Chandragupta Maurya and His TimesThis is a comprehensive work dealing with the life and times of India`s first historical emperor, and a picture of the civilization of India in the early period of the fourth century BC. The author had utilized much material found in Arthasastra. The work also embodies collation and comparison of evidence from different sources, classical works in Sanskrit, Buddhist and jaina texts and the inscriptions of Asoka. The book gives a detailed account of Chandragupta Maurya and the general view of his administration. It has covered almost all aspects of administration including the king, ministers and officers with rules of service and divisions of administrative departments; governance of land system and rural administration along with municipal administration, the source of law and dispensation of justice and the army and its management. Besides social and economic conditions of that times have been elaborately discussed. The detailed contents serves as an index of subjects, the other parts are--Index of technical terms, three appendics which enrich utility of the book and a plate of typical Mauryan Coins. |
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Page 27
... Magadha , Gandhara , Yavana , Saka , Chedi , and Hupa [ V. II ] . Thus these various peoples , mostly from the Punjab and the frontier Highlands , were involved in the great war between Chandragupta and his enemies in Magadha . This ...
... Magadha , Gandhara , Yavana , Saka , Chedi , and Hupa [ V. II ] . Thus these various peoples , mostly from the Punjab and the frontier Highlands , were involved in the great war between Chandragupta and his enemies in Magadha . This ...
Page 33
... Magadha . There is , however , evidence to show that the event created a widespread sensation and roused popular interest . It passed into folk lore and tradition . It seems that , after recruiting their army locally in the Punjab in ...
... Magadha . There is , however , evidence to show that the event created a widespread sensation and roused popular interest . It passed into folk lore and tradition . It seems that , after recruiting their army locally in the Punjab in ...
Page 36
... Magadha . He made himself at once the sovereign of an empire which was much larger than that of Nanda , for it included the land of the five rivers up to the Indus . This empire also extended farther by his later conquests . His ...
... Magadha . He made himself at once the sovereign of an empire which was much larger than that of Nanda , for it included the land of the five rivers up to the Indus . This empire also extended farther by his later conquests . His ...
Contents
CHAPTER I | 1 |
Greatness I Earliest Indian Emperors 1 Terms and Ceremonies | 10 |
Taxila 16 Education at Taxila | 16 |
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Common terms and phrases
according Adhyakshas administration agricultural Alexander Alexander's already seen Amatyas animals appointed army Arrian Arthasastra ascetics Asoka Bhadrabahu Brahminical Buddhist Cambridge History caste cattle centre Chanakya Chandragupta Maurya charge chariots chief classes coins conquest cultivation described Dharma Durga duties elephants empire evidence foreign forests frontiers Gandhāra gold grades grains Greek rule harem Heads of Departments Hindu horses husband India Indus infantry inscriptions irrigation Jain Kautilya kinds king's known Kshatriya labour land live Magadha Mahāvamsa Mantri Manu marriage Maurya empire Megasthenes mentioned military Ministers named Nanda king noted officer called palace panas Panini Pataliputra Patañjali persons Poros princes protected province punch-marked punished Punjab recruited refers revenue river roads Rock Edict royal rural Samaharta Sanskrit Satrap Seleukos silver sources sovereign sovereignty Strabo Sudra Superintendent Surashtra symbol taxes Taxila texts town tradition Uttarapatha VIII village women Yaksha