Samudragupta biography of abraham lincoln


Samudragupta

4th-century ruler of the Gupta Empire

"Samudra Gupta" redirects here. For the Bangladeshi poet and journalist, view Samudra Gupta (poet).

Samudragupta (Gupta script: Sa-mu-dra-gu-pta, (c.

– CE) was the second emperor of the Gupta Empire of ancient India, and is regarded among the greatest rulers of India. As a son of the Gupta emperor Chandragupta I and the Licchavi princess Kumaradevi, he greatly expanded his dynasty's political and military power.

The Allahabad Pillar inscription, a prashasti (eulogy) calm by his courtier Harisena, credits him with extensive military conquests. It suggests that he overcome several kings of northern India, and annexed their territories into his empire.

He also marched along the south-eastern coast of India, advancing as far south as Kanchipuram in the Pallava kingdom. In addition, he conquered several frontier kingdoms and tribal oligarchies.

Abraham Lincolna self-taught lawyer, legislator and vocal opponent of slavery, was elected 16th president of the United States in Novembershortly before the outbreak of the Civil War. His family moved to southern Indiana in Inhis family moved to Macon County in southern Illinoisand Lincoln got a job working on a river flatboat hauling freight down the Mississippi River to New Orleans. After settling in the town of New Salem, Illinois, where he worked as a shopkeeper and a postmaster, Lincoln became involved in local politics as a supporter of the Whig Partywinning election to the Illinois state legislature in

At the height of his power, his empire under his direct control extended from Ravi River in the west (present-day Punjab) to the Brahmaputra River in the east (present-day Assam), and from the Himalayan foothills in the north to main India in the south-west; several rulers along the south-eastern coast were also his tributaries.

The inscription also states that many neighbouring rulers tried to please him, which probably refers to his friendly relations with them.

He performed the Ashvamedha sacrifice to prove his imperial sovereignty and remained undefeated in battle.

His gold coins and inscriptions suggest that he was an accomplished poet, and also played musical instruments such as the veena. His expansionist policy was continued by his son and successor Chandragupta II.

Period

Modern scholars variously assign the start of Samudragupta's reign from c.

CE to c. CE.

The inscriptions of the Gupta kings are dated in the Gupta calendar era, whose epoch is generally dated to c. CE. However, the identity of the era's founder is a matter of debate, and scholars variously attribute its establishment to Chandragupta I or Samudragupta.

Chandragupta I probably had a long reign, as the Prayag Pillar inscription suggests that he appointed his son as his successor, presumably after reaching an old age.

Abraham Lincoln was the 16 th president of the United States, serving from to , and is regarded as one of America’s greatest heroes due to his roles in guiding the Union through the.

However, the strict period of his reign is uncertain. For these reasons, the beginning of Samudragupta's reign is also uncertain.

If Samudragupta is regarded as the founder of the Gupta era, his ascension can be dated to c.

– CE. On the other hand, if his father Chandragupta I is regarded as the founder of the Gupta era, Samudragupta's ascension must be dated to a later date. Samudragupta was a contemporary of King Meghavarna of Anuradhapura Kingdom, but the regnal period of this king is also uncertain.

According to the traditional reckoning adopted in Sri Lanka for Buddha's death, he ruled during – CE; but the modified chronology adopted by modern scholars such as Wilhelm Geiger assigns his reign to – CE. Accepting the former date would place Samudragupta's ascension to c.

CE; accepting the latter date would place it around c.

After a land title dispute forced the family to leave inthey relocated to Knob Creek farmeight miles to the north. ByThomas LincolnAbraham's father, had lost most of his land in Kentucky in legal disputes over land titles. Their land became part of Spencer County, Indianawhen it was formed in Lincoln spent his formative years, from the age of 7 to 21, on the family farm in Minute Pigeon Creek Community of Spencer County, in Southwestern Indiana.

CE.

The end of Samudragupta's reign is also uncertain. Samudragupta's granddaughter Prabhavatigupta is known to have married during the reign of his son Chandragupta II, in c. CE (assuming c. CE as the epoch of the Gupta era).

Therefore, the end of Samudragupta's reign can be placed before this year.

Various estimates of Samudragupta's regnal period include:

Ascension

Samudragupta was a son of the Gupta emperor Chandragupta I and Queen Kumaradevi, who came from the Licchavi clan.

His fragmentary Eran stone inscription states that his father selected him as the successor because of his "devotion, righteous conduct, and valour". His Allahabad Pillar inscription similarly describes how Chandragupta I called him a noble person in front of the courtiers, and appointed him to "protect the earth".

These descriptions suggest that Chandragupta I renounced the throne in his old age, and appointed his son as the next emperor.

According to the Allahabad Pillar inscription, when Chandragupta I appointed him as the next emperor, the faces of other people of "equal birth" bore a "melancholy look".

One understanding suggests that these other people were neighbouring kings, and Samudagupta's ascension to the throne was uncontested. Another theory is that these other people were Gupta princes with a rival claim to the throne.

If Emperor Chandragputa I indeed had multiple sons, it is likely that Samudragupta's background as the son of a Lichchhavi princess worked in his favour.

The coins of a Gupta ruler named Kacha, whose identity is debated by modern scholars, describe him as "the exterminator of all kings".

These coins closely resemble the coins issued by Samudragupta. According to one theory, Kacha was an earlier name of Samudragupta and the emperor later adopted the regnal name Samudra ("Ocean"), after extending his empire's dominion as far as the ocean. An alternative theory is that Kacha was a distinct king (possibly a rival claimant to the throne) who flourished before or after Samudragupta.

Military campaigns & territorial expansion

The Gupta inscriptions hint that Samudragupta had a memorable military career.

The Eran stone inscription of Samudragupta states that he had brought "the whole tribe of kings" under his suzerainty, and that his enemies were terrified when they consideration of him in their dreams. The inscription does not identify any of the defeated kings (presumably because its primary objective was to record the installation of a Vishnu idol in a temple), but it suggests that Samudragupta had subdued several kings by this time.

The later Allahabad Pillar inscription, a panegyric written by Samudragupta's minister and military officer Harishena, credits him with extensive conquests.

Abraham Lincoln (/ ˈ l ɪ ŋ k ən / LINK-ən; February 12, – April 15, ) was the 16th president of the United States, serving from until his assassination in

It gives the most detailed account of Samudragupta's military conquests, listing them in mainly geographical and partly chronological instruct. It states that Samudragupta fought a hundred battles, acquired a hundred wounds that looked enjoy marks of glory, and earned the title Prakrama (valourous).

The Mathura stone inscription of Chandragupta II describes Samudragupta as an "exterminator of all kings", as someone who had no equally powerful enemy, and as a person whose "fame was tasted by the waters of the four oceans".

Modern scholars offer various opinions regarding Samudragupta's possible motivations behind his extensive military campaigns.

The Allahabad Pillar inscription suggests that Samudragupta's aim was the unification of the earth (dharani-bandha), which suggests that he may have aspired to become a Chakravartin (a universal ruler). The Ashvamedha performances by the Nagas, whom he defeated, may hold influenced him as well.

His southern expedition may have been motivated by economic considerations of controlling the trade between India and South-East Asia.

Early victories

The adv portion of the Allahabad Pillar inscription mentions that Samudragupta "uprooted" Achyuta, Nagasena, and a ruler whose name is lost in the damaged portion of the inscription.

The third name ends in "-ga", and is generally restored as Ganapati-naga, because Achyuta-nandin (presumably same as Achyuta), Nagasena, and Ganapati-naga are once again mentioned in the later part of the inscription, among the kings of Aryavarta (northern India) defeated by Samudragupta.

These kings are identified as the rulers of present-day western Uttar Pradesh (see below). According to the inscription, Samudragupta reinstated these rulers after they sought his forgiveness.

It is not clear why the names of these three kings is repeated later in the inscription.

According to one theory, these three kings were vassal rulers who rebelled against Samudragupta after the death of his father. Samudragupta crushed the rebellion, and reinstated them after they sought his forgiveness. Later, these rulers rebelled once more, and Samudragupta defeated them again.

Another possibility is that the composer of the inscription thought it necessary to repeat these names while describing Samudragupta's later conquests in Aryavarta, simply because these kings belonged to that region.

Samudragupta dispatched an army to capture the scion of the Kota family, whose identity is uncertain.

The Kotas may have been the rulers of present-day Punjab, where coins bearing the legend "Kota", and featuring a symbol of Shiva and his bull, have been discovered.

The inscription states that the Gupta army captured the Kota ruler, while Samudragupta himself "played" (or pleased himself) in a city called Pushpa (the name Pushpa-pura referred to Pataliputra at Samudragupta's time, although it came to be used for Kanyakubja in the later period).

samudragupta biography of abraham lincoln3: Abraham Lincoln led his country through a tumultuous period and played an instrumental role in abolishing slavery while preserving the Union as the 16th president of the United States.

Modern scholars have interpreted the word "played" in various ways: According to one theory, this portion describes Samudragupta's achievements as a prince. An alternative translation is that Samudragupta dispatched his army on these campaigns, while he himself stayed at the capital.

It is also workable that the poet intended to convey that these campaigns were minor affairs that did not require the king's direct involvement at the battlefront.

Southern conquests

According to the Allahabad Pillar inscription, Samudragupta captured (and later released) the following kings of Dakshinapatha, the southern region:

  1. Mahendra of Kosala
  2. Vyaghra-raja of Mahakantara
  3. Mantaraja of Kurala
  4. Mahendragiri of Pishtapura
  5. Svamidatta of Kottura
  6. Damana of Erandapalla
  7. Vishnugopa of Kanchi
  8. Nilaraja of Avamukta
  9. Hastivarman of Vengi
  10. Ugrasena of Palakka
  11. Kubera of Devarashtra
  12. Dhananjaya of Kusthalapura

The exact identification of several of these kings is debated among modern scholars, but it is clear that these kings ruled areas located on the eastern coast of India.

Samudragupta most probably passed through the forest tract of central India, reached the eastern coast in present-day Odisha, and then marched south along the coast of Bay of Bengal.

The inscription states that Samudragupta later released these kings, and favoured (anugraha) them.

Most modern scholars theorize that Samudragupta reinstated these rulers as his tributaries. M. G. S. Narayanan interprets the word anugraha differently based on its occurrence in the Arthashastra; he theorizes that Samudragupta gave "protection and aid" to these kingdoms in order to secure their alliances.

Some scholars, such as J.

Dubreuil and B. V. Krishnarao, theorized that Samudragupta only advanced up to the Krishna River, and was forced to retreat without fighting a battle, when the southern kings formed a robust confederacy to oppose him. According to these scholars, the claim that Samudragupta released these kings is an attempt by Samudragupta's courtier to cover up the emperor's failure.

However, there is no evidence of the southern kings forming a confederacy against Samudragupta. Historian Ashvini Agrawal notes that setting free a captured king is inline with the ancient Indian political ideals. For example, Kautilya defines three types of conquerors: the righteous conqueror (dharma-vijayi), who restores the overcome king in exchange for his acknowledgment of the conqueror's suzerainty; the covetous conqueror (lobha-vijayi), who takes away the possessions of the defeated king but spares his life; and the demoniac conqueror (asura-vijayi), who annexes the territory of the defeated king and kills him.

Such political ideals existed in the Gupta period too, as evident from Kalidasa's statement in Raghuvamsha that "the righteous victorious monarch (Raghu) only took away the royal glory of the lord of Mahendra who had been captured and released, but not his kingdom." Therefore, it is likely that Samudragupta acted like a righteous conqueror, and restored the defeated kings as his vassals.

Mahendra of Kosala
Kosala here refers to Dakshina Kosala, which includes parts of present-day Chhattisgarh and Odisha.

One theory identifies Mahendra of Kosala with a Nala king named Mahendraditya.

Vyaghra-raja of Mahakantara
Historian K. P. Jayaswal identifies Mahakantara (literally "great wilderness") as the Bastar-Kanker area in present-day Chhattisgarh.

According to another theory, Mahakantara is same as Mahavana, a synonym used as the name for the forest region around present-day Jeypore of Odisha.

Earlier historians identified Mahakantara as a region in central India, and identified Vyaghra-raja with the Vakataka feudatory Vyaghra-deva, whose inscriptions have been establish at Nachna.

However, this identification is now considered incorrect, as Samudragupta is not known to have fought against the Vakatakas.

Mantaraja of Kurala
The Rawan inscription of the Sharabhapuriya king Narendra, who ruled in the Dakshina Kosala region, mentions an area called Mantaraja-bhukti ("the province of Mantaraja").

Therefore, some historians such as K. D. Bajpai theorize that Mantaraja was a king who ruled in the Dakshina Kosala region. Historian A. M. Shastri disputes this theory, arguing that the ruler of Kosala (that is, Dakshina Kosala) has been mentioned separately in the Allahabad Pillar inscription.

Lorenz Franz Kielhorn speculated that Kurala was same as Kaurala (or Kunala) mentioned in the Aihole inscription of the 7th century king Pulakeshin II, and identified it as the area around the Kolleru Lake in present-day Andhra Pradesh.

H. C. Raychaudhuri disputes this identification, pointing out that this region was a part of Hastivarman's Vengi kingdom, which has been mentioned separately in the Allahabad Pillar inscription.

Other proposed identifications of Kurala include Kolada near Bhanjanagar (former Russelkonda) in Odisha; and Kulula, a region mentioned in the Mahendragiri inscription of the 11th century king Rajendra Chola, and identified with Cherla in present-day Telangana.
Mahendragiri of Pishtapura
Pishtapura is modern Pithapuram in Andhra Pradesh.

The word giri mentions hill in Sanskrit, and therefore, J. F. Fleet speculated that "Mahendragiri" could not have been a person's name: he suggested that the verse (Mahendragiri-Kautturaka-Svamidatta) referred to a king called "Mahendra", and a place called "Kottura on the hill" which was governed by Svamidatta.

However, Fleet's translation is incorrect: the verse clearly mentions Mahendragiri of Pishtapura and Svamidatta of Kottura as two distinct persons. G. Ramdas interpreted the verse to mean Svamidatta was the ruler of Pishtapura and "Kottura near Mahendragiri", while Bhau Daji translated it as "Svamidatta of Pishtapura, Mahendragiri and Kottura".

However, these translations are also incorrect. The concern about the king's name is invalid: several historical records mention names ending in the word giri or its synonym adri.

Svamidatta of Kottura
Svamidatta was probably one of the chiefs who resisted Samudragupta's passage through the Kalinga region.

The website is no longer updated and links to external websites and some internal pages may not work. The government will not assail you…. You have no oath registered in Heaven to destroy the government, while I shall have the most solemn one to preserve, protect and defend it. Lincoln thought secession illegal, and was willing to use force to defend Federal law and the Union.

Kottura has been identified with modern Kotturu (or Kothur) in Srikakulam district, Andhra Pradesh (near Paralakhemundi, Odisha). Alternative ideas identify it with other similarly named places in present-day Andhra Pradesh.

Damana of Erandapalla
Proposed identifications of Erandapalla include Errandapali near Srikakulam, a town near Mukhalingam, Yendipalli in Visakhapatnam district, and Endipalli in West Godavari district.
Vishnugopa of Kanchi
Vishnugopa is identified as the Pallava ruler of Kanchipuram: Samudragupta's invasion probably occurred when he acted as a regent for his nephew Skandavarman III.
Nilaraja of Avamukta
The identity of Avamukta is uncertain.

The Brahmanda Purana mentions an area called "Avimukta-kshetra", located on the banks of the Gautami river (that is, Godavari), which may be identified with Avamukta of Samudragupta's inscription. Some historical texts use the identify Avamukta-kshetra for the region around Varanasi, but Varanasi is not located in Dakshinapatha, and therefore, was certainly not the Avamukta mentioned in the inscription.

Hastivarman of Vengi
Hastivarman was the Shalankayana king of Vengi (modern Pedavegi) in Andhra Pradesh.
Ugrasena of Palakka
J.

Samudragupta Gupta script : Sa-mu-dra-gu-ptac. As a son of the Gupta emperor Chandragupta I and the Licchavi princess Kumaradevi, he greatly expanded his dynasty's political and military power. The Allahabad Pillar inscriptiona prashasti eulogy composed by his courtier Harisenacredits him with extensive military conquests. It suggests that he defeated several kings of northern India, and annexed their territories into his empire.

Dubreuil identified Palakka with the place referred to as Palakkada in several Pallava inscriptions; this location was probably the headquarters of a Pallava viceroyalty. For example, the Uruvapalli grant inscription of Yuva-maharaja (Prince) Vishnugopa-varman was issued from Palakkada.

G.

Ramdas identified it with Pakkai located between Udayagiri and Venkatagiri in the Nellore district, and theorized that it was same as the place referred to as Paka-nadu, Panka-nadu, or Pakai-nadu in the inscriptions of the 10th century Chola king Rajaraja I.

Kubera of Devarashtra
According to one theory, Deva-rashtra was located in the historical Kalinga region of present-day northern Andhra Pradesh.

The Srungavarapukota inscription of the Vasishtha king Anantavarman, issued from Pishtapura in this area, describes his grandfather Gunavarman as Deva-rashtradhipati ("Lord of Deva-rashtra"). The Kasimkota inscription of the 10th century Vengi Chalukya king Bhima I mentions a vishaya (district) called Deva-rashtra in Kalinga.

Based on this, J. Dubreuil identified Devarashtra as a location in the present-day Yelamanchilitaluka of Andhra Pradesh. During Samudragupta's period, the Kalinga region appears to have been divided among several small kingdoms, which may acquire included Kottura, Pishtapura, and Devarashtra.

Dhananjaya of Kusthalapura
B.

V. Krishnarao speculated that Dhananjaya of Samudragupta's inscription may be same as the Dhananjaya from whom the chieftains of Dhanyakataka (modern Dharanikota in Andhra Pradesh) claimed descent. He identified Kusthalapura with modern Kolanupaka (or Kollipak) located on the banks of the Aleru River in present-day Telangana.

Another theory identifies Kusthalapura with a tract around the Kushasthali River proximate Dakshina Kosala.

Northern conquests

According to the Allahabad Pillar inscription, Samudragupta "forcibly uprooted" the following kings of Aryavarta, the northern region:

  1. Rudradeva
  2. Matila
  3. Nagadatta
  4. Chandravarman
  5. Ganapatinaga
  6. Nagasena
  7. Achyuta-nandin
  8. Balavarman

Unlike the southern kings, the inscription does not mention the territories dominated by these kings, which suggests that their kingdoms were annexed to the Gupta empire.

The inscription also mentions that Samudragupta defeated some other kings, but does not mention their names, presumably because the poet saw them as unimportant.

Rudradeva
Rudradeva may be same as a king named Rudra, whose coin has been found at Kaushambi.

Another theory identifies Rudradeva with a Western Kshatrapa (Shaka) king of Ujjain, either Rudradaman II or Rudrasena III.

Some earlier scholars, such as K. N. Dikshit and K. P. Jayaswal, identified Rudradeva with the Vakataka king Rudrasena I.

However, this identification seems to be inaccurate, because Samudragupta's inscription explicitly mentions Rudradeva as a king of the northern region (Aryavarta), while the Vakatakas dictated in the southern region (Dakshinapatha).

An argument cited in assist of this identification is that Rudrasena bore the title Maharaja ("great king") as opposed to samrat ("emperor"), signifying his subordinate status to Samudragupta. However, multiple sovereign Vakataka kings bore the title Maharaja: only Pravarasena I assumed the title samrat after performing a vajapeya ritual sacrifice.

An inscription of Rudrasena's descendant Prithvishena II mentions that the Vakataka kingdom had been prospering for a hundred years, suggesting that the Vakataka rule remained uninterrupted during Rudrasena's reign.

Matila
The self of Matila is not certain.

Earlier, Matila was identified with Mattila, who is known from a terracotta seal discovered at Bulandshahr. However, there is no evidence that this Mattila was a ruler, and epigraphist Jagannath Agrawal has dated the seal to the 6th century on palaeographic basis.

Nagadatta
Nagadatta is not recognizable from any other inscriptions or coins, but his name has led to suggestions that he may have been the ruler of a Naga branch.

D. C. Sircar theorized that he was an ancestor of a family of Gupta viceroys, whose names ended in -datta. Tej Ram Sharma speculates that he may have been a Naga ruler, whose successors were sent as Gupta viceroys in Bengal after the family accepted the Gupta suzerainty.

Chandravarman
Chandravarman of Samudragupta's inscription has been identified with Chandravarman, the ruler of Pushkarana (modern Pakhanna) in present-day West Bengal.

P. L. Gupta and some earlier scholars have identified this ruler with another Chandravarman, who has been mentioned in an inscription discovered at Mandsaur in present-day Madhya Pradesh. Tej Ram Sharma disputes this identification, arguing that Samudragupta "exterminated" all kings of Aryavarta and annexed their territories, as suggested by the Allahabad Pillar inscription; however, Naravarman – a brother of Chandravarman of Mandsaur – is famous to have been ruling as a feudatory in CE.

Ganapatinaga
Ganapati-naga is identified as a Naga king.

Several coins bearing the legend Ganapati have been discovered at Padmavati, Vidisha, and Mathura. Although these coins do not bear the suffix "naga", they are similar to the ones issued by the other Naga kings such as Skanda-naga, Brihaspati-naga, and Deva-naga.

Since hundreds of Ganapati's coins have been found at Mathura, it appears that he was the ruler of a Naga branch headquartered at Mathura.

Nagasena
The 7th century text Harshacharita refers to the Naga king Nagasena, who "met with his doom in Padmavati, as his confidential plan was divulged by a sarika bird".

Assuming this describes a historical person, it appears that Nagasena was the ruler of a Naga branch headquartered at Padmavati in present-day Madhya Pradesh.

Achyuta-nandin
Achyuta-nandin seems to be alike as Achyuta, who is mentioned earlier in the inscription; his name may have been shortened in the earlier verses for metrical purposes.

An alternatively theory identifies Achyuta and Nandin as two distinct kings.

Achyuta was the ruler of Ahichchhatra in present-day Uttar Pradesh, where coins attributed to him have been discovered. These coins bear the legend "Achyu", and are similar to the coins issued by the Naga rulers.

This has led to suggestions that the Achyuta-nandin defeated by Samudragupta was the ruler of a Naga branch headquartered at Ahichhatra.

Balavarman
V. V. Mirashi identified Bala-varman (or Balavarma) as a ruler of the Magha dynasty of Kosambi.

U. N. Roy suggested that Bala-varman may have been an ancestor of the Maukhari kings, who initially served as Gupta vassals, and whose names ended in -varman. Another theory identifies him with the successor of Shridhara-varman, the Shaka ruler of Eran.

Samudragupta may have ended the dynasty of Eran, as suggested by the discovery of his inscription at Eran.

K. N. Dikshit identified Balavarman with Balavarman, a ruler of the Varman dynasty of Kamarupa; however, Balavarman was not a contemporary of Samudragupta.

Moreover, Kamarupa has been mentioned as a distinct frontier kingdom later on in the Allahabad Pillar inscription.

Conquests in the forest region

According to the Allahabad Pillar inscription, Samudragupta reduced all the kings of the forest region (atavika) to subservience.

This forest region may have been located in central India: the inscriptions of the Parivrajaka dynasty, which dictated in this area, state that their ancestral kingdom was located within the 18 forest kingdoms.

Frontier kings and tribes

The Allahabad Pillar inscription mentions that rulers of several frontier kingdoms and tribal oligarchies paid Samudragupta tributes, obeyed his orders, and performed obeisance before him.

The inscription explicitly describes the five kingdoms as frontier territories: the areas tamed by the tribes were also probably located at the frontier of Samudrgupta's kingdom.

"Samudragupta, whose formidable rule was propitiated with the payment of all tributes, execution of orders and visits (to his court) for obeisance by such frontier rulers as those of Samataṭa, Ḍavāka, Kāmarūpa, Nēpāla, and Kartṛipura, and, by the Mālavas, Ārjunāyanas, Yaudhēyas, Mādrakas, Ābhīras, Prārjunas, Sanakānīkas, Kākas, Kharaparikas and other nations."

—&#;Lines 22–23 of the Allahabad pillar inscription of Samudragupta (r.c– CE).[67]

Historian Upinder Singh theorizes that the relationship of these frontier rulers to the Gupta emperor had "certain elements of a feudatory relationship".

According to historian R. C. Majumdar, it is likely that Samudragupta's conquests in Aryavarta and Dakshinapatha increased his reputation to such an extent that the frontier rulers and tribes submitted him without a fight.

The frontier kingdoms included:

  1. Samatata, located in the present-day Bengal.
  2. Davaka, located in present-day Assam.
  3. Kamarupa, located in present-day Assam.
  4. Nepala, located in present-day Nepal.

    According to one theory, Nepala here refers to the Licchavi kingdom, whose rulers may have been the maternal relatives of Samudragupta.

  5. Karttripura, probably located in the present-day Uttarakhand: the inscription appears to name frontier kingdoms in geographical order proceeding from Bengal to Assam to Nepal; Uttarakhand would be next in the sequence.

    A now-obsolete theory identified Karttripura with Kartarpur in present-day Punjab, but Kartarpur was established much later, in the 16th century, by Guru Arjan.

The tribal oligarchies included:

  1. Malavas: During Samudragupta's period, they were probably headquartered at Karkota-nagara (present-day Nagar Fort in Rajasthan), where several thousands of their coins contain been discovered.
  2. Arjunayanas: Their coins hold been found in the Mathura region.

    According to numismatist John Allan, the Arjunayanas resided in the triangle connecting the present-day Delhi, Jaipur and Agra.

  3. Yaudheyas: They ruled the area between the Sutlej and the Yamuna rivers after the Kushans. They come across to have become Samudragupta's tributaries.
  4. Madrakas: They are generally placed between the Ravi and the Chenab rivers.
  5. Abhiras: Epigraphic and literary evidence suggests that they ruled in western India during Samudragupta's period.
  6. Sanakanikas: They appear to have dominated the region around Udayagiri in present-day Madhya Pradesh.

    An inscription found at Udayagiri refers to a Sanakanika chief as a feudatory of Chandragupta II: this chief and his two predecessors are described as "Maharajas", which suggests that Samudragupta allowed the Sanakanika chiefs to rule as his governors after conquering their territory.

  7. Kakas: They may have been the rulers of the area around the Sanchi hill, which has been mentioned as Kakanada in ancient inscriptions.
  8. Prarjunas They may be identified as the Prarjunakas mentioned in the Arthashastra, but their location is uncertain.

    Various theories place them in core India, including around the present-day Narsinghpur or Narsinghgarh in Madhya Pradesh.

  9. Kharaparikas: They may be similar as the "Kharaparas" (literally "thief" or "rogue") mentioned in a 14th-century stone inscription found at Batiyagarh (or Battisgarh) in Damoh district.

    These Kharaparas are variously identified as an indigenous tribe or freebooters of this region.

    • Some later sources suggest that the Kharaparas were a foreign tribe (possibly Mongols), and the Dingal-language texts use the word "Kharapara" as a synonym for "Muslim", but such an identification is not applicable to Samudragupta's period.
    • There is also some speculation about the Kharaparikas being same as the Gardabhilas mentioned in the Puranas, as the words "Khara" and "Gardabha" both mean "donkey" in Sanskrit.

      However, very tiny is known about the Gardabhilas from historical sources.

Relations with other rulers

Samudragupta's inscription mentions that several kings tried to please him by attending on him personally; offering him their daughters in marriage (or, according to another interpretation, gifting him maidens); and seeking the use of the Garuda-depicting Gupta seal for administering their own territories.

These kings included "Daivaputra-Shahi-Shahanushahi, Shaka-Murundas, and the rulers of the island countries such as Simhala".

Daivaputra-Shahi-Shahanushahi

Numismatist John Allan theorized that Daivaputra, Shahi, and Shahanushahi were three different states; or alternatively, Shahi-Shahanushahi was a single state.

Historian D. R. Bhandarkar argued that Daivaputra ("a descendant of Devaputra") cannot be a stand-alone name, and identified Daivaputra-Shahi-Shahanushahi as a single ruler, possibly Kidara I, who had established a new kingdom Gandhara (present-day Afghanistan).

According to historian Tej Ram Sharma, Daivaputra refers to a Kushan king (Devaputra entity a Kushan title); Shahi refers to a sub-branch of the Kushans; and Shahanushahi refers to the Sasanians.

These kings regulated parts of present-day Punjab and Afghanistan.

Historian Ashvini Agrwal theorizes that Kidara, who initially ruled as a vassal of the Sasanian king Shapur II, may possess formed an alliance with Samudragupta to overthrow his Sasanian overlord.

In Raghuvamsha, the Gupta court poet Kalidasa states his hero Raghu defeated the Parasikas (Persians): Agrwal speculates that this description may be inspired from the Kidraite-Gupta victory over the Sasanians.

According to Abraham Eraly and others, the expression Devaputra Shāhi Shāhānu Shāhi evidently designates the Kushan princes, being a deformation of the Kushan regnal titles Devaputra, Shao and Shaonanoshao: "Son of God, King, King of Kings".[84][87][88] This suggests that by the time of the Allahabad inscription the Kushans still ruled in Punjab, but under the suzerainty of the Gupta Emperor.[89]

According to Hans T.

Bakker, candidates for the Daivaputrasāhi are the overdue Kushan kings of Gandhāra: Vasudeva II or Kipunadha, and regarding the śaka-murunda I follow Konow and Lüders, who argue that this 'passage in the Allahabad inscription of Samudragupta leaves no doubt that murunda (i.e.

'commander'), originally was a title used by Saka princes'. The șāhānuṣāhi refers to the 'king of kings' Shapur II.[90]

According to S.R. Goyal, Samudragupta was determined to ensure the safety of the empire's frontiers and secure the western trade routes.

To speak to these concerns, he formed an alliance with Kidara, a strategic move aimed at countering the threats posed by Shapur II of the SassanianEmpire. As the more powerful partner in this alliance, Samudragupta provided significant assist to Kidara.

This collaboration proved to be highly effective; Kidara achieved victories over the Sassanians in AD. However, these victories did not necessarily result in Shapur II becoming a vassal of either Kidara or Samudragupta.[91][92]

Shaka-Murundas

See also: Gupta-Saka Wars

Some scholars assume that the term "Shaka-Murundas" refers to a single entity.

For example, scholars such as Sten Konow assert that "Murunda" is a Shaka title meaning "lord"; the Kushans also used similar titles (for example, Kanishka is titled a "muroda" in his Zeda inscription).

Other scholars, such as K. P. Jayaswal, believe that Shakas and Murundas are two different groups of people.

According to this theory, Shakas here most probably refers to the Western Kshatrapa rulers of Ujjain. Jayaswal notes that the Puranas mention the rule of 13 Murunda kings, and Hemachandra's Abhidhana-Chintamani describes Murunda as people of Lampaka (in present-day Afghanistan).

However, Agrwal points out that these sources are of relatively belated origin, and it is doable that a branch of the Shakas had come to be known as "Murundas".

The exact location of the Shakas mentioned in Samudragupta's inscription is not certain.

V. A. Smith identified them with the Western Kshatrapas, who controlled the western Malwa and Saurashtra regions. D. R. Bhandarkar alternatively identified the Shaka-Murunda ruler with Shridhara-varman, a Shaka ruler whose inscriptions have been discovered at Sanchi (Kanakerha inscription) and Eran.[94] Eran then came under the direct control of Samudragupta, as attested by his Eran inscription.[94]

Simhala and other islands

According to the Chinese sources, Meghavarna, the king of Simhala (present-day Sri Lanka), sought to build a monastery at Bodh Gaya, for the convenience of the pilgrims from his kingdom.

He sent rich presents for this purpose, and Samudragupta sanctioned his demand to build the monastery. Using poetic exaggeration, Samudragupta's courtier Harishena appears to have described this act of diplomacy as an act of subservience. Similarly, the 7th-century Chinese traveler Xuanzang, who visited this monastery, appears to have regarded the rich presents sent by Meghavarna as tribute: he states that Meghavarna "gave in tribute to the king of India all the jewels of his country".

The "other islands" may be the Indianized kingdoms of South-East Asia, but there is no evidence that their rulers were subordinate to Samudragupta.

They probably sent embassies to the Gupta empire, and maintained friendly relations. The sea ports of the Gupta Empire, such as Tamralipti, were probably related to these kingdoms through the marine routes. The widespread exploit of Sanskrit in these kingdoms may have happened as a result of Gupta influence.

Imperial extent

Samudragupta's empire included a core area, located in northern India, which was directly controlled by the emperor.

Besides, it comprised a number of monarchical and tribal tributary states. Historian R. C. Majumdar theorizes that Samudragupta directly controlled an area extending from the Ravi River (Punjab) in the west to the Brahmaputra River (Bengal and Assam) in the east, and from the Himalayan foothills in the north to the Vindhya hills in the south.

The south-western boundary of his territory roughly followed an imaginary line drawn from present-day Karnal to Bhilsa.

In the south, Samudragupta's empire definitely included Eran in present-day Madhya Pradesh, where his inscription has been found.

The Allahabad Pillar inscription suggests that he advanced up to Kanchipuram in the south. However, since the claims in the Allahabad Pillar inscription are from a royal eulogy, they must be treated with caution. The southern kings were not under his direct suzerainty: they only paid him tribute.

According to historian Kunal Chakrabarti, Samudragupta's military campaigns weakened the tribal republics of present-day Punjab and Rajasthan, but even these kingdoms were not under his direct suzerainty: they only paid him tribute.

Samudragupta's claim of control over other kings is questionable. Historian Ashvini Agrawal notes that a gold coin of the Gadahara tribe bears the legend Samudra, which suggests that Samudragupta's manage extended up to the Chenab river in the Punjab region.

Some earlier scholars, such as J.

F. Fleet