The
Mauryan Empire
By the end of the
sixth century B.C., India's northwest was integrated
into the Persian Achaemenid Empire and became one of its
satrapies. This integration marked the beginning of
administrative contacts between Central Asia and India.
Although Indian
accounts to a large extent ignored Alexander the Great's
Indus campaign in 326 B.C., Greek writers recorded their
impressions of the general conditions prevailing in
South Asia during this period. Thus, the year 326 B.C.
provides the first clear and historically verifiable
date in Indian history. A two-way cultural fusion
between several Indo-Greek elements--especially in art,
architecture, and coinage--occurred in the next several
hundred years. North India's political landscape was
transformed by the emergence of Magadha in the eastern
Indo-Gangetic Plain. In 322 B.C., Magadha, under the
rule of Chandragupta Maurya, began to assert its
hegemony over neighboring areas. Chandragupta, who ruled
from 324 to 301 B.C., was the architect of the first
Indian imperial power--the Mauryan Empire (326-184
B.C.)--whose capital was Pataliputra, near modern-day
Patna, in Bihar.
Situated on rich
alluvial soil and near mineral deposits, especially
iron, Magadha was at the center of bustling commerce and
trade. The capital was a city of magnificent palaces,
temples, a university, a library, gardens, and parks, as
reported by Megasthenes, the third-century B.C. Greek
historian and ambassador to the Mauryan court. Legend
states that Chandragupta's success was due in large
measure to his adviser Kautilya, the Brahman author of
the Arthashastra (Science of Material Gain), a
textbook that outlined governmental administration and
political strategy. There was a highly centralized and
hierarchical government with a large staff, which
regulated tax collection, trade and commerce, industrial
arts, mining, vital statistics, welfare of foreigners,
maintenance of public places including markets and
temples, and prostitutes. A large standing army and a
well-developed espionage system were maintained. The
empire was divided into provinces, districts, and
villages governed by a host of centrally appointed local
officials, who replicated the functions of the central
administration.
Ashoka, grandson of
Chandragupta, ruled from 269 to 232 B.C. and was one of
India's most illustrious rulers. Ashoka's inscriptions
chiseled on rocks and stone pillars located at strategic
locations throughout his empire--such as Lampaka (Laghman
in modern Afghanistan), Mahastan (in modern Bangladesh),
and Brahmagiri (in Karnataka)--constitute the second set
of datable historical records. According to some of the
inscriptions, in the aftermath of the carnage resulting
from his campaign against the powerful kingdom of
Kalinga (modern Orissa), Ashoka renounced bloodshed and
pursued a policy of nonviolence or ahimsa, espousing a
theory of rule by righteousness. His toleration for
different religious beliefs and languages reflected the
realities of India's regional pluralism although he
personally seems to have followed Buddhism (see
Buddhism, ch. 3). Early Buddhist stories assert that he
convened a Buddhist council at his capital, regularly
undertook tours within his realm, and sent Buddhist
missionary ambassadors to Sri Lanka.
Contacts established
with the Hellenistic world during the reign of Ashoka's
predecessors served him well. He sent
diplomatic-cum-religious missions to the rulers of
Syria, Macedonia, and Epirus, who learned about India's
religious traditions, especially Buddhism. India's
northwest retained many Persian cultural elements, which
might explain Ashoka's rock inscriptions--such
inscriptions were commonly associated with Persian
rulers. Ashoka's Greek and Aramaic inscriptions found in
Kandahar in Afghanistan may also reveal his desire to
maintain ties with people outside of India.
After the
disintegration of the Mauryan Empire in the second
century B.C., South Asia became a collage of regional
powers with overlapping boundaries. India's unguarded
northwestern border again attracted a series of invaders
between 200 B.C. and A.D. 300. As the Aryans had done,
the invaders became "Indianized" in the
process of their conquest and settlement. Also, this
period witnessed remarkable intellectual and artistic
achievements inspired by cultural diffusion and
syncretism. The Indo-Greeks, or the Bactrians, of the
northwest contributed to the development of numismatics;
they were followed by another group, the Shakas (or
Scythians), from the steppes of Central Asia, who
settled in western India. Still other nomadic people,
the Yuezhi, who were forced out of the Inner Asian
steppes of Mongolia, drove the Shakas out of
northwestern India and established the Kushana Kingdom
(first century B.C.-third century A.D.). The Kushana
Kingdom controlled parts of Afghanistan and Iran, and in
India the realm stretched from Purushapura (modern
Peshawar, Pakistan) in the northwest, to Varanasi (Uttar
Pradesh) in the east, and to Sanchi (Madhya Pradesh) in
the south. For a short period, the kingdom reached still
farther east, to Pataliputra. The Kushana Kingdom was
the crucible of trade among the Indian, Persian,
Chinese, and Roman empires and controlled a critical
part of the legendary Silk Road. Kanishka, who reigned
for two decades starting around A.D. 78, was the most
noteworthy Kushana ruler. He converted to Buddhism and
convened a great Buddhist council in Kashmir. The
Kushanas were patrons of Gandharan art, a synthesis
between Greek and Indian styles, and Sanskrit
literature. They initiated a new era called Shaka in
A.D. 78, and their calendar, which was formally
recognized by India for civil purposes starting on March
22, 1957, is still in use.
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