parliament of India Greek and Roman sources which are the oldest surviving records that mention Chandragupta or circumstances related to him these include works written by Nearchus Onesicritus Aristobulus of Cassandreia Strabo Megasthenes Diodorus Arrian Pliny the Elder Plutarch and Justin Hindu texts such as the Puranas and Arthashastra later composed Hindu sources include legends in Vishakhadatta s Mudrarakshasa Somadeva s Kathasaritsagara and Kshemendra s Brihatkathamanjari Buddhist sources are those dated in fourth century 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 15 16 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 mention the last Nanda Empire which usurped the king before him Justin states Chandragupta was of humble origin and includes stories of miraculous legends associated with him such as a wild elephant appearing and submitting itself as a ride to him before a war Justin s text notes Chandragupta and Chanakya defeated and removed Nanda from his rule 17 Megasthenes account as it has survived in Greek texts that quote him states that Alexander the Great and Chandragupta met which if true would mean his rule started earlier than 321 BCE 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 As Alexander did not cross the Beas river Chandragupta s territory probably included the Punjab region 18 The pre 4th century Hindu Puranic texts mostly mirror the Greek sources These texts do not discuss the details of Chandragupta s ancestry but rather cover the ancestry of the last Nanda king The Nanda king is described to be cruel against dharma and shastras and born out of an illicit relationship followed by a coup 19 The Chanakya s Arthasastra refers to the Nanda rule as against the spiritual cultural and military interests of the country a period where intrigue and vice multiplied 19 Chanakya states that Chandragupta returned dharma nurtured diversity of views and ruled virtuously that kindled love among the subjects for his rule 19 One medieval commentator states Chandragupta to be the son of one of the Nanda s wives with the name Mura 19 Other sources describe Mura as a concubine of the king 20 Another Sanskrit dramatic text Mudrarakshasa uses the terms Vrishala and Kula Hina meaning not descending from a recognized clan or family to describe Chandragupta 21 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 21 The same drama also refers to Chandragupta as someone of humble origin like Justin 21 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 22 23 24 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 25 The Buddhist texts such as Mahavamsa describe Chandragupta to be of Kshatriya origin 26 These sources written about seven centuries after his dynasty ended state that both Chandragupta and his grandson Ashoka a patron of Buddhism were from a branch of the Shakya noble family from which Gautama Buddha descended from 27 These Buddhist sources attempt to link the dynasty of their patron Ashoka directly to the Buddha 28 The sources claim that the family branched off to escape persecution from a king of the Kosala Kingdom 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 27 3 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 29 The Maha bodhi vasa states he hailed from Moriya nagara while the Digha Nikaya states he came from the maurya clan of Pipphalivana 26 The Buddhist sources also mention that Brahmin Chanakya was his counselor and with whose support Chandragupta became the king at Patliputra 29 He has also been variously identified with Shashigupta who has same etymology as of Chandragupta of Paropamisadae on the account of same life events 30 7th century Bhadrabahu inscription at Shravanabelagola Sanskrit Purvahale Kannada script This is the oldest inscription at the site and it mentions Bhadrabahu and Prabhacandra Lewis Rice and Digambara Jains interpret Prabhacandra to be Chandragupta Maurya while others such as J F Fleet V R Ramachandra Dikshitar and Svetambara Jains state this interpretation is wrong 2 15 16 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 26 31 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 32 33 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 34 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 34 2 35 Date EditNone of the ancient texts mention when Chandragupta was born Plutarch claims that he was a young man when he met Alexander during the latter s invasion of India c 326 325 BCE Assuming the Plutarch account is true Raychaudhuri proposed in 1923 that Chandragupta may have been born after 350 BCE 36 According to other Greco Roman texts Chandragupta attacked the Greek Indian governors after Alexander s death c 323 BCE with Seleucus I Nicator entering into a treaty with Chandragupta years later 37 Seleucus Nicator under this treaty gave up Arachosia Kandahar Gedrosia Makran and Paropanisadai Paropamisadae Kabul to Chandragupta in exchange for 500 war elephants 18 The texts do not include the start or end year of Chandragupta s reign 38 According to some Hindu and Buddhist texts Chandragupta ruled for 24 years 39 The Buddhist sources state Chandragupta Maurya ruled 162 years after the death of the Buddha 40 However the Buddha s birth and death vary by source and all these lead to a chronology that is significantly different than the Greek Roman records Similarly Jain sources composed give different gaps between Mahavira s death and his accession 40 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 40 Historians such as Irfan Habib and Vivekanand Jha assign Chandragupta s reign to c 322 298 BCE 41 Upinder Singh dates his rule from 324 or 321 BCE to 297 BCE 5 Kristi Wiley states he reigned between 320 and 293 BCE 15 Early life EditOne medieval commentator states Chandragupta to be the son of one of the Nanda s wives with the name Mura 19 Other sources describe Mura as a concubine of the king 20 Another Sanskrit dramatic text Mudrarakshasa uses the terms Vrishala and Kula Hina meaning not descending from a recognized clan or family to describe Chandragupta 21 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 21 The same drama also refers to Chandragupta as someone of humble origin like Justin 21 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 22 23 42 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 25 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 43 31 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 26 31 The Jain Brahmin then went about making money through magic and returned later to claim young Chandragupta 31 whom he taught and trained Together they recruited soldiers and attacked the Nanda kingdom Eventually they won and proclaimed Patliputra as their capital 31 Career EditInfluence of Chanakya Kautilya or Vishnugupta Edit Chandragupta s guru was Chanakya with whom he studied as a child and with whose counsel he built the Empire This image is a 1915 artistic portrait of Chanakya The Buddhist and Hindu sources 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 cowherd friends played near Vinjha forest Chanakya saw him give orders to the others bought him from the hunter and adopted Chandragupta 44 Chanakya taught and admitted him in Taxila to study the Vedas military arts law and other sastras 44 45 After Taxila Chandragupta and Chanakya moved to Pataliputra the capital and a historic learning center in the eastern Magadha kingdom of India They met Nanda there according to Hindu sources and Dhana Nanda according to Pali language Buddhist sources 46 Chandragupta became a commander of the Nanda army but according to Justin Chandragupta offended the Nanda king Nandrum or Nandrus who ordered his execution 43 An alternative version states that it was the Nanda king who was publicly insulted by Chanakya 47 Chandragupta and Chanakya escaped and became rebels who planned to remove the Nanda king from power 48 note 1 The Mudrarakshasa also states that Chanakya swore to destroy the Nanda dynasty after he felt insulted by the king 50 47 The Roman text by Justin mentions a couple of miraculous incidents that involved Sandracottus Chandragupta and presents these legends as omens and portents of his 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 51 Building the empire Edit Main articles Conquest of the Nanda Empire and Maurya Empire According to the Buddhist text Mahavamsa Tika Chandragupta and Chanakya raised an army by recruiting soldiers from many places after the former completed his education at Taxila Chanakya made Chandragupta the leader of the army 52 The Digambara Jain text Parishishtaparvan states that this army was raised by Chanakya with coins he minted and an alliance formed with Parvataka 53 54 According to Justin Chandragupta organized an army 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 55 The Buddhist Mahavamsa Tika and Jain Parishishtaparvan records Chandragupta s army unsuccessfully attacking the Nanda capital 53 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 56 He then refined his strategy by establishing garrisons in the conquered territories and finally besieged the Nanda capital Pataliputra There Dhana Nanda accepted defeat and was killed by Buddhist accounts 57 or deposed and exiled by Hindu accounts 58 Conquest of the Nanda empire Edit Greco 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 48 59 After Alexander ended his campaign and left Chandragupta s army conquered the Nanda capital Pataliputra around 322 BCE with Chanakya s counsel 43 Historically reliable details of Chandragupta s campaign into Pataliputra are unavailable and legends written centuries later are inconsistent Buddhist texts such as Milindapanha claim Magadha was ruled by the Nanda dynasty which with Chanakya s counsel Chandragupta conquered to restore dhamma 60 61 The army of Chandragupta and Chanakya first conquered the Nanda outer territories before invading Pataliputra 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 62 61 The conquest was fictionalised in Mudrarakshasa in which Chandragupta is said to have first acquired Punjab and allied with a local king named Parvatka under the Chanakya s advice before advancing on the Nanda Empire 63 Chandragupta laid siege to Kusumapura now Patna the capital of Magadha by deploying guerrilla warfare methods with the help of mercenaries from conquered areas 64 65 Historian P K Bhattacharyya states that the empire was built by a gradual conquest of provinces after the initial consolidation of Magadha 66 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 67 Chanakya disguised himself as a mendicant and found seven mother goddesses saptamatrika inside He concluded these goddesses were protecting the town people 67 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 kingdom and attacked Patliputra with an immeasurable army 67 With a depleted treasury exhausted merit and insufficient intelligence the Nanda king lost 67 These legends state that the Nanda king was defeated but allowed to leave Pataliputra alive with a chariot full of items his family needed 68 The Jain sources attest that his daughter fell in love at first sight with Chandragupta and married him 67 26 With the defeat of Nanda Chandragupta Maurya founded the Maurya Empire in ancient India 3 69 Conquest of north west regions Edit Chandragupta had defeated the remaining Macedonian satrapies in the northwest of the Indian subcontinent by 317 BCE The Indian campaign of Alexander the Great ended before Chandragupta came into power Alexander had left India in 325 BCE and assigned the northwestern Indian subcontinent territories to Greek governors 70 71 The nature of early relationship between these governors and Chandragupta is unknown Justin mentions Chandragupta as a rival of the Alexander s successors in north western India 41 He states that after Alexander s death Chandragupta freed Indian territories from the Greeks and executed some of the governors 72 According to Boesche this war with the northwestern territories was in part fought by mercenaries hired by Chandragupta and Chanakya and these wars may have been the cause of the demise of two of Alexander s governors Nicanor and Philip 73 Megasthenes served as a Greek ambassador in his court for four years 69 War and marriage alliance with Seleucus Edit According to Appian Seleucus I Nicator one of Alexander s Macedonian generals who in 312 BCE established the Seleucid Kingdom with its capital at Babylon brought Persia and Bactria under his own authority putting his eastern front facing the empire of Chandragupta 74 75 Seleucus and Chandragupta waged war until they came to an understanding with each other Seleucus married off his daughter Berenice to Chandragupta to forge an alliance 75 R C Majumdar and D D Kosambi note that Seleucus appeared to have fared poorly after ceding large territories west of the Indus to Chandragupta The Maurya Empire added Arachosia Kandahar Gedrosia Balochistan and Paropamisadae Gandhara 76 77 b According to Strabo Seleucus Nicator gave these regions to Chandragupta along with a marriage treaty and in return received five hundred elephants 78 The details of the engagement treaty are not known 79 However since the extensive sources available on Seleucus never mention an Indian princess it is thought that the marital alliance went the other way with Chandragupta himself or his son Bindusara marrying a Seleucid princess in accordance with contemporary Greek practices to form dynastic alliances An Indian Puranic source the Pratisarga Parva of the Bhavishya Purana described the marriage of Chandragupta with a Greek Yavana princess daughter of Seleucus 80 The Mahavamsa also states that seven months after the war ended Seleucus gave one of his daughters Berenice known in Pali as Suvarnnaksi in marriage to Chandragupta 81 Chandragupta sent 500 war elephants to Seleucus which played a key role in Seleucus victory at the Battle of Ipsus 82 83 84 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 85 Southern conquest Edit After annexing Seleucus provinces west of the Indus river Chandragupta had a vast empire extending across the northern Indian sub continent from the Bay of Bengal to the Arabian Sea Chandragupta began expanding his empire southwards beyond the Vindhya Range and into the Deccan Plateau 43 By the time his conquests were complete Chandragupta s empire extended over most of the subcontinent 86 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 87 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 88 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 89 Names and titles Edit A modern statue depicting Chandragupta Maurya Laxminarayan Temple Delhi 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 90 In Greek and Latin accounts Chandragupta is known as Sandrakottos Greek Sandrakottos and Androcottus Greek Androkottos 91 92 The king s epithets mentioned in the Sanskrit play Mudrarakshasa include Chanda siri Chandra shri Piadamsana Priya darshana and Vrishala 90 Piadamsana is similar to Piyadasi an epithet of his grandson Ashoka 93 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 94 Empire EditThere are no records of Chandragupta s military conquests and the reach of his empire It is based on inferences from Greek and Roman historians and the religious Indian texts written centuries after his death Based on these the North West reach of his empire included parts of present day Afghanistan that Seleucus I Nicator ceded to him including Kabul Kandahar Taxila and Gandhara 76 95 These are the areas where his grandson Ashoka left the major Kandahar rock edict and other edicts in the Greek and Aramaic languages 96 97 In the 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 98 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 99 There is uncertainty about the other conquests that Chandragupta may have achieved especially in the Deccan region of southern India 99 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 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 100 Maurya with his counsellor Chanakya together built one of the largest empires ever on the Indian subcontinent 3 33 101 Chandragupta s empire extended from Bengal to central Afghanistan encompassing most of the Indian subcontinent except for parts that are now Tamil Nadu Kerala and Odisha 102 33 Rule EditAfter unifying much of India Chandragupta and Chanakya passed a series of major economic and political reforms Chandragupta established a strong central administration from Pataliputra now Patna 103 Chandragupta applied the statecraft and economic policies described in Chanakya s text Arthashastra 104 105 106 There are varying accounts in the historic legendary and hagiographic literature of various Indian religions about Chandragupta s rule but Allchin and Erdosy are suspect they state one cannot but be struck by the many close correspondences between the Hindu Arthashastra and the two other major sources the Buddhist Asokan inscriptions and Greek Megasthenes text 107 The Maurya rule was a structured administration Chandragupta had a council of ministers amatya with Chanakya was his chief minister 108 109 The empire was organised into territories janapada centres of regional power were protected with forts durga and state operations were funded with treasury kosa 110 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 He routinely performed Vedic sacrifices 111 Brahmanical rituals 112 failed verification and hosted major festivals marked by procession of elephants and horses His officers inspected situations requiring law and order in the cities the crime rate was low 113 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 114 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 114 The third administrative body overlooked the military its training its weapons supply and the needs of the soldiers 114 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 king who had come to power by assassinating the previous king 115 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 116 117 Infrastructure projects Edit Silver punch mark coin of the Maurya empire with symbols of wheel and elephant 3rd century BCE The empire built a strong economy from a solid infrastructure such as irrigation temples mines and roads 118 119 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 107 Regional prosperity in agriculture was one of the required duties of his state officials 120 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 121 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 122 According to Kaushik Roy the Maurya dynasty rulers were great road builders 119 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 119 Roy stated this network boosted trade and commerce and helped move armies rapidly and efficiently 119 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 123 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 124 125 Arts and architecture EditThe evidence of arts and architecture during Chandragupta s time is mostly limited to texts such as those by Megasthenes 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 126 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 127 128 The site was dated to third century BCE by many scholars 127 128 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 129 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 130 Succession renunciation and death Sallekhana Edit 1 300 years Old Shravanabelagola relief shows death of Chandragupta after taking the vow of Sallekhana Some consider it about the legend of his arrival with Bhadrabahu 2 15 16 A statue depicting Chandragupta Maurya right with his spiritual mentor Acharya Bhadrabahu at Shravanabelagola Chandragupta Maurya having 16 auspicious dreams in Jainism The circumstances and year of Chandragupta s death are unclear and disputed 2 15 16 According to Digambara Jain accounts Bhadrabahu 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 kingdom to his son Bindusara Together states a Digambara legend Chandragupta and Bhadrabahu moved to Shravanabelagola in present day south Karnataka 131 These Jain accounts appeared in texts such as Brihakatha kosa 931 CE of Harishena Bhadrabahu charita 1450 CE of Ratnanandi Munivaṃsa bhyudaya 1680 CE and Rajavali kathe 132 133 134 Chandragupta lived as an ascetic at Shravanabelagola for several years before fasting to death as per the Jain practice of sallekhana according to the Digambara legend 135 32 136 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 1 According to Roy Chandragupta s abdication of throne may be dated to c 298 BCE and his death between 297 BCE and 293 BCE 64 His grandson was emperor Ashoka who is famed for his historic pillars and his role in helping spread Buddhism outside of ancient India 137 136 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 138 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 2 15 16 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 15 16 Jeffery D Long a scholar of Jain and Hindu studies says in one Digambara version it was Samprati Chandragupta who renounced migrated and performed sallekhana in Shravanabelagola Long states 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 The two Chandraguptas have been confused to be the same in some Digambara legends 139 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 140 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 140 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 15 141 142 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 royal storage and the Jain Brahmin Chanakya using violence and cunning tactics to expand Chandragupta s kingdom and increase royal revenues 31 It states in verses 8 415 to 8 435 that for 15 years as king Chandragupta was a follower of non Jain ascetics with the wrong view of religion non Jain and lusted for women Chanakya who was a Jain follower persuaded Chandragupta to convert to Jainism by showing that Jain ascetics avoided women and focused on their religion 31 The legend mentions Chanakya aiding the premature birth of Bindusara 31 It states in verse 8 444 that Chandragupta died in meditation can possibly be sallekhana and went to heaven 143 According to Hemachandra s legend Chanakya also performed sallekhana 143 The Footprints of Chandragupta Maurya on Chandragiri Hill where Chandragupta the unifier of India and founder of the Maurya Dynasty performed Sallekhana 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 2 Other scholars have 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 2 Legacy EditA memorial to Chandragupta Maurya exists on Chandragiri hill in Shravanabelagola Karnataka 144 The Indian Postal Service issued a commemorative postage stamp honouring Chandragupta Maurya in 2001 145 In popular culture EditMudrarakshasa is a political drama in Sanskrit by Vishakhadatta composed 600 years after the conquest of Chandragupta probably between 300 CE and 700 CE 64 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 146 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 147 Chandragupta is a 1920 Indian silent film about the Mauryan king 148 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 149 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 150 The story of Chanakya and Chandragupta was made into a film in Telugu in 1977 titled Chanakya Chandragupta 151 The television series Chanakya is an account of the life and times of Chanakya based on the play Mudra Rakshasa The Signet Ring of Rakshasa 152 In 2011 a television series called Chandragupta Maurya was telecast on Imagine TV 153 154 155 In 2016 the television series Chandra Nandini was a fictionalized romance saga 156 In 2018 a television series called Chandragupta Maurya portrays the life of Chandragupta Maurya 157 He is a leader of the Indian civilization in the Rise and Fall expansion of the 4X video game Civilization VI 158 Nobunaga the Fool a Japanese stage play and anime features a character named Chandragupta based on the emperor In the 2001 film Asoka directed by Santosh Sivan Bollywood producer Umesh Mehra played the role of Chandragupta Maurya See also Edit History portal India portalList of Indian monarchs List of Jain states and dynasties Mauryan art ShashiguptaNotes Edit Pali चन दग त त म र य Candagutta MōriyaSanskrit चन द रग प त म र य Candragupta MauryaAncient Greek Sandrakoptos Sandrakoptos Sandrakottos Sandrakottos Androkottos Androkottos According to Grainger Seleucus must have held Aria Herat and furthermore his son Antiochos was active there fifteen years later Grainger John D 1990 2014 Seleukos Nikator Constructing a Hellenistic Kingdom Routledge p 109 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 49 References Edit a b Mookerji 1988 p 40 a b c d e f g h Dikshitar 1993 pp 264 266 a b c d Chandragupta Maurya Emperor of India Archived 10 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica Upinder Singh 2016 p 330 a b Upinder Singh 2016 p 331 a b c Majumdar R C Raychauduhuri H C Datta Kalikinkar 1960 An Advanced History of India London Macmillan amp Company Ltd New York St Martin s Press If the Jaina tradition is to be believed Chandragupta was converted to the religion of Mahavira He is said to have abdicated his throne and passed his last days at Sravana Belgola in Mysore Greek evidence however suggests that the first Maurya did not give up the performance of sacrificial rites and was far from following the Jaina creed of Ahimsa or non injury to animals He took delight in hunting a practice that was continued by his son and alluded to by his grandson in his eighth Rock Edict It is however possible that in his last days he showed some predilection for Jainism Chakrabarty Dilip K 2010 The Geopolitical Orbits of Ancient India The Geographical Frames of the Ancient Indian Dynasties New Delhi Oxford and New York Oxford University Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 19 908832 4 We are assuming that the basic historical geographical configuration of the Magadhan power was achieved before the beginning of the Maurya dynasty whose founder Chandragupta Maurya simply added to it the stretch from the Indus valley to the southern foot of the Hindukush giving the Mauryan India a strong foothold in the Oxus to the Indus interaction zone of Indian history The evidence is in some cases as in the cases of Gujarat Bengal and Assam shadowy but if Chandragupta had undertaken expeditions in these directions there would have been echoes of these expeditions in the literary traditions Fisher Michael 2018 An Environmental History of India From the Earliest Times to the Twenty First Century New Approaches in Asian History Series Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press p 71 ISBN 9781107111622 Chandragupta r 320 c 298 BCE led a rebellion that seized power in Magadha and founded the Maurya Dynasty He located his capital Pataliputra today s Patna at an especially strategic trading and defensive location on the south bank of the Ganges where the Son River joined it The actual origins of the Maurya family remain uncertain but consensus holds that Chandragupta was low born One popular account asserts he was the previous king s son by a low ranked queen or concubine and overthrew his royal half brothers Maurya means peacock and some Jain texts identify his family as low peacock herders ranked by Brahmans as Shudra at best Bose Sugata Jalal Ayesha Modern South Asia History Culture Political Economy London and New York Routledge p 39 The political history of the centuries following the rise of Buddhism and Jainism saw the emergence and consolidation of powerful regional states in northern India Among the strongest of these was the kingdom of Magadha with its capital at Pataliputra near the modern city of Patna The Magadhan kingdom expanded under the Maurya dynasty in the fourth and fifth centuries BCE to become an empire embracing almost the whole of the subcontinent Chandragupta Maurya founded the dynasty in 322 BCE just a few years after Alexander the Great s brief foray into northwestern India The Maurya empire reached its apogee under the reign of Ashoka 268 231 BCE Stein Burton Arnold David 2010 A History of India 2 ed Wiley Blackwell p 16 ISBN 978 1 4051 9509 6 Around 270 bce the first Indian documentary records issued by the Buddhist king Ashoka were added to the Greek source Though Ashoka s inscriptions were deciphered in the nineteenth century we still cannot be sure about the political formation that existed under this Mauryan king much less under the kingdom s founder Ashoka s grandfather Chandragupta who was possibly a contemporary of Alexander Evidence in the form of a Sanskrit treatise called the Arthashastra depicting a centralized tyrannical spy ridden and compul sively controlling regime probably does not pertain to Mauryan times If its political world was not pure theory it could only have been achieved within a small city state not a realm as vast as that defined by the distribution of Ashoka s inscriptions over some 1500 miles from Afghanistan to southern India c Ludden David 2013 India and South Asia A Short History Oneworld Publications pp 29 30 ISBN 978 1 78074 108 6 Quote The geography of the Mauryan Empire resembled a spider with a small dense body and long spindly legs The highest echelons of imperial society lived in the inner circle composed of the ruler his immediate family other relatives and close allies who formed a dynastic core Outside the core empire travelled stringy routes dotted with armed cities Outside the palace in the capital cities the highest ranks in the imperial elite were held by military commanders whose active loyalty and success in war determined imperial fortunes Wherever these men failed or rebelled dynastic power crumbled Imperial society flourished where elites mingled they were its backbone its strength was theirs Kautilya s Arthasastra indicates that imperial power was concentrated in its original heartland in old Magadha where key institutions seem to have survived for about seven hundred years down to the age of the Guptas Here Mauryan officials ruled local society but not elsewhere In provincial towns and cities officials formed a top layer of royalty under them old conquered royal families were not removed but rather subordinated In most janapadas the Mauryan Empire consisted of strategic urban sites connected loosely to vast hinterlands through lineages and local elites who were there when the Mauryas arrived and were still in control when they left The authors and their affiliations listed in the title page of the reference which has the Wikipedia page An Advanced History of India are R C Majumdar M A Ph D Vice Chancellor Dacca University H C Raychaudhuri M A Ph D Carmichael Professor of Ancient Indian History and Culture Calcutta University and Kalikinkar Datta M A Ph D Premchand Raychand Scholar Mount Medallist Griffith Prizeman Professor and Head of the Department of History Patna College Patna Mookerji 1988 pp 2 14 229 235 Mookerji 1988 pp 3 14 a b c d e f g h Wiley 2009 pp 50 52 a b c d e f Fleet 1892 pp 156 162 Mookerji 1988 pp 5 7 a b Upinder Singh 2017 pp 264 265 a b c d e Mookerji 1988 pp 7 9 a b Edward James Rapson Wolseley Haig Richard Burn Henry Dodwell Mortimer Wheeler eds 1968 The Cambridge History of India Vol 4 p 470 His surname Maurya is explained by Indian authorities as mean son of Mura who is described as a concubine of the king a b c d e f Mookerji 1988 pp 9 11 a b Mookerji 1988 p 13 a b Mookerji 1988 pp 15 18 note a b Mookerji 1988 pp 7 13 a b c d e Mookerji 1988 p 14 a b Mookerji 1988 pp 13 15 Thapar 1961 p 12 a b Mookerji 1988 pp 13 14 Seth H C 1937 Did Candragupta Maurya belong to North Western India Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 18 2 158 165 ISSN 0378 1143 JSTOR 41688339 a b c d e f g h Hemacandra 1998 pp 155 157 168 188 a b Jones amp Ryan 2006 p xxviii a b c Kulke amp Rothermund 2004 p 59 65 a b Jaini 1991 pp 43 44 Upadhye 1977 pp 272 273 Raychaudhuri 1923 p 142 Raychaudhuri 1923 p 137 Raychaudhuri 1923 p 138 Thapar 1961 p 13 a b c Raychaudhuri 1967 pp 134 142 a b Habib amp Jha 2004 p 15 note a b c d Mookerji 1988 p 6 a b Mookerji 1988 pp 15 17 Modelski George 1964 Kautilya Foreign Policy and International System in the Ancient Hindu World American Political Science Review Cambridge University Press 58 3 549 560 doi 10 2307 1953131 JSTOR 1953131 S2CID 144135587 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 Mookerji 1988 pp 19 20 a b Mookerji 1988 p 18 a b Habib amp Jha 2004 p 14 Trautmann 1970 pp 240 241 History Biography of Chandragupta Maurya and His Maurya Empire Md Mizanur Rahaman Mizan Retrieved 5 August 2022 Mookerji 1988 p 32 Mookerji 1988 p 22 a b Hemacandra 1998 pp 175 188 Raychaudhuri 1967 pp 144 145 Raychaudhuri 1967 p 144 Mookerji 1988 p 33 Malalasekera 2002 p 383 Mookerji 1988 pp 33 34 Stoneman 2019 p 155 Thapar 2013 pp 362 364 a b Sen 1895 pp 26 32 Mookerji 1988 pp 28 33 Roy 2012 pp 27 61 62 a b c Roy 2012 pp 61 62 Grant 2010 p 49 Bhattacharyya 1977 p 8 a b c d e Hemacandra 1998 pp 176 177 Mookerji 1988 p 34 a b Roy 2012 p 62 Mookerji 1988 pp 2 25 29 Sastri 1988 p 26 Mookerji 1988 pp 6 8 31 33 Boesche 2003 pp 9 37 Mookerji 1988 pp 2 3 35 38 a b Appian p 55 a b Mookerji 1988 pp 36 37 105 Walter Eugene Clark 1919 The Importance of Hellenism from the Point of View of Indic Philology Classical Philology 14 4 297 313 doi 10 1086 360246 S2CID 161613588 Strabo 15 2 1 9 Archived from the original on 3 February 2009 Retrieved 14 July 2017 Barua 2005 pp 13 15 Sagar Chandra 1992 Foreign Influence on Ancient India Northern Book Centre p 83 Paranavithana Senarat January 1971 The Greeks and the Mauryans Lake House Investments ISBN 9780842607933 India the Ancient Past Burjor Avari p 106 107 Majumdar 2003 p 105 Tarn W W 1940 Two Notes on Seleucid History 1 Seleucus 500 Elephants 2 Tarmita The Journal of Hellenic Studies 60 84 94 doi 10 2307 626263 JSTOR 626263 S2CID 163980490 Mookerji 1988 p 38 Raychaudhuri 1967 p 18 Zvelebil 1973 pp 53 54 Mookerji 1988 pp 41 42 Upinder Singh 2016 pp 330 331 a b Raychaudhuri 1967 p 139 Thapar 2004 p 177 Arora U P 1991 The Indika of Megasthenes an Appraisal Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 72 73 1 4 307 329 JSTOR 41694901 Raychaudhuri 1967 pp 139 140 Raychaudhuri 1967 p 140 Kulke amp Rothermund 2004 p 61 Dupree 2014 pp 285 289 Dupont Sommer Andre 1970 Une nouvelle inscription arameenne d Asoka trouvee dans la vallee du Laghman Afghanistan Comptes rendus des seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres 114 1 158 173 doi 10 3406 crai 1970 12491 Salomon 1998 pp 194 199 200 with footnote 2 a b Habib amp Jha 2004 p 19 Kulke amp Rothermund 2004 p 64 Boesche 2003 p 7 18 Mookerji 1988 pp 1 4 Mookerji 1988 pp 13 18 Boesche 2003 pp 7 18 MV Krishna Rao 1958 Reprinted 1979 Studies in Kautilya 2nd Edition OCLC 551238868 ISBN 978 8121502429 pages 13 14 231 233 Olivelle 2013 pp 31 38 a b Allchin amp Erdosy 1995 pp 187 194 Modelski George 1964 Kautilya Foreign Policy and International System in the Ancient Hindu World American Political Science Review 58 3 549 560 doi 10 2307 1953131 JSTOR 1953131 S2CID 144135587 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 Upinder Singh 2017 p 220 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the Jain Elders translated by R C C Fynes Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 283227 6 Jain Jyoti Prasad 2005 Jaina Sources of the History of Ancient India 100 BC AD 900 Munshiram Manoharlal ISBN 9788121511407 Jaini Padmanabh S 1991 Gender and Salvation University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06820 9 Jones Constance Ryan James D 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 7564 5 Long Jeffery D 2013 Jainism An Introduction I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 85771 392 6 Kulke Hermann Rothermund Dietmar 2004 A History of India 4th ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 15481 9 Majumdar R C 2003 1952 Ancient India Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0436 4 Malalasekera Gunapala Piyasena 2002 Encyclopaedia of Buddhism Acala Government of Ceylon Mandal Dhaneshwar 2003 Ayodhya Archaeology After Demolition A Critique of the new and fresh Discoveries Orient Blackswan ISBN 9788125023449 Mookerji Radha Kumud 1962 Asoka 3rd Revised repr ed Delhi Motilal Banarsidass reprint 1995 ISBN 978 81208 058 28 Mookerji Radha Kumud 1988 first published in 1966 Chandragupta Maurya and his times 4th ed Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 0433 3 Obeyesekere Gananath 1980 Doniger Wendy ed Karma and Rebirth in Classical Indian Traditions University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 03923 0 Olivelle Patrick 2013 King Governance and Law in Ancient India Kauṭilya s Arthasastra Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199891825 Raychaudhuri H C 1923 Political History of Ancient India From the Accession of Parikshit to the Extinction of the Gupta Dynasty Oxford University Press 1996 reprint with B N Mukerjee Introduction Raychaudhuri H C 1967 India in the Age of the Nandas Chandragupta and Bindusara in K A Nilakanta Sastri ed Age of the Nandas and Mauryas Second ed Motilal Banarsidass 1988 reprint ISBN 978 81 208 0466 1 Roy Kaushik 2012 Hinduism and the Ethics of Warfare in South Asia From Antiquity to the Present Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 01736 8 Salomon Richard 1998 Indian Epigraphy A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit Prakrit and the other Indo Aryan Languages Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 535666 3 Samuel Geoffrey 2010 The Origins of Yoga and Tantra Indic Religions to the Thirteenth Century Cambridge University Press Sastri Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta 1988 Age of the Nandas and Mauryas Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0466 1 Sen R K 1895 Origin of the Maurya of Magadha and of Chanakya Journal of the Buddhist Text Society of India The Society Singh Upinder 2016 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education ISBN 978 93 325 6996 6 Singh Upinder 2017 Political Violence in Ancient India Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 97527 9 Stoneman Richard 2019 The Greek Experience of India From Alexander to the Indo Greeks Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 18538 5 Thapar Romila 1961 Asoka and the Decline of the Mauryas Oxford University Press Thapar Romila 2004 first published by Penguin in 2002 Early India From the Origins to A D 1300 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24225 8 Thapar Romila 2013 The Past Before Us Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 72651 2 Trautmann Thomas R 1970 Alexander and Nandrus in Justin 15 4 16 Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 51 1 4 Upadhye Adinatha Neminatha 1977 Mahavira and His Teachings Bhagavan Mahavira 2500th Nirvaṇa Mahotsava Samiti Vallely Anne 2018 Kitts Margo ed Martyrdom Self Sacrifice and Self Immolation Religious Perspectives on Suicide Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 065648 5 Varadpande Manohar Laxman 2006 Woman in Indian Sculpture Abhinav ISBN 978 81 7017 474 5 Wiley Kristi L 16 July 2009 The A to Z of Jainism Scarecrow ISBN 978 0 8108 6821 2 Zvelebil Kamil 1973 The Smile of Murugan On Tamil Literature of South India BRILL ISBN 90 04 03591 5Further reading EditBongard Levin Grigory Maksimovich 1985 Mauryan India New Delhi Sterling Publishers OCLC 14395730 Kosmin Paul J 2014 The Land of the Elephant Kings Space Territory and Ideology in Seleucid Empire Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 72882 0 Mani Braj Ranjan 2005 Debrahmanising history dominance and resistance in Indian society Manohar ISBN 978 81 7304 640 7 Roy Kaushik 2015 Warfare in Pre British India 1500BCE to 1740CE Routledge Sagar Krishna Chandra 1992 Foreign Influence on Ancient India Northern Book Centre ISBN 9788172110284External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chandragupta Maurya Wikiquote has quotations related to Chandragupta Maurya Maurya and Sunga Art N R RayChandragupta MauryaMaurya dynastyPreceded byDhana Nanda as king of the Magadha Empire Emperor of the Maurya Empire322 297 BCE Succeeded byBindusara Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chandragupta Maurya amp oldid 1148017556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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