The Mighty Gupta Empire of India

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 17 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @HistoryDose
    @HistoryDose  Год назад +122

    Skip the waitlist and invest in blue-chip art for the very first time by signing up for Masterworks: www.masterworks.art/historydose
    Purchase shares in great masterpieces from artists like Pablo Picasso, Banksy, Andy Warhol, and more. 🎨 See important Masterworks disclosures: masterworks.com/cd

    • @Kain81023
      @Kain81023 Год назад +4

      Can you do Bjorn Ironside / Ragnar Lotbrok, Leif Eriksson, and other famous vikings?

    • @piyushjaiswal9283
      @piyushjaiswal9283 Год назад +1

      You are going to find a lot of unknown history ( even to indians & Hindus ) in the India office of British library London and all the records of East India company

    • @piyushjaiswal9283
      @piyushjaiswal9283 Год назад +1

      I would also suggest you to do an episode on the storming of ghazni fort by East India company troops during the first anglo-afghan wars. They had won a series of battles against various tribes and kingdoms of Afghanistan but it's not told. You will find all the records as already foretold in the archives of East India company - British library and archives you'll have to locate.

    • @discombobulation3016
      @discombobulation3016 Год назад +1

      Pls make a video on the Chola Empire ruled by RajaRaja chola and Rajendra Chola

    • @rnz1155
      @rnz1155 Год назад +2

      Amazing! Can we have a future video about Skanderbeg, the Albanian medieval ruler who defeated the Ottomans and other powers like Venice for more than 25 times?

  • @rage8673
    @rage8673 Год назад +1999

    I like how he mentioned "steels" as an Indian product sent to west as trade, very less historical channels mention this that Ancient Indians had highest quality steels and were expert metalurgists in that era, some still existing like the Ashokan Stambhs/Pillars, weapons made up of wootz steel and many more.

    • @stormshadow5283
      @stormshadow5283 Год назад +187

      Steel was first manufactured in India

    • @kunjukunjunil1481
      @kunjukunjunil1481 Год назад +242

      Famous Damascus steel was actually from India.

    • @rankingresearchdata
      @rankingresearchdata Год назад +116

      There's oldest iron pillar without rust In Delhi

    • @robwalsh9843
      @robwalsh9843 Год назад +169

      Europeans called it "Damascus steel" because they associated it with Saracen warriors from the Middle East, but it was actually an Indian smithing technique.

    • @dwarasamudra8889
      @dwarasamudra8889 Год назад +51

      @@rankingresearchdata yes, that was made during the Gupta Period (during the reign of Emperor Chandragupta II). It was erected in Udaygiri, Vidisha in Madhya Pradesh but was taken to Delhi during either the reign of Maharaja Anganpala of the Tomara Dynasty or one of the foreign Delhi Sultanate rulers.

  • @king_halcyon
    @king_halcyon Год назад +2700

    Samudragupta was the real GIGACHAD. He was:
    1) Bold enough to unite the warring kingdoms and janapadas of the Gangetic Plain.
    2) Intelligent enough to consolidate his power over the fertile Plain and make people realize that unity is strength.
    3) Merciful enough to not kill his tributary kings.
    4) not power hungry enough to incorporate every territory he crossed.
    5) tolerant of other religions
    6) an excellent military leader
    7) an accomplished poet and musician
    And yes, seven is the magic number.

    • @sayandey4237
      @sayandey4237 Год назад +191

      @@LOGICALGUY-jm5fu yes! He was undefeated.

    • @sayandey4237
      @sayandey4237 Год назад +25

      @@LOGICALGUY-jm5fu I know, there are so many misinterpretation happening when people are trying decode the facts from Sanskrit literary work.

    • @sayandey4237
      @sayandey4237 Год назад +11

      @@LOGICALGUY-jm5fu Bro I never said you are wrong. I agreed with you!
      You are misinterpreting me 😄

    • @jaihind9462
      @jaihind9462 Год назад +4

      @@LOGICALGUY-jm5fu I am interested to know what happened to the horse after though? Did it become the personal horse of the king or no?

    • @jaihind9462
      @jaihind9462 Год назад +3

      @@LOGICALGUY-jm5fu ok i would much rather have horse be lived

  • @pippinpaddleoppsokopolis176
    @pippinpaddleoppsokopolis176 Год назад +1454

    as an American I fucking love Ancient Indian History. So underrated, equal to if not surpasses, ancient greece or rome, or ancient china

    • @DarthVader-no9cc
      @DarthVader-no9cc Год назад +135

      If you go more back to ancient Indian history around 2500-3000 B.C , there was a massive Indian civilization named as the Indus valley civilization. The most scientific civilization ever.

    • @DarthVader-no9cc
      @DarthVader-no9cc Год назад +80

      Also in the ancient Indian University of Nalanda and Taxashila, people from all over the world including Chinese use to come and study there

    • @riderchallenge4250
      @riderchallenge4250 Год назад +88

      @@DarthVader-no9cc The nalanda and taxashila were that time what MIT and oxford are today

    • @016durgeshkumar5
      @016durgeshkumar5 Год назад +49

      Your comment shows you are new to history try to learn what these ancient civilizations like Greece, Rome or China used to call India then you will be surprised and understand who is equal and who is above.

    • @theeternal6890
      @theeternal6890 Год назад +8

      Dang u made me feel so proud bruh.

  • @konkyolife
    @konkyolife Год назад +1450

    "I will bring you down miserably into the jaws of a lion" Bro, watched it like 15 times such a smashing episode that was.

  • @alexisroman6786
    @alexisroman6786 Год назад +2263

    As a Mexican Indian history is one of the most fascinating history

    • @futiousstyles3315
      @futiousstyles3315 Год назад +155

      As an Indian, Mexican history is likewise interesting..

    • @alexisroman6786
      @alexisroman6786 Год назад +55

      @@futiousstyles3315 thanks brother

    • @liukiang8329
      @liukiang8329 Год назад +75

      Mexican Indian is such an unusual mix, but sounds so right lol.

    • @alexisroman6786
      @alexisroman6786 Год назад +11

      @@liukiang8329 I know so one was going to call me out and why does it sound right

    • @hirenbhudia9065
      @hirenbhudia9065 Год назад +62

      The similarities between mayan culture, deities & ancient hindu deities is astounding. For eg.: A statue of a monkey god carrying a mace discovered in amazon forest fully resembles hindu deity hanuman.

  • @vishnusudarsanam5375
    @vishnusudarsanam5375 Год назад +503

    There is a saying in Telugu "Guptula yugam suvarna yugam" which translates "Gupta's period is Golden period"

    • @RohanSharmacap
      @RohanSharmacap Год назад +38

      Actually after Mauryans, it was the Guptas that were able to establish peace council with Souther Indian powers like Cheras, Pandyas etc

    • @RohanSharmacap
      @RohanSharmacap Год назад +13

      @@siddharthsirvaiya3544 hmmm tbh Cholas ruled for a REALLY long time like Thousands of years, by best guess yes they must have been around and most probably might have been the biggest power in South India before Vijayanagara as my guess

    • @bhupeshyoutuber5578
      @bhupeshyoutuber5578 Год назад +3

      ​@@RohanSharmacapchola ruled for 2400 years

    • @Saurabh20000
      @Saurabh20000 Год назад +11

      @@bhupeshyoutuber5578 Imagine Chola Kingdom somewhere in Sindh/Punjab region in ancient India. They are not gona survive even for 50 yrs

    • @riderchallenge4250
      @riderchallenge4250 Год назад +5

      @@siddharthsirvaiya3544 no chola peak came during Raja Raja chola and Rajendra Chola around 900ce to 1100 ce

  • @oumuamua1602
    @oumuamua1602 Год назад +1278

    India should be proud of it's history, a true boiling pot of cultures and people over the millennia.

    • @dwarasamudra8889
      @dwarasamudra8889 Год назад +83

      @@LOGICALGUY-jm5fu yes, The Indian were the only civilization along with the Byzantines and Franks to have stopped the Arab invasions. Apart from Sindh, Indian Empires prevented the Arab invasion of India for 300 years. It also took 200 years for the Turkic Ghazavid rulers to conquer Northern India and it took themanother 100 years to invade Southern Indian where they were quickly chased out. These same invaders conquered and ruled Persia, Anatolia, Egypt, Iraq, Syria, North Africa etc from almost 1000 years

    • @aaryan_B055
      @aaryan_B055 Год назад +55

      Islam conquered nd converted whole middle east, turkey, egypt, persia nd central asia in only 50 yrs.
      But the INDIAN resistance was such that it took 500 years just to reach DELHI after Sindh.
      And also, ISLAMIC rulers were in partnership with the locals while always under constant attacks by other INDIANS.

    • @playstationaccount4473
      @playstationaccount4473 Год назад +1

      Mind your own business.

    • @playstationaccount4473
      @playstationaccount4473 Год назад

      ​@AARYAN but they made India their bitch and ruled for eons. Babur, Akbar, Aurangazeb...these are the Indian kings the world knows.

    • @oumuamua1602
      @oumuamua1602 Год назад +9

      @@playstationaccount4473 Your mother.

  • @ritiksharma9649
    @ritiksharma9649 Год назад +634

    Some Indian historian says he fought almost 150 battles and got 100 scar but still undefeated
    He was a great musician too 😊
    My favourite king 😊

    • @top5hindi919
      @top5hindi919 Год назад +28

      Our ancestors ❤

    • @cosmoray9750
      @cosmoray9750 Год назад

      Zelensky Changes Tune on 'Battle for Bakhmut' After Russian ...
      ruclips.net/video/0IIE0lJzTh8/видео.html 🤔

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +4

      My favorite is Akbar

    • @top5hindi919
      @top5hindi919 Год назад +56

      @@Deepak_Dhakad No one asked

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +3

      @@top5hindi919 no one asked to reply

  • @SunilMeena-do7xn
    @SunilMeena-do7xn Год назад +550

    The Ashvamedha Yajna is mentioned even in Ramayana. After returning from war, Shri Ram had done this Yajna to establish his authority.

    • @prasoonjha1816
      @prasoonjha1816 Год назад +20

      It's even in the beginning of Ramayana where Dasharatha performed it to get sons.

    • @GyanTvAmit
      @GyanTvAmit Год назад +45

      ​@@prasoonjha1816 stop lying he not performed ashwamedh yagya for sons,he performed fire yagya

    • @GokulChandSharma7
      @GokulChandSharma7 Год назад +24

      ​@@prasoonjha1816 it was different yagya

    • @riderchallenge4250
      @riderchallenge4250 Год назад +8

      it is mentioned in mahabharata too

    • @millennialmind9507
      @millennialmind9507 Год назад +9

      @@GyanTvAmit I believe it's putrakameshti yadnya

  • @AyubuKK
    @AyubuKK Год назад +1747

    The war elephants are straight out of fantasy. Really awesome.

    • @noahblake533
      @noahblake533 Год назад +58

      Battle of Gondor in Lord of the Rings 😂

    • @AyubuKK
      @AyubuKK Год назад +9

      @@noahblake533 Exactly

    • @BigBrotherTheWatcher1984
      @BigBrotherTheWatcher1984 Год назад +26

      They became obsolete as soon as gunpowder got into use.

    • @netaji-thebritishslayer
      @netaji-thebritishslayer Год назад +94

      @@BigBrotherTheWatcher1984 gunpowder is obsolete by todays standards

    • @LewiWall-mx6fq
      @LewiWall-mx6fq Год назад +12

      ​@@BigBrotherTheWatcher1984 still the horses goes brrr. 😂

  • @GreenLittlePandas
    @GreenLittlePandas Год назад +241

    Nalanda University was established during the Gupta Empire era and it held over 9 million books. People used to call this university one of the greatest universities at that time in Asia. Students from different parts of India, Tibet, China, the middle east/Persia (Iran, Iraq), Japan, etc used to come and do a residency at that time. Psychology, Arts, Science, Calculus, Bodha Lipi, Sanskrit, astrology, astronomy, medicine, etc used to teach here and the great library Dharmaganja consisted of three buildings called the Ratnasagara, the Ratnaranjak, and the Ratnodadhi, which alone was nine stories high. It was destroyed and burned much of its facilities at the beginning of the twelfth century by the Islamic invader Bakhtiyar Khilji. The munis/gurus/professors were burned, hanged on the street for days, and killed by this invader at that time. For more below is the reference.
    Ref: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nalanda_mahavihara

    • @kingmaker2603
      @kingmaker2603 Год назад +1

      Fake it has no historic reference.

    • @memeclade
      @memeclade Год назад +42

      @@kingmaker2603 its not fake.

    • @Orewa_Ani4683
      @Orewa_Ani4683 Год назад

      @@kingmaker2603 it's a well recorded event
      What else you're going to say false
      Leftist

    • @vanshbeniwal1662
      @vanshbeniwal1662 Год назад +55

      ​@@kingmaker2603 what fake?
      Do you wanna say nalanda University is fake?😂
      It is even a UNESCO World Heritage site
      Source -its page on Wikipedia
      Where in details it is mentioned as UNESCO world heritage sites
      Nowadays people call even accepted facts as fake

    • @Chingbong1
      @Chingbong1 Год назад

      @@kingmaker2603 Mullah spotted. If you actually tried you can find references of it from ancient china and ancient Greece, probably even egypt and Mesopotamia. But you muslims were busy burning those books and raping children so you never noticed and now saying it never existed. Typical muslim behaviour

  • @JessiOz2k07
    @JessiOz2k07 Год назад +409

    Oh man, this was epic.
    RUclipsrs need to start making more videos about Indian history. Their history is so epic and one of the oldest.
    Imagine the tales they have.
    Please do more on Indian civilisation and history.

    • @NedTheAlien
      @NedTheAlien Год назад +24

      Indian history is typically presented as a confusing mess of one invasion after another (said many years ago by a friend who read some of it). Videos like this go a long way towards remedying that by cohering around central influential periods

    • @shubhnamdeo2865
      @shubhnamdeo2865 Год назад +6

      ​@@NedTheAlien It is not a confusing mess if you begin with the ones that started it all, Aryans, Indus Valley Civilization, and Vedic Civilization in the north. The Sangam Age, and the Dravidians in the south.

    • @Pinicle_of_evolution
      @Pinicle_of_evolution Год назад +12

      @@shubhnamdeo2865 Aryans?

    • @rishavkumar1250
      @rishavkumar1250 Год назад +1

      @@LOGICALGUY-jm5fu it's real

    • @wonderworld7721
      @wonderworld7721 Год назад +2

      @@rishavkumar1250 : nothing is real, why U r spreading myth/lie ??..

  • @deusvult5247
    @deusvult5247 Год назад +699

    Love India from Armenia
    🇦🇲 ❤️ 🇮🇳

    • @escapedeviltrap
      @escapedeviltrap Год назад +7

      ty

    • @catcat63527
      @catcat63527 Год назад +19

      Oi. We supporting you in war right now, too. ❤ From India

    • @samsung123451
      @samsung123451 Год назад +10

      Armenia and India have a long history too...

    • @ROHITPun-gl6mm
      @ROHITPun-gl6mm Год назад +10

      Love Armenia from India two of the oldest countries in the world and countinous running civilisation.

    • @shantanushekharsjunerft9783
      @shantanushekharsjunerft9783 Год назад +5

      We have a large Armenian population going back centuries. Love you too brother!

  • @cynthiaahern9081
    @cynthiaahern9081 Год назад +189

    The ancient history of India has always fascinated me. Thank you so much. Great video!

    • @aaryan_B055
      @aaryan_B055 Год назад +8

      INDIA the only original Hindu civilization still alive after 2800 years of foreign invasions.
      Otherwise look what happened to Sumer, Anatolia, persia, egypt, Maya, Inka, aztec.
      Almost vanished.

    • @bo55man30
      @bo55man30 Год назад +4

      We need Assassin Creed for Ancient India!!!

  • @tylersaykao283
    @tylersaykao283 Год назад +478

    I hope he makes a video on the Khmer empire. Being Cambodian myself it would be amazing to see it illustrated with his way of rhetoric and visuals. I can already see a tapestry of ankor wat with a narration like “Once a thriving metropolis nature has reclaimed this gem of mysterious and forgotten empire, where now it stands as a monument of how quickly even mighty symbols of power can be transformed into something unrecognizable.” Chills just typing it 😁

    • @remcon559
      @remcon559 Год назад +12

      Khmer. Where? Here

    • @pancaca9050
      @pancaca9050 Год назад +17

      @@remcon559 What's funny is that they're actually spelled Khmai, not c'mere

    • @LouSassle789
      @LouSassle789 Год назад

      Didn’t they kill millions of people? Pol pot I believe was his name.

    • @Al_cappuccino19
      @Al_cappuccino19 Год назад +22

      On that another topic that really interesting is the Khmer relation with the chola dynasty which eventually leads to conflict with the Srivijaya

    • @jaihind9462
      @jaihind9462 Год назад +2

      @@remcon559 cambodia

  • @sabkabaap1758
    @sabkabaap1758 Год назад +1087

    As an Indian, I'm so proud and thankful to you for covering the much underrated Indic history! So fkin excited lessgo!!!

    • @yj9032
      @yj9032 Год назад +36

      You people are proud of each and every single time India is mentioned on the internet.

    • @tonmoy1549
      @tonmoy1549 Год назад

      @@yj9032 if the white man doesn't want to be proud of himself then why do you care about the light brown swarthoids?

    • @adrianopandolfo
      @adrianopandolfo Год назад +4

      When you use the term Indic, are you referring to the genreal South-Asian subcontinent (modern day India, Pakistan & Bangladesh)?

    • @nationmatters919
      @nationmatters919 Год назад +69

      @@adrianopandolfo what's South Asian Subcontinent? You guys are coining news terms Every single day. Its the Indian Subcontinent only

    • @adrianopandolfo
      @adrianopandolfo Год назад +4

      @Nation Matters lmao I'm just curious what indic means because using the term Indian for the subcontinent might create some political debates (like with the Persian/Arabian Gulf, and the Phillipine/South China Sea)
      south-asians are "Indian" in the way that they were apart of the British Raj, but India itself as a unifying nationalism is a relatively new concept, because the various states and empires prior to the Raj conquered never fully unified the entire subcontinent.

  • @STARK50
    @STARK50 Год назад +414

    India was the first country to use Elephants in a war. Even Alexender got scarred when he saw a Elephant in a battlefield when he was trying to conquer India.

    • @malegria9641
      @malegria9641 Год назад +61

      no coincidence that he was finally stopped at the indus.

    • @syphernynx4186
      @syphernynx4186 Год назад

      You are wrong

    • @RavenHart-sx8xs
      @RavenHart-sx8xs Год назад +3

      Yea, he was scared of elephants from Bengal. I remember that 😂

    • @shreejitghoroi7432
      @shreejitghoroi7432 Год назад +37

      ​@@syphernynx4186​ what wrong!? He got scared seeing thousands of war elephant of dhanananda!

    • @Matter743
      @Matter743 11 месяцев назад +35

      @@syphernynx4186 he lost in india, his army opposed him, he got hit, his horse got killed , his many commanders lost there lives and still they portrayed him as god of war! Persian army was large in number made of mercenaries no wonder they lost but in india he met an army equally capable who were fighting for their land against invaders(alexander). They would be completely destroyed if they choose to go on deep in india. And alexander while leaving india went from deserts and barren lands of india where he also fought many tribes and lost most of his army because if harsh weather and that to just to show world that he was not defeated in india 😌 and the truth was he sneaked out from india instead of ruling or building any memorial place like he did in Egypt and Persia this fact is enough to prove he lost. He was tyrant ruler who was not this kind as he was portrayed in the war with porus

  • @mertyenen6711
    @mertyenen6711 Год назад +127

    The Ashvameda (not sure if I spelled it correctly) ritual was a huge flex. This guy was not a gigachad he was THE GIGACHAD of his era.

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +8

      Asvamedh sacrifice is one of key sacrifice of indo aryan warrior caste

    • @mertyenen6711
      @mertyenen6711 Год назад

      @@Deepak_Dhakad thanks for the information brother. So, was the custom actually like it is depicted in the video?
      I was fascinated because I've never heard of anything like that before.

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +3

      @@mertyenen6711 well it's far more complex. Horse arrives after one year or more afterwards for more than one month many ritual ceremonies held by thousands of priests (Only those which r descendants of higher caste priests those who composed Vedic hymns in bronze age for aryan gods). After long period of various rituals and sacrifices , queen purify horse and priests kills him by suffocation then queen sleep with dead horse (to represent fake mating with horse) next day priests slaughters horse and meat offered to various aryan gods Most important Indra the god of thunder and heaven , Mitra, Ashwins (twin horse head gods, twin sons of Sun god Surya) etc.

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +2

      @@mertyenen6711 last time, Asvamedh sacrifice was did my Rajput King Jai Singh II in early 1700s. I'm rajput myself. Asvamedh sacrifice dates back to 4000-6000BCE. Aryans migrated to india around 2000BCE , They brought here old Hinduism , sanskrit language. Reason why cows r sacred in india is because Aryans were pastroralists people from steppe grasslands of South Russia or central Asia. Horse and cows were sacred for them. Even ancient hindus around 1500-1300BCE used to sacrifice cows and horses to Dyaus pitra (sky father hindu god ). Indra , Surya etc all aryan gods and goddesses r his child. But later in medieval times some revolutions happened and animal sacrifice , beef eating etc became uncommon in most of Hindu sects.
      Funfact:- Horses r equally or more sacred than cows.

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +5

      @@mertyenen6711 thing is Hinduism is Only Indo European Religion which survived today. Romans , Greeks , Celtic , Baltic , Germans etc all left their Indo European Religion. But still we perform sacrifice to aryan gods. Dyaus pitra is still prevalent.

  • @bobbystudios4014
    @bobbystudios4014 Год назад +81

    The paintings prove this channel as one of the best history channel on RUclips to this date. There's something so fascinating seeing custom picture created just for the topic at hand, and I love how they are portrayed through music, story telling, and atmospherically set up.

    • @HistoryDose
      @HistoryDose  Год назад +7

      Much appreciated! If you want to hear more about the art process, check out our Q&A episodes on the Live tab

    • @bobbystudios4014
      @bobbystudios4014 Год назад +3

      @@HistoryDose really? Definitely watching that.

  • @Shahanshah.Shahin
    @Shahanshah.Shahin Год назад +831

    The Gupta Empire and the Sasanian Persian Empire had great relations, and the scientific advancements and ideas were shared between those two. Indian advancements in math, medicine, panchatantra, and board games like chess were imported by the Persians, and the Persian inventions in science, astrology, architecture and arts, music, chemistry, and physics were imported into India. It was only after the Islamic conquest of Persia that those things were adopted by the Arabs under the Abbasid Caliphate.

    • @hehehuhu
      @hehehuhu Год назад +71

      Arabs were also involved in trade with the Southern parts of India. According to some they might have come to trade even during pre islamic period. So they might also have got it through that connection.

    • @nadheem420
      @nadheem420 Год назад +45

      @@hehehuhu I'm from Kerala(southern west coast) and yes all traders especially Arabs craved for spices and came here. Overtime especially since islamic times, they started settling and became a part of kerala

    • @SetuwoKecik
      @SetuwoKecik Год назад +19

      And from arabs through trade and specifically conquest of hispania, these inventions reached europe.

    • @nadheem420
      @nadheem420 Год назад +11

      @@SetuwoKecik it reached italy by mostly just trade, and it was the renaissance that introduced science more into europe, by cordoba caliphate was also important

    • @jhaG_
      @jhaG_ Год назад +42

      Chess was made in india during harrapan age. It's the oldest game in the world. There is a whole chess board found in harappan sites 😂

  • @deelanaS
    @deelanaS Год назад +145

    Indian history is criminally underrated and I would love to see more. But Sri Lankan history is mental and arguably just as interesting just because of how unique it is to the rest of South Asia.

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +12

      Indian history is million times more complex

    • @deelanaS
      @deelanaS Год назад +11

      @@Deepak_Dhakad That’s because India is geographically and ethnically expansive and will obviously be more complex. I never said Indian history was ‘basic’. Its so interesting and rich, but Sri Lankan history is just as spectacular and unique in its own way and thing is no one over talks about bc they think its solely an extension of Indian history. Hope you understand :)

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +1

      @@deelanaS yes

    • @suraj.1889
      @suraj.1889 Год назад +12

      @@deelanaS i think it is a sin to separate the indian and sri lankan history, what is indian history is also sri lankan history and vice versa.

    • @deelanaS
      @deelanaS Год назад +6

      @@suraj.1889 Definitely, Indian history and Sri Lankan history are throughly linked together & have had strong ties well before ancient periods, but wouldn’t you say Pakistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan & Nepal have closer affinities with India? Maybe I am biased, as I am a Sinhalese Sri Lankan, but us being cut off from the rest of the subcontinent (including the Maldives) means we ended up developing our own version of an Indianized civilization that was unique to the rest of South Asia. Buddhism unfortunately fading in India meant Sri Lanka saw it self as being a great bastion of Theravada Buddhism which would go on to spread throughout South East Asia. Either way we are both brothers from similar yet unique cultures and age old civilizations.

  • @Strat-Guides
    @Strat-Guides Год назад +230

    This is a part of history I know very little about, but would love to learn more! Thank you for putting this together - amazing video as always :D

    • @HistoryDose
      @HistoryDose  Год назад +14

      Thanks Strat! Always love seeing comments from you :)

    • @ajithsidhu7183
      @ajithsidhu7183 Год назад +8

      @@HistoryDose please do sikh empire, king porus and rajput warriors

    • @sunilkumartehlan417
      @sunilkumartehlan417 Год назад

      @@ajithsidhu7183 and why not jat warriors? why the bias against them?

    • @ajithsidhu7183
      @ajithsidhu7183 Год назад

      @@sunilkumartehlan417 that as well like king porus

    • @thenationalist8845
      @thenationalist8845 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@sunilkumartehlan417 it s no biased
      They are just less known than these
      Coz u know what congress govt did to our history texts

  • @BarnabyCodswallow
    @BarnabyCodswallow Год назад +187

    Awesome video, as always! Indian history is so rich, but equally unknown to many outside of it.
    And I loved the inclusion of the speed-painting- I've always been curious how those amazing visuals are made!

    • @HistoryDose
      @HistoryDose  Год назад +20

      Thanks! Joe and I talked about the art process in the latest Q&A if you’d like to hear more!

    • @BarnabyCodswallow
      @BarnabyCodswallow Год назад +4

      @@HistoryDose Fantastic! Checking it out ASAP!

    • @Graphical_Gurujii
      @Graphical_Gurujii Год назад

      it is even unknown to most of the Indians, thanks to marxist and leftist Distorians

  • @kuku6116
    @kuku6116 Год назад +376

    Amazing Content, would love to see more Ancient & Mediaeval Indian empires.
    1. Mauryan Empire - role of Chanakya in defeating Nanda & about Ashoka the Great.
    2. Kanishka Kushan Empire
    3. The Great Chola empire -Ruled South India & South east Asia.
    4. Karkota Dynasty of North India - defended Kashmir for 200 years against Islamic kings
    5. Sultanate & Mughal Rule.
    6. The richest Vijaynagar Empire & its fall.

    • @Azzam_Alqudsi
      @Azzam_Alqudsi Год назад +6

      dont forget Sultanate and Rajj are independent at time and would attack other Rajj and dynasties together... it really depends who's fighting who and why.. as an Indonesian, I love learning about indian-pakistan(S/Hind region) history before the British rule, it's always fun to see how brothers are before hating each other

    • @ShubhamGupta-hg9md
      @ShubhamGupta-hg9md Год назад +1

      @@Azzam_Alqudsi hindusim doesn't have any hate for others but hindus are polystheic which are worst creation ever in quran 98.6

    • @kuku6116
      @kuku6116 Год назад +22

      @@Azzam_Alqudsi i didn't say they were same, Indian kings even fought among themselves, despite many destruction of its heritage faced by the sub-continent under sultanate & Mughal some kings like Muhammad Tughlaq, Akbar, Shahjahan do added to Subcontinent heritage.

    • @bapparawal2457
      @bapparawal2457 Год назад +44

      You forgot Maratha Empire. They are very important empire who on its peak spread from present day Pakistan to almost entirely of present India except North easter and parts of Southern India

    • @dwarasamudra8889
      @dwarasamudra8889 Год назад +22

      @@kuku6116 Maybe Akbar and Shah Jahan can be considered Indians and did some level of good but none of the Delhi Sultanate rulers (including Muhammad bin Tughlaq) were good rulers; they were tyrants that even foreign Muslims like Ibn Batuta considered to be mental and excessively brutal. These rulers destroyed way more than they built.

  • @TacticalShinebox
    @TacticalShinebox Год назад +176

    India has a lot of mystery and mythology to it. I it find interesting the many cultures. My old best friend was half Indian, we'd hang out with his relatives and hit the Indian buffets along Devon Ave. In Chicago. Cool culture.

    • @piyushjaiswal9283
      @piyushjaiswal9283 Год назад

      Half on father's side or mother's side. What was his other half?

    • @TacticalShinebox
      @TacticalShinebox Год назад +3

      @piyushjaiswal9283 mother is indian Vendanta sect. Father white Scottish background.

    • @piyushjaiswal9283
      @piyushjaiswal9283 Год назад

      @@TacticalShinebox is he on RUclips or social media?

    • @TacticalShinebox
      @TacticalShinebox Год назад

      @piyushjaiswal9283 no he's not

    • @kikaa1884
      @kikaa1884 Год назад +1

      Always they show Gupta empire small😡😡😡 it fought many battles and wars and it's peak size is 3.5 million sq km actually in Indian subcontinent.

  • @lordofthehouseofstormcrows8615
    @lordofthehouseofstormcrows8615 Год назад +303

    Damned shame they don't teach this in high schools in America. Very rich history, very beautiful culture, sadly not that well known by Americans. Great job, keep up the great work. I'd pay you to do my biography

    • @Azzam_Alqudsi
      @Azzam_Alqudsi Год назад

      Americans cant even teach themselves about their own history, doubt most cares about other cultures' history

    • @PahadiSher
      @PahadiSher Год назад +50

      why would they teach Indian history in American schools? They don't even teach us about them in India much because of the education system.😂

    • @freeminded7
      @freeminded7 Год назад +8

      @@PahadiSher exactly. I’m not sure why these people think all learning is the governments jobs anyways. Plus they did go over the basics in elementary school.

    • @rudra1286
      @rudra1286 Год назад +17

      We dont learn about this even in india. L education system

    • @shasha0076
      @shasha0076 Год назад

      Actually they don't even teach our rich history in india itself. Its filled with mughal n British Indian history completely. Showing indian history is filled with loosers mostly written by leftists after India's independence 🤦

  • @ronakshah1990
    @ronakshah1990 Год назад +116

    The artwork in this video is amazing and so under-appreciated. It's rare to come across paintings or art depicting these early Indian empires.

    • @RG-un2vl
      @RG-un2vl Год назад

      Not sure the art work is accurate

    • @ABBZ120
      @ABBZ120 Год назад +4

      @@RG-un2vl not sure if it is or isn’t, but I imagine most depictions of the ancient world aren’t

    • @RG-un2vl
      @RG-un2vl Год назад

      @@ABBZ120 there are many times very accurate descriptions....of the Gupta period Kalidasa poetry etc,literature is quite detailed

    • @sarazkekule6201
      @sarazkekule6201 Год назад

      @@RG-un2vl Go visit Kailash temple

  • @dangerdev004
    @dangerdev004 Год назад +45

    Gupta period of India is known as Golden Age and it's zenith marked the true prosperity it once had.

  • @Aryan_H1
    @Aryan_H1 Год назад +115

    *That was India's golden era - The gupta empire*
    During Gupta empire India was ahead of china. It was after Islamic invasion when India lost its position to the Chinese.
    Even then, We had More money in gold than the entire Western world combined.

    • @prasanth2601
      @prasanth2601 Год назад +2

      China was a mess during gupta period. After the fall of gupta China was United under one (or 2) emperor to become center of world

    • @LeSunshineee
      @LeSunshineee Год назад +5

      India superpower soon brother

    • @ChineseApricot69
      @ChineseApricot69 4 месяца назад

      @@LeSunshineee very unlikely to happen

    • @dhruv.g
      @dhruv.g 4 месяца назад +4

      @@ChineseApricot69 its inevitable

    • @ChineseApricot69
      @ChineseApricot69 4 месяца назад

      @@dhruv.g only if we work hard and we are not

  • @stormshadow5283
    @stormshadow5283 Год назад +150

    Eulogy to Licchavidauhitra (grandson of the Licchavis on his mother's side) Maharajadhiraja Samudragupta by his court poet Harisena describing the bravery and courage of his Emperor:
    Of him (who) was skilful in engaging in hundreds of battles of various kinds, whose only ally was valour (parākrama) through the might of his own arm, and who (has thus) the epithet Parākrama (valourious), whose body was most charming, being covered over with the plenteous beauty of the marks of hundreds of promiscuous scars, caused by battle-axes, arrows, spikes (śaṅku), spears (śakti), barbed darts (prāsa), swords, iron clubs (tōmara), javelins for throwing (bhindipāla), barbed arrows (nārācha), span-long arrows (vaitastika) and many other weapons.

    • @tonmoy1549
      @tonmoy1549 Год назад +3

      Licchavis were the major clan in the Vrijji Confederacy, no?

    • @stormshadow5283
      @stormshadow5283 Год назад +13

      @@tonmoy1549 not last major clan, the foremost clan of Vrijji. But Samudragupta's mother was from the Nepali branch of the Licchavis.

  • @heisenstein6392
    @heisenstein6392 Год назад +45

    That scene at 3:34 with the music is AMAZING. Absolutely fantastic work here, you guys deserve way more recognition!

  • @shantanushekharsjunerft9783
    @shantanushekharsjunerft9783 Год назад +166

    Indians were master metallurgists in ancient times. But these days metallurgy is the key component that is holding back India’s defense sector.

    • @MuraliM-oo9ri
      @MuraliM-oo9ri Год назад +5

      I think it's much more than metallurgy
      Are you referring to the engine blade metals?

    • @ariyanbhattacharjee597
      @ariyanbhattacharjee597 Год назад +2

      Back in the day defense and war props were complete metallurgical and in todays era its mettwlurgy + mechanics + electronics

    • @shantanushekharsjunerft9783
      @shantanushekharsjunerft9783 Год назад

      @@ariyanbhattacharjee597 agreed but I meant to say our current challenge is mainly metallurgy. We are quite good with electronics and avionics.

    • @debodatta7398
      @debodatta7398 Год назад +3

      You guys keep saying Indian...It was not Indian it was Tamil, Indian wasn't even an ethnicity back then, it was specifically the Tamils in Tamil Nadu and Sri lanka who created the greatest steel known in the pre-modern world Wootz Steel that was imported out into the outside world and became known as Damascus Steel to Europeans, the smiths in Syria thanks to beneficial trade links that go back generations with the Tamils were trained by them to work it, no other country had that luxary and no other country could work with Wootz they could only purchase it, same with the Gupta and any other North Indian kingdom.

    • @arunasharma749
      @arunasharma749 Год назад +8

      @@debodatta7398 blah blah blah more tamil kanging

  • @prettypuff1
    @prettypuff1 Год назад +121

    Very excited for this.
    This channel is like watching fine art with impressive storytelling. Feels like museum tour.
    Thank you again

  • @xXnoahconstrictorXx
    @xXnoahconstrictorXx Год назад +72

    Your choices of topics, your narration, the art, the ambient sounds are all perfect! On more than 1 ocassion I have used your videos in my AP World History class to better illustrate some historical peoples and events. Keep it up man!

    • @HistoryDose
      @HistoryDose  Год назад +6

      Thanks! Cool to know it’s being used in some classrooms!

  • @RohanSharmacap
    @RohanSharmacap Год назад +36

    The Wootz steel or Damascus steel( I don’t know why it is associated with Middle East) was originating in Southern India and was passed through the nation as the world class material for swords, Japanese traded with India for Wootz steel and it is even said while Britishers fought Indian in battles they would scavenge Indian tulwars or Swords and abandon their own, such was the quality of Indian swords

    • @neil_pat
      @neil_pat 10 месяцев назад +3

      I have heard The Cholas use it

  • @dialloabdoulalay3190
    @dialloabdoulalay3190 3 месяца назад +10

    The Gupta Empire, often hailed as the 'Golden Age of India,' was a powerhouse of innovation in science, mathematics, and culture. They gave the world the concept of zero, revolutionizing mathematics and laying the groundwork for modern number systems still used today!

    • @Samraagyi
      @Samraagyi 3 месяца назад +6

      Also the decimal system. Basically, all the numbers and not just zero.
      Everyone keeps missing out on this one.

  • @Yogesh-yadav0
    @Yogesh-yadav0 Год назад +456

    Having 33% to 35% of world's GDP isn't a joke
    The Indian gupta empire 🇮🇳🔥💪 India the golden bird then

    • @alexhu5491
      @alexhu5491 Год назад +14

      Caste system, slaves for millennia, descendants of invaders are Brahmin masters, indigenous Indians are untouchable 🤣

    • @vanshbeniwal1662
      @vanshbeniwal1662 Год назад +129

      ​@@alexhu5491"slaves for millenia"🤡
      We were targeted due to our wealth only like all other civilization
      Persia Egypt and their culture was destroyed by Arabs
      Greek culture by Christian
      We are the only one with completely same culture after so many invasion as we never give up fighting
      Before Mughals
      Selucide empire, hunnic empire all 3 arab caliphates and scythians and many other were trashed here
      And Mughals too were defeated by Marathas at end

    • @alexhu5491
      @alexhu5491 Год назад +7

      @@vanshbeniwal1662 Unable to accept reality this is your problem

    • @alexhu5491
      @alexhu5491 Год назад

      @@vanshbeniwal1662 The descendants of Afghan and Pakistani invaders for millennia are masters Brahmins, indigenous Indians are untouchable, this is no secret 🤡

    • @qwerty-ws5hq
      @qwerty-ws5hq Год назад +67

      @@alexhu5491 Firstly, the Britishers made the so called "caste" system more RIGID. Secondly, he is right, India's global share of GDP was 32% BEFORE the islamic inavsions....
      Bhagvad Gita 4.13 - 'The four categories of occupations were created by Me according to people’s qualities and activities. Although I am the Creator of this system, know Me to be the Non-doer and Eternal.'
      COMMENTARY on Gita 4.13 👇
      The Vedas classify people into four categories of occupations, not according to their birth, but according to their natures. Such varieties of occupations exist in every society. Even in communist nations where equality is the overriding principle, the diversity in human beings cannot be smothered. There are the philosophers who are the communist party think-tanks, there are the military men who protect the country, there are the farmers who engage in agriculture, and there are the factory workers.
      The Vedic philosophy explains this variety in a more scientific manner. It states that the material energy is constituted of three guṇas (modes): sattva guṇa (mode of goodness), rajo guṇa (mode of passion), and tamo guṇa (mode of ignorance). The Brahmins are those who have a preponderance of the mode of goodness. They are predisposed toward teaching and worship. The Kshatriyas are those who have a preponderance of the mode of passion mixed with a smaller amount of the mode of goodness. They are inclined toward administration and management. The Vaishyas are those who possess the mode of passion mixed with some mode of ignorance. Accordingly, they form the business and agricultural class. Then there are the Shudras, who are predominated by the mode of ignorance. They form the working class. This classification was neither meant to be according to birth, nor was it unchangeable. Shree Krishna explains in this verse that the classification of the Varṇāśhram system was according to people’s qualities and activities.
      Although God is the creator of the scheme of the world, yet he is the non-doer. This is similar to the rain. Just as rain water falls equally on the forest, yet from some seeds huge banyan trees sprout, from other seeds beautiful flowers bloom, and from some thorny bushes emerge. The rain, which is impartial, is not answerable for this difference. In the same way, God provides the souls with the energy to act, but they are free in determining what they wish to do with it; God is not responsible for their actions.

  • @XoPlanetI
    @XoPlanetI Год назад +46

    The war elephants were specially trained killing machines. Sharp sword adorned their tusks and these elephants would throw the enemy upwards and wait for him to land on the sword. Alexander lost the battle to King Porus mostly due to war elephants and his battle-hardened soldiers

    • @arjunraj823
      @arjunraj823 Год назад +6

      In Bahubali film, you can see a war elephant with thorns on its tusk.

  • @opsauras1507
    @opsauras1507 Год назад +67

    The art in this video is absolutely stunning.

  • @haleyguthrie3113
    @haleyguthrie3113 Год назад +35

    India has to have the most interesting histories and amazing stories. 👏

    • @sportstoday7938
      @sportstoday7938 Год назад +8

      Yes. Probably the only country which battled for nearly 2000+ years from Alexander to British empire and still survived with its civilization and culture must have great history..

  • @john_wick1969
    @john_wick1969 Год назад +50

    It's a shame that our history syllabus doesn't shed much light on our (Indian) ancestors and kings and Empires but rather teach about people who came to plunder our national

    • @ShivanshuTyagi72981
      @ShivanshuTyagi72981 10 месяцев назад

      Well, they do. We know much about it but they can't make a novel on every dynasty in 5000 years of history

    • @neil_pat
      @neil_pat 10 месяцев назад

      @@ShivanshuTyagi72981 but they can teach every islamic invader and britisher thoroughly with some sweet distortions🤡

    • @r1a172
      @r1a172 4 месяца назад

      @@ShivanshuTyagi72981 have u read about bappa rawal in any book??

  • @rohanshahzad832
    @rohanshahzad832 Год назад +31

    when he said that the Hunnic king didnt worship vishnu but instead shiva "the god of destruction", i got literal chills

    • @incrediblypractical.
      @incrediblypractical. Год назад

      Chill both are just superstitious cringe fictional characters of Hinduism nothing else so it doesn't matter

    • @porothashawarma2339
      @porothashawarma2339 Год назад +6

      Mihirakula looks like one of my uncles 🤣

    • @HA-rn2iu
      @HA-rn2iu Год назад +8

      Vishnu is Shiva and Shiva is Vishnu. If you understand their roles, then Vishnu and Shiva merge into each other.
      Shiva should be termed transformer. He awards death to transform that energy to nothingness. Blackhole sounds familiar ? Shiva meaning one that is not.

  • @Yadavharsh.
    @Yadavharsh. 10 месяцев назад +20

    Chess was originated in 6th century in India 🇮🇳 gupta Empire period when a battle was held and the prince died in that war, after outcome of that king decided to invent a game, through some mathematician, minister and scholar invents the boards and piece and it called chaturanga modern day chess !

  • @philipnearis5058
    @philipnearis5058 Год назад +70

    Yet again, another beautifully narrated story of history, coupled with equally vivid and breathtaking illustration. Well done.

  • @mask53
    @mask53 Год назад +227

    The reason why I am super excited is not only because of the fact that the video is about Indian history, which already is criminally underrated, but also because it is about GUPTA empire.
    This empire is underrated of the underrated. Mauryans, Mughals, Rajputs, Marathas etc. have already been covered in detail and have featured in countless TV serials, movies etc. Guptas got nothing to their name.
    This video is perhaps first proper attempt at RUclips to bring the empire to the attention of international audience.
    Hence, I am really thankful to History dose. I hope that in future you cover even more underrated empires from India.❣️

    • @hehehuhu
      @hehehuhu Год назад +16

      Well most Southern dynasties and empires are also underrated. Only recent years did cholas get some recognition

    • @sabkabaap1758
      @sabkabaap1758 Год назад +9

      even Vijayanagar, Ahoms and Nepali Gorkhali Kingdoms arw underrated

    • @prasoonjha1816
      @prasoonjha1816 Год назад +13

      And ironically, the Gupta Empire was the best among them all.

    • @shubhnamdeo2865
      @shubhnamdeo2865 Год назад +9

      @@prasoonjha1816 Yea lol. Everyone cries about how Nalanda was lost, but they do not know where it came from. It came from this underrated Empire.

    • @ghs89
      @ghs89 Год назад +5

      ​@@shubhnamdeo2865 yes, no one gives credit to King Kumargupta who built Nalanda.

  • @Dimitri_1996
    @Dimitri_1996 10 месяцев назад +45

    Love for Indians from France 🇫🇷❤️

  • @apatriot4400
    @apatriot4400 Год назад +80

    Whoa Indians! Stopped invincible Greeks, broke Scithians into pieces, pushed away Parthians, braved Huns, broke Arabian blitzkrieg by stopping them for 300 years, didn't get wiped out in the Turkish flood, overthrew Turkish yoke time and again, humbled Mongoles . Last but not least, had the whole India reconquesta type liberated when Britishers came as uninvited guests.

    • @sagar9703
      @sagar9703 6 месяцев назад +5

      Pretty much sums it up💛

    • @shubhankardasgupta4777
      @shubhankardasgupta4777 6 месяцев назад +2

      hehe not under the Gupta regime.

    • @Rickey-pu5nw
      @Rickey-pu5nw 25 дней назад

      @@apatriot4400 much destruction is done unfortunately.

  • @NedTheAlien
    @NedTheAlien Год назад +63

    Indian history is typically presented as a confusing mess of one invasion after another (said many years ago by a friend who read some of it). Videos like this go a long way towards remedying that by cohering around central influential periods

    • @Blazee2897
      @Blazee2897 Год назад

      Where did your friend read this from?

    • @NedTheAlien
      @NedTheAlien Год назад +1

      @Sai-ns9ky here's my cartoon description of Indian history:
      2500 BC - indus Valley civilization
      1500 BC - Aryan migration (not invasion)
      300 - 200 BC - mauryan empire
      200BC - 5th C- invasions
      5th C - 7th C- Gupta empire
      7th C - 16th C - invasions
      16thC - 18thC - mughal empire
      19thC - 20C - British empire
      1948 - present - modern india

    • @vanshbeniwal1662
      @vanshbeniwal1662 Год назад

      ​@@NedTheAlien You are wrong
      Till 10th century it was pratihara empire in north and Rashtrakutas in south
      Yes there were invasions before and after Gupta but they all failed
      They only succeeded in 1192. It was pratihara empire
      And even in 12 to 18th century south indian dynasties were still undefeated

    • @vanshbeniwal1662
      @vanshbeniwal1662 Год назад

      ​@@NedTheAlien18th century that was maratha Empire
      And even during 13th to 16th century tughluqs were the only sultanat to rule most of the india and khiljis in the north
      At other time there were other powerful empires and those invaders were in smaller area

    • @hirenahir76200
      @hirenahir76200 Год назад

      True those are just made up propoganda to show india in low light so others don't get influenced by india and it's culture

  • @paco680
    @paco680 Год назад +22

    After seeing this video I really wish to see in the future an assassin's creed set in India during the Gupta empire, seems so fascinating and would make a perfect setting for an ac game

  • @kevting4512
    @kevting4512 Год назад +84

    I hope you'll explore more of South/Southeastern Asian historical topics. These are very underrated areas and deserves some much needed wider audience. Might I propose King Naresuan of the Ayutthaya Kingdom and the formation of the Tai hegemony.

    • @swasg3129
      @swasg3129 Год назад +7

      Subcontinent asia is completely different from south east Asia.

    • @Azzam_Alqudsi
      @Azzam_Alqudsi Год назад +2

      @@swasg3129 that's why we need more coverage before the limited knowledge are lost... some script like the Jawi script and Balinese script are still preserved today, but with time, it can be gone
      i mean let's check out some Hindu and Buddhist warfare in Pre-colonized Indonesia, like it's very cool how it stopped and reconciliate

    • @swasg3129
      @swasg3129 Год назад +1

      @@Azzam_Alqudsi don't care about south east Asia, I'm not from there. This video is about subcontinent

    • @paganpriest9882
      @paganpriest9882 Год назад +3

      ​@@swasg3129 Indian kings were in South East Asia as well...there were hindu kingdoms

    • @QuantumNinja1.9
      @QuantumNinja1.9 Год назад +5

      ​@@swasg3129 why the hell u have to be so disrespectful.
      South Asia has huge influence on southeast Asia.
      Read about cholas, pallavas, Khmer, srivijayas etc.

  • @vickytaspartan
    @vickytaspartan Год назад +48

    I heard something about the Gupta in Universal History class in high school here in Mexico, but with your video I learned more on this interesting episode of Human history. I'll go to check more on the empire. Thank you!

    • @aaryan_B055
      @aaryan_B055 Год назад +4

      Guptas eradicated scythians nd white HUNNS.
      Two Gupta kings ie SAMUDRAGUPTA nd SKANDAGUPTA were even known as SHAKARI nd HUNNARI means the annihilatior of SHAKA(scythians) nd HUNN.

    • @shubhankardasgupta4777
      @shubhankardasgupta4777 Год назад +3

      @@aaryan_B055 yaaaas baby

  • @SenapatiM96
    @SenapatiM96 Год назад +31

    Interesting how more than a millennium later a European monarch would receive the title 'The Samudragupta of Europe'.

  • @itsoblivion8124
    @itsoblivion8124 Год назад +12

    This empire is very underrated from perspective of mathamatical history.
    Gupta dynasty had built great nalanda university which gave birth to computational methods for zero, negative, hindu-arabic numerals and modern trigonometry sine function.

    • @sikasbkoju3715
      @sikasbkoju3715 Год назад +3

      Vedic-avasta is correct word not hindu-arabic. For your kind information. Hindu is word used for non-muslims.

    • @ryzensingh7801
      @ryzensingh7801 Год назад

      Not hindu-arabic but vedic numerals.

  • @AbhishekRoy-wi6xm
    @AbhishekRoy-wi6xm Год назад +11

    Your content is not only super informative, but it's also incredibly engaging and fun to watch.
    That's why I'm kindly requesting more videos on Indian history. There's just so much to explore and discover, and I know you guys would knock it out of the park with whatever topics you choose.

  • @mrr4717
    @mrr4717 Год назад +11

    You should make a video on Vijaynagara empire. They were great kings who ruled for large time in most difficult time.
    Note: Capital of Vijaynagara was brightest star in entire medieval history

  • @Joshu-y1k
    @Joshu-y1k 9 месяцев назад +6

    Indian culture and history is amazing.

  • @joeschianodicola1810
    @joeschianodicola1810 Год назад +10

    one can only imagine the harrowing imagery of the battlefield, with war elephants stamping their way through infantry, and cavalry rushing and slicing through formations

  • @Gidi66
    @Gidi66 Год назад +21

    As an South African it was nice to learn about Gupta's other than the ones that so damaged my country with corruption and theft 👍

    • @BakriPeluddin
      @BakriPeluddin Год назад +4

      🤣 🤣 That was funny

    • @Alakazam001
      @Alakazam001 10 месяцев назад +1

      Not the same thing.
      The empire reffered themselves as gangetic king of kings.
      Its the british that gave them this name. But gupta is used by even mauryan rulers.

  • @NedTheAlien
    @NedTheAlien Год назад +1

    Thanks!

    • @HistoryDose
      @HistoryDose  Год назад +1

      Thanks for watching and supporting! :)

  • @StoicHistorian
    @StoicHistorian Год назад +15

    Simply the best history channel on RUclips, incredible that it’s the work of only two men, let alone brothers

  • @bryan...5047
    @bryan...5047 Год назад +16

    This episode of the Gupta Empire of India is top level the art and the storytelling is very good, I honestly can't wait until they touch ancient greek or macedonian greek which ever comes first i know its somewhat a boring part of history, but one day I do like to see the Greeks in the amazing art style this channel has its really cool man

  • @Charith-x5d
    @Charith-x5d Год назад +9

    The fact that you mentioned the loss of malleability ( Internal mobility too ) in caste shows how well researched this is .

  • @SidG_huh
    @SidG_huh Год назад +10

    Damn, the video was a movie in itself! Visually grand, relating to the grandeur of the Gupta dynasty. As an Indian, I absolutely loved the video! Thank you!

  • @JustJiril
    @JustJiril Год назад +8

    This is sick brother. Never witnessed anything like this. Not only the graphics were astonishing but the facts too. They were to the point. Kudos to your work. Keep it up. Imma share this to everyone.

  • @biswanathmahapatra8441
    @biswanathmahapatra8441 2 месяца назад +8

    Gupta Era is considered as the Golden Age of Indian History

    • @ウェシュミン
      @ウェシュミン Месяц назад +1

      Actually during the time of the Mughal Empire.

    • @ウェシュミン
      @ウェシュミン Месяц назад +2

      ​@@SananTh01 "It is incorrect to assume that India’s Golden Age was limited only to the Gupta period and that nothing comparable happened during the Mughal era. While the Gupta period is undoubtedly considered a Golden Age of India, it is equally important to acknowledge that the Mughal period marked unparalleled achievements in cultural, economic, architectural, and political domains. The Mughal era is also rightly seen as a Golden Age for India, as it elevated the nation to new heights.
      During the Mughal reign, India was the world's largest economy, contributing approximately 25% of the global GDP. This was a time when India was renowned worldwide for its textile industry, spices, and handicrafts. Akbar’s rule saw reforms in land revenue, restructuring of taxation systems, and the establishment of new trade routes, all of which boosted agriculture and commerce to unprecedented levels. Even Western historians like Tod and Elphinstone acknowledged Akbar’s administration as remarkable, crediting him for transforming the Indian subcontinent into a unified political entity.
      In addition, the Mughals made extraordinary contributions to the fields of art and architecture. Masterpieces like the Taj Mahal, Fatehpur Sikri, Red Fort, and Shalimar Bagh are not just symbols of cultural richness but also testify to how the Mughals embraced and elevated India’s architectural traditions. Mughal miniature paintings, carpet weaving, and music (like the development of khayal and dhrupad styles) also belong to this era.
      On religious tolerance and secularism, Akbar implemented the policy of 'Sulh-e-Kul,' which aimed to grant equal rights to all religions. He abolished the jizya tax, appointed Hindu kings to high positions in his court, and even established the Ibadatkhana for discussions among scholars of different faiths. Shah Jahan provided patronage to temples in Banaras and Mathura, and Aurangzeb, despite his controversial image, also granted endowments to several Hindu temples.
      The assertion that Mughals merely 'occupied' the land of the natives is also historically inaccurate. The Mughals adopted this land as their homeland and nurtured its culture, language, and society. The evolution of the Urdu language, the incorporation of Persian architectural styles into Indian traditions, and the cultural intermingling of Hindus and Muslims are evidence of the Mughal legacy in India.
      As for the duration of their rule, the Mughal Empire lasted for nearly 300 years (1526-1857), which cannot be described as a 'short rule.' Comparatively, the Gupta Empire’s effective period of influence was around 200 years. Moreover, while the Gupta period was largely confined to North India, the Mughals ruled almost the entire Indian subcontinent.
      It is also essential to note that the incidents of temple destruction attributed to the Mughals were primarily driven by political reasons rather than religious intolerance. The temples targeted were often associated with rebellious rulers or political adversaries. Despite this, the Mughals patronized and provided grants to hundreds of temples. Ignoring these aspects of history reflects bias.
      Therefore, claiming that the Mughals only destroyed temples or that their era was not part of India’s Golden Age distorts historical facts and undermines the diversity and richness of Indian history. The Mughal period was a chapter in India’s history that brought unparalleled achievements in art, culture, governance, and economy, deserving recognition as a Golden Age in its own right.

    • @Simpleinfo09
      @Simpleinfo09 Месяц назад

      History of Bihar/Magadh

  • @AshishGuptaRajvanshi
    @AshishGuptaRajvanshi Год назад +88

    Proud of having them as our ancestors ❤

  • @jaikumarjadhav6575
    @jaikumarjadhav6575 Год назад +19

    This man drops the most cool and aesthetic history videos, which are as informative as creative they are. Great work! Keep going!! ❤

  • @willo7734
    @willo7734 10 месяцев назад +2

    Can’t believe I just found your channel. This is amazing stuff! I’ve become interested in Indian history lately and this is perfect. Now to binge your other content.

  • @sydjaguar
    @sydjaguar 10 месяцев назад +2

    You are an amazing story teller. Ancient Indian history is little known and researched.

  • @parthiaball
    @parthiaball Год назад +15

    This was fantastic to watch, thank you!
    I look forward to you potentially doing an episode on a south Indian power, like the Cholas, the ancient Tamil kings, or Vijayanagara.

  • @RudraanshSeth
    @RudraanshSeth Год назад +3

    A very beautiful note of Gupta Empires dawn and dusk and all in between
    Great Job Done and Hard Work Payed off
    One thing I'll tell everyone is that Lor Shivas depiction as God Of destruction should not be misinterpreted and misunderstood...In Hinduism (or Sanatan Dharm) the life cycle of The Cosmos consists of 3 energies at play called Tridevas
    The Energy of Creation or Big Bang-Brahma
    The Energy of the Preservation or the Universe-Vishnu
    The Energy of Destruction-Rudra
    Things that begin must be ended for a healthy lif cycle
    Mind u also that Shiva is also God Of destruction of all bad thoughts is also know for his his Self Control and Meditation and known for State of Peace as he was the Adiyogi that is the first person to perform and teach the knowledge of Yoga and Cosmos
    He is known as Bhoothnath , God of elements and Bholenath , The Innocent God
    But he takes up his rudra ( Fierce and Painful) form when there is need.
    So don't make up wrong perception...
    Again I'll thank You for such a great video about ancient indian history

  • @siddharthshivakumar4379
    @siddharthshivakumar4379 Год назад +6

    As an Indian, I loved this video so much! I really hope a video about the Chola Dynasty is on the cards too!

  • @kevinle5460
    @kevinle5460 Год назад +1

    Keep it going boyz!

  • @thehistorybard6333
    @thehistorybard6333 Год назад +14

    Loved this video! Stunning art from Joe, he's a great artist himself! And brilliantly written and narrated by Chris as usual. Thankyou for another magical journey back in time guys!!

  • @WatchPoliceBodycam
    @WatchPoliceBodycam Год назад +19

    You inspired me to also make short animated history videos like the Gold Rush of the Wild West!
    Thank you History Dose

  • @IndoAryan
    @IndoAryan Год назад +134

    3:40 The Ashvamedha Yajna was a horse sacrifice ritual of Vedic Aryan. It was used by ancient Indian kings to prove their imperial sovereignty: a horse accompanied by the king's warriors would be released to wander for a year. In the territory traversed by the horse, any rival could dispute the king's authority by challenging the warriors accompanying it. After one year, if no enemy had managed to kill or capture the horse, the animal would be guided back to the king's capital. It would be then sacrificed, and the king would be declared as an undisputed sovereign.

    • @indian8801
      @indian8801 Год назад +13

      Samdurgupta 😍

    • @GyanTvAmit
      @GyanTvAmit Год назад +49

      its not sacrifice,its like leaving horse to move freely to capture other's territory,english vocabulary have less words to describe sanskrit word meanings

    • @IndoAryan
      @IndoAryan Год назад +38

      @@GyanTvAmit Brother, I have read the Vedas and according to the Vedas, horses were sacrificed in Ashwamedha Yajna.

    • @rinkibiswas3364
      @rinkibiswas3364 Год назад +1

      ​@@IndoAryan Hi bro ☺️

    • @GyanTvAmit
      @GyanTvAmit Год назад +31

      @@IndoAryan no sacrifice means not killing in vedas,Horses were not killed, they were released, if someone caught them, they had to fight.

  • @Obelixlxxvi
    @Obelixlxxvi Год назад +4

    A famous example of ancient India's metallurgy skills - one of the oldest steel pillars that never rusts is very close my house in Mehrauli...in the Qutab Minar Complex. Have seen it now for 4+ decades...as we use to play cricket in the gardens of that complex.

  • @chaitanyasabharwal72003
    @chaitanyasabharwal72003 Год назад +14

    Truly, the might of the Indian empires was unbelievable. And no shocking that this was because of the teachings & values of the Sanatan Dharma. With due respect for all religions. But I'm proud to be an Indian and a Sanatani. There are 1000s of more tales, stories and epics originating from the acient India history. They are remarkable and I'd love to collect information on them.
    And lastly, kudos to History Dose. You've done a brilliant job making this video!

  • @Shubhamkumar-fr9hl
    @Shubhamkumar-fr9hl Год назад +15

    But indians forgetting their own beautiful history alot of indians even don't know who was legendary emperor samudragupta 😢😢

  • @NikhilKumar-ty6vq
    @NikhilKumar-ty6vq Год назад +3

    Man this is amazing, breathtaking, the level of story telling and the images you used are so beautiful , would love to see more of your work on ancient India
    Kudos to you and your team
    May God bless you

  • @avinavpal1403
    @avinavpal1403 Год назад +37

    Golden period of india❤

    • @shubhankardasgupta4777
      @shubhankardasgupta4777 Год назад +3

      bruh, even the Palas of Bengal had glorious times in the past. THey controlled the entire northern plains.

    • @major2707
      @major2707 Год назад +1

      Bharat have many powerful kingdoms ...🙂 No more hate and discrimination

    • @JStratham-ym9fb
      @JStratham-ym9fb Год назад +5

      ​@@shubhankardasgupta4777 Under educated Bangladeshi, voter of mumtaj begum.

    • @hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiib
      @hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiib Год назад +1

      @@shubhankardasgupta4777 pala capital was munger they were bihari empire

    • @avinavpal1403
      @avinavpal1403 Год назад +1

      As per historian's Gupta period clamed as golden period of india because in that time india new high in mathematics, science and astronomy and king chandragupta 2 (Vikramaditya) established nalanda University at that time
      Aryabhatta also exists in Gupta period

  • @amitkumarsharma9511
    @amitkumarsharma9511 7 месяцев назад +9

    Iron pillar in Delhi is of Gupta’s period and is still rust free even after 2000 years.

    • @well_art
      @well_art 3 месяца назад

      Its mauryan

    • @amitkumarsharma9511
      @amitkumarsharma9511 3 месяца назад

      @@well_art nope.

    • @Samraagyi
      @Samraagyi 3 месяца назад

      ​@@well_artIt was built by the son of Samudragupt, Vikramaditya.

  • @rydersmith7652
    @rydersmith7652 Год назад +13

    This is the greatest assassins creed setting possible

  • @Replicaate
    @Replicaate 7 месяцев назад +7

    War elephants always seem like something out of high fantasy to me even though I know they were real. I can’t imagine how someone who’d never seen a war beast bigger than a horse would react to seeing a line of elephants approaching.

    • @Terminator-b8q
      @Terminator-b8q Месяц назад +3

      @@Replicaate That's what Alexander felt when he reached on the banks of Indus!!

  • @govindraj28
    @govindraj28 5 месяцев назад +8

    Samudra gupta fought 100 wars without a single lose. 🕉️🔥

  • @durer2319
    @durer2319 Год назад +31

    The Mauryan Empire is more inspiring and was much more expansive than Gupta's. The architecture that developed in Gupta Empire gave rise to an whole new era in Indian's architecture.

    • @alvis_ff6028
      @alvis_ff6028 Год назад +9

      Still the Gupta period is known as the golden age of Indian civilization

    • @dwarasamudra8889
      @dwarasamudra8889 Год назад +2

      The Gupta Emperors were very well aware of the Mauryan Emperors. They largely modelled their empire on the Mauryan empire, even copying Mauryan state emblems like the Lion Pillars.

    • @sakshigupta8603
      @sakshigupta8603 Год назад +2

      @@dwarasamudra8889 Samudragupta named his son Chandragupta in honor of the 1st Mauryan king. Gupta empire is the golden age but Mauryan empire is special because it emerged as a defence against the invading greek forces - Alexander, a brainchild of Chanakya brought to reality by his disciple Chandragupta Maurya to safeguard the people, culture and religion of Bharatvarsha against foreign forces. Imagine if we had someone like that in the 1700s when Brits arrived or in the 1300s when Mughals were in full force. There is no competition. Both empires did what they could to preserve and advance the culture of this land in their own capacity and anyone who pitches them against each other is only a fool.

  • @abmujvek1
    @abmujvek1 2 месяца назад +2

    This should be used in schools. The music, the visuals, the narration - all mind blowing. Feels like I'm watching a movie.

  • @Zeus11Nova13
    @Zeus11Nova13 10 месяцев назад +2

    Love the art work and the sound effects, this was epic, thanks for the video ❤

  • @namankulshrestha5373
    @namankulshrestha5373 Год назад +6

    This video was awesome
    Personally gupta Empire was my favourite
    And it is called the golden period of india that time we share almost 38% of world gdp , the art and culture, discovery from 0 to many mathematical and physics formulas , from hinduism, buddhism and Jainism all religions or ideology are flourishing in this period
    My request topic is
    Mauryan, cholas and indus valley civilisation
    Plssss🙏

  • @adityajoshi6422
    @adityajoshi6422 Год назад +19

    Please also cover Cholas if you haven't already. One of the mightiest empires in the southern india who at one point were controlling much of South east asia

  • @nw3877
    @nw3877 Год назад +9

    Top 3 Settings for Assassin's Creed India -
    1. Mauryan Empire
    a. Alexander army loses motivation and will in India.
    b. Got to meet "Chanakya", the master(Guru) of Mauryan emperor(s). The GREAT master strategist, economist, diplomat, security advisor and creative assassination techniques he had.
    c. Got to see the biggest Empire ever in India after British Colony.
    d. Got to see most area from Northwest (Takshashila) to East (Patliputra) to South (Kalinga etc.) .
    But it will be bit like Origins somewhat lacking true Parkour type locations (AC2, AC1, ACUnity)
    2. Gupta Empire
    a. Got to see popular astronomers, mathematicians.
    b. Great architecture and decent parkour location.
    c. Basically everything you expect from Golden Era.
    d. Might see Central part of India.
    3. Ranjit Singh's Empire (Sikh Empire)
    a. Great for AC type cities for parkour.
    b. It might be like Syndicate or Unity in terms of Weapons.
    c. Might only see North Western part of India.

    • @nw3877
      @nw3877 Год назад

      The last descendant of Sikh Empire was in AC Syndicate too. (But here, it's for Early period of the Empire)

    • @noideasforanyhandlesorry990
      @noideasforanyhandlesorry990 Год назад +1

      One more would be Maratha's under the reign of Aurangzeb

  • @Lmao69
    @Lmao69 Год назад +17

    A decent video on the Gupta dynasty.
    Many people make video on ashoka saying he is the greatest or whatever.
    But It was Samudragupta.

    • @ramsengar1761
      @ramsengar1761 Год назад +11

      That's what I always tell the people that the samudragupta was the greatest conqueror of India. He reached deep south and also to Afghanistan he further pushed into the northeast region. Ashoka got most of the territory from his father while samudragupta conquered it by himself

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +3

      Samudragupt was better conqueror but overall Samrat Ashok is greatest in south asian history. Even u can his influence everyone. Indian national emblem is itself Ashok stambh. He is like father of india

    • @ramsengar1761
      @ramsengar1761 Год назад +5

      @@Deepak_Dhakad yes that's what I'm saying that samudragupta was the greatest conqueror

    • @Lmao69
      @Lmao69 Год назад +3

      ​​​@@Deepak_Dhakad Ashoka never fought any war except the Kalinga war,in that too he suffered massive casualties and caused the normal citizens of Kalinga to suffer.
      He wasted The royal treasury by sponsoring useless Buddhist missionaries and converting Hindus into Buddhists. Ashoka was the reason that started the decline of the Mauryan Empire.
      Where as Samudragupta conquered 20 kingdoms , 18 forest kingdoms, because of these extensive conquests of Samudragupta 14 tribal or frontier kingdoms accepted the Gupta suzerainity.The kidarite Hunas who were initially paying tributes to The Sassainid persia became A tributary state of the Guptas.The kushans were also forced to become a vassaal of Gupta's . Sri Lanka was also a vassal state of The Gupta's. Inspite of These massive and destructive conquests , Gupta era became The Golden age of India. All these happened Under Samudragupta.
      Goi adopted The Ashok stambh and Ashok chakra because ashoka renounced violence ( a lie) . The illiterate politicians did not knew anything About other Empires except that of Mauryans.

    • @Deepak_Dhakad
      @Deepak_Dhakad Год назад +1

      @@Lmao69 lol 😂. Samrat Ashoka is father of bharatvarsh.
      And his grandfather conquered more land than any other indian king ever did. Guptas conquered tiny kingdoms meanwhile Samrat Chandragupt maurya conquererd Powerful Nanda empire.
      Those Buddist missions were successful. Sri Lanka , South east asia and later Kushan empire etc all inherited budhhism of maurya empire. Tell me which historian said maurya empire declined under Asoka, saying out of air?
      Asoka was first person to introduce stone architecture in India. Indian art and architecture completely changed since rule of Asoka. And maurya empire was far more bigger and biggest in south asian history

  • @ishaanjetly8084
    @ishaanjetly8084 Год назад +49

    Most legendary Hindu Emperor

    • @netaji-thebritishslayer
      @netaji-thebritishslayer Год назад +5

      Krishnadevaraya

    • @hirenahir76200
      @hirenahir76200 Год назад

      Mihirkul

    • @dwarasamudra8889
      @dwarasamudra8889 Год назад +5

      @@netaji-thebritishslayer nah, there were greater kannadiga rulers than krishnadevaraya like Amoghavarsha Nriputunga, Krishna I, Govinda etc of the Rashtrakutas, Vikramaditya and Someshwara IV of the Kalyani Chalukyas,

    • @chinanumbawun111
      @chinanumbawun111 Год назад +1

      @@dwarasamudra8889 pulakeshi

    • @khelkud_Network_TV
      @khelkud_Network_TV Год назад +4

      GORKHA 🇳🇵🙏

  • @sicboy83
    @sicboy83 Год назад +5

    As a Mexican,Irish, Native American, Roman, Indian, Spanish, this is the best video

  • @ShivamYadav-jy2hm
    @ShivamYadav-jy2hm Год назад +8

    Will love to learn more about Indian history....really thankful for your channel.....have taught me more about history than the schools....patiently waiting for more content ❤❤

  • @sloaiza81
    @sloaiza81 Год назад +1

    Insanely good vid. Loved the mention of Zero!

  • @katierumlock6645
    @katierumlock6645 Год назад +8

    I don’t know if you take recommendations, but I think your style of video production would work really well with the story of Saint Olga of Kiev. Her subjugation of the Drevlians, governance during Svaitoslav’s campaigns, and contributions to Orthodox Christianity combine into a riveting narrative that would complement your cinematography perfectly.

  • @kanishkchahar7261
    @kanishkchahar7261 Год назад +3

    BRUH!!! The level of storytelling style gave me goosebumps.

  • @wesley_b
    @wesley_b Год назад +3

    Amazing glimpse into another time. I don't know much about Indian history. This was very very captivating. Thank you.