Concepts

Gupta Golden Age

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectHistory

Definition

The period of the Gupta Empire (about 320 to 550 CE), often called the classical or golden age of ancient India for its achievements in science, mathematics, art, literature, and administration.

Key points

  • Major rulers: Chandragupta I (founder, Gupta era from 319 to 320 CE), Samudragupta (the "Indian Napoleon", praised in the Allahabad/Prayag Prashasti by Harishena), and Chandragupta II Vikramaditya (defeated the Shakas).
  • Science and mathematics: Aryabhata (concept of zero in use, place value, heliocentric ideas, value of pi) and Varahamihira (astronomy, the Brihat Samhita).
  • Literature: Kalidasa (Abhijnanasakuntalam, Meghaduta) is associated with this age; medicine advanced through texts of Sushruta and Charaka.
  • Art and architecture: the Ajanta cave paintings, the iron pillar at Mehrauli (rust-resistant), and early structural temples (Dashavatara temple, Deogarh).
  • Chinese pilgrim Fa-Hien visited during Chandragupta II's reign; decline followed Hun (Huna) invasions in the 5th and 6th centuries.

Why it matters for CAPF

Achievement-to-person matching (Aryabhata, Kalidasa, Varahamihira), the Allahabad Prashasti, and the Fa-Hien visit are standard ancient-history items.

Common confusion

Chandragupta Maurya (Mauryan, 4th century BCE) is different from Chandragupta I and Chandragupta II of the Guptas (4th to 5th century CE); Fa-Hien (Gupta) versus Hsuan Tsang (Harsha).

One-line recall

Classical age (about 320 to 550 CE) of Aryabhata, Kalidasa, and Ajanta art under Samudragupta and Chandragupta II.

Parent note

post mauryan and gupta age

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