Amrakarddava's military career is emphasized in inscriptions that speak of him as having won "banners of victory and fame in many battles." This warrior, who became one of his important & notable achievements where he participated in the
Gupta–Saka Wars along with Emperor
Chandragupta II. . An inscription from one of the caves at Udayagiri Hill, about two miles northwest of
Bhilsa, notes the dedication of a cave to
Sambhu by a minister named
Virasena who was in the service of
Chandragupta II. This undecorated inscription is believed to refer to the Saka war. A second inscription, dated to Gupta Year 93 (the date gives the Gregorian equivalent of 412–413 CE), records donations made by Amrakarddava to a major Buddhist
Vihara on the site. Historians have connected this note to the Saka war, and they have argued that this conflict lasted for a long time. == Patronage of Buddhism ==