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Chandragupta II

Chandragupta II (r.c. 376-415), also known by his title Vikramaditya, as well as Chandragupta Vikramaditya, was the third ruler of the Gupta Empire in India, and was one of the most powerful emperors of the Gupta dynasty.

Chandragupta II
Vikramaditya, Bhattaraka, Maharajadhiraja
An 8 gram gold coin featuring Chandragupta II astride a caparisoned horse with a bow in his left hand.[1] The name Cha-gu-pta appears in the upper left quadrant.
Gupta Emperor
Reignc. 376 – c. 415 CE
PredecessorSamudragupta, possibly Ramagupta
SuccessorKumaragupta I
SpouseDhruvadevi, Kuberanaga
Issue
DynastyGupta
FatherSamudragupta
MotherDattadevi
ReligionHinduism[2]

Chandragupta continued the expansionist policy of his father Samudragupta, mainly through military conquest. Historical evidence suggests that he defeated the Western Kshatrapas, and extended the Gupta Empire from the Indus River in the west to the Bengal region in the east, and from the Himalayan foothills in the north to the Narmada River in the south. His daughter Prabhavatigupta was a queen of the southern Vakataka kingdom, and he may have had influence in the Vakataka territory during her regency.

The Gupta Empire reached its zenith during the rule of Chandragupta. The Chinese pilgrim Faxian, who visited India during his reign, suggests that he ruled over a peaceful and prosperous kingdom. The legendary figure of Vikramaditya is probably based on Chandragupta II (among other kings), and the noted Sanskrit poet Kalidasa may have been his court poet.

Names and titles

"Chandra" inscriptions
 
 
The name "Chandra" on a coin of Chandragupta II (left), and on the Iron Pillar of Delhi (right). Gupta script: letter "Cha"  , followed by the conjunct consonant "ndra"   formed of the vertical combination of the three letters n   d   and r  .[3][4]
 
The full name "Chandragupta" in Gupta script (Gupta script:     ) Cha-ndra-gu-pta, on coinage.[4]

Chandragupta II was the second ruler of the dynasty to bear the name "Chandragupta", the first being his grandfather Chandragupta I. He was also simply known as "Chandra", as attested by his coins.[5] The Sanchi inscription of his officer Amrakardava states that he was also known as Deva-raja. The records of his daughter Prabhavatigupta, issued as a Vakataka queen, call him Chandragupta as well as Deva-gupta.[6] Deva-shri (IAST: Devaśri) is another variation of this name.[7] The Delhi iron pillar inscription states that king Chandra was also known as "Dhava": if this king Chandra is identified with Chandragupta (see below), it appears that "Dhava" was another name for the king. Another possibility is that "dhava" is a mistake for a common noun "bhava", although this is unlikely, as the rest of the inscription does not contain any errors.[8]

A passage in the Vishnu Purana suggests that major parts of the eastern coast of India - Kosala, Odra, Tamralipta, and Puri - were ruled by the Devarakshitas around the same time as the Guptas. Since it seems unlikely that an obscure dynasty named Devarakshita was powerful enough to control substantial territory during the Gupta period, some scholars, such as Dasharatha Sharma, theorize that "Deva-rakshita" (IAST: Devarakṣita) was another name for Chandragupta II. Others, such as D. K. Ganguly, oppose this theory, arguing that this identification is quite arbitrary, and cannot be explained satisfactorily.[9]

Chandragupta assumed the titles Bhattaraka and Maharajadhiraja, and bore the epithet Apratiratha ("having no equal or antagonist"). The Supiya stone pillar inscription, issued during the reign of his descendant Skandagupta, also calls him "Vikramaditya".[7]

Early life

Chandragupta was a son of Samudragupta and queen Dattadevi, as attested by his own inscriptions.[7] According to the official Gupta genealogy, Chandragupta succeeded his father on the Gupta throne. The Sanskrit play Devichandraguptam, combined with other evidence suggests that he had an elder brother named Ramagupta, who preceded him on the throne. In the play, Ramagupta decides to surrender his queen Dhruvadevi to a Shaka enemy when besieged, but Chandragupta goes to the enemy camp disguised as the queen and kills the enemy. Sometime later, Chandragupta dethrones Ramagupta, and becomes the new king.[10] The historicity of this narrative is debated among modern historians, with some believing it to be based on true historical events, while others dismissing it as a work of fiction.[11][12]

Period of reign

 
The pillar inscribed with the Lakulisa Mathura Pillar Inscription, Mathura recording the installation of two Shiva Lingas by Udita Acharya in the "year 61 following the era of the Guptas in the reign of Chandragupta Vikramaditya, son of Samudragupta" (380 CE). Rangeshwar Temple. Mathura Museum.[13][14] Mathura Museum.

The Mathura pillar inscription of Chandragupta II (as well as some other Gupta inscriptions) mention two dates: several historians have assumed that one of these dates denotes the king's regnal year, while the other date denotes the year of the Gupta calendar era.[15] However, Indologist Harry Falk in 2004 has theorized that the date understood to be the regnal year by the earlier scholars is actually a date of the kālānuvarttamāna system.[16] According to Falk, the kālānuvarttamāna system is a continuation of the Kushana calendar era established by emperor Kanishka, whose coronation Falk dates to 127 CE. The Kushana era restarts counting after a hundred years (e.g. the year after 100 is 1, not 101).[17]

The date portion of the Mathura inscription reads (in IAST):[15]

candragupta-sya vijarajya-saṃvatsa[re] ... kālānuvarttamāna-saṃvatsare ekaṣaṣṭhe 60 ... [pra]thame śukla-divase paṃcāmyaṃ

The letters before the words kālānuvarttamāna-saṃvatsare are abraded in the inscription, but historian D. R. Bhandarkar (1931–1932) reconstructed them as gupta, and translated the term gupta-kālānuvarttamāna-saṃvatsare as "year following the Gupta era". He translated the entire sentence as:[18]

"In the ... year of ... Chandragupta, ... on the fifth of the bright half of the first (Ashadha) of the year 61 following the Gupta era".

Historian D. C. Sircar (1942) restored the missing letters as "[paṃ]cāme" ("fifth"), and concluded that the inscription was dated to the Chandragupta's fifth regnal year.[19] The missing letters have alternatively been read as "prathame" ("first"). According to these interpretations, the inscription is thus dated in year 61 of the Gupta era, and either the first or the fifth regnal year of Chandragupta. Assuming that the Gupta era starts around 319–320 CE, the beginning of Chandragupta's reign can be dated to either 376–377 CE or 380–381 CE.[20]

Falk agrees that the missing letters denote a numerical year, but dismisses Sircar's reading as "mere imagination", pointing out that the missing letters are "abraded beyond recovery".[21] In support of his Kushana era theory, Falk presents four Gupta inscriptions (in chronological order) that mention the term kālānuvarttamāna-saṃvatsare:[22]

Inscription Reigning monarch Dynastic year kālānuvarttamāna year
Mathura pillar Chandragupta II Abraded 61
Lintel Not mentioned Not given 70
Yaksha figure Kumaragupta I 112 5
Buddhist image pedestal Kumaragupta I 121 15

Falk notes that the "dynastic year" in the table above appears to be a year of the Gupta era. The kālānuvarttamāna year cannot be regnal year, because Chandragupta I is not known to have ruled for as long as 61 years. If we assume "61" of the Mathura pillar inscription denotes a year of the Gupta era (as assumed by Bhandarkar, Sircar and other scholars), we must assume that "15" of the Buddhist image pedestal also denotes a year of the Gupta era: this is obviously incorrect, since Kumaragupta I ruled after Chandragupta II. Scholars K.K. Thaplyal and R.C. Sharma, who studied the Buddhist image pedestal inscription, speculated that the scribe had mistakenly interchanged the years 121 and 15, but Falk calls this assumption unnecessary.[22]

According to Falk, the discrepancy can be explained satisfactorily, if we assume that the kālānuvarttamāna era denotes a system that restarts counting after a hundred years. The Yaksha figure inscription is dated to year 112 of the Gupta era (c. 432 CE), which corresponds to the kālānuvarttamāna year 5. Thus, the kālānuvarttamāna era used during Kumaragupta's time must have started in 432-5 = 427 CE. The years mentioned in the Buddhist image pedestal inscription also suggests that the epoch of this era was c. 426-427 CE.[23] Since the kālānuvarttamāna system restarts counting every 100 years, the kālānuvarttamāna era used during the reign of Chandragupta II must have started in 327 CE. Thus, the Mathura inscription can be dated to 327+61 = c. 388 CE.[24] While Falk's theory does not change the Gupta chronology significantly, it implies that the date of the Mathura inscription cannot be used to determine the beginning of Chandragupta's reign.[24]

The Sanchi inscription, dated to 412-413 CE (year 93 of the Gupta era), is the last known dated inscription of Chandragupta.[7] His son Kumaragupta was on the throne by the 415-416 CE (year 96 of the Gupta era), so Chandragupta's reign must have ended sometime during 412-415 CE.[25]

Military career

 
Cave 6 and Cave 8 inscriptions at Udayagiri Caves mention the rule of Chandragupta II.

The Udayagiri inscription of Chandragupta's foreign minister Virasena suggests that the king had a distinguished military career. It states that he "bought the earth", paying for it with his prowess, and reduced the other kings to the status of slaves.[26] His empire seems to have extended from the mouth of the Indus and northern Pakistan in the west to the Bengal region in the east, and from the Himalayan terai region in the north to the Narmada River in the south.[5][27]

Chandragupta's father Samudragupta and his son Kumaragupta I are known to have performed the Ashvamedha horse sacrifice to proclaim their military prowess. In the 20th century, the discovery of a stone image of a horse found near Varanasi, and the misreading of its inscription as "Chandramgu" (taken to be "Chandragupta"), led to speculation that Chandragupta also performed the Ashvamedha sacrifice. However, there is no actual evidence to support this theory.[28]

Western Kshatrapas

Historical and literary evidence suggests that Chandragupta II achieved military successes against the Western Kshatrapas (also known as Shakas), who ruled in west-central India.[29] The Allahabad Pillar inscription of Chandragupta's father Samudragupta names the "Shaka-Murundas" among the kings who tried to appease him.[30][31] It may be possible that Samudragupta reduced the Shakas to a state of subordinate alliance, and Chandragupta completely subjugated them.[32]

Virasena's Udayagiri inscription describes him as a resident of Pataliputra, and states that he came to Udayagiri in Central India with the king who sought to "conquer the whole world". This indicates that Chandragupta had reached Udayagiri in central India during a military campaign. The theory that Chandragupta led an army to Central India is also corroborated by the c. 412–413 CE (Gupta year 93) Sanchi inscription of Amrakardava, who is said to have "acquired victory and fame in many battles and whose livelihood was secured by serving Chandragupta." A c. 401–402 CE (Gupta year 82) inscription of Chandragupta's feudatory Maharaja Sanakanika has also been discovered in Central India. The only important power to have ruled in this region during Chandragupta's period were the Western Kshatrapas, whose rule is attested by their distinct coinage. The coins issued by the Western Kshatrapa rulers abruptly come to end in the last decade of the 4th century.[29] The coins of this type reappear in the second decade of the 5th century, and are dated in the Gupta era, which suggests that Chandragupta subjugated the Western Kshatrapas.[32]

The exact date of Chandragupta's victory is not known, but it can be tentatively dated to sometime between 397 and 409.[33] The last of the 4th century Kshatrapa coins - that of Rudrasimha III - can be dated to the Shaka year 310 or 319 (the coin legend is partially lost), that is 388 or 397.[29] Chandragupta's coins, dated to 409, are similar to the Kshtrapa coins, with the Shakas' Buddhist vihara symbol replaced by the Gupta symbol of Garuda.[33]

Literary evidence also corroborates Chandragupta's victory over the Western Kshatrapas. The Sanskrit play Devichandraguptam, whose historicity is disputed, narrates that Chandragupta's elder brother Ramagupta agreed to surrender his queen Dhruvadevi to a Shaka chief when besieged, but Chandragupta went to the enemy camp disguised as the queen, and killed the Shaka chief.[32] Chandragupta bore the title Vikramaditya, and several Indian legends talk of king Vikramaditya who defeated the Shakas. Several modern scholars have theorized that these legends may be based on Chandragupta's victory over the Shakas.[32]

As a result of his victory over the Western Kshatrapas, Chandragupta must have extended his empire up to the Arabian Sea coast in present-day Gujarat.[32]

Other military victories

 
The iron pillar of Delhi, which features an inscription of king Chandra, identified as Chandragupta II. It was installed as a victory pillar in the Qutb complex by Sultan Iltutmish in the 13th century.[34]
 
The inscription of king Chandra

The iron pillar of Delhi contains an inscription of a king called "Chandra".[35] Modern scholars generally identify this king with Chandragupta II, although this cannot be said with complete certainty.[36]

While alternative identifications have been proposed, there is strong evidence for identifying Chandra of the iron pillar inscription as Chandragupta II:[5]

  • Chandragupta's coins refer to him as "Chandra".[5]
  • According to the iron pillar inscription, Chandra was a devotee of Vishnu.[35] Chandragupta was also a Vaishnavite, and is described as a Bhagvata (devotee of Vishnu) in the Gupta records.[37]
  • The iron pillar is said to have been set up by king Chandra in honour of Vishnu, on a hill named Vishnu-pada, but the king seems to have died shortly before the inscription was engraved, as the inscription states that "the king has quit the earth and gone to the other world". A similar Vishnu-dhvaja (flagpole in honour of Vishnu) was set up the Gupta emperor Skandagupta (a grandson of Chandragupta) after the death of his father Kumaragupta I.[37]
  • According to his Udayagiri inscription, Chandragupta went on a digvijaya ("conquest of all quarters") campaign.[5] He is known to have been a powerful sovereign emperor, and this fits in well with the iron pillar inscription's description of king Chandra as someone who "attained sole supreme sovereignty in the world acquired by his own arm and (enjoyed) for a very long time".[37]
  • The iron pillar inscription states that the southern ocean is "perfumed by the breezes" of Chandra's prowess. This may be a reference to Chandragupta's extension of the Gupta rule to the Arabian Sea after his conquest of the Western Kshatrapa territory. Arabian Sea was located to the south of the Gupta empire, and thus, the term "southern ocean" is applicable to it in this context.[37]
  • The iron pillar inscription states that "his name was Chandra and he was holding the glory of a full moon on his face". This is reminiscent of his descendant Skandagupta's Mandasaur inscription, which describes Chandragupta as "a moon in the galaxy of Gupta kings with the famous name Chandragupta".[7]

The iron pillar inscription credits Chandra with the following victories:[35]

  • Defeated an alliance of enemies in the Vanga country
  • Crossed the "seven faces" of the river Sindhu (Indus) during a war, and defeated the Vahlikas.

Punjab region

If Chandra is identified with Chandragupta, it appears that Chandragupta marched through the Punjab region, and advanced up to the country of the Vahlikas, that is, Balkh in present-day Afghanistan.[36] Some short Sanskrit inscriptions at the Sacred Rock of Hunza (in present-day Pakistan), written in Gupta script, mention the name Chandra. A few of these inscriptions also mention the name Harishena, and one particular inscription mentions Chandra with the epithet "Vikramaditya". Based on the identification of "Chandra" with Chandragupta, and Harishena with the Gupta courtier Harishena, these inscriptions can be considered as further evidence of a Gupta military campaign in the area. However, this identification is not certain, and Chandra of the Hunza inscriptions could have well been a local ruler.[5]

According to Sten Konow, the term "seven faces", mentioned in the iron pillar inscription, refers to the seven mouths of Indus. Historians R. C. Majumdar and K. P. Jayaswal, on the other hand, believe that the term refers to the tributaries of Indus: the five rivers of Punjab (Jhelum, Ravi, Sutlej, Beas, and Chenab), plus possibly the Kabul and the Kunar rivers.[35]

It is quite possible that Chandragupta passed through the Punjab region during this campaign: his political influence in this region is attested to by the use of the Gupta era in an inscription found at Shorkot, and by some coins bearing the name "Chandragupta". However, there is no evidence that Chandragupta annexed Punjab to the Gupta Empire, which suggests that Chandragupta's victory in this region was not a decisive one. There is little evidence of Gupta influence in Punjab after his reign: numismatic evidence suggests that Punjab was ruled by petty chieftains after his death. These chieftains bore Indian names, but issued coins that imitate the Kidarite coinage: they may have been Hinduized foreigners or Indians continuing the usage of foreign-style coinage.[38]

Bengal region

The identification of Chandra with Chandragupta II also suggests Chandragupta achieved victories in the Vanga area in the present-day Bengal region. According to the Allahabad Pillar inscription of his father Samudragupta, the Samatata kingdom of the Bengal region was a Gupta tributary. The Guptas are known to have been ruling Bengal in the early 6th century, although there are no surviving records of the Gupta presence in this region for the intervening period.[38]

It is possible that a large part of the Bengal region was annexed to the Gupta empire by Chandragupta, and that this control continued into the 6th century.[39] The Delhi iron pillar inscription suggests that an alliance of semi-independent chiefs of Bengal unsuccessfully resisted Chandragupta's attempts to extend the Gupta influence in this region.[38]

Personal life and matrimonial alliances

 
Probable image of Chandragupta II, paying homage to Varaha, avatar of Vishnu, in Udayagiri Caves, circa 400.[40]

Gupta records mention Dhruvadevi as Chandragupta's queen, and the mother of his successor Kumaragupta I.[41] The Basarh clay seal mentions Dhruva-svamini as a queen of Chandragupta, and the mother of Govindagupta.[42][43] It is unlikely that Chandragupta had two different queens with similar names: it appears that Dhruvasvamini was most probably another name for Dhruvadevi, and that Govindagupta was a real brother of Kumaragupta.[44]

Chandragupta also married Kuvera-naga (alias Kuberanaga), whose name indicates that she was a princess of the Naga dynasty, which held considerable power in central India before Samudragupta subjugated them. This matrimonial alliance may have helped Chandragupta consolidate the Gupta empire, and the Nagas may have helped him in his war against the Western Kshatrapas.[45]

Prabhavati-gupta, the daughter of Chandragupta and Kuvera-naga, married the Vakataka king Rudrasena II, who ruled in the Deccan region to the south of the Gupta empire.[28] After her husband's death in c. 390, Prabhavati-gupta acted as a regent for her minor sons.[33] In the two copper-plate inscriptions issued during her regency, the names of her Gupta ancestors with their imperial titles appear before the name of the Vakataka king with the lesser title Maharaja. This suggests that the Gupta court may have had influence in the Vakataka administration during her regency.[28] Historians Hermann Kulke and Dietmar Rothermund believe that the Vakataka kingdom was "practically part of the Gupta empire" during her 20-year long regency.[33] The Vakatakas may have supported Chandragupta during his conflict with the Western Kshatrapas.[45]

The Guptas also appear to have entered into a matrimonial alliance with the Kadamba dynasty, the southern neighbours of the Vakatakas. The Talagunda pillar inscription suggests that the daughters of the Kadamba king Kakusthavarman, married into other royal families, including that of the Guptas.[46][45] While Kakusthavarman was a contemporary of Chandragupta's son Kumaragupta I,[46] it is noteworthy that some medieval chiefs of present-day Karnataka (where the Kadambas ruled) claimed descent from Chandragupta.[45] According to the Vikramaditya legends, emperor Vikramaditya (a character believed to be based on Chandragupta) sent his court poet Kalidasa as an ambassador to the lord of Kuntala. While the Kuntala king referred to in this legend has been identified by some scholars with a Vakataka king, it is more likely that he was a Kadamba king, because the Vakataka king did not rule over Kuntala, and was never called the lord of Kuntala.[45]

Administration

 
One of the earliest dated Gupta statues, a Bodhisattva derived from the Kushan style of Mathura art, inscribed "year 64" of the Gupta era, 384 CE, Bodh Gaya.[47]

Several feudatories of Chandragupta are known from historical records:

The following ministers and officers of Chandragupta are known from various historical records:

  • Vira-sena, foreign minister, known from the Udayagiri inscription recording his construction of a Shiva temple[20]
  • Amrakardava, a military officer, known from the Sanchi inscription recording his donations to the local Buddhist monastery[29]
  • Shikhara-svami, a minister; according to historian K. P. Jayaswal's theory, he was the author of the political treatise Kamandakiya Niti[48]

Navaratnas

Jyotirvidabharana (22.10), a treatise attributed to Kalidasa, states that nine famous scholars known as the Navaratnas ("nine gems") attended the court of the legendary Vikramaditya. Besides Kalidasa himself, these included Amarasimha, Dhanvantari, Ghatakarapara, Kshapanaka, Shanku, Varahamihira, Vararuchi, and Vetala Bhatta.[49] However, there is no historical evidence to show that these nine scholars were contemporary figures or proteges of the same king.[50][51] Jyotirvidabharana is considered a literary forgery of a date later than Kalidasa by multiple scholars.[51][49] There is no mention of such "Navaratnas" in earlier literature, and D. C. Sircar calls this tradition "absolutely worthless for historical purposes".[52]

Nevertheless, multiple scholars believe that one of these Navaratnas – Kalidasa – may have indeed flourished during the reign of Chandragupta II. These scholars include William Jones, A. B. Keith, and Vasudev Vishnu Mirashi among others.[53][54] It is possible that Kalidasa was a court poet of Chandragupta.[55]

Religion

 
Chandragupta II is associated with the development of Vaishnavism in India, and the establishment of the Udayagiri Caves with Vaishnava iconography (here Varaha saving the world from chaos).[56] Circa 400.[57]

Many gold and silver coins of Chandragupta, as well the inscriptions issued by him and his successors, describe him as a parama-bhagvata, that is, a devotee of the god Vishnu. One of his gold coins, discovered at Bayana, calls him chakra-vikramah, literally, "[one who is] powerful [due to his possession of the] discus", and shows him receiving a discus from Vishnu.[58]

An Udayagiri inscription records the construction of a Vaishnava cave temple by Chandragupta's feudatory Maharaja Sanakanika, in year 82 of the Gupta era (c. 401-402).[29]

Chandragupta was also tolerant of other faiths. The Udayagiri inscription of Chandragupta's foreign minister Virasena records the construction of a temple dedicated to the god Shambhu (Shiva).[20] An inscription found at Sanchi near Udayagiri records donations to the local Buddhist monastery by his military officer Amrakardava, in year 93 of the Gupta era (c. 412-413).[29]

Faxian's visit

Chinese pilgrim Faxian visited India during the reign of Chandragupta, and spent around six years in the Gupta kingdom.[48] He was mostly interested in Buddhist religious affairs, and did not bother to record the name of the reigning king. His account presents an idealized picture of the Gupta administration, and not everything he states can be taken at face value. However, his description of the kingdom as a peaceful and prosperous one seems to be generally true, attested by the fact that he did not face any brigandage unlike the later Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang.[48]

Faxian describes Madhya-desha ("Middle Kingdom"), the region to the south-east of Mathura, as a populous region with good climate and happy people. He mentions that the citizens were not required to "register their households or attend to any magistrates and their rules".[59][48] Faxian mentions that wicked repeated rebels had their right hand cut off by the king's administration, but otherwise, there was no corporal punishment for crimes: the criminals were only fined, lightly or heavily, according to the severity of the crime.[59][48] According to Faxian, the king's bodyguards and attendants all received salaries.[59]

Faxian mentions that other than the untouchable Chandalas, the people did not consume meat, intoxicating drinks, onions or garlic. The Chandalas lived apart from other people, and struck a piece of wood to announce their presence when they entered a city or a marketplace: this would enable other people to avoid contact with them. Only the Chandalas engaged in the fisheries and hunting, and sold meat. In the general markets, there were no butchers' shops or alcohol dealers, and the people did not keep pigs or fowl.[59] According to historian R. C. Majumdar, Faxian's observations about the people's food habits seem to have been based on his contact with the Buddhist religious community, and may not be applicable to the general public.[6]

Faxian mentions that the people used cowries for buying and selling goods.[59]

Faxian mentions the Pataliputra region as the most prosperous part of the Middle Kingdom, describing its people as benevolent and righteous. He describes an annual Buddhist celebration, which involved a procession of 20 grand carts of Buddhas, the Brahmanas's invitation to the Buddhas to enter the city, and music performances. He mentions that in the cities, the Vaishya chiefs had established centers for dispensing charity and medical help to the destitute. These centres attracted the poor, the orphans, the widowers, the childless, the handicapped, and the sick, who were examined by doctors and given food and medicine until they got better.[59]

Inscriptions

The following inscriptions of Chandragupta have been discovered:

  • Mathura pillar inscription, dated to the year 61 of the Gupta era. The date has been interpreted as c. 380-381 by earlier scholars,[20] but Harry Falk (2004) dates it to 388 (see Period of reign section above).[60]
  • Mathura pillar inscription, undated[7]
  • Udayagiri cave inscription, dated to the year 82 of the Gupta era[7]
  • Udayagiri cave inscription, undated[7]
  • Gadhwa stone inscription, dated to the year 88 of the Gupta era[7]
  • Sanchi stone inscription, dated to the year 93 of the Gupta era[7]
  • Mehrauli iron pillar inscription, undated[7]

Coinage

 
Gold coin of Chandragupta II, with a figure of an archer (obverse), and with a figure of the Indian goddess of good fortune, Shri, seated on a lotus (reverse), Cleveland Museum of Art

Chandragupta continued issuing most of the gold coin types introduced by his father Samudragupta, such as the Sceptre type (rare for Chandragupta II), the Archer type, and the Tiger-Slayer type. However, Chandragupta II also introduced several new types, such as the Horseman type and the Lion-slayer type, both of which were used by his son Kumaragupta I.[61]

Chandragupta's various gold coins depict his martial spirit or peacetime pursuits.[62]

Lion-slayer type
These coins depict Chandragupta slaying a lion, and bear the legend simha-vikrama. Similar coins issued by his father Samudragupta depict the king slaying a tiger, and bear the legend vyaghra-parakramaha.[55] Historian R. C. Majumdar theorizes that Chandragupta's conquest of present-day Gujarat (where the Asiatic lion is found) may have presented him with an opportunity to hunt lions, resulting in the substition of tiger with lion on the imperial coins.[55]
Couch-and-flower type
These coins depict Chandragupta seated on a couch, and holding a flower in his right hand. The legend "rupa-kriti" occurs below the couch. These coins are similar to Samudragupta's coins which depict the king playing a musical instrument.[55]
Rider type
These coins depict the king riding a fully-caparisoned horse.[55]

In addition, Chandragupta II was the first Gupta king to issue silver coins. These coins were intended to replace the silver coinage of the Western Kshatrapas after Chandragupta II defeated them, and were modelled on the Kshatrapa coinage. The main difference was to replace the dynastic symbol of the Kshatrapas (the three-arched hill) by the dynastic symbol of the Guptas (the mythic eagle Garuda). The obverse of these coins depicts a bust of the king, with corrupted Greek legend "OOIHU".[65][66] The reverse features the Brahmi script legend "Chandragupta Vikramaditya, King of Kings, and a devotee of Vishnu", around Garuda, the mythic eagle and dynastic symbol of the Guptas.[67]

Personality

The Udayagiri inscription of Virasena describes Chandragupta as a "king of kings" as well as an ascetic rajadhirajarshi, and declares that his activities were "beyond comprehension".[20]

Identification with the legendary Vikramaditya

 
Vikramaditya goes forth to war, a modern artist's imagination

Vikramaditya is a legendary emperor of ancient India, who is characterised as the ideal king, known for his generosity, courage, and patronage to scholars. A number of historians believe that at least some of the Vikramaditya legends are based on Chandragupta II. These historians include D. R. Bhandarkar, V. V. Mirashi and D. C. Sircar among others.[68][51]

Based on some coins and the Supia pillar inscription, it is believed that Chandragupta II adopted the title "Vikramaditya".[69] The Cambay and Sangli plates of the Rashtrakuta king Govinda IV use the epithet "Sahasanka" for Chandragupta II. The name "Sahasanka" has also been applied to the legendary Vikramaditya.[70]

The legendary Vikramaditya is said to have defeated the Śaka invaders, and was therefore, known as Śakari ("enemy of the Śakas). Chandragupta II conquered Malwa after defeating the Western Kshatrapas (a branch of Śakas); he also expelled the Kushanas from Mathura. His victory over these foreign tribes was probably transposed on upon a fictional character, resulting in the Vikramaditya legends.[71][72]

According to most legends, Vikramaditya had his capital at Ujjain, although some legends mention him as the king of Pataliputra. The Guptas had their capital at Pataliputra. According to D. C. Sircar, Chandragupta II may have defeated the Shaka invaders of Ujjain, and placed his son Govindagupta as a viceroy there. As a result, Ujjain might have become a second capital of the Gupta empire, and subsequently, legends about him (as Vikramaditya) might have developed.[73][74] Guttas of Guttavalal, a minor dynasty based in present-day Karnataka, claimed descent from the imperial Guptas. The Caudadanapura inscription of the Guttas alludes to the legendary Vikramaditya ruling from Ujjayni, and several Gutta royals were named "Vikramaditya". According to Vasundhara Filliozat, their reference to the legendary Vikramaditya is simply because they confused him with Chandragupta II.[75] However, D. C. Sircar sees this as further proof that the legendary Vikramaditya was based on Chandragupta II.[76]

Vikram Samvat

Vikrama Samvat, an Indian calendar era beginning in 57 BCE, is associated with the legendary Vikramaditya. However, this association did not exist before 9th century. The earlier sources call this era by various names, including Kṛṭa, the era of the Malava tribe, or simply, Samvat.[77][49] Scholars such as D. C. Sircar and D. R. Bhandarkar believe that the name of the era changed to "Vikram Samvat" after the reign of Chandragupta II, who had adopted the title Vikramaditya.[78]

References

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  4. ^ a b Allen, John (1914). Catalogue of the coins of the Gupta dynasties. p. 24.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Upinder Singh 2008, p. 480.
  6. ^ a b R. C. Majumdar 1981, p. 63.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Tej Ram Sharma 1989, p. 148.
  8. ^ R. C. Majumdar 1981, pp. 63–64.
  9. ^ Dilip Kumar Ganguly 1987, pp. 5–6.
  10. ^ Upinder Singh 2008, p. 479.
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  13. ^ Ashvini Agrawal 1989, p. 98.
  14. ^ "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in. American Institute of Indian Studies.
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  17. ^ Harry Falk 2004, pp. 168–171.
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  29. ^ a b c d e f g R. C. Majumdar 1981, p. 53.
  30. ^ Ashvini Agrawal 1989, p. 125.
  31. ^ Tej Ram Sharma 1989, p. 77–78.
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  38. ^ a b c R. C. Majumdar 1981, p. 57.
  39. ^ R. C. Majumdar 1981, pp. 57–58.
  40. ^ Becker, Catherine (2010). "Not Your Average Board: The Colossal Varāha at Erāṇ, an Iconographic Innovation". Artibus Asiae. 70 (1): 127. ISSN 0004-3648. JSTOR 20801634.
  41. ^ Ashvini Agrawal 1989, pp. 191–200.
  42. ^ Tej Ram Sharma 1989, p. 111.
  43. ^ Romila Thapar 2013, p. 359.
  44. ^ Tej Ram Sharma 1978, p. 30.
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  46. ^ a b Tej Ram Sharma 1989, p. 174.
  47. ^ Rhi, Ju-Hyung (1994). "From Bodhisattva to Buddha: The Beginning of Iconic Representation in Buddhist Art". Artibus Asiae. 54 (3/4): 223. doi:10.2307/3250056. ISSN 0004-3648. JSTOR 3250056.
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  49. ^ a b c M. Srinivasachariar (1974). History of Classical Sanskrit Literature. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 94–111. ISBN 9788120802841.
  50. ^ Kailash Chand Jain 1972, pp. 162–163.
  51. ^ a b c Vasudev Vishnu Mirashi; Narayan Raghunath Navlekar (1969). Kalidasa: Date, Life And Works. Popular. pp. 8–29. ISBN 978-81-7154-468-4.
  52. ^ D. C. Sircar 1969, pp. 120–123.
  53. ^ Vasudev Vishnu Mirashi and Narayan Raghunath Navlekar (1969). Kālidāsa; Date, Life, and Works. Popular Prakashan. pp. 1–35. ISBN 9788171544684.
  54. ^ Chandra Rajan (2005). The Loom of Time. Penguin UK. pp. 268–274. ISBN 9789351180104.
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  57. ^ a b Curta, Florin; Holt, Andrew (28 November 2016). Great Events in Religion: An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History [3 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 271. ISBN 978-1-61069-566-4.
  58. ^ J. N. Banerjea 1982, p. 781.
  59. ^ a b c d e f Upinder Singh 2008, p. 505.
  60. ^ Harry Falk 2004, pp. 169–173.
  61. ^ Ashvini Agrawal 1989, pp. 24–27.
  62. ^ R. C. Majumdar 1981, pp. 61–62.
  63. ^ "Evidence of the conquest of Saurastra during the reign of Chandragupta II is to be seen in his rare silver coins which are more directly imitated from those of the Western Satraps... they retain some traces of the old inscriptions in Greek characters, while on the reverse, they substitute the Gupta type ... for the chaitya with crescent and star." in Rapson "A catalogue of Indian coins in the British Museum. The Andhras etc.", p.cli
  64. ^ Curta, Florin; Holt, Andrew (2016). Great Events in Religion: An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History [3 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 271. ISBN 978-1-61069-566-4.
  65. ^ "The conquest is indicated by the issue of the new Gupta silver coinage modelled on the previous Saka coinage showing on observe the King's head, Greek script, and dates as on Saka coins" in Early history of Jammu region: pre historic to 6th century A.D. by Raj Kumar p.511
  66. ^ "Evidence of the conquest of Saurastra during the reign of Chandragupta II is to be seen in his rare silver coins which are more directly imitated from those of the Western Satraps... they retain some traces of the old inscriptions in Greek characters, while on the reverse, they substitute the Gupta type (a peacock) for the chaitya with crescent and star." in Rapson "A catalogue of Indian coins in the British Museum. The Andhras etc...", p.cli. Most people now realize that Rapson was mistaken in identifying the central bird as a peacock; rather, it is the mythic eagle Garuda, the dynastic symbol of the Guptas. For example, A.S. Altekar says: "... the three-arched hill in the centre is replaced by Garuda, which was the imperial insignia of the Guptas. The view of earlier writers ... that the bird is a peacock is clearly untenable." in Altekar: The Coinage of the Gupta Empire, Varanasi: Banaras Hindu University, 1957, p. 151.
  67. ^ Mitchiner, Michael (1978). Oriental coins and their values. Vol. 2. Hawkins Publications. 4821–4823.
  68. ^ Kailash Chand Jain 1972, pp. 157, 161.
  69. ^ D. C. Sircar 1969, p. 130.
  70. ^ Kailash Chand Jain 1972, p. 162.
  71. ^ Alf Hiltebeitel (2009). Rethinking India's Oral and Classical Epics. University of Chicago Press. pp. 254–275. ISBN 9780226340555.
  72. ^ Maurice Winternitz; Moriz Winternitz (1963). History of Indian Literature. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 42. ISBN 978-81-208-0056-4.
  73. ^ Kailash Chand Jain 1972, pp. 158–159, 164.
  74. ^ D. C. Sircar 1969, p. 131.
  75. ^ Vasundhara Filliozat (1995). The Temple of Muktēśvara at Cauḍadānapura. Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts / Abhinav. p. 7. ISBN 978-81-7017-327-4.
  76. ^ D. C. Sircar 1969, p. 136.
  77. ^ Ashvini Agrawal 1989, pp. 174–175.
  78. ^ D. C. Sircar 1969, p. 165–166.

Bibliography

  • Ashvini Agrawal (1989). Rise and Fall of the Imperial Guptas. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0592-7.
  • D. C. Sircar (1969). Ancient Malwa And The Vikramaditya Tradition. Munshiram Manoharlal. ISBN 978-8121503488.
  • Dilip Kumar Ganguly (1987). The Imperial Guptas and Their Times. Abhinav. ISBN 978-81-7017-222-2.
  • Harry Falk (2004). "The Kaniṣka era in Gupta Records". Silk Road Art and Archaeology. Institute of Silk Road Studies, Kamakura. 10: 167–176.
  • Hermann Kulke; Dietmar Rothermund (2004). A History of India. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-32920-0.
  • J. N. Banerjea (1982). "Vaishnavism, Saivism and Minor Sects". In R. C. Mujumdar (ed.). A Comprehensive History of India. Vol. III, Part II. Indian History Congress / Orient Longmans.
  • Kailash Chand Jain (1972). Malwa Through the Ages, from the Earliest Times to 1305 A.D. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0824-9.
  • R. C. Majumdar (1981). A Comprehensive History of India. Vol. 3, Part I: A.D. 300-985. Indian History Congress / People's Publishing House. OCLC 34008529.
  • Romila Thapar (2013). The Past Before Us. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-72651-2.
  • Upinder Singh (2008). A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century. Pearson Education India. ISBN 978-81-317-1677-9.
  • Tej Ram Sharma (1989). A Political History of the Imperial Guptas: From Gupta to Skandagupta. Concept. ISBN 978-81-7022-251-4.
  • Tej Ram Sharma (1978). Personal and Geographical Names in the Gupta Inscriptions. Concept. p. 49. OCLC 5413655.

External links

  •   Media related to Chandragupta II at Wikimedia Commons
  • Coins of Chandragupta II

chandragupta, other, uses, chandragupta, also, known, title, vikramaditya, well, chandragupta, vikramaditya, third, ruler, gupta, empire, india, most, powerful, emperors, gupta, dynasty, vikramaditya, bhattaraka, maharajadhirajaan, gram, gold, coin, featuring,. For other uses see Chandragupta Chandragupta II r c 376 415 also known by his title Vikramaditya as well as Chandragupta Vikramaditya was the third ruler of the Gupta Empire in India and was one of the most powerful emperors of the Gupta dynasty Chandragupta IIVikramaditya Bhattaraka MaharajadhirajaAn 8 gram gold coin featuring Chandragupta II astride a caparisoned horse with a bow in his left hand 1 The name Cha gu pta appears in the upper left quadrant Gupta EmperorReignc 376 c 415 CEPredecessorSamudragupta possibly RamaguptaSuccessorKumaragupta ISpouseDhruvadevi KuberanagaIssueKumaragupta I Prabhavatigupta GovindaguptaDynastyGuptaFatherSamudraguptaMotherDattadeviReligionHinduism 2 Chandragupta continued the expansionist policy of his father Samudragupta mainly through military conquest Historical evidence suggests that he defeated the Western Kshatrapas and extended the Gupta Empire from the Indus River in the west to the Bengal region in the east and from the Himalayan foothills in the north to the Narmada River in the south His daughter Prabhavatigupta was a queen of the southern Vakataka kingdom and he may have had influence in the Vakataka territory during her regency The Gupta Empire reached its zenith during the rule of Chandragupta The Chinese pilgrim Faxian who visited India during his reign suggests that he ruled over a peaceful and prosperous kingdom The legendary figure of Vikramaditya is probably based on Chandragupta II among other kings and the noted Sanskrit poet Kalidasa may have been his court poet Contents 1 Names and titles 2 Early life 3 Period of reign 4 Military career 4 1 Western Kshatrapas 4 2 Other military victories 4 2 1 Punjab region 4 2 2 Bengal region 5 Personal life and matrimonial alliances 6 Administration 6 1 Navaratnas 7 Religion 8 Faxian s visit 9 Inscriptions 10 Coinage 11 Personality 12 Identification with the legendary Vikramaditya 12 1 Vikram Samvat 13 References 13 1 Bibliography 14 External linksNames and titles Edit Chandra inscriptions The name Chandra on a coin of Chandragupta II left and on the Iron Pillar of Delhi right Gupta script letter Cha followed by the conjunct consonant ndra formed of the vertical combination of the three letters n d and r 3 4 The full name Chandragupta in Gupta script Gupta script Cha ndra gu pta on coinage 4 Chandragupta II was the second ruler of the dynasty to bear the name Chandragupta the first being his grandfather Chandragupta I He was also simply known as Chandra as attested by his coins 5 The Sanchi inscription of his officer Amrakardava states that he was also known as Deva raja The records of his daughter Prabhavatigupta issued as a Vakataka queen call him Chandragupta as well as Deva gupta 6 Deva shri IAST Devasri is another variation of this name 7 The Delhi iron pillar inscription states that king Chandra was also known as Dhava if this king Chandra is identified with Chandragupta see below it appears that Dhava was another name for the king Another possibility is that dhava is a mistake for a common noun bhava although this is unlikely as the rest of the inscription does not contain any errors 8 A passage in the Vishnu Purana suggests that major parts of the eastern coast of India Kosala Odra Tamralipta and Puri were ruled by the Devarakshitas around the same time as the Guptas Since it seems unlikely that an obscure dynasty named Devarakshita was powerful enough to control substantial territory during the Gupta period some scholars such as Dasharatha Sharma theorize that Deva rakshita IAST Devarakṣita was another name for Chandragupta II Others such as D K Ganguly oppose this theory arguing that this identification is quite arbitrary and cannot be explained satisfactorily 9 Chandragupta assumed the titles Bhattaraka and Maharajadhiraja and bore the epithet Apratiratha having no equal or antagonist The Supiya stone pillar inscription issued during the reign of his descendant Skandagupta also calls him Vikramaditya 7 Early life EditChandragupta was a son of Samudragupta and queen Dattadevi as attested by his own inscriptions 7 According to the official Gupta genealogy Chandragupta succeeded his father on the Gupta throne The Sanskrit play Devichandraguptam combined with other evidence suggests that he had an elder brother named Ramagupta who preceded him on the throne In the play Ramagupta decides to surrender his queen Dhruvadevi to a Shaka enemy when besieged but Chandragupta goes to the enemy camp disguised as the queen and kills the enemy Sometime later Chandragupta dethrones Ramagupta and becomes the new king 10 The historicity of this narrative is debated among modern historians with some believing it to be based on true historical events while others dismissing it as a work of fiction 11 12 Period of reign Edit The pillar inscribed with the Lakulisa Mathura Pillar Inscription Mathura recording the installation of two Shiva Lingas by Udita Acharya in the year 61 following the era of the Guptas in the reign of Chandragupta Vikramaditya son of Samudragupta 380 CE Rangeshwar Temple Mathura Museum 13 14 Mathura Museum The Mathura pillar inscription of Chandragupta II as well as some other Gupta inscriptions mention two dates several historians have assumed that one of these dates denotes the king s regnal year while the other date denotes the year of the Gupta calendar era 15 However Indologist Harry Falk in 2004 has theorized that the date understood to be the regnal year by the earlier scholars is actually a date of the kalanuvarttamana system 16 According to Falk the kalanuvarttamana system is a continuation of the Kushana calendar era established by emperor Kanishka whose coronation Falk dates to 127 CE The Kushana era restarts counting after a hundred years e g the year after 100 is 1 not 101 17 The date portion of the Mathura inscription reads in IAST 15 candragupta sya vijarajya saṃvatsa re kalanuvarttamana saṃvatsare ekaṣaṣṭhe 60 pra thame sukla divase paṃcamyaṃThe letters before the words kalanuvarttamana saṃvatsare are abraded in the inscription but historian D R Bhandarkar 1931 1932 reconstructed them as gupta and translated the term gupta kalanuvarttamana saṃvatsare as year following the Gupta era He translated the entire sentence as 18 In the year of Chandragupta on the fifth of the bright half of the first Ashadha of the year 61 following the Gupta era Historian D C Sircar 1942 restored the missing letters as paṃ came fifth and concluded that the inscription was dated to the Chandragupta s fifth regnal year 19 The missing letters have alternatively been read as prathame first According to these interpretations the inscription is thus dated in year 61 of the Gupta era and either the first or the fifth regnal year of Chandragupta Assuming that the Gupta era starts around 319 320 CE the beginning of Chandragupta s reign can be dated to either 376 377 CE or 380 381 CE 20 Falk agrees that the missing letters denote a numerical year but dismisses Sircar s reading as mere imagination pointing out that the missing letters are abraded beyond recovery 21 In support of his Kushana era theory Falk presents four Gupta inscriptions in chronological order that mention the term kalanuvarttamana saṃvatsare 22 Inscription Reigning monarch Dynastic year kalanuvarttamana yearMathura pillar Chandragupta II Abraded 61Lintel Not mentioned Not given 70Yaksha figure Kumaragupta I 112 5Buddhist image pedestal Kumaragupta I 121 15Falk notes that the dynastic year in the table above appears to be a year of the Gupta era The kalanuvarttamana year cannot be regnal year because Chandragupta I is not known to have ruled for as long as 61 years If we assume 61 of the Mathura pillar inscription denotes a year of the Gupta era as assumed by Bhandarkar Sircar and other scholars we must assume that 15 of the Buddhist image pedestal also denotes a year of the Gupta era this is obviously incorrect since Kumaragupta I ruled after Chandragupta II Scholars K K Thaplyal and R C Sharma who studied the Buddhist image pedestal inscription speculated that the scribe had mistakenly interchanged the years 121 and 15 but Falk calls this assumption unnecessary 22 According to Falk the discrepancy can be explained satisfactorily if we assume that the kalanuvarttamana era denotes a system that restarts counting after a hundred years The Yaksha figure inscription is dated to year 112 of the Gupta era c 432 CE which corresponds to the kalanuvarttamana year 5 Thus the kalanuvarttamana era used during Kumaragupta s time must have started in 432 5 427 CE The years mentioned in the Buddhist image pedestal inscription also suggests that the epoch of this era was c 426 427 CE 23 Since the kalanuvarttamana system restarts counting every 100 years the kalanuvarttamana era used during the reign of Chandragupta II must have started in 327 CE Thus the Mathura inscription can be dated to 327 61 c 388 CE 24 While Falk s theory does not change the Gupta chronology significantly it implies that the date of the Mathura inscription cannot be used to determine the beginning of Chandragupta s reign 24 The Sanchi inscription dated to 412 413 CE year 93 of the Gupta era is the last known dated inscription of Chandragupta 7 His son Kumaragupta was on the throne by the 415 416 CE year 96 of the Gupta era so Chandragupta s reign must have ended sometime during 412 415 CE 25 Military career Edit Cave 6 and Cave 8 inscriptions at Udayagiri Caves mention the rule of Chandragupta II The Udayagiri inscription of Chandragupta s foreign minister Virasena suggests that the king had a distinguished military career It states that he bought the earth paying for it with his prowess and reduced the other kings to the status of slaves 26 His empire seems to have extended from the mouth of the Indus and northern Pakistan in the west to the Bengal region in the east and from the Himalayan terai region in the north to the Narmada River in the south 5 27 Chandragupta s father Samudragupta and his son Kumaragupta I are known to have performed the Ashvamedha horse sacrifice to proclaim their military prowess In the 20th century the discovery of a stone image of a horse found near Varanasi and the misreading of its inscription as Chandramgu taken to be Chandragupta led to speculation that Chandragupta also performed the Ashvamedha sacrifice However there is no actual evidence to support this theory 28 Western Kshatrapas Edit Historical and literary evidence suggests that Chandragupta II achieved military successes against the Western Kshatrapas also known as Shakas who ruled in west central India 29 The Allahabad Pillar inscription of Chandragupta s father Samudragupta names the Shaka Murundas among the kings who tried to appease him 30 31 It may be possible that Samudragupta reduced the Shakas to a state of subordinate alliance and Chandragupta completely subjugated them 32 Virasena s Udayagiri inscription describes him as a resident of Pataliputra and states that he came to Udayagiri in Central India with the king who sought to conquer the whole world This indicates that Chandragupta had reached Udayagiri in central India during a military campaign The theory that Chandragupta led an army to Central India is also corroborated by the c 412 413 CE Gupta year 93 Sanchi inscription of Amrakardava who is said to have acquired victory and fame in many battles and whose livelihood was secured by serving Chandragupta A c 401 402 CE Gupta year 82 inscription of Chandragupta s feudatory Maharaja Sanakanika has also been discovered in Central India The only important power to have ruled in this region during Chandragupta s period were the Western Kshatrapas whose rule is attested by their distinct coinage The coins issued by the Western Kshatrapa rulers abruptly come to end in the last decade of the 4th century 29 The coins of this type reappear in the second decade of the 5th century and are dated in the Gupta era which suggests that Chandragupta subjugated the Western Kshatrapas 32 The exact date of Chandragupta s victory is not known but it can be tentatively dated to sometime between 397 and 409 33 The last of the 4th century Kshatrapa coins that of Rudrasimha III can be dated to the Shaka year 310 or 319 the coin legend is partially lost that is 388 or 397 29 Chandragupta s coins dated to 409 are similar to the Kshtrapa coins with the Shakas Buddhist vihara symbol replaced by the Gupta symbol of Garuda 33 Literary evidence also corroborates Chandragupta s victory over the Western Kshatrapas The Sanskrit play Devichandraguptam whose historicity is disputed narrates that Chandragupta s elder brother Ramagupta agreed to surrender his queen Dhruvadevi to a Shaka chief when besieged but Chandragupta went to the enemy camp disguised as the queen and killed the Shaka chief 32 Chandragupta bore the title Vikramaditya and several Indian legends talk of king Vikramaditya who defeated the Shakas Several modern scholars have theorized that these legends may be based on Chandragupta s victory over the Shakas 32 As a result of his victory over the Western Kshatrapas Chandragupta must have extended his empire up to the Arabian Sea coast in present day Gujarat 32 Other military victories Edit The iron pillar of Delhi which features an inscription of king Chandra identified as Chandragupta II It was installed as a victory pillar in the Qutb complex by Sultan Iltutmish in the 13th century 34 The inscription of king Chandra The iron pillar of Delhi contains an inscription of a king called Chandra 35 Modern scholars generally identify this king with Chandragupta II although this cannot be said with complete certainty 36 While alternative identifications have been proposed there is strong evidence for identifying Chandra of the iron pillar inscription as Chandragupta II 5 Chandragupta s coins refer to him as Chandra 5 According to the iron pillar inscription Chandra was a devotee of Vishnu 35 Chandragupta was also a Vaishnavite and is described as a Bhagvata devotee of Vishnu in the Gupta records 37 The iron pillar is said to have been set up by king Chandra in honour of Vishnu on a hill named Vishnu pada but the king seems to have died shortly before the inscription was engraved as the inscription states that the king has quit the earth and gone to the other world A similar Vishnu dhvaja flagpole in honour of Vishnu was set up the Gupta emperor Skandagupta a grandson of Chandragupta after the death of his father Kumaragupta I 37 According to his Udayagiri inscription Chandragupta went on a digvijaya conquest of all quarters campaign 5 He is known to have been a powerful sovereign emperor and this fits in well with the iron pillar inscription s description of king Chandra as someone who attained sole supreme sovereignty in the world acquired by his own arm and enjoyed for a very long time 37 The iron pillar inscription states that the southern ocean is perfumed by the breezes of Chandra s prowess This may be a reference to Chandragupta s extension of the Gupta rule to the Arabian Sea after his conquest of the Western Kshatrapa territory Arabian Sea was located to the south of the Gupta empire and thus the term southern ocean is applicable to it in this context 37 The iron pillar inscription states that his name was Chandra and he was holding the glory of a full moon on his face This is reminiscent of his descendant Skandagupta s Mandasaur inscription which describes Chandragupta as a moon in the galaxy of Gupta kings with the famous name Chandragupta 7 The iron pillar inscription credits Chandra with the following victories 35 Defeated an alliance of enemies in the Vanga country Crossed the seven faces of the river Sindhu Indus during a war and defeated the Vahlikas Punjab region Edit If Chandra is identified with Chandragupta it appears that Chandragupta marched through the Punjab region and advanced up to the country of the Vahlikas that is Balkh in present day Afghanistan 36 Some short Sanskrit inscriptions at the Sacred Rock of Hunza in present day Pakistan written in Gupta script mention the name Chandra A few of these inscriptions also mention the name Harishena and one particular inscription mentions Chandra with the epithet Vikramaditya Based on the identification of Chandra with Chandragupta and Harishena with the Gupta courtier Harishena these inscriptions can be considered as further evidence of a Gupta military campaign in the area However this identification is not certain and Chandra of the Hunza inscriptions could have well been a local ruler 5 According to Sten Konow the term seven faces mentioned in the iron pillar inscription refers to the seven mouths of Indus Historians R C Majumdar and K P Jayaswal on the other hand believe that the term refers to the tributaries of Indus the five rivers of Punjab Jhelum Ravi Sutlej Beas and Chenab plus possibly the Kabul and the Kunar rivers 35 It is quite possible that Chandragupta passed through the Punjab region during this campaign his political influence in this region is attested to by the use of the Gupta era in an inscription found at Shorkot and by some coins bearing the name Chandragupta However there is no evidence that Chandragupta annexed Punjab to the Gupta Empire which suggests that Chandragupta s victory in this region was not a decisive one There is little evidence of Gupta influence in Punjab after his reign numismatic evidence suggests that Punjab was ruled by petty chieftains after his death These chieftains bore Indian names but issued coins that imitate the Kidarite coinage they may have been Hinduized foreigners or Indians continuing the usage of foreign style coinage 38 Bengal region Edit The identification of Chandra with Chandragupta II also suggests Chandragupta achieved victories in the Vanga area in the present day Bengal region According to the Allahabad Pillar inscription of his father Samudragupta the Samatata kingdom of the Bengal region was a Gupta tributary The Guptas are known to have been ruling Bengal in the early 6th century although there are no surviving records of the Gupta presence in this region for the intervening period 38 It is possible that a large part of the Bengal region was annexed to the Gupta empire by Chandragupta and that this control continued into the 6th century 39 The Delhi iron pillar inscription suggests that an alliance of semi independent chiefs of Bengal unsuccessfully resisted Chandragupta s attempts to extend the Gupta influence in this region 38 Personal life and matrimonial alliances Edit Probable image of Chandragupta II paying homage to Varaha avatar of Vishnu in Udayagiri Caves circa 400 40 Gupta records mention Dhruvadevi as Chandragupta s queen and the mother of his successor Kumaragupta I 41 The Basarh clay seal mentions Dhruva svamini as a queen of Chandragupta and the mother of Govindagupta 42 43 It is unlikely that Chandragupta had two different queens with similar names it appears that Dhruvasvamini was most probably another name for Dhruvadevi and that Govindagupta was a real brother of Kumaragupta 44 Chandragupta also married Kuvera naga alias Kuberanaga whose name indicates that she was a princess of the Naga dynasty which held considerable power in central India before Samudragupta subjugated them This matrimonial alliance may have helped Chandragupta consolidate the Gupta empire and the Nagas may have helped him in his war against the Western Kshatrapas 45 Prabhavati gupta the daughter of Chandragupta and Kuvera naga married the Vakataka king Rudrasena II who ruled in the Deccan region to the south of the Gupta empire 28 After her husband s death in c 390 Prabhavati gupta acted as a regent for her minor sons 33 In the two copper plate inscriptions issued during her regency the names of her Gupta ancestors with their imperial titles appear before the name of the Vakataka king with the lesser title Maharaja This suggests that the Gupta court may have had influence in the Vakataka administration during her regency 28 Historians Hermann Kulke and Dietmar Rothermund believe that the Vakataka kingdom was practically part of the Gupta empire during her 20 year long regency 33 The Vakatakas may have supported Chandragupta during his conflict with the Western Kshatrapas 45 The Guptas also appear to have entered into a matrimonial alliance with the Kadamba dynasty the southern neighbours of the Vakatakas The Talagunda pillar inscription suggests that the daughters of the Kadamba king Kakusthavarman married into other royal families including that of the Guptas 46 45 While Kakusthavarman was a contemporary of Chandragupta s son Kumaragupta I 46 it is noteworthy that some medieval chiefs of present day Karnataka where the Kadambas ruled claimed descent from Chandragupta 45 According to the Vikramaditya legends emperor Vikramaditya a character believed to be based on Chandragupta sent his court poet Kalidasa as an ambassador to the lord of Kuntala While the Kuntala king referred to in this legend has been identified by some scholars with a Vakataka king it is more likely that he was a Kadamba king because the Vakataka king did not rule over Kuntala and was never called the lord of Kuntala 45 Administration Edit One of the earliest dated Gupta statues a Bodhisattva derived from the Kushan style of Mathura art inscribed year 64 of the Gupta era 384 CE Bodh Gaya 47 Several feudatories of Chandragupta are known from historical records Maharaja Sanakanika a feudatory known from the Udayagiri inscription that records his construction of a Vaishnava temple 29 Maharaja Trikamala a feudatory known from a Gaya inscription engraved on a Bodhisattva image 48 Maharaja Shri Vishvamitra Svami a feudaotry known from a seal found at Vidisha 48 Maharaja Svamidasa the ruler of Valkha was also probably a Gupta feudatory if we assume that his inscription is dated in the Gupta calendar era according to another theory his inscription is dated in the Kalachuri calendar era 48 The following ministers and officers of Chandragupta are known from various historical records Vira sena foreign minister known from the Udayagiri inscription recording his construction of a Shiva temple 20 Amrakardava a military officer known from the Sanchi inscription recording his donations to the local Buddhist monastery 29 Shikhara svami a minister according to historian K P Jayaswal s theory he was the author of the political treatise Kamandakiya Niti 48 Navaratnas Edit Jyotirvidabharana 22 10 a treatise attributed to Kalidasa states that nine famous scholars known as the Navaratnas nine gems attended the court of the legendary Vikramaditya Besides Kalidasa himself these included Amarasimha Dhanvantari Ghatakarapara Kshapanaka Shanku Varahamihira Vararuchi and Vetala Bhatta 49 However there is no historical evidence to show that these nine scholars were contemporary figures or proteges of the same king 50 51 Jyotirvidabharana is considered a literary forgery of a date later than Kalidasa by multiple scholars 51 49 There is no mention of such Navaratnas in earlier literature and D C Sircar calls this tradition absolutely worthless for historical purposes 52 Nevertheless multiple scholars believe that one of these Navaratnas Kalidasa may have indeed flourished during the reign of Chandragupta II These scholars include William Jones A B Keith and Vasudev Vishnu Mirashi among others 53 54 It is possible that Kalidasa was a court poet of Chandragupta 55 Religion Edit Chandragupta II is associated with the development of Vaishnavism in India and the establishment of the Udayagiri Caves with Vaishnava iconography here Varaha saving the world from chaos 56 Circa 400 57 Many gold and silver coins of Chandragupta as well the inscriptions issued by him and his successors describe him as a parama bhagvata that is a devotee of the god Vishnu One of his gold coins discovered at Bayana calls him chakra vikramah literally one who is powerful due to his possession of the discus and shows him receiving a discus from Vishnu 58 An Udayagiri inscription records the construction of a Vaishnava cave temple by Chandragupta s feudatory Maharaja Sanakanika in year 82 of the Gupta era c 401 402 29 Chandragupta was also tolerant of other faiths The Udayagiri inscription of Chandragupta s foreign minister Virasena records the construction of a temple dedicated to the god Shambhu Shiva 20 An inscription found at Sanchi near Udayagiri records donations to the local Buddhist monastery by his military officer Amrakardava in year 93 of the Gupta era c 412 413 29 Faxian s visit EditChinese pilgrim Faxian visited India during the reign of Chandragupta and spent around six years in the Gupta kingdom 48 He was mostly interested in Buddhist religious affairs and did not bother to record the name of the reigning king His account presents an idealized picture of the Gupta administration and not everything he states can be taken at face value However his description of the kingdom as a peaceful and prosperous one seems to be generally true attested by the fact that he did not face any brigandage unlike the later Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang 48 Faxian describes Madhya desha Middle Kingdom the region to the south east of Mathura as a populous region with good climate and happy people He mentions that the citizens were not required to register their households or attend to any magistrates and their rules 59 48 Faxian mentions that wicked repeated rebels had their right hand cut off by the king s administration but otherwise there was no corporal punishment for crimes the criminals were only fined lightly or heavily according to the severity of the crime 59 48 According to Faxian the king s bodyguards and attendants all received salaries 59 Faxian mentions that other than the untouchable Chandalas the people did not consume meat intoxicating drinks onions or garlic The Chandalas lived apart from other people and struck a piece of wood to announce their presence when they entered a city or a marketplace this would enable other people to avoid contact with them Only the Chandalas engaged in the fisheries and hunting and sold meat In the general markets there were no butchers shops or alcohol dealers and the people did not keep pigs or fowl 59 According to historian R C Majumdar Faxian s observations about the people s food habits seem to have been based on his contact with the Buddhist religious community and may not be applicable to the general public 6 Faxian mentions that the people used cowries for buying and selling goods 59 Faxian mentions the Pataliputra region as the most prosperous part of the Middle Kingdom describing its people as benevolent and righteous He describes an annual Buddhist celebration which involved a procession of 20 grand carts of Buddhas the Brahmanas s invitation to the Buddhas to enter the city and music performances He mentions that in the cities the Vaishya chiefs had established centers for dispensing charity and medical help to the destitute These centres attracted the poor the orphans the widowers the childless the handicapped and the sick who were examined by doctors and given food and medicine until they got better 59 Inscriptions Edit Sanchi inscription of Chandragupta II The following inscriptions of Chandragupta have been discovered Mathura pillar inscription dated to the year 61 of the Gupta era The date has been interpreted as c 380 381 by earlier scholars 20 but Harry Falk 2004 dates it to 388 see Period of reign section above 60 Mathura pillar inscription undated 7 Udayagiri cave inscription dated to the year 82 of the Gupta era 7 Udayagiri cave inscription undated 7 Gadhwa stone inscription dated to the year 88 of the Gupta era 7 Sanchi stone inscription dated to the year 93 of the Gupta era 7 Mehrauli iron pillar inscription undated 7 Coinage Edit Gold coin of Chandragupta II with a figure of an archer obverse and with a figure of the Indian goddess of good fortune Shri seated on a lotus reverse Cleveland Museum of Art Chandragupta continued issuing most of the gold coin types introduced by his father Samudragupta such as the Sceptre type rare for Chandragupta II the Archer type and the Tiger Slayer type However Chandragupta II also introduced several new types such as the Horseman type and the Lion slayer type both of which were used by his son Kumaragupta I 61 Chandragupta s various gold coins depict his martial spirit or peacetime pursuits 62 Lion slayer type These coins depict Chandragupta slaying a lion and bear the legend simha vikrama Similar coins issued by his father Samudragupta depict the king slaying a tiger and bear the legend vyaghra parakramaha 55 Historian R C Majumdar theorizes that Chandragupta s conquest of present day Gujarat where the Asiatic lion is found may have presented him with an opportunity to hunt lions resulting in the substition of tiger with lion on the imperial coins 55 Couch and flower type These coins depict Chandragupta seated on a couch and holding a flower in his right hand The legend rupa kriti occurs below the couch These coins are similar to Samudragupta s coins which depict the king playing a musical instrument 55 Rider type These coins depict the king riding a fully caparisoned horse 55 Coins of Chandragupta II Obverse of Chhatra type left and Archer type right coins Coin with the king s name in Brahmi script Silver coin in Western Satraps style 15mm 2 1 grams 63 64 57 Various gold coins of Chandragupta II In addition Chandragupta II was the first Gupta king to issue silver coins These coins were intended to replace the silver coinage of the Western Kshatrapas after Chandragupta II defeated them and were modelled on the Kshatrapa coinage The main difference was to replace the dynastic symbol of the Kshatrapas the three arched hill by the dynastic symbol of the Guptas the mythic eagle Garuda The obverse of these coins depicts a bust of the king with corrupted Greek legend OOIHU 65 66 The reverse features the Brahmi script legend Chandragupta Vikramaditya King of Kings and a devotee of Vishnu around Garuda the mythic eagle and dynastic symbol of the Guptas 67 Personality EditThe Udayagiri inscription of Virasena describes Chandragupta as a king of kings as well as an ascetic rajadhirajarshi and declares that his activities were beyond comprehension 20 Identification with the legendary Vikramaditya Edit Vikramaditya goes forth to war a modern artist s imagination Main article Vikramaditya Vikramaditya is a legendary emperor of ancient India who is characterised as the ideal king known for his generosity courage and patronage to scholars A number of historians believe that at least some of the Vikramaditya legends are based on Chandragupta II These historians include D R Bhandarkar V V Mirashi and D C Sircar among others 68 51 Based on some coins and the Supia pillar inscription it is believed that Chandragupta II adopted the title Vikramaditya 69 The Cambay and Sangli plates of the Rashtrakuta king Govinda IV use the epithet Sahasanka for Chandragupta II The name Sahasanka has also been applied to the legendary Vikramaditya 70 The legendary Vikramaditya is said to have defeated the Saka invaders and was therefore known as Sakari enemy of the Sakas Chandragupta II conquered Malwa after defeating the Western Kshatrapas a branch of Sakas he also expelled the Kushanas from Mathura His victory over these foreign tribes was probably transposed on upon a fictional character resulting in the Vikramaditya legends 71 72 According to most legends Vikramaditya had his capital at Ujjain although some legends mention him as the king of Pataliputra The Guptas had their capital at Pataliputra According to D C Sircar Chandragupta II may have defeated the Shaka invaders of Ujjain and placed his son Govindagupta as a viceroy there As a result Ujjain might have become a second capital of the Gupta empire and subsequently legends about him as Vikramaditya might have developed 73 74 Guttas of Guttavalal a minor dynasty based in present day Karnataka claimed descent from the imperial Guptas The Caudadanapura inscription of the Guttas alludes to the legendary Vikramaditya ruling from Ujjayni and several Gutta royals were named Vikramaditya According to Vasundhara Filliozat their reference to the legendary Vikramaditya is simply because they confused him with Chandragupta II 75 However D C Sircar sees this as further proof that the legendary Vikramaditya was based on Chandragupta II 76 Vikram Samvat Edit Vikrama Samvat an Indian calendar era beginning in 57 BCE is associated with the legendary Vikramaditya However this association did not exist before 9th century The earlier sources call this era by various names including Kṛṭa the era of the Malava tribe or simply Samvat 77 49 Scholars such as D C Sircar and D R Bhandarkar believe that the name of the era changed to Vikram Samvat after the reign of Chandragupta II who had adopted the title Vikramaditya 78 References Edit 1910 0403 26 Doniger Wendy 2009 The Hindus An Alternative History p 379 ISBN 9781594202056 Retrieved 24 September 2022 Bandela Prasanna Rao 2003 Coin Splendour A Journey Into the Past Abhinav Publications p 11 ISBN 9788170174271 a b Allen John 1914 Catalogue of the coins of the Gupta dynasties p 24 a b c d e f Upinder Singh 2008 p 480 a b R C Majumdar 1981 p 63 a b c d e f g h i j k Tej Ram Sharma 1989 p 148 R C Majumdar 1981 pp 63 64 Dilip Kumar Ganguly 1987 pp 5 6 Upinder Singh 2008 p 479 D C Sircar 1969 p 139 R C Majumdar 1981 p 51 Ashvini Agrawal 1989 p 98 Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in American Institute of Indian Studies a b Harry Falk 2004 p 169 Harry Falk 2004 p 171 Harry Falk 2004 pp 168 171 Harry Falk 2004 pp 169 170 Harry Falk 2004 p 170 a b c d e R C Majumdar 1981 p 52 Harry Falk 2004 pp 169 171 a b Harry Falk 2004 p 172 Harry Falk 2004 pp 172 173 a b Harry Falk 2004 p 173 R C Majumdar 1981 p 64 R C Majumdar 1981 pp 52 53 Hermann Kulke amp Dietmar Rothermund 2004 p 92 a b c R C Majumdar 1981 p 59 a b c d e f g R C Majumdar 1981 p 53 Ashvini Agrawal 1989 p 125 Tej Ram Sharma 1989 p 77 78 a b c d e R C Majumdar 1981 p 54 a b c d Hermann Kulke amp Dietmar Rothermund 2004 p 91 Eaton Richard M 25 July 2019 India in the Persianate Age 1000 1765 Penguin UK p 37 ISBN 978 0 14 196655 7 a b c d R C Majumdar 1981 p 55 a b R C Majumdar 1981 p 56 a b c d R C Majumdar 1981 p 58 a b c R C Majumdar 1981 p 57 R C Majumdar 1981 pp 57 58 Becker Catherine 2010 Not Your Average Board The Colossal Varaha at Eraṇ an Iconographic Innovation Artibus Asiae 70 1 127 ISSN 0004 3648 JSTOR 20801634 Ashvini Agrawal 1989 pp 191 200 Tej Ram Sharma 1989 p 111 Romila Thapar 2013 p 359 Tej Ram Sharma 1978 p 30 a b c d e R C Majumdar 1981 p 60 a b Tej Ram Sharma 1989 p 174 Rhi Ju Hyung 1994 From Bodhisattva to Buddha The Beginning of Iconic Representation in Buddhist Art Artibus Asiae 54 3 4 223 doi 10 2307 3250056 ISSN 0004 3648 JSTOR 3250056 a b c d e f g h R C Majumdar 1981 p 62 a b c M Srinivasachariar 1974 History of Classical Sanskrit Literature Motilal Banarsidass pp 94 111 ISBN 9788120802841 Kailash Chand Jain 1972 pp 162 163 a b c Vasudev Vishnu Mirashi Narayan Raghunath Navlekar 1969 Kalidasa Date Life And Works Popular pp 8 29 ISBN 978 81 7154 468 4 D C Sircar 1969 pp 120 123 Vasudev Vishnu Mirashi and Narayan Raghunath Navlekar 1969 Kalidasa Date Life and Works Popular Prakashan pp 1 35 ISBN 9788171544684 Chandra Rajan 2005 The Loom of Time Penguin UK pp 268 274 ISBN 9789351180104 a b c d e R C Majumdar 1981 p 61 Curta Florin Holt Andrew 28 November 2016 Great Events in Religion An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History 3 volumes ABC CLIO pp 270 273 ISBN 978 1 61069 566 4 a b Curta Florin Holt Andrew 28 November 2016 Great Events in Religion An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History 3 volumes ABC CLIO p 271 ISBN 978 1 61069 566 4 J N Banerjea 1982 p 781 a b c d e f Upinder Singh 2008 p 505 Harry Falk 2004 pp 169 173 Ashvini Agrawal 1989 pp 24 27 R C Majumdar 1981 pp 61 62 Evidence of the conquest of Saurastra during the reign of Chandragupta II is to be seen in his rare silver coins which are more directly imitated from those of the Western Satraps they retain some traces of the old inscriptions in Greek characters while on the reverse they substitute the Gupta type for the chaitya with crescent and star in Rapson A catalogue of Indian coins in the British Museum The Andhras etc p cli Curta Florin Holt Andrew 2016 Great Events in Religion An Encyclopedia of Pivotal Events in Religious History 3 volumes ABC CLIO p 271 ISBN 978 1 61069 566 4 The conquest is indicated by the issue of the new Gupta silver coinage modelled on the previous Saka coinage showing on observe the King s head Greek script and dates as on Saka coins in Early history of Jammu region pre historic to 6th century A D by Raj Kumar p 511 Evidence of the conquest of Saurastra during the reign of Chandragupta II is to be seen in his rare silver coins which are more directly imitated from those of the Western Satraps they retain some traces of the old inscriptions in Greek characters while on the reverse they substitute the Gupta type a peacock for the chaitya with crescent and star in Rapson A catalogue of Indian coins in the British Museum The Andhras etc p cli Most people now realize that Rapson was mistaken in identifying the central bird as a peacock rather it is the mythic eagle Garuda the dynastic symbol of the Guptas For example A S Altekar says the three arched hill in the centre is replaced by Garuda which was the imperial insignia of the Guptas The view of earlier writers that the bird is a peacock is clearly untenable in Altekar The Coinage of the Gupta Empire Varanasi Banaras Hindu University 1957 p 151 Mitchiner Michael 1978 Oriental coins and their values Vol 2 Hawkins Publications 4821 4823 Kailash Chand Jain 1972 pp 157 161 D C Sircar 1969 p 130 Kailash Chand Jain 1972 p 162 Alf Hiltebeitel 2009 Rethinking India s Oral and Classical Epics University of Chicago Press pp 254 275 ISBN 9780226340555 Maurice Winternitz Moriz Winternitz 1963 History of Indian Literature Motilal Banarsidass p 42 ISBN 978 81 208 0056 4 Kailash Chand Jain 1972 pp 158 159 164 D C Sircar 1969 p 131 Vasundhara Filliozat 1995 The Temple of Muktesvara at Cauḍadanapura Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts Abhinav p 7 ISBN 978 81 7017 327 4 D C Sircar 1969 p 136 Ashvini Agrawal 1989 pp 174 175 D C Sircar 1969 p 165 166 Bibliography Edit Ashvini Agrawal 1989 Rise and Fall of the Imperial Guptas Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0592 7 D C Sircar 1969 Ancient Malwa And The Vikramaditya Tradition Munshiram Manoharlal ISBN 978 8121503488 Dilip Kumar Ganguly 1987 The Imperial Guptas and Their Times Abhinav ISBN 978 81 7017 222 2 Harry Falk 2004 The Kaniṣka era in Gupta Records Silk Road Art and Archaeology Institute of Silk Road Studies Kamakura 10 167 176 Hermann Kulke Dietmar Rothermund 2004 A History of India Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 32920 0 J N Banerjea 1982 Vaishnavism Saivism and Minor Sects In R C Mujumdar ed A Comprehensive History of India Vol III Part II Indian History Congress Orient Longmans Kailash Chand Jain 1972 Malwa Through the Ages from the Earliest Times to 1305 A D Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0824 9 R C Majumdar 1981 A Comprehensive History of India Vol 3 Part I A D 300 985 Indian History Congress People s Publishing House OCLC 34008529 Romila Thapar 2013 The Past Before Us Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 72651 2 Upinder Singh 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education India ISBN 978 81 317 1677 9 Tej Ram Sharma 1989 A Political History of the Imperial Guptas From Gupta to Skandagupta Concept ISBN 978 81 7022 251 4 Tej Ram Sharma 1978 Personal and Geographical Names in the Gupta Inscriptions Concept p 49 OCLC 5413655 External links Edit India portal History portal Monarchy portal Biography portal Media related to Chandragupta II at Wikimedia Commons Coins of Chandragupta II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chandragupta II amp oldid 1135423110, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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