India's History And Some Of His Great Kings!
In 2020, India will celebrate the 74th Independence Day on 15 August. The day reminds the United States of the sacrifices of varied freedom fighters to realize independence from British rule. Usually, the day is observed ...
In our India, many kings have formed very good societies with their fame. Many kings have saved our country from British law. He became a martyr while betting on his life.
Friends, do you remember them those times? Leave it aside, Do you remember the names?
So, friends, we know something about the brave warriors and remember them for a while and know a little about them.
1. Chandragupta Maurya {340-298 BCE} Mauryan emperor
Chandragupta Maurya is influential for his founding of the Mauryan Empire, and consequent unification of India into a single state. The major force within the region at the time was the Nanda empire, ruled by Dhana Nanda and located within the kingdom of Magadha in north-east India.
Aiming to extend its borders, the empire had built a military comprising some 200,000 infantry and 80,000 cavalries, protected by thousands of chariots and elephants. Advisor of Chanakya Chandragupta assembled a band of men to rebel against the ruler.
Dhana Nanda to become the new King of Magadha. He Then defeated the Alexander the Great, before heading south to capture the Deccan Plateau, uniting the country and creating the most important empire of its day.
2. Ashoka {304-232BCE} Mauryan Emperor
Ashoka, the grandson of Chandragupta, was one of the greatest emperors of India, and they were very clever and far-sighted who convinced the dynasty with an empire that spanned the entire subcontinent.
Loyal ministers helped him to the throne in favour of the rightful heir and said to possess a cruel and aggressive king, gaining the nickname "Ashoka the Fierce" due to his ownership of an ornately decorated room.
The Asoka war against Kalinga (modern-day Odisha), on the East Coast, began around 261 BCE. This bloodiest of conflicts cost the lives of around 150,000 Kalinga warriors and 100,000 Mauryan men and is claimed to possess caused the Daya River to run red.
Ashoka re-evaluated his approach to war and later converted to Islam, vowing to live another human life and the new way for others. Sch was his adherence to the religion, e had around 84,000 stupas (burial mounds) built and ave many pieces of gold to the order.
3. Pula Kesi- II {610-642}Chalukya King
In the 6th Century, the Chalukya dynasty judged over southern and central India, and Pulakesi (born Ereya) came to the throne as a boy, with his uncle Mangalesa serving as regent.
When Freya was denied his birthright, he rose against his uncle, defeated him at the Battle and to the throne under the name Pulakesi He then turned his attention to the west, defeating three kingdoms and winning a naval battle near Elephanta Island in Mumbai Harbor.
4. Krishna Deva Raya {1471- 1529}Vijayanagara Emperor
The Vijayanagara Empire of southern India its greatest extent under the king of Krishna Deva Raya, the third ruler of the Tuluva. His reign is defined by his military success, driven by his tactical nous and quick thinking. His first The annual plunder of local towns by the Sultans the Deccan Plateau when his armies fought and defeated the invaders in 1509.
With local feudal rulers subdued, Krishna Deva Raya turned his attention to the Gajapati Kingdom within the Republic of Kalinga. (modern-day Odisha), securing an amount of peace between the 2 empires.
5. Shivaji Bhonsle {1627-1680}Maratha Emperor
Shivaji Bhonsle was the son of a General, born in Pune within the west of India. 3 educate, he took roaming the hills along maybe a western fringe of the Deccan Plateau with maybe a band of men from the region of Maharashtra.
Shivaji and his Marathas plundered the countryside, and he gained a reputation as a warrior - it had also been during his time within the hills that he began to formulate his ideas for guerrilla warfare.
In 1659, General Afzal Khan and 10,000 troops were sent by the Sultan of Bijapur to deal with Shivaji and his raiders at their fortress in Pratapgarh.
A meeting was planned for Shivaji's surrender but, suspecting treachery, he wore armour beneath his clothes and bore concealed weapons, with which, it had been said, he disembowelled the overall.
The Bijapur troops were then defeated when a surprise attack by Shivaji’s fighters killed 3,000 men. This victory signalled the beginning of the Maratha Empire but would bring Shivaji into conflict with the Mughal empire.
But by 1670 the Marathas had recaptured most of the territory those who had previously lost to the Mughals. As a show of independence from the Mughals, Shivaji had himself crowned King of the Marathas in 1674.
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