Shungas, Indo-Greeks, Shakas, Kushanas and Satavahanas, then the Gupta empire and the classical golden age: rulers, administration, society, the achievements in science, mathematics, literature and art, and the decline (c. 200 BCE to 600 CE), with reference tables and authored CAPF practice
After the fall of the Mauryas around 185 BCE, north India fragmented and was successively dominated by the Shungas, the Indo-Greeks (Bactrian Greeks), the Shakas (Scythians), the Parthians (Pahlavas), and above all the Kushanas, while the Satavahanas held the Deccan. From the early fourth century CE, the Gupta Empire (c. 319 to 550 CE) reunited much of north India and presided over what is conventionally called the "classical" or "golden" age, the high point of Sanskrit literature, temple architecture, mathematics, astronomy, and medicine. The sources combine inscriptions (the Allahabad Prashasti, the Junagadh inscription of Rudradaman, the Hathigumpha inscription), coins (the Indo-Greeks and Guptas issued superb gold coinage), foreign accounts (the Chinese pilgrim Fa-Hien), and a rich body of texts.
For CAPF, the topic is high-yield. The examiner tests Kanishka and the Saka era, Gupta ruler-to-achievement and ruler-to-epithet matching, scholar-to-work matching (Aryabhata, Varahamihira, Kalidasa), who founded Nalanda, who composed the Allahabad Prashasti, which Chinese pilgrim visited under whom, and the Gandhara-versus-Mathura art schools.
The Kushanas were a Central Asian people (a branch of the Yuezhi). Their greatest ruler was Kanishka I (accession traditionally dated to 78 CE, taken as the start of the Saka era). His empire ran from Central Asia (Bactria) across the north-west and into the Gangetic plain, with capitals at Purushapura (Peshawar) and Mathura. Kanishka was a great patron of Buddhism: he convened the Fourth Buddhist Council in Kashmir (Kundalvana), which led to the Hinayana-Mahayana split, and he supported the spread of Mahayana along the Silk Route to Central Asia and China. His age saw the flowering of two art schools, the Gandhara school (a Greco-Roman, Hellenistic style in grey schist, the first to make images of the Buddha in human form) and the Mathura school (an indigenous style in red sandstone). The court scholars included the physician Charaka (the Charaka Samhita, on medicine), the Buddhist philosopher Ashvaghosha (Buddhacharita), and the philosopher Nagarjuna (the Madhyamika / Shunyavada school).
The Satavahanas (called Andhras in the Puranas) ruled the Deccan from their capital at Pratishthana (Paithan) on the Godavari. The greatest king was Gautamiputra Satakarni, praised in the Nasik prashasti of his mother Gautami Balashri, who defeated the Shaka ruler Nahapana. The Satavahanas issued lead and copper (and some potin) coins, promoted inland and maritime trade, used Prakrit as the official language, and began the practice of granting tax-free land to Brahmanas and Buddhist monks (the agrahara and brahmadeya grants). They followed a matronymic naming custom (kings named after their mothers, hence Gautamiputra, "son of Gautami"). The Buddhist rock-cut caves and chaityas of the western Deccan (Karle, Nasik, Bhaja) and the later Amaravati stupa school of art flourished in and after their time.
The dynasty was founded by Sri Gupta and Ghatotkacha (who used the modest title Maharaja). The real founder of the empire was:
The empire weakened from the late fifth century under repeated Huna invasions (the chiefs Toramana and his son Mihirakula) and the rise of independent feudatories (samantas), and faded by the mid-sixth century. The Maukharis, the Maitrakas of Vallabhi, and the later Vardhanas (Harsha) succeeded to parts of the realm.
Gupta administration was more decentralised than the Mauryan, with provinces (bhuktis) under uparikas, districts (vishayas) under vishayapatis, and a growing class of land-granting feudatories (samantas) who held administrative and even judicial powers, an early form of "feudalism". Society saw the consolidation of the caste order and the rise of land grants to Brahmanas; the position of women declined further (early marriage, the first epigraphic reference to sati appears at Eran, 510 CE). The economy was prosperous and partly self-sufficient, with flourishing trade (though the long-distance Roman trade had declined), guilds (shrenis), and the issue of the finest gold coins (dinaras) of ancient India, along with silver and copper coinage.
The most important post-Gupta ruler of the north was Harshavardhana of Thanesar and Kanauj (606 to 647 CE), of the Pushyabhuti (Vardhana) dynasty, who briefly reunited much of north India. His court poet Banabhatta wrote the Harshacharita (a biography) and the Kadambari. The Chinese Buddhist pilgrim Hiuen Tsang (Xuanzang) visited India during his reign and left a detailed account; Harsha held the great religious assemblies at Kanauj and Prayag. His southward advance was checked by the Chalukya Pulakeshin II. Harsha himself wrote three Sanskrit plays (Ratnavali, Nagananda, Priyadarshika). His death without an heir left the north fragmented again, leading into the early medieval period.
Literature: Kalidasa is the foremost Sanskrit poet-dramatist of the age (the plays Abhijnanashakuntalam, Malavikagnimitram, Vikramorvashiyam; the poems Meghaduta, Raghuvamsha, Kumarasambhava, Ritusamhara). Vishakhadatta wrote the political dramas Mudrarakshasa and Devichandraguptam. Shudraka wrote Mrichchhakatika. The Puranas and the two great epics reached their final form, and the smritis (including the Manusmriti and later law codes) were compiled. The Panchatantra (Vishnu Sharma) of moral fables belongs to this milieu. Amarasimha compiled the Sanskrit lexicon Amarakosha.
Science and mathematics: Aryabhata (born 476 CE) wrote the Aryabhatiya, stated that the earth rotates on its axis (and that the apparent motion of the heavens is due to this), explained solar and lunar eclipses scientifically, gave an accurate value of pi (approximately 3.1416), and worked on trigonometry. Varahamihira wrote the Brihatsamhita (an encyclopaedia of astronomy, astrology, geography, and natural science) and the Panchasiddhantika. Brahmagupta (7th century, just after the Guptas) advanced the rules of zero and is credited with an early statement of gravitation. The decimal place-value system and the symbol and concept of zero matured in this period. In medicine, Charaka (of the earlier Kushana age, the Charaka Samhita on internal medicine) and Sushruta (the Sushruta Samhita on surgery, including cataract and plastic surgery) are the classical authorities.
Art and architecture: the Gupta age established the Nagara (north Indian) style of structural temple; the Dashavatara (Vishnu) temple at Deogarh (Uttar Pradesh) and the brick temple at Bhitargaon are early examples. The murals of the Ajanta caves (Maharashtra), the finest ancient Indian painting, were executed largely in the Gupta and Vakataka period. Buddhist sculpture (the Sarnath Buddha) reached a classical serenity. The rust-free Iron Pillar at Mehrauli (Delhi), inscribed for a king "Chandra" and standing for more than fifteen centuries without rusting, attests to the metallurgical skill of the age.
| Ruler / figure | Dynasty | Key fact |
|---|---|---|
| Pushyamitra | Shunga | Founder; killed the last Maurya; Ashvamedha; Bharhut and Sanchi railings |
| Menander (Milinda) | Indo-Greek | Recorded in the Milindapanha (with Nagasena) |
| Rudradaman I | Shaka | Junagadh inscription (c. 150 CE), first long Sanskrit inscription |
| Kanishka I | Kushana | Saka era (78 CE); Fourth Buddhist Council (Kashmir); Gandhara and Mathura art; Charaka, Ashvaghosha, Nagarjuna |
| Gautamiputra Satakarni | Satavahana | Greatest Satavahana king; defeated Nahapana; Nasik prashasti |
| Chandragupta I | Gupta | Maharajadhiraja; Gupta era 319 CE; Lichchhavi alliance |
| Samudragupta | Gupta | "Napoleon of India"; Allahabad Prashasti by Harisena; Ashvamedha; veena coins |
| Chandragupta II (Vikramaditya) | Gupta | Defeated the Shakas; Fa-Hien visited; navaratnas; Vakataka alliance |
| Kumaragupta I | Gupta | Founded Nalanda; worshipped Kartikeya |
| Skandagupta | Gupta | Repelled the early Huna invasions; repaired the Sudarshana lake |
| Scholar | Work / contribution |
|---|---|
| Aryabhata | Aryabhatiya; earth's rotation; value of pi; eclipses; trigonometry |
| Varahamihira | Brihatsamhita; Panchasiddhantika |
| Brahmagupta | Rules of zero; early statement of gravitation |
| Kalidasa | Abhijnanashakuntalam, Meghaduta, Raghuvamsha, Kumarasambhava |
| Vishakhadatta | Mudrarakshasa, Devichandraguptam |
| Shudraka | Mrichchhakatika |
| Charaka | Charaka Samhita (medicine, Kushana age) |
| Sushruta | Sushruta Samhita (surgery) |
| Amarasimha | Amarakosha (Sanskrit lexicon) |
| Feature | Gandhara school | Mathura school | Amaravati school |
|---|---|---|---|
| Region | North-west (Gandhara) | Mathura (UP) | Lower Krishna valley (Andhra) |
| Patrons | Kushanas | Kushanas | Satavahanas and Ikshvakus |
| Influence | Greco-Roman (Hellenistic) | Indigenous Indian | Indigenous, narrative |
| Material | Grey schist | Red (mottled) sandstone | White marble (limestone) |
| Subject | Mainly Buddha and Bodhisattvas | Buddha, Jain, and Hindu (Yaksha) images | Buddhist stupa relief (Jataka scenes) |
| Era | Year | Started by |
|---|---|---|
| Vikrama Samvat | 58 BCE | Traditionally Vikramaditya (Malwa) |
| Saka era | 78 CE | Kanishka (Indian national calendar, 1957) |
| Gupta era | 319 CE | Chandragupta I |
| Harsha era | 606 CE | Harshavardhana |
Formats: ruler-to-epithet (Samudragupta as "Napoleon of India", Chandragupta II as Vikramaditya); scholar-to-work matching; single-correct on the Saka era and Kanishka; who founded Nalanda; who composed the Allahabad Prashasti; which pilgrim visited under whom; Gandhara-versus-Mathura statements.
Authored practice (with answers):