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Mahajanapadas

The Mahājanapadas (Sanskrit: great realm, from maha, "great", and janapada, "foothold of the people") were sixteen kingdoms or oligarchic republics that existed in ancient India from the sixth to fourth centuries BCE, during the second urbanisation period.[2]

Mahājanapadas
c. 600 BCEc. 345 BCE
Map of the 16 Mahājanapadas.[1]
CapitalVarious
Common languagesPali, Prakrits, and Sanskrit
Religion
Ancient Hinduism
Śramaṇa (Buddhism and Jainism)
GovernmentRepublics (gaṇasaṅghas)
Monarchies
Historical eraIron Age
• Established
c. 600 BCE
• Disestablished
c. 345 BCE

History edit

The 6th–5th centuries BCE are often regarded as a major turning point in early Indian history. During this period, India's first large cities since the demise of the Indus Valley civilization arose. It was also the time of the rise of sramana movements (including Buddhism and Jainism), which challenged the religious orthodoxy of the Vedic period.

Two of the Mahājanapadas were most probably gaṇasaṅghas (oligarchic republics), and others had forms of monarchy. Ancient Buddhist texts like the Anguttara Nikaya[3] make frequent reference to sixteen great kingdoms and republics that had developed and flourished in a belt stretching from Gandhara in the northwest to Anga in the eastern part of the Indian subcontinent. They included parts of the trans-Vindhyan region,[4] and all had developed prior to the rise of Buddhism in India.[5]

Archaeologically, this period has been identified as corresponding in part to the Northern Black Polished Ware culture.[6]

Overview edit

 
Pottery of the Northern Black Polished Ware culture (c. 500–200 BCE)

The term "Janapada" literally means the foothold of a people. The fact that Janapada is derived from Jana points to an early stage of land-taking by the Jana people for a settled way of life. This process of settlement on land had completed its final stage prior to the times of the Buddha and Pāṇini. The Pre-Buddhist northern Indian sub-continent was divided into several Janapadas, demarcated from each other by boundaries. In Pāṇini's "Ashtadhyayi", Janapada stands for country and Janapadin for its citizenry. Each of these Janapadas was named after the Kshatriya people (or the Kshatriya Jana) who had settled therein.[7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14] Buddhist and other texts only incidentally refer to sixteen great nations (Solasa Mahajanapadas) that existed prior to the time of the Buddha. They do not give any connected history except in the case of Magadha. The Buddhist Anguttara Nikaya, at several places,[15] gives a list of sixteen great nations:

Another Buddhist text, the Digha Nikaya, mentions twelve Mahajanapadas from the above list and omits four of them (Assaka, Avanti, Gandhara, and Kamboja).[16]

Chulla-Niddesa, another ancient text of the Buddhist canon, adds Kalinga to the list and substitutes Yona for Gandhara, thus listing the Kamboja and the Yona as the only Mahajanapadas from Uttarapatha.[17][18]

The Vyākhyāprajñapti (or the Bhagavati Sutra), a sutra of Jainism, gives a different list of sixteen Mahajanapadas:

  1. Anga
  2. Banga (Vanga)
  3. Magadha
  4. Malaya
  5. Malavaka
  6. Accha
  7. Vaccha
  8. Kochcha
  9. Padha
  10. Ladha (Radh or Lata)
  11. Bajji (Vajji)
  12. Moli (Malla)
  13. Kasi
  14. Kosala
  15. Avaha
  16. Sambhuttara
  17. Ruhma

The author of the Bhagavati Sutra (or the Vyākhyāprajñapti) has a focus on the countries of Madhydesa and of the far east and south only. He omits the nations from Uttarapatha like the Kamboja and Gandhara. The more extended horizon of the Bhagvati and the omission of all countries from Uttarapatha "clearly shows that the Bhagvati list is of later origin and therefore less reliable."[19]

List of Mahajanapadas edit

Aṅga edit

The first reference to the Angas is found in the Atharvaveda where they find mention along with the Magadhas, Gandharis and the Mujavats, apparently as a despised people. The Jaina Prajnapana ranks Angas and Vangas in the first group of Aryan people. It mentions the principal cities of ancient India.[20] It was also a great center of trade and commerce and its merchants regularly sailed to distant Suvarnabhumi. Anga was annexed by Magadha in the time of Bimbisara. This was the one and only conquest of Bimbisara.

Aśmaka edit

The country of Assaka or the Ashmaka tribe was located in Dakshinapatha or southern India. It included areas in present-day Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and Maharashtra.[21] In Gautama Buddha's time, many of the Assakas were located on the banks of the Godavari River (south of the Vindhya mountains). The capital of the Assakas was Potana or Potali, which corresponds present-day Bodhan in Telangana and Paudanya of Mahabharata.[22] In Maharashtra its capital is located in Potali which corresponds to present day Nandura, Buldhana district. The Ashmakas are also mentioned by Pāṇini. They are placed in the north-west in the Markendeya Purana and the Brhat Samhita. The river Godavari separated the country of the Assakas from that of the Mulakas (or Alakas). The country of Assaka lay outside the pale of Madhyadesa. It was located on a southern high road, the Dakshinapatha. At one time, Assaka included Mulaka and abutted Avanti.[23]

Avanti edit

 
Silver coin of Avanti mahajanapada (4th century BCE)

The country of the Avantis was an important kingdom of western India and was one of the four great monarchies in India in the post era of Mahavira and Buddha, the other three being Kosala, Vatsa and Magadha. Avanti was divided into north and south by the river Narmada. Initially, Mahishamati (Mahissati) was the capital of Southern Avanti, and Ujjaini (Sanskrit: Ujjayini) was of northern Avanti, but at the times of Mahavira and Buddha, Ujjaini was the capital of integrated Avanti. The country of Avanti roughly corresponded to modern Malwa, Nimar and adjoining parts of today's Madhya Pradesh. Both Mahishmati and Ujjaini stood on the southern high road called Dakshinapatha which extended from Rajagriha to Pratishthana (modern Paithan). Avanti was an important centre of Buddhism and some of the leading theras and theris were born and resided there. King Nandivardhana of Avanti was defeated by king Shishunaga of Magadha. Avanti later became part of the Magadhan empire.[24]

Chedi edit

The Chedis, Chetis or Chetyas had two distinct settlements of which one was in the mountains of Nepal and the other in Bundelkhand near Kausambi. According to old authorities, Chedis lay near Yamuna midway between the kingdom of Kurus and Vatsas. In the mediaeval period, the southern frontiers of Chedi extended to the banks of the river Narmada. Sotthivatnagara, the Sukti or Suktimati of Mahabharata, was the capital of Chedi. The Chedis were an ancient people of India and are mentioned in the Rigveda, with their king Kashu Chaidya.[25]

The location of the capital city, Suktimati, has not been established with certainty. Historian Hem Chandra Raychaudhuri and F. E. Pargiter believed that it was in the vicinity of Banda, Uttar Pradesh.[25] Archaeologist Dilip Kumar Chakrabarti has proposed that Suktimati can be identified as the ruins of a large early historical city, at a place with the modern-day name Itaha, on the outskirts of Rewa, Madhya Pradesh.[26]

Gandhāra edit

The wool of the Gandharis is referred to in the Rigveda. The Gandharas and their king figure prominently as strong allies of the Kurus against the Pandavas in the Mahabharata war. The Gandharas were furious people, well-trained in the art of war. According to Puranic traditions, this Janapada was founded by Gandhara, son of Aruddha, a descendant of Yayati. The princes of this country are said to have come from the line of Druhyu who was a famous king of the Rigvedic period and one of the five sons of king Yayati of lunar dynasty. The river Indus watered the lands of Gandhara. Taksashila and Pushkalavati, the two cities of this Mahajanapada, are said to have been named after Taksa and Pushkara, the two sons of Bharata, a prince of Ayodhya and younger brother of Lord Rama. According to Vayu Purana (II.36.107), the Gandharas were destroyed by Pramiti (a.k.a. Kalika) at the end of Kali Yuga. Pāṇini mentioned both the Vedic form Gandhari as well as the later form Gandhara in his Ashtadhyayi. The Gandhara kingdom sometimes also included Kashmira.[28] Hecataeus of Miletus (549-468) refers to Kaspapyros (Kasyapura or Purushapura, i.e., modern day Peshawar) as a Gandharic city. According to Gandhara Jataka, at one time, Gandhara formed a part of the kingdom of Kashmir. The Jataka also gives another name Chandahara for Gandhara.

Gandhara Mahajanapada of Buddhist traditions included territories of east Afghanistan, and north-west of the Panjab (modern districts of Peshawar (Purushapura) and Rawalpindi). Its later capital was Taksashila (Prakrit for Taxila). The Taksashila University was a renowned centre of learning in ancient times, where scholars from all over the world came to seek higher education. Pāṇini, the Indian genius of grammar and Kautiliya are the world-renowned products of Taxila University. King Pukkusati or Pushkarasarin of Gandhara in the middle of the 6th century BCE was the contemporary of king Bimbisara of Magadha. Gandhara was located on the grand northern high road (Uttarapatha) and was a centre of international commercial activities. According to one group of scholars, the Gandharas and Kambojas were cognate people.[29][30][31] It is also contended that the Kurus, Kambojas, Gandharas and Bahlikas were cognate people.[32] According to Dr T. L. Shah, the Gandhara and Kamboja were nothing but two provinces of one empire and were located coterminously, hence influencing each other's language.[33] Naturally, they may have once been a cognate people.[34] Gandhara was often linked politically with the neighboring regions of Kashmir and Kamboja.[35]

Kamboja edit

Kambojas are also included in the Uttarapatha. In ancient literature, the Kamboja is variously associated with the Gandhara, Darada and the Bahlika (Bactria). Ancient Kamboja is known to have comprised regions on either side of the Hindukush. The original Kamboja was located in eastern Oxus country as neighbor to Bahlika, but with time, some clans of the Kambojas appear to have crossed the Hindukush and planted colonies on its southern side also. These latter Kambojas are associated with the Daradas and Gandharas in Indian literature and also find mention in the Edicts of Ashoka. The evidence in the Mahabharata and in Ptolemy's Geography distinctly supports two Kamboja settlements.[36] The cis-Hindukush region from Nurestan up to Rajauri in southwest of Kashmir sharing borders with the Daradas and the Gandharas constituted the Kamboja country.[37] The capital of Kamboja was probably Rajapura (modern Rajori) in the south-west of Kashmir. The Kamboja Mahajanapada of the Buddhist traditions refers to this cis-Hindukush branch of ancient Kambojas.[38]

The trans-Hindukush region including the Pamirs and Badakhshan which shared borders with the Bahlikas (Bactria) in the west and the Lohas and Rishikas of Sogdiana/Fergana in the north, constituted the Parama-Kamboja country.[39] The trans-Hindukush branch of the Kambojas remained pure Iranian but a large section of the Kambojas of cis-Hindukush appears to have come under Indian cultural influence. The Kambojas are known to have had both Iranian as well as Indian affinities.[40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49][50]

The Kambojas were also a well known republican people since Epic times. The Mahabharata refers to several gaṇaḥ (or Republics) of the Kambojas.[51] Kautiliya's Arthashastra[52] attestes the Kambojas republican character and Ashoka's Edict No. XIII also testifies the presence of the Kambojas along with the Yavanas.[53] Pāṇini's Sutras,[54] though tend to convey that the Kamboja of Pāṇini was a Kshatriya monarchy, but "the special rule and the exceptional form of derivative" he gives to denote the ruler of the Kambojas implies that the king of Kamboja was a titular head (king consul) only.[55] According to Buddhist texts, the first fourteen of the above Mahajanapadas belong to Majjhimadesa (Mid India) while the last two belong to Uttarapatha or the north-west division of Jambudvipa.

In a struggle for supremacy that followed in the 6th/5th century BCE, the growing state of the Magadhas emerged as the predominant power in ancient India, annexing several of the Janapadas of the Majjhimadesa. A bitter line in the Puranas laments that Magadhan emperor Mahapadma Nanda exterminated all Kshatriyas, none worthy of the name Kshatriya being left thereafter. This refers to the Kasis, Kosalas, Kurus, Panchalas, Vatsyas and other neo-Vedic tribes of the east Panjab of whom nothing was ever heard except in the legend and poetry. (The Nandas usurped the throne of Shishunaga dynasty c. 345 BCE, thus founding the Nanda Empire.)[56]

The Kambojans and Gandharans, however, never came into direct contact with the Magadhan state until Chandragupta and Kautiliya arose on the scene. But these nations also fell prey to the Achaemenids of Persia during the reign of Cyrus (558–530 BCE) or in the first year of Darius. Kamboja and Gandhara formed the twentieth and richest satrapy of the Achaemenid Empire. Cyrus I is said to have destroyed the famous Kamboja city called Kapisi (modern Begram) in Paropamisade.

Kāśi edit

The kingdom was located in the region around its capital Varanasi, bounded by the Varuna and Asi rivers in the north and south which gave Varanasi its name. Before Buddha, Kasi was the most powerful of the sixteen Mahajanapadas. Several jataka tales bear witness to the superiority of its capital over other cities in India and speak highly of its prosperity and opulence. These stories tell of the long struggle for supremacy between Kashi and the three kingdoms of Kosala, Anga and Magadha. Although King Brihadratha of Kashi conquered Kosala, Kashi was later incorporated into Kosala by King Kansa during Buddha's time. The Kashis along with the Kosalas and Videhans find mention in Vedic texts and appear to have been a closely allied people. The Matsya Purana and Alberuni spell Kashi as Kausika and Kaushaka respectively. All other ancient texts read Kashi.[citation needed]

Kosala edit

 
Silver coins of Kosala mahajanapada (c. 525–465 BCE)

The country of Kosala was located to the north-west of Magadha, with its capital at Ayodhya. Its territory corresponded to the modern Awadh (or Oudh) in Central and Eastern Uttar Pradesh. It had the river Ganges for its southern, the river Gandak (Narayani) for its eastern, and the Himalaya mountains for its northern boundary.

 
Procession of Prasenajit of Kosala leaving Sravasti to meet the Buddha, Sanchi.[57]

Later, the kingdom was ruled by the famous king Prasenajit during the era of Mahavira and Buddha, followed by his son Vidudabha (Virudhaka). King Prasenajit was highly educated. His position was further improved by a matrimonial alliance with Magadha: his sister was married to Bimbisara and part of Kasi was given as dowry. There was, however, a struggle for supremacy between king Pasenadi (Prasenajit) and king Ajatashatru of Magadha which was finally settled once the confederation of Liccavis became conquered by Magadha. Kosala was ultimately merged into Magadha when Vidudabha was Kosala's ruler. Ayodhya, Saketa, Banaras, and Sravasti were the chief cities of Kosala.[citation needed]

Kuru edit

 
Silver coin of Kuru mahajanapada (4th century BCE)

The Puranas trace the origin of Kurus from the Puru-Bharata family. Kuru was born after 25 generations of Puru's dynasty, and after 15 generations of Kuru, Kauravas and Pandavas were born. Aitareya Brahmana locates the Kurus in Madhyadesha and also refers to the Uttarakurus as living beyond the Himalayas. According to the Buddhist text Sumangavilasini,[58] the people of Kururashtra (the Kurus) came from the Uttarakuru. Vayu Purana attests that Kuru, son of Samvarsana of the Puru lineage, was the eponymous ancestor of the Kurus and the founder of Kururashtra (Kuru Janapada) in Kurukshetra. The country of the Kurus roughly corresponded to the modern Thanesar, state of Delhi, and Meerut district of Uttar Pradesh. According to the Jatakas, the capital of the Kurus was Indraprastha (Indapatta) near modern Delhi which extended seven leagues. At Buddha's time, the Kuru country was ruled by a titular chieftain (king consul) named Korayvya. The Kurus of the Buddhist period did not occupy the same position as they did in the Vedic period but they continued to enjoy their ancient reputation for deep wisdom and sound health. The Kurus had matrimonial relations with the Yadavas, the Bhojas, Trigratas, and the Panchalas. There is a Jataka reference to king Dhananjaya, introduced as a prince from the race of Yudhishtra. Though a well known monarchical people in the earlier period, the Kurus are known to have switched to a republican form of government during the 6th to 5th centuries BCE. In the 4th century BCE, Kautiliya's Arthashastra also attests the Kurus following the Rajashabdopajivin (king consul) constitution.

Magadha edit

 
Silver coin of Magadha mahajanapada (c. 350 BCE)

The Magadha was one of the most prominent and prosperous of mahajanapadas.[citation needed]

 
King Bimbisara of Magadha visits the Bamboo Garden (Venuvana) in Rajagriha; artwork from Sanchi.

The kingdom of the Magadhas roughly corresponded to the modern districts of Patna and Gaya in southern Bihar and parts of Bengal in the east. The capital city of Pataliputra was bound in the north by the river Ganges, in the east by the river Champa, in the south by the Vindhya mountains and in the west by the river Sona. During Buddha's time its boundaries included Anga. Its earliest capital was Girivraja or Rajagaha (modern Rajgir in the Nalanda district of Bihar). The other names for the city were Magadhapura, Brihadrathapura, Vasumati, Kushagrapura and Bimbisarapuri. It was an active center of Jainism in ancient times. The first Buddhist Council was held in Rajagaha in the Vaibhara Hills. Later on, Pataliputra became the capital of Magadha.[citation needed]

Malla edit

 
Conjectural reconstruction of the main gate of Kushinagar, city of the Mallakas, circa 500 BCE adapted from a relief at Sanchi.
 
City of Kushinagar in the 5th century BCE according to a 1st-century BCE frieze in Sanchi Stupa 1 Southern Gate.

The Mallakas are frequently mentioned in Buddhist and Jain works. They were a powerful people dwelling in Northern India. According to Mahabharata, Panduputra Bhimasena is said to have conquered the chief of the Mallakas in the course of his expedition in Eastern India. During the Buddhist period, the Mallakas Kshatriya were a republican people with their dominion consisting of nine territories[59] corresponding to the nine confederated clans. These republican states were known as gaṇasaṅghas. Two of these confederations – one with Kushinagar (modern Kasia near Gorakhpur) as its capital and the second with Pava (modern Fazilnagar, 20 kilometres (12 mi) southeast of Kushinagar) as the capital – had become very important at the time of Buddha. Kuśināra is very important in the history of Buddhism since Lord Buddha took last meal at Pava. Buddha was taken ill at Pava and died at Kusinara. It is widely believed that Lord Gautam died at the courtyard of King Sastipal Mall of Kushinagar. Kushinagar is now the centre of the Buddhist pilgrimage circle which is being developed by the tourism development corporation of Uttar Pradesh.

The Mallakas, like the Licchavis, are mentioned by Manusmriti as Vratya Kshatriyas. They are called Vasishthas (Vasetthas) in the Mahapparnibbana Suttanta. The Mallakas originally had a monarchical form of government but later they switched to one of Samgha (republic), the members of which called themselves rajas. The Mallakas appeared to have formed an alliance with the Licchhavis for self-defense but lost their independence not long after Buddha's death and their dominions were annexed to the Magadhan empire.[citation needed]

 
Mallaka defending the city of Kushinagar, as depicted at Sanchi. Malla was an ancient Indian republic (gaṇasaṅghas) mentioned in the Anguttara Nikaya.[60]

Matsya edit

The country of the Matsya or Macchā tribe lay to the south of the Kurus and west of the Yamuna, which separated them from the Panchalas. It roughly corresponded to the former state of Jaipur in Rajasthan, and included the whole of Alwar with portions of Bharatpur. The capital of Matsya was at Viratanagara (modern Bairat) which is said to have been named after its founder king Virata. In Pali literature, the Matsyas are usually associated with the Surasenas. The western Matsya was the hill tract on the north bank of the Chambal. A branch of Matsya is also found in later days in the Vizagapatam region. The Matsyas had not much political importance of their own during the time of Buddha.[citation needed]

Pañcāla edit

 
Coin of the Panchalas of Adhichhatra (75-50 BCE).
Obv Indra seated facing on pedestal, holding bifurcated object.
Rev Idramitrasa in Brahmi, Panchala symbols.

The Panchalas occupied the country to the east of the Kurus between the mountains and river Ganges. It roughly corresponded to modern Budaun, Farrukhabad and the adjoining districts of Uttar Pradesh. The country was divided into Uttara-Panchala and Dakshina-Panchala. The northern Panchala had its capital at Adhichhatra or Chhatravati (modern Ramnagar in the Bareilly District), while southern Panchala had its capital at Kampilya or Kampil in the Farrukhabad District. The famous city of Kanyakubja or Kanauj was situated in the kingdom of Panchala. Originally a monarchical clan, the Panchals appear to have switched to republican corporation in the 6th and 5th centuries BCE. In the 4th century BCE, Kautiliya's Arthashastra also attests the Panchalas as following the Rajashabdopajivin (king consul) constitution.[citation needed]

Śūrasena edit

 
Silver coin of Surasena mahajanapada (5th century BCE).

The country of the Surasenas lay to the east of Matsya and west of Yamuna. This corresponds roughly to the Brij region of Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and Rajasthan. and Gwalior region of Madhya Pradesh. It had its capital at Madhura or Mathura. Avantiputra, the king of Surasena, was the first among the chief disciples of Buddha, through whose help Buddhism gained ground in Mathura country. The Andhakas and Vrishnis of Mathura/Surasena are referred to in the Ashtadhyayi of Pāṇini. In Kautiliya's Arthashastra, the Vrishnis are described as sangha or republic. The Vrishnis, Andhakas and other allied tribes of the Shoorsaini formed a sangha and Vasudeva (Krishna) is described as the sangha-mukhya. Mathura, the capital of Surasena, was also known at the time of Megasthenes as the centre of Krishna worship. The Surasena kingdom had lost its independence on annexation by the Magadhan empire.[citation needed]

Vṛji edit

 
Ananda Stupa, built by the Licchavis at Vaishali, which served as the capital of the Vajjika League, one of the world's earliest republics (gaṇasaṅgha).

Vajji or Vṛji was a confederacy of neighbouring clans including the Licchavis and one of the principal mahājanapadas of Ancient India. The area they ruled constitutes the region of Mithila in Nepal and northern Bihar and their capital was the city of Vaishali.[61]

Both the Buddhist text Anguttara Nikaya and the Jaina text Bhagavati Sutra (Saya xv Uddesa I) included Vajji in their lists of solasa (sixteen) mahājanapadas.[62] The name of this mahājanapada was derived from one of its ruling clans, the Vṛjis. The Vajji state is indicated to have been a republic. This clan is mentioned by Pāṇini, Chanakya and Xuanzang.[63]

Vatsa (or Vaṃsa) edit

The Vatsas or Vamsas are called to be a branch of the Kurus. The Vatsa or Vamsa country corresponded with the territory of modern Allahabad in Uttar Pradesh. It had a monarchical form of government with its capital at Kausambi (identified with the village Kosam, 38 miles from Allahabad).[64] Kausambi was a very prosperous city where a large number of wealthy merchants resided. It was the most important entrepôt of goods and passengers from the north-west and south. Udayana was the ruler of Vatsa in the 6th-5th century BCE. He was very powerful, warlike and fond of hunting. Initially king Udayana was opposed to Buddhism, but later became a follower of Buddha and made Buddhism the state religion. Udayana's mother, Queen Mrigavati, is notable for being one of the earliest known female rulers in Indian history.

See also edit

References edit

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  29. ^ Revue des etudes grecques 1973, p. 131, Ch-Em Ruelle, Association pour l'encouragement des etudes grecques en France.
  30. ^ Early Indian Economic History, 1973, pp. 237, 324, Rajaram Narayan Saletore.
  31. ^ Myths of the Dog-man, 199, p. 119, David Gordon White; Journal of the Oriental Institute, 1919, p 200; Journal of Indian Museums, 1973, p 2, Museums Association of India; The Pāradas: A Study in Their Coinage and History, 1972, p 52, Dr B. N. Mukherjee - Pāradas; Journal of the Department of Sanskrit, 1989, p 50, Rabindra Bharati University, Dept. of Sanskrit- Sanskrit literature; The Journal of Academy of Indian Numismatics & Sigillography, 1988, p 58, Academy of Indian Numismatics and Sigillography - Numismatics; Cf: Rivers of Life: Or Sources and Streams of the Faiths of Man in All Lands, 2002, p. 114, J. G. R. Forlong.
  32. ^ Journal of the Oriental Institute, 1919, p 265, Oriental Institute (Vadodara, India) - Oriental studies; For Kuru-Kamboja connections, see Dr Chandra Chakraberty's views in: Literary history of ancient India in relation to its racial and linguistic affiliations, pp. 14,37, Vedas; The Racial History of India, 1944, p. 153, Chandra Chakraberty - Ethnology; Paradise of Gods, 1966, p 330, Qamarud Din Ahmed - Pakistan.
  33. ^ Ancient India, History of India for 1000 years, four Volumes, Vol I, 1938, pp. 38, 98 by Dr T. L. Shah.
  34. ^ James Fergusson observes: "In a wider sense, name Gandhara implied all the countries west of Indus as far as Candhahar" (The Tree and Serpent Worship, 2004, p. 47, James Fergusson).
  35. ^ Encyclopedia Americana, 1994, p 277, Encyclopedias and Dictionaries.
  36. ^ Ptolemy's Geography mentions Tambyzoi located in eastern Bactria (Ancient India as Described by Ptolemy: Being a Translation of the Chapters ... 1885, p. 268, John Watson McCrindle - Geography, Ancient; Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World, History - 2000, p. 99, (editors) Richard J. A. Talbert) and Ambautai people located to south of Hindukush Mountains (Geography 6.18.3; See map in McCrindle, p. 8). Dr S. Levi has identified Tambyzoi with Kamboja (Indian Antiquary, 1923, p. 54; Pre Aryan and Pre Dravidian in India, 1993, p. 122, Dr Sylvain Lévi, Dr Jean Przyluski, Jules Bloch, Asian Educational Services) while land of Ambautai has also been identified by Dr Michael Witzel (Harvard University) with Sanskrit Kamboja Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies, Vol. 5, 1999, issue 1 (September), Dr. M. Witzel; Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History, 2005, p 257, Laurie L. Patton, Edwin Bryant; The Indo-Aryans of Ancient South Asia: Language, Material Culture and Ethnicity, 1995, p. 326, George Erdosy.
  37. ^ MBH VII.4.5; II.27.23.
  38. ^ See: Problems of Ancient India, 2000, pp. 5-6; cf: Geographical Data in the Early Puranas, p. 168.
  39. ^ MBH II.27.27.
  40. ^ Vedic Index I, p. 138, Macdonnel, Dr Keith.
  41. ^ Ethnology of Ancient Bhārata, 1970, p. 107, Dr Ram Chandra Jain.
  42. ^ The Journal of Asian Studies; 1956, p. 384, Association for Asian Studies, Far Eastern Association (U.S.).
  43. ^ Balocistān: siyāsī kashmakash, muz̤mirāt va rujḥānāt; 1989, p. 2, Munīr Aḥmad Marrī.
  44. ^ India as Known to Panini: A Study of the Cultural Material in the Ashṭādhyāyī; 1953, p. 49, Dr Vasudeva Sharana Agrawala.
  45. ^ Afghanistan, p. 58, W. K. Fraser, M. C. Gillet.
  46. ^ Afghanistan, its People, its Society, its Culture, Donal N. Wilber, 1962, pp. 80, 311 etc.
  47. ^ Iran, 1956, p. 53, Herbert Harold Vreeland, Clifford R. Barnett.
  48. ^ Geogrammatical Dictionary of Sanskrit (Vedic): 700 Complete Revisions of the Best Books..., 1953, p. 49, Dr Peggy Melcher, Dr A. A. McDonnel, Dr Surya Kanta, Dr Jacob Wackernagel, Dr V. S. Agarwala.
  49. ^ Geographical and Economic Studies in the Mahābhārata: Upāyana Parva, 1945, p. 33, Dr Moti Chandra - India.
  50. ^ A Grammatical Dictionary of Sanskrit (Vedic): 700 Complete Reviews of the ..., 1953, p. 49, Dr Vasudeva Sharana Agrawala, Surya Kanta, Jacob Wackernagel, Arthur Anthony Macdonell, Peggy Melcher - India.
  51. ^ MBH 7/91/39.
  52. ^ Arthashastra 11/1/4.
  53. ^ 13th Major Rock Edict. Translation by E. Hultzsch (1857-1927). Published in India in 1925. Inscriptions of Asoka p.43. Public Domain.
  54. ^ Ashtadhyayi IV.1.168–175.
  55. ^ Hindu Polity: A Constitutional History of India in Hindu Times, Parts I and II., 1955, p. 52, Dr Kashi Prasad Jayaswal - Constitutional history; Prācīna Kamboja, jana aura janapada =: Ancient Kamboja, people and country, 1981, Dr Jiyālāla Kāmboja - Kamboja (Pakistan).
  56. ^ Panda, Harihar (2007), Prof. H.C. Raychaudhuri, as a Historian, Northern Book Centre, p. 28, ISBN 978-81-7211-210-3
  57. ^ Marshall p.59
  58. ^ II. p 481
  59. ^ Kalpa Sutra; Nirayavali Sutra
  60. ^ Asiatic Mythology by J. Hackin p.83ff
  61. ^ Olivelle, Patrick (13 July 2006). Between the Empires: Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199775071 – via Google Books.
  62. ^ Raychaudhuri Hemchandra (1972), Political History of Ancient India, Calcutta: University of Calcutta, pp. 85–6
  63. ^ Raychaudhuri Hemchandra (1972), Political History of Ancient India, Calcutta: University of Calcutta, p.107
  64. ^ Rohan L. Jayetilleke (5 December 2007). . Daily News. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 29 October 2008.

Further reading edit

  • R. C. Majumdar and A. D. Pusalker, eds. The History and Culture of the Indian People. Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bombay 1951.
  • Sethna, K. D. (1989). Ancient India in a new light. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan.
  • Sethna, K. D. (2000). Problems of ancient India. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan.

External links edit

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mahajanapadas, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mahajanapadas news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Mahajanapadas Sanskrit great realm from maha great and janapada foothold of the people were sixteen kingdoms or oligarchic republics that existed in ancient India from the sixth to fourth centuries BCE during the second urbanisation period 2 Mahajanapadasc 600 BCE c 345 BCEMap of the 16 Mahajanapadas 1 CapitalVariousCommon languagesPali Prakrits and SanskritReligionAncient HinduismSramaṇa Buddhism and Jainism GovernmentRepublics gaṇasaṅgha s MonarchiesHistorical eraIron Age Establishedc 600 BCE Disestablishedc 345 BCEPreceded by Succeeded byPainted Grey Ware cultureVedic periodJanapadaKuru Kingdom Nanda EmpireAchaemenid Empire Contents 1 History 2 Overview 3 List of Mahajanapadas 3 1 Aṅga 3 2 Asmaka 3 3 Avanti 3 4 Chedi 3 5 Gandhara 3 6 Kamboja 3 7 Kasi 3 8 Kosala 3 9 Kuru 3 10 Magadha 3 11 Malla 3 12 Matsya 3 13 Pancala 3 14 Surasena 3 15 Vṛji 3 16 Vatsa or Vaṃsa 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editThe 6th 5th centuries BCE are often regarded as a major turning point in early Indian history During this period India s first large cities since the demise of the Indus Valley civilization arose It was also the time of the rise of sramana movements including Buddhism and Jainism which challenged the religious orthodoxy of the Vedic period Two of the Mahajanapadas were most probably gaṇasaṅgha s oligarchic republics and others had forms of monarchy Ancient Buddhist texts like the Anguttara Nikaya 3 make frequent reference to sixteen great kingdoms and republics that had developed and flourished in a belt stretching from Gandhara in the northwest to Anga in the eastern part of the Indian subcontinent They included parts of the trans Vindhyan region 4 and all had developed prior to the rise of Buddhism in India 5 Archaeologically this period has been identified as corresponding in part to the Northern Black Polished Ware culture 6 Overview editMain article Janapada nbsp Pottery of the Northern Black Polished Ware culture c 500 200 BCE The term Janapada literally means the foothold of a people The fact that Janapada is derived from Jana points to an early stage of land taking by the Jana people for a settled way of life This process of settlement on land had completed its final stage prior to the times of the Buddha and Paṇini The Pre Buddhist northern Indian sub continent was divided into several Janapadas demarcated from each other by boundaries In Paṇini s Ashtadhyayi Janapada stands for country and Janapadin for its citizenry Each of these Janapadas was named after the Kshatriya people or the Kshatriya Jana who had settled therein 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Buddhist and other texts only incidentally refer to sixteen great nations Solasa Mahajanapadas that existed prior to the time of the Buddha They do not give any connected history except in the case of Magadha The Buddhist Anguttara Nikaya at several places 15 gives a list of sixteen great nations Anga Assaka or Asmaka Avanti Chedi Gandhara Kashi Kamboja Kosala Kuru Magadha Malla Matsya or Maccha Panchala Surasena Vajji Vatsa or Vamsa Another Buddhist text the Digha Nikaya mentions twelve Mahajanapadas from the above list and omits four of them Assaka Avanti Gandhara and Kamboja 16 Chulla Niddesa another ancient text of the Buddhist canon adds Kalinga to the list and substitutes Yona for Gandhara thus listing the Kamboja and the Yona as the only Mahajanapadas from Uttarapatha 17 18 The Vyakhyaprajnapti or the Bhagavati Sutra a sutra of Jainism gives a different list of sixteen Mahajanapadas Anga Banga Vanga Magadha Malaya Malavaka Accha Vaccha Kochcha Padha Ladha Radh or Lata Bajji Vajji Moli Malla Kasi Kosala Avaha Sambhuttara Ruhma The author of the Bhagavati Sutra or the Vyakhyaprajnapti has a focus on the countries of Madhydesa and of the far east and south only He omits the nations from Uttarapatha like the Kamboja and Gandhara The more extended horizon of the Bhagvati and the omission of all countries from Uttarapatha clearly shows that the Bhagvati list is of later origin and therefore less reliable 19 List of Mahajanapadas editAṅga edit Main article Anga The first reference to the Angas is found in the Atharvaveda where they find mention along with the Magadhas Gandharis and the Mujavats apparently as a despised people The Jaina Prajnapana ranks Angas and Vangas in the first group of Aryan people It mentions the principal cities of ancient India 20 It was also a great center of trade and commerce and its merchants regularly sailed to distant Suvarnabhumi Anga was annexed by Magadha in the time of Bimbisara This was the one and only conquest of Bimbisara Asmaka edit Main article Assaka The country of Assaka or the Ashmaka tribe was located in Dakshinapatha or southern India It included areas in present day Andhra Pradesh Telangana and Maharashtra 21 In Gautama Buddha s time many of the Assakas were located on the banks of the Godavari River south of the Vindhya mountains The capital of the Assakas was Potana or Potali which corresponds present day Bodhan in Telangana and Paudanya of Mahabharata 22 In Maharashtra its capital is located in Potali which corresponds to present day Nandura Buldhana district The Ashmakas are also mentioned by Paṇini They are placed in the north west in the Markendeya Purana and the Brhat Samhita The river Godavari separated the country of the Assakas from that of the Mulakas or Alakas The country of Assaka lay outside the pale of Madhyadesa It was located on a southern high road the Dakshinapatha At one time Assaka included Mulaka and abutted Avanti 23 Avanti edit Main article Avanti Ancient India nbsp Silver coin of Avanti mahajanapada 4th century BCE The country of the Avantis was an important kingdom of western India and was one of the four great monarchies in India in the post era of Mahavira and Buddha the other three being Kosala Vatsa and Magadha Avanti was divided into north and south by the river Narmada Initially Mahishamati Mahissati was the capital of Southern Avanti and Ujjaini Sanskrit Ujjayini was of northern Avanti but at the times of Mahavira and Buddha Ujjaini was the capital of integrated Avanti The country of Avanti roughly corresponded to modern Malwa Nimar and adjoining parts of today s Madhya Pradesh Both Mahishmati and Ujjaini stood on the southern high road called Dakshinapatha which extended from Rajagriha to Pratishthana modern Paithan Avanti was an important centre of Buddhism and some of the leading theras and theris were born and resided there King Nandivardhana of Avanti was defeated by king Shishunaga of Magadha Avanti later became part of the Magadhan empire 24 Chedi edit Main article Chedi Kingdom The Chedis Chetis or Chetyas had two distinct settlements of which one was in the mountains of Nepal and the other in Bundelkhand near Kausambi According to old authorities Chedis lay near Yamuna midway between the kingdom of Kurus and Vatsas In the mediaeval period the southern frontiers of Chedi extended to the banks of the river Narmada Sotthivatnagara the Sukti or Suktimati of Mahabharata was the capital of Chedi The Chedis were an ancient people of India and are mentioned in the Rigveda with their king Kashu Chaidya 25 The location of the capital city Suktimati has not been established with certainty Historian Hem Chandra Raychaudhuri and F E Pargiter believed that it was in the vicinity of Banda Uttar Pradesh 25 Archaeologist Dilip Kumar Chakrabarti has proposed that Suktimati can be identified as the ruins of a large early historical city at a place with the modern day name Itaha on the outskirts of Rewa Madhya Pradesh 26 Gandhara edit Main article Gandhara nbsp Coin of Early Gandhara Janapada AR Shatamana and one eighth Shatamana round Taxila Gandhara region c 600 300 BCE nbsp A coin of Takshashila portrays a tree flanked by a hill surmounted by a crescent and a Nandipada above a swastika 27 The wool of the Gandharis is referred to in the Rigveda The Gandharas and their king figure prominently as strong allies of the Kurus against the Pandavas in the Mahabharata war The Gandharas were furious people well trained in the art of war According to Puranic traditions this Janapada was founded by Gandhara son of Aruddha a descendant of Yayati The princes of this country are said to have come from the line of Druhyu who was a famous king of the Rigvedic period and one of the five sons of king Yayati of lunar dynasty The river Indus watered the lands of Gandhara Taksashila and Pushkalavati the two cities of this Mahajanapada are said to have been named after Taksa and Pushkara the two sons of Bharata a prince of Ayodhya and younger brother of Lord Rama According to Vayu Purana II 36 107 the Gandharas were destroyed by Pramiti a k a Kalika at the end of Kali Yuga Paṇini mentioned both the Vedic form Gandhari as well as the later form Gandhara in his Ashtadhyayi The Gandhara kingdom sometimes also included Kashmira 28 Hecataeus of Miletus 549 468 refers to Kaspapyros Kasyapura or Purushapura i e modern day Peshawar as a Gandharic city According to Gandhara Jataka at one time Gandhara formed a part of the kingdom of Kashmir The Jataka also gives another name Chandahara for Gandhara Gandhara Mahajanapada of Buddhist traditions included territories of east Afghanistan and north west of the Panjab modern districts of Peshawar Purushapura and Rawalpindi Its later capital was Taksashila Prakrit for Taxila The Taksashila University was a renowned centre of learning in ancient times where scholars from all over the world came to seek higher education Paṇini the Indian genius of grammar and Kautiliya are the world renowned products of Taxila University King Pukkusati or Pushkarasarin of Gandhara in the middle of the 6th century BCE was the contemporary of king Bimbisara of Magadha Gandhara was located on the grand northern high road Uttarapatha and was a centre of international commercial activities According to one group of scholars the Gandharas and Kambojas were cognate people 29 30 31 It is also contended that the Kurus Kambojas Gandharas and Bahlikas were cognate people 32 According to Dr T L Shah the Gandhara and Kamboja were nothing but two provinces of one empire and were located coterminously hence influencing each other s language 33 Naturally they may have once been a cognate people 34 Gandhara was often linked politically with the neighboring regions of Kashmir and Kamboja 35 Kamboja edit Main article Kambojas Kambojas are also included in the Uttarapatha In ancient literature the Kamboja is variously associated with the Gandhara Darada and the Bahlika Bactria Ancient Kamboja is known to have comprised regions on either side of the Hindukush The original Kamboja was located in eastern Oxus country as neighbor to Bahlika but with time some clans of the Kambojas appear to have crossed the Hindukush and planted colonies on its southern side also These latter Kambojas are associated with the Daradas and Gandharas in Indian literature and also find mention in the Edicts of Ashoka The evidence in the Mahabharata and in Ptolemy s Geography distinctly supports two Kamboja settlements 36 The cis Hindukush region from Nurestan up to Rajauri in southwest of Kashmir sharing borders with the Daradas and the Gandharas constituted the Kamboja country 37 The capital of Kamboja was probably Rajapura modern Rajori in the south west of Kashmir The Kamboja Mahajanapada of the Buddhist traditions refers to this cis Hindukush branch of ancient Kambojas 38 The trans Hindukush region including the Pamirs and Badakhshan which shared borders with the Bahlikas Bactria in the west and the Lohas and Rishikas of Sogdiana Fergana in the north constituted the Parama Kamboja country 39 The trans Hindukush branch of the Kambojas remained pure Iranian but a large section of the Kambojas of cis Hindukush appears to have come under Indian cultural influence The Kambojas are known to have had both Iranian as well as Indian affinities 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 The Kambojas were also a well known republican people since Epic times The Mahabharata refers to several gaṇaḥ or Republics of the Kambojas 51 Kautiliya s Arthashastra 52 attestes the Kambojas republican character and Ashoka s Edict No XIII also testifies the presence of the Kambojas along with the Yavanas 53 Paṇini s Sutras 54 though tend to convey that the Kamboja of Paṇini was a Kshatriya monarchy but the special rule and the exceptional form of derivative he gives to denote the ruler of the Kambojas implies that the king of Kamboja was a titular head king consul only 55 According to Buddhist texts the first fourteen of the above Mahajanapadas belong to Majjhimadesa Mid India while the last two belong to Uttarapatha or the north west division of Jambudvipa In a struggle for supremacy that followed in the 6th 5th century BCE the growing state of the Magadhas emerged as the predominant power in ancient India annexing several of the Janapadas of the Majjhimadesa A bitter line in the Puranas laments that Magadhan emperor Mahapadma Nanda exterminated all Kshatriyas none worthy of the name Kshatriya being left thereafter This refers to the Kasis Kosalas Kurus Panchalas Vatsyas and other neo Vedic tribes of the east Panjab of whom nothing was ever heard except in the legend and poetry The Nandas usurped the throne of Shishunaga dynasty c 345 BCE thus founding the Nanda Empire 56 The Kambojans and Gandharans however never came into direct contact with the Magadhan state until Chandragupta and Kautiliya arose on the scene But these nations also fell prey to the Achaemenids of Persia during the reign of Cyrus 558 530 BCE or in the first year of Darius Kamboja and Gandhara formed the twentieth and richest satrapy of the Achaemenid Empire Cyrus I is said to have destroyed the famous Kamboja city called Kapisi modern Begram in Paropamisade Kasi edit Main article Kingdom of Kashi The kingdom was located in the region around its capital Varanasi bounded by the Varuna and Asi rivers in the north and south which gave Varanasi its name Before Buddha Kasi was the most powerful of the sixteen Mahajanapadas Several jataka tales bear witness to the superiority of its capital over other cities in India and speak highly of its prosperity and opulence These stories tell of the long struggle for supremacy between Kashi and the three kingdoms of Kosala Anga and Magadha Although King Brihadratha of Kashi conquered Kosala Kashi was later incorporated into Kosala by King Kansa during Buddha s time The Kashis along with the Kosalas and Videhans find mention in Vedic texts and appear to have been a closely allied people The Matsya Purana and Alberuni spell Kashi as Kausika and Kaushaka respectively All other ancient texts read Kashi citation needed Kosala edit Main article Kosala nbsp Silver coins of Kosala mahajanapada c 525 465 BCE The country of Kosala was located to the north west of Magadha with its capital at Ayodhya Its territory corresponded to the modern Awadh or Oudh in Central and Eastern Uttar Pradesh It had the river Ganges for its southern the river Gandak Narayani for its eastern and the Himalaya mountains for its northern boundary nbsp Procession of Prasenajit of Kosala leaving Sravasti to meet the Buddha Sanchi 57 Later the kingdom was ruled by the famous king Prasenajit during the era of Mahavira and Buddha followed by his son Vidudabha Virudhaka King Prasenajit was highly educated His position was further improved by a matrimonial alliance with Magadha his sister was married to Bimbisara and part of Kasi was given as dowry There was however a struggle for supremacy between king Pasenadi Prasenajit and king Ajatashatru of Magadha which was finally settled once the confederation of Liccavis became conquered by Magadha Kosala was ultimately merged into Magadha when Vidudabha was Kosala s ruler Ayodhya Saketa Banaras and Sravasti were the chief cities of Kosala citation needed Kuru edit Main article Kuru Kingdom nbsp Silver coin of Kuru mahajanapada 4th century BCE The Puranas trace the origin of Kurus from the Puru Bharata family Kuru was born after 25 generations of Puru s dynasty and after 15 generations of Kuru Kauravas and Pandavas were born Aitareya Brahmana locates the Kurus in Madhyadesha and also refers to the Uttarakurus as living beyond the Himalayas According to the Buddhist text Sumangavilasini 58 the people of Kururashtra the Kurus came from the Uttarakuru Vayu Purana attests that Kuru son of Samvarsana of the Puru lineage was the eponymous ancestor of the Kurus and the founder of Kururashtra Kuru Janapada in Kurukshetra The country of the Kurus roughly corresponded to the modern Thanesar state of Delhi and Meerut district of Uttar Pradesh According to the Jatakas the capital of the Kurus was Indraprastha Indapatta near modern Delhi which extended seven leagues At Buddha s time the Kuru country was ruled by a titular chieftain king consul named Korayvya The Kurus of the Buddhist period did not occupy the same position as they did in the Vedic period but they continued to enjoy their ancient reputation for deep wisdom and sound health The Kurus had matrimonial relations with the Yadavas the Bhojas Trigratas and the Panchalas There is a Jataka reference to king Dhananjaya introduced as a prince from the race of Yudhishtra Though a well known monarchical people in the earlier period the Kurus are known to have switched to a republican form of government during the 6th to 5th centuries BCE In the 4th century BCE Kautiliya s Arthashastra also attests the Kurus following the Rajashabdopajivin king consul constitution Magadha edit Main articles Magadha and Greater Magadha nbsp Silver coin of Magadha mahajanapada c 350 BCE The Magadha was one of the most prominent and prosperous of mahajanapadas citation needed nbsp King Bimbisara of Magadha visits the Bamboo Garden Venuvana in Rajagriha artwork from Sanchi The kingdom of the Magadhas roughly corresponded to the modern districts of Patna and Gaya in southern Bihar and parts of Bengal in the east The capital city of Pataliputra was bound in the north by the river Ganges in the east by the river Champa in the south by the Vindhya mountains and in the west by the river Sona During Buddha s time its boundaries included Anga Its earliest capital was Girivraja or Rajagaha modern Rajgir in the Nalanda district of Bihar The other names for the city were Magadhapura Brihadrathapura Vasumati Kushagrapura and Bimbisarapuri It was an active center of Jainism in ancient times The first Buddhist Council was held in Rajagaha in the Vaibhara Hills Later on Pataliputra became the capital of Magadha citation needed Malla edit Main article Malla tribe nbsp Conjectural reconstruction of the main gate of Kushinagar city of the Mallakas circa 500 BCE adapted from a relief at Sanchi nbsp City of Kushinagar in the 5th century BCE according to a 1st century BCE frieze in Sanchi Stupa 1 Southern Gate The Mallakas are frequently mentioned in Buddhist and Jain works They were a powerful people dwelling in Northern India According to Mahabharata Panduputra Bhimasena is said to have conquered the chief of the Mallakas in the course of his expedition in Eastern India During the Buddhist period the Mallakas Kshatriya were a republican people with their dominion consisting of nine territories 59 corresponding to the nine confederated clans These republican states were known as gaṇasaṅgha s Two of these confederations one with Kushinagar modern Kasia near Gorakhpur as its capital and the second with Pava modern Fazilnagar 20 kilometres 12 mi southeast of Kushinagar as the capital had become very important at the time of Buddha Kusinara is very important in the history of Buddhism since Lord Buddha took last meal at Pava Buddha was taken ill at Pava and died at Kusinara It is widely believed that Lord Gautam died at the courtyard of King Sastipal Mall of Kushinagar Kushinagar is now the centre of the Buddhist pilgrimage circle which is being developed by the tourism development corporation of Uttar Pradesh The Mallakas like the Licchavis are mentioned by Manusmriti as Vratya Kshatriyas They are called Vasishthas Vasetthas in the Mahapparnibbana Suttanta The Mallakas originally had a monarchical form of government but later they switched to one of Samgha republic the members of which called themselves rajas The Mallakas appeared to have formed an alliance with the Licchhavis for self defense but lost their independence not long after Buddha s death and their dominions were annexed to the Magadhan empire citation needed nbsp Mallaka defending the city of Kushinagar as depicted at Sanchi Malla was an ancient Indian republic gaṇasaṅgha s mentioned in the Anguttara Nikaya 60 Matsya edit Main article Matsya tribe The country of the Matsya or Maccha tribe lay to the south of the Kurus and west of the Yamuna which separated them from the Panchalas It roughly corresponded to the former state of Jaipur in Rajasthan and included the whole of Alwar with portions of Bharatpur The capital of Matsya was at Viratanagara modern Bairat which is said to have been named after its founder king Virata In Pali literature the Matsyas are usually associated with the Surasenas The western Matsya was the hill tract on the north bank of the Chambal A branch of Matsya is also found in later days in the Vizagapatam region The Matsyas had not much political importance of their own during the time of Buddha citation needed Pancala edit Main article Pancala nbsp Coin of the Panchalas of Adhichhatra 75 50 BCE Obv Indra seated facing on pedestal holding bifurcated object Rev Idramitrasa in Brahmi Panchala symbols The Panchalas occupied the country to the east of the Kurus between the mountains and river Ganges It roughly corresponded to modern Budaun Farrukhabad and the adjoining districts of Uttar Pradesh The country was divided into Uttara Panchala and Dakshina Panchala The northern Panchala had its capital at Adhichhatra or Chhatravati modern Ramnagar in the Bareilly District while southern Panchala had its capital at Kampilya or Kampil in the Farrukhabad District The famous city of Kanyakubja or Kanauj was situated in the kingdom of Panchala Originally a monarchical clan the Panchals appear to have switched to republican corporation in the 6th and 5th centuries BCE In the 4th century BCE Kautiliya s Arthashastra also attests the Panchalas as following the Rajashabdopajivin king consul constitution citation needed Surasena edit Main article Surasena nbsp Silver coin of Surasena mahajanapada 5th century BCE The country of the Surasenas lay to the east of Matsya and west of Yamuna This corresponds roughly to the Brij region of Uttar Pradesh Haryana and Rajasthan and Gwalior region of Madhya Pradesh It had its capital at Madhura or Mathura Avantiputra the king of Surasena was the first among the chief disciples of Buddha through whose help Buddhism gained ground in Mathura country The Andhakas and Vrishnis of Mathura Surasena are referred to in the Ashtadhyayi of Paṇini In Kautiliya s Arthashastra the Vrishnis are described as sangha or republic The Vrishnis Andhakas and other allied tribes of the Shoorsaini formed a sangha and Vasudeva Krishna is described as the sangha mukhya Mathura the capital of Surasena was also known at the time of Megasthenes as the centre of Krishna worship The Surasena kingdom had lost its independence on annexation by the Magadhan empire citation needed Vṛji edit Main article Vajjika League nbsp Ananda Stupa built by the Licchavis at Vaishali which served as the capital of the Vajjika League one of the world s earliest republics gaṇasaṅgha Vajji or Vṛji was a confederacy of neighbouring clans including the Licchavis and one of the principal mahajanapadas of Ancient India The area they ruled constitutes the region of Mithila in Nepal and northern Bihar and their capital was the city of Vaishali 61 Both the Buddhist text Anguttara Nikaya and the Jaina text Bhagavati Sutra Saya xv Uddesa I included Vajji in their lists of solasa sixteen mahajanapadas 62 The name of this mahajanapada was derived from one of its ruling clans the Vṛjis The Vajji state is indicated to have been a republic This clan is mentioned by Paṇini Chanakya and Xuanzang 63 Vatsa or Vaṃsa edit Main article Vatsa The Vatsas or Vamsas are called to be a branch of the Kurus The Vatsa or Vamsa country corresponded with the territory of modern Allahabad in Uttar Pradesh It had a monarchical form of government with its capital at Kausambi identified with the village Kosam 38 miles from Allahabad 64 Kausambi was a very prosperous city where a large number of wealthy merchants resided It was the most important entrepot of goods and passengers from the north west and south Udayana was the ruler of Vatsa in the 6th 5th century BCE He was very powerful warlike and fond of hunting Initially king Udayana was opposed to Buddhism but later became a follower of Buddha and made Buddhism the state religion Udayana s mother Queen Mrigavati is notable for being one of the earliest known female rulers in Indian history See also editAchaemenid conquest of the Indus Valley Indo Aryan peoples Iron Age in India Magadha Vajji war Rigvedic tribesReferences edit Lal Deepak 2005 The Hindu Equilibrium India C 1500 B C 2000 A D Oxford University Press p xxxviii ISBN 978 0 19 927579 3 Vikas Nain Second Urbanization in the Chronology of Indian History International Journal of Academic Research and Development 3 2 March 2018 pp 538 542 esp 539 Anguttara Nikaya I p 213 IV pp 252 256 261 Singh Upinder 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Delhi Pearson Education pp 260 4 ISBN 978 81 317 1120 0 16 Mahajanapadas Sixteen Mahajanapadas 16 Maha Janapadas India Maha Janapada Ancient India Iloveindia com Retrieved on 2013 07 12 J M Kenoyer 2006 Cultures and Societies of the Indus Tradition In Historical Roots in the Making of the Aryan R Thapar ed pp 21 49 New Delhi National Book Trust India as Known to Panini A Study of the Cultural Material in the Ashṭadhyayi 1963 p 427 Vasudeva Sharana Agrawala India India in the Time of Patanjali 1968 p 68 Dr B N Puri India Socio economic and Political History of Eastern India 1977 p 9 Y K Mishra Bihar India Tribes of Ancient India 1977 p 18 Mamata Choudhury Ethnology Tribal Coins of Ancient India 2007 p xxiv Devendra Handa Coins Indic 2007 The Journal of the Numismatic Society of India 1972 p 221 Numismatic Society of India Numismatics A History of Pali Literature 2000 Edition p 648 B C Law Some Ksatriya Tribes of Ancient India 1924 pp 230 253 Dr B C Law Anguttara Nikaya Vol I p 213 Vol IV pp 252 256 260 etc Digha Nikaya Vol II p 200 Chulla Niddesa P T S p 37 Lord Mahavira and his times 1974 p 197 Dr Kailash Chand Jain The History and Culture of the Indian People 1968 p lxv Dr Ramesh Chandra Majumdar Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Bharatiya Itihasa Samiti Problems of Ancient India 2000 p 7 K D Sethna Political History of Ancient India 1996 p 86 History amp Culture of Indian People Age of Imperial Unity pp 15 16 Digha Nikaya Tiwari Anshuman Sengupta Anindya 10 August 2018 Laxminama Monks Merchants Money and Mantra Bloomsbury Publishing p 307 ISBN 9789387146808 Sen Sailendra Nath 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilization New Age International p 109 ISBN 9788122411980 Dr Bhandarkaar Shah Bipin February 2014 Home of Jainism after the Fall of Magadhan Empire and history of Shrimal Nagar Vayam Shrimali Researchgate Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b Raychaudhuri Hem Chandra 1923 Political history of ancient India from the accession of Parikshit to the extinction of the Gupta dynasty Calcutta Univ of Calcutta p 66 Chakrabarti Dilip Kumar 2000 Mahajanapada States of Early Historic India in Hansen Mogens Herman ed A Comparative Study of Thirty City state Cultures An Investigation Kgl Danske Videnskabernes Selskab p 387 ISBN 9788778761774 Post Mauryan Punjab Taxila local coinage Circa 220 185 BC AE 17x18mm 7 71 g www cngcoins com Classical Numismatic Group Inc Retrieved 28 June 2017 Jataka No 406 Revue des etudes grecques 1973 p 131 Ch Em Ruelle Association pour l encouragement des etudes grecques en France Early Indian Economic History 1973 pp 237 324 Rajaram Narayan Saletore Myths of the Dog man 199 p 119 David Gordon White Journal of the Oriental Institute 1919 p 200 Journal of Indian Museums 1973 p 2 Museums Association of India The Paradas A Study in Their Coinage and History 1972 p 52 Dr B N Mukherjee Paradas Journal of the Department of Sanskrit 1989 p 50 Rabindra Bharati University Dept of Sanskrit Sanskrit literature The Journal of Academy of Indian Numismatics amp Sigillography 1988 p 58 Academy of Indian Numismatics and Sigillography Numismatics Cf Rivers of Life Or Sources and Streams of the Faiths of Man in All Lands 2002 p 114 J G R Forlong Journal of the Oriental Institute 1919 p 265 Oriental Institute Vadodara India Oriental studies For Kuru Kamboja connections see Dr Chandra Chakraberty s views in Literary history of ancient India in relation to its racial and linguistic affiliations pp 14 37 Vedas The Racial History of India 1944 p 153 Chandra Chakraberty Ethnology Paradise of Gods 1966 p 330 Qamarud Din Ahmed Pakistan Ancient India History of India for 1000 years four Volumes Vol I 1938 pp 38 98 by Dr T L Shah James Fergusson observes In a wider sense name Gandhara implied all the countries west of Indus as far as Candhahar The Tree and Serpent Worship 2004 p 47 James Fergusson Encyclopedia Americana 1994 p 277 Encyclopedias and Dictionaries Ptolemy s Geography mentions Tambyzoi located in eastern Bactria Ancient India as Described by Ptolemy Being a Translation of the Chapters 1885 p 268 John Watson McCrindle Geography Ancient Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World History 2000 p 99 editors Richard J A Talbert and Ambautai people located to south of Hindukush Mountains Geography 6 18 3 See map in McCrindle p 8 Dr S Levi has identified Tambyzoi with Kamboja Indian Antiquary 1923 p 54 Pre Aryan and Pre Dravidian in India 1993 p 122 Dr Sylvain Levi Dr Jean Przyluski Jules Bloch Asian Educational Services while land of Ambautai has also been identified by Dr Michael Witzel Harvard University with Sanskrit Kamboja Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies Vol 5 1999 issue 1 September Dr M Witzel Indo Aryan Controversy Evidence and Inference in Indian History 2005 p 257 Laurie L Patton Edwin Bryant The Indo Aryans of Ancient South Asia Language Material Culture and Ethnicity 1995 p 326 George Erdosy MBH VII 4 5 II 27 23 See Problems of Ancient India 2000 pp 5 6 cf Geographical Data in the Early Puranas p 168 MBH II 27 27 Vedic Index I p 138 Macdonnel Dr Keith Ethnology of Ancient Bharata 1970 p 107 Dr Ram Chandra Jain The Journal of Asian Studies 1956 p 384 Association for Asian Studies Far Eastern Association U S Balocistan siyasi kashmakash muz mirat va rujḥanat 1989 p 2 Munir Aḥmad Marri India as Known to Panini A Study of the Cultural Material in the Ashṭadhyayi 1953 p 49 Dr Vasudeva Sharana Agrawala Afghanistan p 58 W K Fraser M C Gillet Afghanistan its People its Society its Culture Donal N Wilber 1962 pp 80 311 etc Iran 1956 p 53 Herbert Harold Vreeland Clifford R Barnett Geogrammatical Dictionary of Sanskrit Vedic 700 Complete Revisions of the Best Books 1953 p 49 Dr Peggy Melcher Dr A A McDonnel Dr Surya Kanta Dr Jacob Wackernagel Dr V S Agarwala Geographical and Economic Studies in the Mahabharata Upayana Parva 1945 p 33 Dr Moti Chandra India A Grammatical Dictionary of Sanskrit Vedic 700 Complete Reviews of the 1953 p 49 Dr Vasudeva Sharana Agrawala Surya Kanta Jacob Wackernagel Arthur Anthony Macdonell Peggy Melcher India MBH 7 91 39 Arthashastra 11 1 4 13th Major Rock Edict Translation by E Hultzsch 1857 1927 Published in India in 1925 Inscriptions of Asoka p 43 Public Domain Ashtadhyayi IV 1 168 175 Hindu Polity A Constitutional History of India in Hindu Times Parts I and II 1955 p 52 Dr Kashi Prasad Jayaswal Constitutional history Pracina Kamboja jana aura janapada Ancient Kamboja people and country 1981 Dr Jiyalala Kamboja Kamboja Pakistan Panda Harihar 2007 Prof H C Raychaudhuri as a Historian Northern Book Centre p 28 ISBN 978 81 7211 210 3 Marshall p 59 II p 481 Kalpa Sutra Nirayavali Sutra Asiatic Mythology by J Hackin p 83ff Olivelle Patrick 13 July 2006 Between the Empires Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199775071 via Google Books Raychaudhuri Hemchandra 1972 Political History of Ancient India Calcutta University of Calcutta pp 85 6 Raychaudhuri Hemchandra 1972 Political History of Ancient India Calcutta University of Calcutta p 107 Rohan L Jayetilleke 5 December 2007 The Ghositarama of Kaushambi Daily News Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 29 October 2008 Further reading editR C Majumdar and A D Pusalker eds The History and Culture of the Indian People Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Bombay 1951 Sethna K D 1989 Ancient India in a new light New Delhi Aditya Prakashan Sethna K D 2000 Problems of ancient India New Delhi Aditya Prakashan External links edit nbsp Media related to Mahajanapadas at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mahajanapadas amp oldid 1186512134, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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