Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Message
- Message
- Preface
- CHAPTER 1 The Dancing Girl
- CHAPTER 2 The Vedic Age
- CHAPTER 3 The Middle Path
- CHAPTER 4 Greeks at the Door
- CHAPTER 5 The Science of Government
- CHAPTER 6 Remorse at Kalinga
- CHAPTER 7 Martyrdom at Mylapore
- CHAPTER 8 Valley of Blood
- CHAPTER 9 The Nine Gems
- CHAPTER 10 The Giver of Knowledge
- CHAPTER 11 Arab Storm
- CHAPTER 12 The Reformation
- CHAPTER 13 The Gates of Somnath
- CHAPTER 14 Beacon of Civilization
- CHAPTER 15 Sovereign Lord
- CHAPTER 16 A Slave's Slave
- CHAPTER 17 The Shadow of Allah
- CHAPTER 18 Thousand Dinar Kafur
- CHAPTER 19 Delhi Woes
- CHAPTER 20 The Bulwark
- CHAPTER 21 For Christians and Spices
- CHAPTER 22 Matchlocks and Cannons
- CHAPTER 23 The Afghan
- CHAPTER 24 The Last Maharajah of Delhi
- CHAPTER 25 The Death of a City
- CHAPTER 26 The Divine Religion
- CHAPTER 27 The Book
- CHAPTER 28 The Light of the World
- CHAPTER 29 Splendour Amidst Misery
- CHAPTER 30 The Seizer of the Universe
- Select Bibliography
- Further Reading
- Photo Credits
- Index
- About the Author
CHAPTER 5 - The Science of Government
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Message
- Message
- Preface
- CHAPTER 1 The Dancing Girl
- CHAPTER 2 The Vedic Age
- CHAPTER 3 The Middle Path
- CHAPTER 4 Greeks at the Door
- CHAPTER 5 The Science of Government
- CHAPTER 6 Remorse at Kalinga
- CHAPTER 7 Martyrdom at Mylapore
- CHAPTER 8 Valley of Blood
- CHAPTER 9 The Nine Gems
- CHAPTER 10 The Giver of Knowledge
- CHAPTER 11 Arab Storm
- CHAPTER 12 The Reformation
- CHAPTER 13 The Gates of Somnath
- CHAPTER 14 Beacon of Civilization
- CHAPTER 15 Sovereign Lord
- CHAPTER 16 A Slave's Slave
- CHAPTER 17 The Shadow of Allah
- CHAPTER 18 Thousand Dinar Kafur
- CHAPTER 19 Delhi Woes
- CHAPTER 20 The Bulwark
- CHAPTER 21 For Christians and Spices
- CHAPTER 22 Matchlocks and Cannons
- CHAPTER 23 The Afghan
- CHAPTER 24 The Last Maharajah of Delhi
- CHAPTER 25 The Death of a City
- CHAPTER 26 The Divine Religion
- CHAPTER 27 The Book
- CHAPTER 28 The Light of the World
- CHAPTER 29 Splendour Amidst Misery
- CHAPTER 30 The Seizer of the Universe
- Select Bibliography
- Further Reading
- Photo Credits
- Index
- About the Author
Summary
Patna, on the southern bank of the Ganges at its junction with the Son, lies over the ancient city of Pataliputra. Though it is the capital of a state with more than eighty million people, it is a modest sized city in need of maintenance. There is little evidence of the past grandeur of Pataliputra, the greatest city of ancient India, except perhaps, at the Patna Museum where exquisite polished sandstone sculptures from the Mauryan period are exhibited. There is a faint glimpse of the ancient city about six kilometres from the train station, at Kumhrar, where excavations at a waterlogged site have revealed remnants of an eighty-pillared hall. Bihar has many developmental priorities to address before it can embark on excavations to uncover the lost city of Pataliputra beneath the several meters of alluvial laid down by the Ganges. Meanwhile, the magnificence of the city can be inferred from the accounts of the Greek ambassadors to the Mauryan court.
Megasthenese, the Greek ambassador at the court of Chandragupta Maurya, described the extent of Pataliputra as a parallelogram, 14 kilometres from east to west along the river and three kilometres from north to south. It was protected by massive timber palisades that were pierced by sixty-four gates and protected by watchful eyes from five hundred and seventy towers. The city exceeded the splendour of the Persian city of Susa and was, for that period, probably the greatest city in the world. A broad deep moat encircled the city serving both as a defensive barrier and as a sewer. In the year 321 BCE, in this city, Kautilya enthroned his protege Chandragupta Maurya as King of Magadha and India's first Emperor.
Kautilya was a Brahmin Jain from the South Indian village of Chanaka. Although endowed with a brilliant mind, he was hideously ugly and had deformities in his limbs. After studying at Taxila, he sought his fortune in Pataliputra, where his scholarship gained him the position of president of the Sangha, an assembly of academics. When he took the seat of honour at the royal court reserved for the president of the Sangha, presumably without the consent of the Nanda king, he was unceremoniously thrown out.
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- The Dancing GirlA History of Early India, pp. 38 - 45Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2011