Pax Gupta
Pax Gupta or Pax Guptana (
Northern India.[1]
Background
This period ushered an unprecedented growth and development of scientific knowledge in the
Vatsyayana who made great advancements in many academic fields.[5][6] The game of chess developed during this period.[7]
See also
- Pax Kushana, a period of relative peace in the preceding Kushan Empire
References
Citations
- ^ Sinha, Bindeshwari Prasad (1977). Dynastic History of Magadha, Cir. 450-1200 A.D. Abhinav Publications. p. 2.
- ISBN 978-81-87036-66-1.
- ^ Gupta dynasty (Indian dynasty) Archived 30 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Britannica Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved 21 November 2011.
- ISBN 978-0-87113-800-2.
Kalidasa wrote ... with an excellence which, by unanimous consent, justifies the inevitable comparisons with Shakespeare ... When and where Kalidasa lived remains a mystery. He acknowledges no links with the Guptas; he may not even have coincided with them ... but the poet's vivid awareness of the terrain of the entire subcontinent argues strongly for a Guptan provenance.
- ^ Vidya Dhar Mahajan 1990, p. 540.
- ISBN 978-0-87113-800-2.
The great era of all that is deemed classical in Indian literature, art and science was now dawning. It was this crescendo of creativity and scholarship, as much as ... political achievements of the Guptas, which would make their age so golden.
- OCLC 13472872.
Sources
- ISBN 978-0-7855-1191-5. Archivedfrom the original on 10 January 2020. Retrieved 29 August 2018.