Prior
to the rise of the Maurya, numerous states, large and small, covered northern
India. This was theclassical age of ancient India, a time of religious ferment
when two new faiths, Buddhism and Jainism, appeared.
One
of the largest of these states was Magadha. It was located in the eastern part
of the Ganges plain, on the periphery of the Aryan cultural area. Other states
apparently regarded it as semi-barbarous. Perhaps its position on the frontiers
of the Aryan world meant that its people were not too strict in their
commitment to the old Vedic religion of northern India. It is certainly the
case that the two non-orthodox faiths of Jainism and Buddhism flourished here
in their early days, and found patrons amongst the Magadha kings.
Gradually,
over a century or more, Magadha extended its borders. Then, under a line of
kings of the Nanda dynasty (reigned c. 424-322 BC), the kingdom dramatically
expanded, to cover a large part of northern India.
Chandragupta
The
Mauryan period of Indian history was really inaugurated by the conquest of
northwest India by Alexander the Great, in 326 BC. This seems to have
destabilized the political situation amongst the Aryan states in the region,
and the first great conqueror in Indian history, Chandragupta Maurya (reigned
322-298 BC), to rise to power.
Chandragupta
seized control of the throne of Maghada from the last Nanda king, and then
proceeded to conquer that part of northern India which still remained outside
Magadha's borders. He drove out Alexander's successors from the Indian
subcontinent, and went on to conquer the easternmost provinces of Alexander's
former empire, reaching into Afghanistan and eastern Iran.
Internally,
building on foundations laid by the Nanda kings, his reign saw the
establishment of a strong central government. This was the work of his highly
capable chief minister, Chanakya.
Chandragupta
was succeeded by his son, Bindusara (reigned 298-272 BC). He continued his
father's conquests by extending Mauryan power down into central India.
Asoka
Bindusara
was followed by his son, Asoka (reigned 272-232 BC). Asoka proved to be one of
the most remarkable, and attractive, rulers in the whole of world history.
After
a bloody war against Kalinga, in eastern India, Asoka renounced warfare and
converted to Buddhism. He determined that henceforward he would reign in peace.
He actively promoted the spread of Buddhism; and sent missions abroad, to Sri
Lanka and South East Asia. Here they laid the foundations for Buddhism's later
triumph as the predominant faith. He also sent missions to the Greek-speaking
kingdoms to the west, which had carved up Alexander the Great's conquests
between them. Here they seem to have made little impact.
We
can still see the pillars Asoka erected around his empire, on which were
inscribed royal edicts and encouragements to his subjects to live in harmony
with one another. These edicts and exhortations give an insight into Asoka's
mind. What comes across is a compassionate, tolerant, firm ruler, seeking
justice and well-being for all his subjects.
Mauryan
Government
There
seems little doubt that one of the main architects of Mauryan power was
Chandragupta's chief minister, Chanakya. He is widely regarded as the author of
a political treatise called the Arthashastra, a down-to-earth manual on how to
rule. Although most scholars agree that this work was in fact written a long
time after the Maurya had left the stage, many think it does reflect conditions
from that time. In any case, Chanakya seems to have organized an efficient
military and civil administration, on which the Mauryan kings could build a
solid power.
The
king was advised by a council of advisors, and was served by an elaborate
administrative structure. The empire was divided into provinces, each governed
by a member of the royal family. Under them, local rulers seem to have been
kept in place, if they were loyal to the Maurya and forwarded the taxes from
their domains promptly to the imperial treasury in the capital. Their
activities, however, were checked on by senior royal officials, through regular
inspections, and also watched by Mauryan spies, secretly. The Mauryan regime
had an extensive espionage system, which Chandragupta in particular used to
great effect.
The
cities of the empire were directly administered by a hierarchy of royal
officials, responsible for the upkeep of such public facilities as roads and
wells, and for the maintenance of justice.
Mauryan
power rested ultimately on its formidable army, which Greek and Roman authors
regarded (probably wrongly) as the largest in the world at that time. One
claimed that it included 700 elephants, 1000 horses and 600,000 infantry,
surely an exaggeration.
The
Mauryan government and the economy
As
with most ancient administrative systems, ithe Mauryan bureacracy's main
purpose was to collect taxes. These rested primarily on the land tax. Since
this depended on agricultural prosperity, the government sponsored the
reclamation of large amounts of land from forests and wastelands (it seems to
have been illegal for private persons to clear land). Irrigation projects were
undertaken to increase productivity.
Taxes
on trade were also levied, and trade was officially encouraged. The
construction of a network of roads, certainly as much for military as
commercial purposes, will have significantly affected trade for the better; and
such measures as the planting of roadside trees for shade; and the construction
of rest houses every few miles, illustrates the government's concern in this
area.
Economy
and society
The
Mauryan period, particularly during the reign of Asoka, was one of the very few
times in Indian history when the population as a whole experienced an extensive
period of peace. As always, peac encouraged prosperity, and as we have seen,
the government actively sponsored agriculture and trade. Trade routes would
have been more secure than at any time before in India, and indeed for most
periods since. This would have made long-distance commerce easier.
The
archaeological record suggests that the standard of living rose appreciable
under Maurya rule. Iron implements came into wider use, which would have helped
the reclamation of land for farming, and led to greater productivity for
farmers. Metal coinage became more widespread, which would have stimulated
trade. The expansion of trade is reflected in the spread of northern pottery
styles into south India. Palitpura, the Mauryan capital, was a large and
imposing city.
Links
with other regions of the world
The
Mauryan government was in regular diplomatic relations with the Greek-speaking
kingdoms to its west. This was of course specially true for the Seleucid
empire, the nearest, but contacts with Macedonia, Egyptand other kingdoms of
the Hellenistic world are also mentioned. One of the Seleucids' ambassadors to
the Mauryan court was an official called Megethsenes, from whose account, the
Indica, we can glean much information about India at the time of the Mauryan
empire. There seem to have been marriage alliances between the Seleucid and
Mauryan royal families.
These
diplomatic relations also involved trade missions, and under Asoka, missionary
expeditions as well.
Religion
Buddhism
flourished under the Maurya. Some scholars believe that it was in this period,
especially under Asoka, that Buddhism became established as a major religion
within the Indian sub-continent. Jainism also flourished, especially amongst
the merchants of the cities - who, as we have seen, were experiencing a time of
prosperity. The merchants were to some extent on the margins of the early Hindu
scheme of society. They would probably have been less patient than other social
groups with the traditional Brahmin dominance over religious matters, and hence
more attracted to the new heterdox faiths of Buddhiam and Jainism.
Decline
Fifty
years or so after Asoka's death, perhaps sooner (there is very little evidence
from the later Maurya period), the huge empire began to crumble. Outlying
provinces fell away, and by the mid-2nd century BC the empire had shrunk to its
core areas.
Why
did this decline set in, and why was it so rapid?
Asoka
has sometimes been blamed for sowing the seeds of declineby his too-gentle
rule. He might have left unchecked destabilizing forces, which came to full
power after he was gone.
For
this idea there is no evidence; indeed the edicts scattered around the empire
suggest a firm and vigorous ruler. The causes of decline lie elsewhere, and can
be summarized as follows:
Causes
of decline
First,
Asoka seems to have been followed by a succession of weak rulers, who could not
exert their will over such a large empire.
This
is related to the second reason, the Maurya's failure to develop robust
imperial institutions. Unlike the Han empire in China, which continued to run
smoothly for almost 400 years, even when the emperors were nonentities, the
effectiveness of Mauryan rule was always directly dependent upon the personal
ability and energy of the king.
Later
experience from around the world - for example, from China and the Roman empire
- shows that, unless there is a well-working system for selecting and promoting
capable and comparatively honest officials, a bureaucracy can soon become
fragmented amongst the followers of over-powerful ministers and provincial
governors. Something like this may well have occurred in late Maurya times,
culminating in the secession of large provinces from the empire.
Finally,
the fragmentation of the Mauryan empire was, to some extent, a product of its
very success. During the peace and unity the Mauryan kings had brought India,
Aryan culture had spread throughout much of the sub-continent. Towns and cities
had sprung up - normally as centres of Mauryan administration - in places
distant from the old seats of civilization. Economic development had come to
areas which were previously the abode of forest peoples, of nomads and
hunter-gatherers. All this had put in place the economic and administrative
foundations upon which new, independent states could be built; and, with the
firm hand of the early Mauryan kings gone, such states soon appeared.
The
Mauryan legacy
In
later Indian records, the Mauryan empire appears only as an entry in the long
list of kingdoms that made up the vast and complex history of India; no special
significance was attached to it.
No
magnificent architecture was left - the towns where the Maurya carried out most
of their building work continued to be lived in right up to the present day,
and so the Mauryan remains were buried under streets and buildings used by
later generations.
Apart
from a few brief mentions in some accounts, this great empire was all but
forgotten - an astonishing fact given the great importance accorded by peoples
in other parts of the world to their ancient empires.
In
the 19th century, however, some British officials began to wonder, who built
those mysterious pillars dotted around India? How come they are hundreds -
thousands - of miles apart from one another? What do the inscriptions on them
mean?
Then
the truth about the Maurya gradually began to emerge. When it was realised that
these pillars were the work of one king, called Asoka, whose realm covered a
vast area of India and beyond, it was realised that here was an historical
phenomenon of huge significance.
The
Mauryan empire in world history
The
Mauryan empire was the first great empire of the Indian sub-continent, and that
in itself gives it major importance in world history.
It
was one of the great empires of the ancient world; in size at least it was on a
par with the Persian, Roman and Han empires.
The
spread of Indian civilization
The
Mauryan empire spread Aryan culture throughout most of India. It stimulated the
economic development of then-peripheral regions, as these were incorporated
into Aryan society. In accomplishing this, the Mauryan empire vastly expanded
the horizons of Indian civilization, and so made it a more powerful force in
world history.
In
due course, southern India, which only under the Maurya began to be drawn into
what we today think of as Indian culture, would play a pivotal role in the
development of Indian Ocean trade networks, and act as a bridge for goods and
ideas between the Middle East and South East Asia.
The
spread of Buddhism
The
Mauryan empire played a key role in the spread of Buddhism. It is quite
possible that it was the Mauryan period which saw Buddhism's establishment as a
major religion within India - a development encouraged by official policy under
Asoka. This will have helped establish the sub-continent as a base from which
Buddhism could later spread to other parts of Asia.
Moreover,
the Maurya directly promoted Buddhist missions to other regions, and although
in most cases it was only later that the peoples of many of these countries
became Buddhist to any large extent, these Maurya missions seem to have been
directly responsible for the conversion of the ruling class of at least one
country, Sri Lanka.
In
any case, the fact that China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Tibet, Burma, Thailand,
Laos and Cambodia all now have large Buddhist populations is in some part owing
to the great Maurya king, Asoka.
A
saintly ruler
Asoka
offers a rare example in world history of a saintly yet capable ruler. Although
his outstanding personality was hidden in the historical records until the 19th
century, since then it has given all those who study world history pause for
thought. As world history becomes a subject of more widespread study, his
example can only become more widely known.
Institutional
failure
Nevertheless,
there is a negative side to the Maurya's role in world history: their failure
to create an empire that endured for more than a century. This meant it did not
play in Indian history the role that the Han empire played in Chinese - that
is, act as a powerful model for a unified government system which future
generations would set about recreating, and leaving to them the institutional
means by which they could do that.
It
is interesting to ponder the question - had the Mauryas succeeded in creating a
tradition of unity, and Indian history had been more like Chinese, with a
series of great empires providing unity and strength for the nation as a whole
- how would world history have been different?
It
would be one and half millennia before India again came near to unification,
under the Delhi Sultanate - and then only very briefly. Likewise the Moguls and
the British after them achieved brief moments of unity; but there was no
ingrained habit of unity, no urge to merge, which rulers could draw on - a
situation so different in Chinese history, where the only truly legitimate
rulers are those who govern the entire - or at least the bulk - of that giant
country.
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