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The Post-Mauryan Political Scenario in North India: The Decline and Fragmentation of the Gangetic Orbit The Post-Mauryan Political Scenario in North India: The Decline and Fragmentation of the Gangetic Orbit
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The Coming Back of the Inner Indian Orbit into its Own The Coming Back of the Inner Indian Orbit into its Own
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Orissa, the Deccan, and Malwa Orissa, the Deccan, and Malwa
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A New Orbit: Maharashtra (both Vidarbha and Deccan inclusive of the Konkan coast), Andhra (both Deccan and the coast), and Karnataka (Deccan and the Konkan coast) A New Orbit: Maharashtra (both Vidarbha and Deccan inclusive of the Konkan coast), Andhra (both Deccan and the coast), and Karnataka (Deccan and the Konkan coast)
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Notes Notes
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3 The Shift of the Focus to Orissa, the Deccan, and Malwa: c. 200 bc to c. ad 300
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Published:October 2010
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Abstract
One of the most significant geopolitical orbits in the post-Maurya period was the Oxus to the Indus orbit, although it was not a monolithic one on the basis of the period's political history. Instead, it was divided into a number of distinct segments. The Saka thrust towards Mathura shows that during this period, the area of what is called the Indo-Gangetic divide in Indian geography (the area between the Sutlej and the Yamuna) became subject to the influence of political factors associated with the Oxus-Indus orbit. This scenario becomes more evident under the Kushan dynasty. Vast stretches of the Deccan, Orissa, and western Malwa in the post-Mauryan context formed an orbit of their own where a lot of interaction took place, with some thrusts towards the north.
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