mauryan in A Sentence

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    The Mauryan emperor, Ashoka,

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    The Mauryan Empire.

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    The Mauryan judicial system continued unchanged till the death of Bindusara.

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    Another Mauryan king, Ashok,(also known as Priyadarshi or Priyadassi), around 270 B. C.

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    When the Mauryan emperor Ashoka embraced Buddhism, the social revolution became a political revolution.

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    arose from the land which had given birth to the founder of the Mauryan empire

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    The battle was fierce and claimed the lives of 150,000 warriors of Kalinga and 100,000 Mauryan warriors.

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    It is said that 50 years ago from Christ, there was a Mauryan king, whose name was Dhillu.

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    Satavahanas founded on the ruins of the Mauryan empire an empire, of their own which continued for 400 years.

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    a Buddhist monk living in the time of the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka, three hundred years after the Buddha's death.

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    In the pre- Mauryan stage, it is possible to determine the true state of law as the Vedic and Dharmasutra periods.

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    Buddhism took root in Pakistan some 2,300 years ago under the Mauryan king Ashoka, whom Nehru once called“greater than any king or emperor.

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    Buddhism took root in Pakistan some 2,300 years ago under the Mauryan king Asoka, whom Nehru once called“greater than any king or emperor.”.

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    Buddhism in Pakistan took root some 2,300 years ago under the Mauryan king Ashoka, whom Nehru once called“greater than any king or emperor.”.

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    At its zenith, the Mauryan Empire was not only the largest empire in the history of the country but also across the globe.

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    the Deccan, Andhra and north Mysore areas, roughly coinciding with the southern tracts of the Mauryan empire and the regions where Buddhism,

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    The Mauryan emperor, Ashoka, who was born in Pataliputra(Patna) is believed to be one of the greatest rulers in the history of the world.

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    Kautilya' s Concept of Justice The judicial organisation and legal procedures of the Mauryan period were based on the Arthasastra' s concept of law.

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    About the same time the Andhras or Satavahanas founded on the ruins of the Mauryan empire an empire, of their own which continued for 400 years.

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    For example, Emperor Ashoka adopted Buddhism 2,300 years ago, after he had already established a large and complex South Asian empire known as the Mauryan Empire.

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    The parallel narrative is that of the chronicler, Upali, a Buddhist monk living in the time of the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka, three hundred years after the Buddha's death.

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    It was during the Mauryan Empire that the military security and political unity in South Asia allowed for a collective economic system that resulted in enhancing trade and commerce.

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    Buddhism has an ancient history in Pakistan; Buddhism took root in Pakistan some 2,300 years ago under the Mauryan king Ashoka, whom Nehru once called“greater than any king or emperor.”.

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    Buddhism was introduced by the Mauryan emperor Ashoka in the 3rd century bce, and from the 9th to the 12th century ce the region appears to have achieved considerable prominence as a centre of Hindu culture.

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    Such associations of megalithic sites and stupa sites are numerous in the Deccan, Andhra and north Mysore areas, roughly coinciding with the southern tracts of the Mauryan empire and the regions where Buddhism, among other northern religions,

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    Emperor Ashoka, the grandson of Chandragupta Maurya, not only ordered engraving of his edicts on the rock at Junagadh but asked Governor Tusherpha to cut canals from the lake where an earlier Mauryan governor had built a dam.

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    Finally in the beginning of the fourth century AD another Chandragupta( AD 320 to AD 335) arose from the land which had given birth to the founder of the Mauryan empire and made Pataliputra the capital of another fairly big empire which under his son Samudragupta and his grandson Chandragupta II held the whole of India, except a small part of the south, under its sway.

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