Skandagupta: Revision history


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  • curprev 07:1707:17, 23 October 2022Akalanka820 talk contribs 24,107 bytes −90 Restored revision 1117722460 by पाटलिपुत्र (talk): Restoring last clean version, can't promote jatland wiki stuff here. as per writers they were in Sindh in 7th century and from where they moved eastwards. it is literally impossible to connect a dynasty of 4th century Gangetic region to someone in Sindh undo Tags: Twinkle Undo
  • curprev 07:0907:09, 23 October 2022Jat Raj talk contribs 24,197 bytes +1 Historian B. P. Sinha theorized that the Guptas originated in the Mathura-Ayodhya region in present-day Uttar Pradesh. He interpreted a phrase in the Arya-manjushri-mula-kalpa to argue that the Guptas belonged to Mathura. In support of this theory, Sinha stated that Samudragupta's coins were influenced by the coinage of the Kushan Empire, of which Mathura was an important centre.[27] However, Sinha's interpretation of the Arya-manjushri-mula-kalpa passage is doubtful, and the phrase has been alt undo Tags: Reverted Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit
  • curprev 07:0707:07, 23 October 2022Jat Raj talk contribs 24,196 bytes −2 However, B.P Sinha's interpretation of the Arya-manjushri-mula-kalpa passage is doubtful, and the phrase has been alternatively read as "Mathurayam-Jato-vamshadyah", referring to the birth ("jāto") of a person at Mathura. Moreover, Samudragupta's coins show the influence of the later Kushan coins of Punjab, not the coins of Mathura. Finally, it is generally accepted by modern scholars that Mathura first came under the Gupta rule, when Samudragupta defeated the Naga king Ganapati-naga, and annexe undo Tags: Reverted Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit
  • curprev 07:0607:06, 23 October 2022Jat Raj talk contribs 24,198 bytes +91 However, B.P Sinha's interpretation of the Arya-manjushri-mula-kalpa passage is doubtful, and the phrase has been alternatively read as "Mathurayam-Jato-vamshadyah", referring to the birth ("jāto") of a person at Mathura. Moreover, Samudragupta's coins show the influence of the later Kushan coins of Punjab, not the coins of Mathura. Finally, it is generally accepted by modern scholars that Mathura first came under the Gupta rule, when Samudragupta defeated the Naga king Ganapati-naga, and annexe undo Tags: Reverted Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit
  • curprev 07:0407:04, 23 October 2022पाटलिपुत्र talk contribs 24,107 bytes −295 Undid revision 1117722033 by Jat Raj (talk) unsourced undo Tag: Undo
  • curprev 07:0007:00, 23 October 2022Jat Raj talk contribs 24,402 bytes +295 by Chandragomin's grammatical illustration "ajayat Jarto Hanan", i.e. the Jarta or Jat King defeated the Hunas. The word Jarta bere has been taken to refer to the Gupta ruler Skandagupta who is known to have actually defeated the Hunas undo Tags: Reverted Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit

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