Ancient India
History of India

Gold coin of Chandragupta II , Author’s Private Collection
Mahājanapada 600-400 BC |
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Punch-Marked Coin, Maghada Janapada, Silver Karshapana |
Sixteen kingdoms or oligarchic republics existed in ancient India from the sixth century BC to the fourth century BC. These Pre-Buddhist states in the Mahabharata epic, include Kosala, Kuru, Magadha, Malla, Machcha (Matsya), Panchala, Surasena, Vriji and Vatsa. Each of these Janapadas (Jana; people, pada; foot) reflected the culture of its own people of the region and unique. Janapadas are also mentioned in both Buddhist and Jain texts which confirm their historical reality and continuity. |
599 BC Traditional birth year of Mahavira of Jainism, |
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A 19th Century Temple Token of Jainism |
Mahavira, 24th Tirthankar is born (traditional date) into a royal family in the present Bihar region of India. At the age of thirty, he left home in pursuit of spiritual awakening and to spread his philosophy which is now followed by over four million people in India. |
Mayuran Empire 320-232 BC, Chandragupta I 340 – 297 BC |
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Silver Karshapana ca 320 BC |
Mauryan Empire was founded in 320 BC by Chandragupta Maurya in Magadha after he defeated the Nanda dynasty and the Macedonian Seleucid Empire. Chandragupta unified the Indian subcontinent, fragmented into Mahajanapadas in the North West, and the Nanda Empire in the Indo-Gangetic Plain |
Bindusara 320–273 BC |
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Silver punch marked coin 320-270 BC (Author’s Private Collection)
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Bindusara, the son of Chandragupta inherited the vast regions of northern, central and eastern parts of India along with parts of present Afghanistan and Balochistan at the age of 22 years. Greeks knew him as Amitrochates, the destroyer of foes). Bindusara later conquered almost all the Indian peninsula, except the Dravidian South. |
Indo-Scythian 100 BC – 395 CE |
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Indo-Scythian silver coin, Azilises (c.60-45/35 BC) |
Scythians (Sakas), a large group of Iranian Eurasian nomads migrated to central and northern South Asia including Gandhara, Sindh, Kashmir, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in 100BC. The first Saka king in south Asia was Maues established Saka power in Gandhara (modern day Pakistan and Afghanistan region) extended supremacy over north-western India. |
King Kanishka ca 100 AD, Shiva with Nandi, Anton Sebastian Private Collection