
Contents
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The Mythical Domain The Mythical Domain
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The Kings Mentioned in both the Puranic Literature and the Later Vedic Literature The Kings Mentioned in both the Puranic Literature and the Later Vedic Literature
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The Sixteen Mahajanapadas The Sixteen Mahajanapadas
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The Expansion of the Magadhan Power The Expansion of the Magadhan Power
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The Achaemenids in the Indus-Oxus Orbit The Achaemenids in the Indus-Oxus Orbit
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The Mauryan Domain The Mauryan Domain
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The Interaction between the Gangetic and Indus-Oxus Orbits—from the Greeks and Indo-Greeks to the Kushanas The Interaction between the Gangetic and Indus-Oxus Orbits—from the Greeks and Indo-Greeks to the Kushanas
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The Emergence of Regional Political Foci—Orissa, the Deccan, Malwa, Gujarat, Sindh, and Parts of Rajasthan The Emergence of Regional Political Foci—Orissa, the Deccan, Malwa, Gujarat, Sindh, and Parts of Rajasthan
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The Sub-Orbits of the Satavahana Domain—maharashtra, Andhra, and Karnataka The Sub-Orbits of the Satavahana Domain—maharashtra, Andhra, and Karnataka
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The Gangetic-Malwa Orbit under the Guptas The Gangetic-Malwa Orbit under the Guptas
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The Post-Gupta Scenario in North India, the Deccan, and the South up to c. Tenth Century The Post-Gupta Scenario in North India, the Deccan, and the South up to c. Tenth Century
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The North and the South, c. Eleventh–Thirteenth Centuries The North and the South, c. Eleventh–Thirteenth Centuries
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South India, c. ad Tenth–Thirteenth Centuries South India, c. ad Tenth–Thirteenth Centuries
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Observations on the Ancient Indian Geopolitical Frames from the Early Historical Beginning to the Thirteenth Century Observations on the Ancient Indian Geopolitical Frames from the Early Historical Beginning to the Thirteenth Century
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Concluding Observations Concluding Observations
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Note Note
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7 The Emerging Historical–Geographical Pattern of India's Ancient Political History
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Published:October 2010
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Abstract
This book argues that highlighting the various geographical orbits within which the political forces or dynasties of the various periods interacted, as well as their recurrent patterns, may be a more reliable indicator of the geopolitical forces operative in India's history. This approach emphasizes the range of geographical possibilities of the regional power centres of various periods and the extent to which they operated within that frame. The geographical frames of ancient Indian political history are important not because its course is often characterized by regional political units of limited dimensions, but due to the web of inter-regional interaction which they created for themselves within the overarching limits of the geography of the subcontinent.
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