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Chandragupta Maurya
Chandragupta Maurya History- Early life
- Chandragupta Maurya is thought to have been born around 340 BCE in Patna (modern-day Bihar, India).
- Some Texts suggest his rule that Chandragupta’s parents were both Kshatriya (warrior or prince) caste members. In contrast, others claim that his father was a monarch and his mother was a Shudra (service Sarvarthasiddhi of the Nanda Kingdom) was Chandragupta Maurya’s father.
- Ashoka the Great, Chandragupta’s grandson, eventually claimed a blood tie with Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, but the claim was never proven.
Chandragupta Maurya History- Maurya Empire
- Chandragupta Maurya destroyed the Nanda Dynasty, formed the Maurya Empire in 322 BCE and quickly pushed his influence westward across central and western India with the support of Chanakya.
- His advance took advantage of local power disturbances caused by Alexander the Great’s army retreating westward. By 316 BCE, the empire had completely overrun Northwestern India, battling and conquering Alexander’s satraps.
- The expedition commanded by Seleucus I, a Macedonian general in Alexander’s army, was then repelled, and Chandragupta acquired additional land west of the Indus River.
Chandragupta Maurya Wife
Durdhara was Chandragupta Maurya wife, according to the known Jain text. While Durdhara was depicted in popular culture as Dhana Nanda’s daughter, Durdhara was Chandragupta’s first cousin, according to Mahavamsa-tika. She was the daughter of Chandragupta’s eldest maternal uncle, who had travelled to Patliaputra with Chandragupta’s mother.
Durdhara, Chandragupta Maurya’s wife, was also the mother of his only son Bindusar, who became his heir and the Mauryan Empire’s second Samrat. Durdhara, on the other hand, didn’t live long enough to watch her kid grow up since she died before she could see him.
According to tradition, Prime Minister Chanakya was worried that his adversaries might poison Chandragupta, so he began giving little quantities of poison into the emperor’s meals to build up a tolerance. When Chandragupta Maurya’s wife Durdhara was pregnant with their first kid, he was ignorant of the plot and shared part of his meal with her. Durdhara passed away, but Chanakya arrived in time to perform an emergency operation to remove the full-term baby. Bindusara survived, but a drop of his mother’s poisoned blood landed on his forehead, leaving a blue Bindu—the inspiration for his name.
Chandragupta Maurya’s wife died, leaving behind a great ruler. His subsequent wives and children are hardly unknown. Bindusara, Chandragupta’s son, is likely to be remembered more for his son than for his own rule.