Overview

Previous Year UPSC-CSE Questions By the end you will be able to draft model answers for the following UPSC questions. Each question carries a collapsible framework showing how to approach it in the exam.

  1. UPSC Prelims 2006 GS-IThe Allahabad Pillar inscription is associated with which one of the following?
    1. a Mahapadma Nanda
    2. b Chandragupta Maurya
    3. c Ashoka
    4. d Samudragupta
    How to approach this Prelims question

    Question type: Single-best-answer associating the Allahabad pillar inscription with a ruler.

    Approach: Distinguish the pillar (Ashokan) from the inscription in question (Samudragupta's prashasti by Harisena).

    Trap to watch: Ashoka is the trap: the pillar is an Ashokan pillar, but the famous Allahabad prashasti inscription on it records Samudragupta's conquests.

    Key facts to recall:

    • The Allahabad prashasti was composed by Harisena for Samudragupta.
    • It was engraved on a re-used Ashokan pillar.

    Answer signal: Samudragupta.

Samudragupta, the son of Chandragupta I, was the greatest conqueror of the Gupta line and the true maker of the empire. His deeds are known above all from the Allahabad prashasti, a long eulogy composed by his court poet Harisena and engraved on a pillar that had once carried the edicts of Ashoka. It tells of a four-fold conquest: the kings of the north uprooted and their lands annexed, the kings of the south defeated and then released, and the frontier states and foreign powers brought to tribute and homage. He revived the ancient horse-sacrifice, the Ashvamedha, and struck a fine gold coinage. This part covers the prashasti, the four-fold conquest, the Ashvamedha and the coins, and his place in history.

Samudragupta and the Allahabad Prashasti

The Prayaga Prashasti of Harisena

What is the significance of the prashasti: almost all we know of Samudragupta comes from a single great inscription, the Allahabad or Prayaga prashasti.

The prashasti was composed by Samudragupta's court poet and minister Harisena, and was engraved on a stone pillar at Prayaga that had once borne the edicts of Ashoka, six centuries before. It is a work of high poetry and royal praise, and lists the king's conquests in detail; because it is a panegyric, it must be read with some care, but it remains the central document for his reign.

Samudragupta, Son of Chandragupta I

Distinguishing the king: Samudragupta was the son of Chandragupta I and the Lichchhavi princess, chosen by his father to carry the empire forward.

Samudragupta, who ruled in the middle of the fourth century CE, was the son of Chandragupta I and Kumaradevi, and is proudly called the Lichchhavi-dauhitra, the son of the Lichchhavi daughter. The prashasti says his father chose him from among his sons to succeed, and he proved the choice right, turning a small kingdom into a great empire by a lifetime of war.

The Place of Samudragupta in HistoryWhy he is reckoned among the greatest of ancient kingsThe maker of empireHe welded the divided northinto a single great empire.The dharmavijayaHis policy ofdefeat-and-release set a modelof righteous conquest.The KavirajaA patron of arts and music,called the poet-king on his owncoins.The bridge to gloryOn his conquests rose theheight of the empire under hisson.
Figure 1. The place of Samudragupta in history, why he is reckoned among the greatest of ancient kings.

The Conquests: The Four-Fold Policy of Digvijaya

The Four Different Kinds of Conquest

What is the significance of the four-fold policy: Samudragupta treated different kingdoms in different ways, and this careful policy is the key to his empire.

The prashasti shows four distinct treatments. The kings of Aryavarta, the northern plain, were violently uprooted and their kingdoms taken into the empire. The kings of the Dakshinapatha, the south, were defeated but then released and left on their thrones as tributaries. The frontier states paid tribute, and the foreign powers paid homage, so that the empire was ringed by lands that owned his overlordship.

Samudragupta’s Four-Fold ConquestFour different policies for four kinds of kingdomAryavarta: uprootedThe kings of the north wereviolently uprooted and theirlands annexed.Dakshinapatha: releasedThe southern kings weredefeated, then freed and leftas tributaries.Frontier: tributeSamatata, Kamarupa, Nepala andothers submitted and paidtribute.Foreign: homageThe Kushans, Sakas and Ceylonpaid homage through diplomacy.
Figure 2. Samudragupta's four-fold conquest, four policies for four kinds of kingdom.

Aryavarta and the Long Campaign to the South

Distinguishing the campaign: the most remarkable of his wars was a long march down the eastern country to the far south.

In the north Samudragupta crushed and annexed the kingdoms of Aryavarta, making the Gangetic plain the solid core of the empire. In the south he led a long campaign down the east of the peninsula, the Dakshinapatha, defeating a string of kings as far as Kanchi, the seat of Vishnugopa, in the deep south. Yet he did not annex these distant lands; he defeated their kings and then restored them, a policy of righteous conquest, or dharmavijaya.

The Empire and Conquests of SamudraguptaThe four-fold campaigns recorded in the Allahabad prashastiARYAVARTA(annexed)DAKSHINAPATHA(defeated, released)PataliputraPrayagaKanchiSamatataKamarupaNepalaKushansSimhala (Ceylon)Arabian SeaBay of BengalN0500 kmThe four-fold conquestCapital + the prashasti: Pataliputra, PrayagaAryavarta: the annexed northern coreThe Dakshinapatha campaign to KanchiFrontier tributaries: Samatata, Kamarupa, NepalaForeign homage: the Kushans and CeylonBoundaries and routes are indicative. The subcontinent is shown on the official map; base traced on Natural Earth geometry.
Figure 3. The empire and conquests of Samudragupta, the four-fold campaigns of the Allahabad prashasti.

The Frontier States and the Foreign Powers

Distinguishing the wider homage: beyond the conquered lands lay a ring of states that bowed to Samudragupta without being conquered.

The frontier kingdoms, Samatata in the east, Kamarupa in Assam, Nepala and others, submitted and paid tribute. Further off, the great foreign powers paid him homage by diplomacy: the remnants of the Kushans, who styled themselves Daivaputra-Shahi, the Saka rulers, and Meghavarman, the king of Simhala or Ceylon, who is said to have sought leave to build a monastery at Bodh Gaya.

Table 1. The four tiers of Samudragupta's conquest and the lands in each.
Tier How treated Who
Aryavarta (the north) Uprooted and annexed The kings of the Gangetic plain.
Dakshinapatha (the south) Defeated, then released Twelve kings, as far as Kanchi (Vishnugopa).
The frontier states Tribute Samatata, Davaka, Kamarupa, Nepala, Kartripura.
The foreign powers Homage by diplomacy The Kushans, the Sakas, and Ceylon.

The Ashvamedha and the Coinage of Samudragupta

The Horse-Sacrifice and Paramount Sovereignty

What is the significance of the Ashvamedha: to crown his conquests, Samudragupta revived an ancient and solemn royal rite.

Samudragupta revived the Ashvamedha, the horse-sacrifice, a great Vedic rite long unperformed, by which a king proclaimed himself a paramount sovereign over all rivals. A sacrificial horse was set free to wander for a year, and the lands it crossed were claimed for the king. He struck a special Ashvamedha gold coin to mark the rite, showing the horse before the sacrificial post.

The Horse-Sacrifice Gold CoinThe coin that marked Samudragupta’s revival of the AshvamedhaFront123What the coin shows1. The yupa, the tall sacrificial post2. The sacrificial horse, set free for a year3. The legend proclaims the king’s paramount power (struck in gold, the metal of the Gupta age)The Ashvamedha, long unperformed, was revived to proclaim Samudragupta a king of kings.
Figure 4. The horse-sacrifice gold coin of Samudragupta, the mark of his revival of the Ashvamedha.

The Gold Coins: the Conqueror and the Poet-King

Distinguishing the coinage: the gold coins of Samudragupta are among the finest of ancient India, and they show many sides of the king.

His coins picture him as a warrior, an archer with the bow, and a hero with the battle-axe; but the most famous shows him seated and playing the vina, the lyre, a sign of his love of music and of his title Kaviraja, the king of poets. So the coinage shows him at once as conqueror, sacrificer and artist.

Table 2. The chief gold coin types of Samudragupta and their meaning.
Coin type What it shows What it signifies
The archer (standard) type The king with a bow The conquering warrior.
The battle-axe type The king with a battle-axe The hero in war.
The lyrist type The king playing the vina The poet-king, Kaviraja.
The Ashvamedha type The sacrificial horse and post The paramount sovereign.

The Place of Samudragupta in History

The 'Napoleon of India' and the Verdict of History

What is the significance of his place: Samudragupta is reckoned among the greatest of ancient kings, though a famous label for him needs care.

The historian V.A. Smith called Samudragupta the Napoleon of India, for the sweep of his conquests; but this is a modern comparison, not an ancient title, and historians today use it with caution. His true greatness lies in welding the divided north into a single empire, in the model of righteous conquest he set in the south, and in the peace on which his son would raise the golden age of the Guptas.

UPSC Relevance and Exam Focus

Where Samudragupta Fits in the UPSC-CSE Syllabus

This topic belongs to General Studies Paper I: ancient Indian history and culture, and Samudragupta, with the Allahabad prashasti, is among the most examined of the Gupta rulers.

For Prelims, hold the firm facts: the Allahabad prashasti was composed by Harisena and engraved on an Ashokan pillar; Samudragupta's conquest had four tiers, the north annexed, the south defeated and released, the frontiers in tribute and the foreigners in homage; the southern campaign reached Kanchi; he revived the Ashvamedha; and his coins include the lyrist type, the mark of his title Kaviraja.

For Mains, the four-fold policy is a fine example of statecraft, and the prashasti a case study in reading a royal eulogy as history.

Recurring linked concepts an aspirant should keep in working memory:

  • The Allahabad prashasti: By Harisena, on an Ashokan pillar.
  • The four-fold policy: Annex, release, tribute, homage.
  • Dakshinapatha: The south defeated and released; the campaign to Kanchi.
  • The Ashvamedha: The revived horse-sacrifice of paramount sovereignty.
  • The lyrist coin: The mark of his title Kaviraja, the poet-king.

A common Prelims trap is to say Samudragupta annexed the south; in fact the southern kings were defeated and then released, a dharmavijaya, while only the northern Aryavarta kingdoms were annexed. Another is to treat the Napoleon of India as a contemporary title; it is a modern comparison by V.A. Smith.

Prelims MCQ practice

Each question below tests one specific concept on the topic. Click to reveal the answer and a full option-wise explanation.

Q1. The Allahabad (Prayaga) prashasti, the chief source for Samudragupta's reign, was composed by:

  1. Banabhatta
  2. Harisena
  3. Kalidasa
  4. Vishakhadatta
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Harisena

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The Allahabad prashasti was composed by Harisena, Samudragupta's court poet and minister; Banabhatta served Harsha, and Kalidasa belongs to Chandragupta II's age. Hence option (b).

Q2. With reference to Samudragupta's southern (Dakshinapatha) campaign, consider the following statements:

  1. The southern kings were defeated and their kingdoms annexed into the empire.
  2. The campaign reached as far south as Kanchi.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

  1. 1 only
  2. 2 only
  3. Both 1 and 2
  4. Neither 1 nor 2
Show answer and explanation

Answer: 2 only

Explanation.

Only statement 2 is correct. The southern campaign reached Kanchi, but the southern kings were defeated and then released, not annexed (a dharmavijaya); only the northern Aryavarta kingdoms were annexed. Hence option (b).

Q3. Samudragupta revived which ancient royal rite to proclaim his paramount sovereignty?

  1. The Rajasuya
  2. The Ashvamedha
  3. The Vajapeya
  4. The Agnihotra
Show answer and explanation

Answer: The Ashvamedha

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. Samudragupta revived the Ashvamedha, the horse-sacrifice, and struck a special coin to mark it. Hence option (b).

Q4. The lyrist (vina-player) type of gold coin of Samudragupta reflects his title:

  1. Vikramaditya
  2. Kaviraja
  3. Maharajadhiraja
  4. Devaputra
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Kaviraja

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The lyrist coin shows the king playing the vina, the mark of his title Kaviraja, the king of poets. Hence option (b).

Q5. The modern label 'Napoleon of India' for Samudragupta was given by:

  1. R.C. Majumdar
  2. V.A. Smith
  3. D.C. Sircar
  4. H.C. Raychaudhuri
Show answer and explanation

Answer: V.A. Smith

Explanation.

Option (b) is correct. The label 'Napoleon of India' was given by the historian V.A. Smith; it is a modern comparison, not an ancient title. Hence option (b).

Q6. Which foreign king is said to have paid homage to Samudragupta and sought leave to build a monastery at Bodh Gaya?

  1. Meghavarman of Ceylon
  2. Kanishka of the Kushanas
  3. Rudradaman of the Sakas
  4. Pulakeshin of the Chalukyas
Show answer and explanation

Answer: Meghavarman of Ceylon

Explanation.

Option (a) is correct. Meghavarman, the king of Simhala (Ceylon), paid homage to Samudragupta and is said to have sought leave to build a monastery at Bodh Gaya. Hence option (a).

Sources and Further Reading

Editorial Disclaimer

This article is for UPSC preparation. The Allahabad prashasti is a royal eulogy, and the dates and details of Samudragupta's reign are reconstructed by historians; the conventional accounts are given here.