mention the rule of Chandragupta II. The
Udayagiri inscription of Chandragupta's foreign minister Virasena suggests that the king had a distinguished military career. It states that he "bought the earth", paying for it with his prowess, and reduced the other kings to the status of slaves. His empire seems to have extended from the mouth of the Indus and northern Pakistan in the west to the Bengal region in the east, and from the
Himalayan foothills in the north to the
Narmada River in the south. Chandragupta's father
Samudragupta and his son
Kumaragupta I are known to have performed the
Ashvamedha horse sacrifice to proclaim their military prowess. In the 20th century, the discovery of a stone image of a horse found near
Varanasi, and the misreading of its inscription as "Chandramgu" (taken to be "Chandragupta"), led to speculation that Chandragupta also performed the Ashvamedha sacrifice. However, there is no actual evidence to support this theory.
Western Kshatrapas Historical and literary evidence suggests that Chandragupta II achieved military successes against the
Western Kshatrapas (also known as
Shakas), who ruled in west-central India. The
Allahabad Pillar inscription of Chandragupta's father
Samudragupta names the "Shaka-Murundas" among the kings who tried to appease him. It may be possible that Samudragupta reduced the Shakas to a state of subordinate alliance, and Chandragupta completely subjugated them. Virasena's Udayagiri inscription describes him as a resident of
Pataliputra, and states that he came to Udayagiri in Central India with the king who sought to "conquer the whole world". This indicates that Chandragupta had reached Udayagiri in central India during a military campaign. The theory that Chandragupta led an army to Central India is also corroborated by the c. 412–413 CE (Gupta year 93) Sanchi inscription of
Amrakardava, who is said to have "acquired victory and fame in many battles and whose livelihood was secured by serving Chandragupta." A c. 401–402 CE (Gupta year 82) inscription of Chandragupta's feudatory
Maharaja Sanakanika has also been discovered in Central India. The only important power to have ruled in this region during Chandragupta's period were the Western Kshatrapas, whose rule is attested by their distinct coinage. The coins issued by the Western Kshatrapa rulers abruptly come to end in the last decade of the 4th century. The coins of this type reappear in the second decade of the 5th century, and are dated in the Gupta era, which suggests that Chandragupta subjugated the Western Kshatrapas. The exact date of Chandragupta's victory is not known, but it can be tentatively dated to sometime between 397 and 409. The last of the 4th century Kshatrapa coins – that of
Rudrasimha III – can be dated to the
Shaka year 310 or 319 (the coin legend is partially lost), that is 388 or 397. Chandragupta's coins, dated to 409, are similar to the Kshtrapa coins, with the Shakas' Buddhist vihara symbol replaced by the Gupta symbol of
Garuda. Literary evidence also corroborates Chandragupta's victory over the Western Kshatrapas. The Sanskrit play
Devichandraguptam, whose historicity is disputed, narrates that Chandragupta's elder brother
Ramagupta agreed to surrender his queen
Dhruvadevi to a Shaka chief when besieged, but Chandragupta went to the enemy camp disguised as the queen, and killed the Shaka chief. Chandragupta bore the title
Vikramaditya, and several Indian legends talk of king
Vikramaditya who defeated the Shakas. Several modern scholars have theorised that these legends may be based on Chandragupta's victory over the Shakas. As a result of his victory over the Western Kshatrapas, Chandragupta must have extended his empire up to the
Arabian Sea coast in present-day
Gujarat.
Other military victories , which features an inscription of king Chandra, identified as Chandragupta II. It was installed as a victory pillar in the
Qutb complex by Sultan
Iltutmish in the 13th century. The
iron pillar of Delhi contains an inscription of a king called "Chandra". Modern scholars generally identify this king with Chandragupta II, although this cannot be said with complete certainty. While alternative identifications have been proposed, there is strong evidence for identifying Chandra of the iron pillar inscription as Chandragupta II: • Chandragupta's coins refer to him as "Chandra". • According to the iron pillar inscription, Chandra was a devotee of
Vishnu. Chandragupta was also a Vaishnavite, and is described as a
Bhagvata (devotee of Vishnu) in the Gupta records. • The iron pillar is said to have been set up by king Chandra in honour of Vishnu, on a hill named Vishnu-pada, but the king seems to have died shortly before the inscription was engraved, as the inscription states that "the king has quit the earth and gone to the other world". A similar Vishnu-
dhvaja (
flagpole in honour of Vishnu) was set up the Gupta emperor
Skandagupta (a grandson of Chandragupta) after the death of his father
Kumaragupta I. • According to his Udayagiri inscription, Chandragupta went on a
digvijaya ("conquest of all quarters") campaign. He is known to have been a powerful sovereign emperor, and this fits in well with the iron pillar inscription's description of king Chandra as someone who "attained sole supreme sovereignty in the world acquired by his own arm and (enjoyed) for a very long time". • The iron pillar inscription states that the southern ocean is "perfumed by the breezes" of Chandra's prowess. This may be a reference to Chandragupta's extension of the Gupta rule to the
Arabian Sea after his conquest of the Western Kshatrapa territory. Arabian Sea was located to the south of the Gupta empire, and thus, the term "southern ocean" is applicable to it in this context. • The iron pillar inscription states that "his name was Chandra and he was holding the glory of a full moon on his face". This is reminiscent of his descendant
Skandagupta's Mandasaur inscription, which describes Chandragupta as "a moon in the galaxy of Gupta kings with the famous name Chandragupta". The iron pillar inscription credits Chandra with the following victories: • Defeated an alliance of enemies in the
Vanga country • Crossed the "seven faces" of the river Sindhu (
Indus) during a war and defeated the
Vahlikas.
Punjab region If Chandra is identified with Chandragupta, it appears that Chandragupta marched through the
Punjab region, and advanced up to the country of the Vahlikas, that is,
Balkh in present-day Afghanistan. Some short Sanskrit inscriptions at the
Sacred Rock of Hunza (in present-day Pakistan), written in
Gupta script, mention the name Chandra. A few of these inscriptions also mention the name Harishena, and one particular inscription mentions Chandra with the epithet "Vikramaditya". Based on the identification of "Chandra" with Chandragupta, and Harishena with the Gupta courtier
Harishena, these inscriptions can be considered as further evidence of a Gupta military campaign in the area. However, this identification is not certain, and Chandra of the Hunza inscriptions could have well been a local ruler. According to
Sten Konow, the term "seven faces", mentioned in the iron pillar inscription, refers to the seven
mouths of Indus. Historians R. C. Majumdar and K. P. Jayaswal, on the other hand, believe that the term refers to the tributaries of Indus: the five rivers of
Punjab (
Jhelum,
Ravi,
Sutlej,
Beas, and
Chenab), plus possibly the
Kabul and the
Kunar rivers. It is quite possible that Chandragupta passed through the Punjab region during this campaign: his political influence in this region is attested to by the use of the
Gupta era in an inscription found at
Shorkot, and by some coins bearing the name "Chandragupta". However, there is no evidence that Chandragupta annexed Punjab to the Gupta Empire, which suggests that Chandragupta's victory in this region was not a decisive one. There is little evidence of Gupta influence in Punjab after his reign: numismatic evidence suggests that Punjab was ruled by petty chieftains after his death. These chieftains bore Indian names, but issued coins that imitate the
Kidarite coinage: they may have been Hinduized foreigners or Indians continuing the usage of foreign-style coinage.
Bengal region The identification of Chandra with Chandragupta II also suggests Chandragupta achieved victories in the Vanga area in the present-day
Bengal region. According to the
Allahabad Pillar inscription of his father
Samudragupta, the
Samatata kingdom of the Bengal region was a Gupta tributary. The Guptas are known to have been ruling Bengal in the early 6th century, although there are no surviving records of the Gupta presence in this region for the intervening period. It is possible that a large part of the Bengal region was annexed to the Gupta empire by Chandragupta, and that this control continued into the 6th century. The Delhi iron pillar inscription suggests that an alliance of semi-independent chiefs of Bengal unsuccessfully resisted Chandragupta's attempts to extend the Gupta influence in this region. == Personal life and matrimonial alliances ==