
Samudragupta was the emperor of the Gupta Empire in ancient India. Samudragupta, Chandragupta I’s son and successor, greatly expanded the Gupta kingdom. According to the description of Harisena in the inscriptions on the Allahabad Pillar, Samudragupta was a great warrior.
Table of Contents
Samudragupta - Features
Samudragupta - Background
During his Reign
Samudragupta - Extent of his Empire
Samudragupta - Military Career
Samudragupta - Administration
Samudragupta - Conquests
Samudragupta - Inscriptions
Samudragupta - Art and Culture
Samudragupta - Asvamedha Yajna
Samudragupta - Coinage
Conclusion
Samudragupta – Features
- Samudragupta (r. 335/336–375 CE) was the second emperor of Ancient India’s Gupta Empire and one of the greatest rulers in Indian history.
- He greatly expanded his dynasty’s political and military power as the son of Gupta emperor Chandragupta I and the Licchavi princess Kumaradevi. His conquests laid the groundwork for the expansion of the Gupta Empire, a period dubbed the “Golden Age of India” by oriental historians.
- The Allahabad Pillar inscription, a prashasti (eulogy) written by his courtier Harishena, credits him with numerous military victories. It implies that he defeated several northern Indian kings and annexed their territories to his empire.
- He also marched along India’s south-eastern coast, reaching the Pallava kingdom. He also subjugated a number of frontier kingdoms and tribal oligarchies.
- His empire stretched from the Ravi River in the west to the Brahmaputra River in the east, and from the Himalayan foothills in the north to central India in the south-west; his tributaries included several rulers along the south-eastern coast.
- To demonstrate his imperial sovereignty, Samudragupta performed the Ashvamedha sacrifice and, according to his coins, remained undefeated.
- His gold coins and inscriptions indicate that he was a talented poet who also played music. His son Chandragupta II carried on his father’s expansionist policies.
Samudragupta – Background
- The Gupta kings’ inscriptions are dated in the Gupta calendar era, which is generally dated to around 319 CE.
- However, the identity of the era’s founder is disputed, with scholars varyingly attributing it to Chandragupta I or Samudragupta.
- The Prayag Pillar inscription indicates that Chandragupta I had a long reign, as he appointed his son as his successor, presumably after reaching old age.
- However, the precise duration of his reign is unknown. Because of these factors, the start of Samudragupta’s reign is also uncertain.
During his Reign
- Samudragupta was the son of the Gupta king Chandragupta I and the Licchavi queen Kumaradevi.
- According to his father’s Eran stone inscription, he was chosen as the heir because of his “devotion, righteous conduct, and valour.”
- According to his Allahabad Pillar inscription, Chandragupta called him a noble person in front of the courtiers and appointed him to “protect the earth.”
- According to these accounts, Chandragupta abdicated the throne in his old age and named his son as the next king.
- When Chandragupta appointed him as the next ruler, the faces of other people of “equal birth” bore a “melancholy look,” according to the Allahabad Pillar inscription.
- According to one interpretation, these other people were neighbouring kings, and Samudagupta’s ascension to the throne was uncontested.
- Another theory is that these other people were Gupta princes vying for the throne.
- Samudragupta’s background as the son of a Lichchhavi princess most likely helped him.
- Modern scholars debate the identity of a Gupta ruler named Kacha, whose coins describe him as “the exterminator of all kings.” These coins are very similar to those issued by Samudragupta.
- According to one theory, Kacha was an earlier name of Samudragupta: after extending his territory up to the ocean, the king took the regnal name Samudra (“Ocean”).
- Another theory holds that Kacha was a separate king (possibly a rival claimant to the throne) who reigned before or after Samudragupta.
Samudragupta – Extent of his Empire
- Samudragupta’s dominion was enormous and was under his direct control. Nearly all of northern India was included.
- Gujarat, Orissa, Western Punjab, Western Rajputana Sindh, or Gujarat were not part of the Gupta kingdom.
- His empire therefore covered the most populous and productive nations in the Ganges Valley, extending from the Brahmaputra River in the east to the Yamuna and Chambal Rivers in the west, and on to the Narvada River in the south.

Samudragupta – Military Career
- According to the Gupta inscriptions, Emperor Samudragupta had a distinguished military career. The Emperor Samudragupta’s inscription on the Eran stone claims that he subjugated “the whole tribe of monarchs” and that his opponents were afraid when they dreamed of him.
- Although the inscription omits the names of any of the conquered monarchs (perhaps because its main purpose was to document the placement of a Vishnu image in a temple), it seems Emperor Samudragupta had vanquished the majority of the kingdoms of this period.
- Emperor Samudragupta is credited with extensive conquests in the subsequent Allahabad Pillar inscription, which was penned by his minister and military officer Harishena. It provides the most thorough chronicle of Emperor Samudragupta’s military victories, detailing them in a mix of chronological and primarily geographical order.
- According to this, Emperor Samudragupta participated in a hundred wars, sustained a thousand wounds that resembled battle scars, and attained the title of Parakrami (Valourous).
- Emperor Samudragupta is referred to in the Mathura stone inscription of Emperor Chandragupta II as the “exterminator of all monarchs.”
Samudragupta – Administration
- Samudragupta was a capable and successful administrator who set up a civil administration system that upheld peace and prosperity throughout the vast empire.
- Although the provinces enjoyed autonomy, the central government essentially controlled supervision.
- He altered the formal structure by placing the authorities under his control.
- This arrangement essentially persisted until the Musalmans finished capturing Northern India.
Conquests
Samudragupta – Conquests
- Samudragupta developed many plans for his conquests in the north and south.
- He made the decision to conquer the nearby Kingdoms before setting off on distant expeditions.
- Aryavarta was conquered in his first campaign. In the third phase, he then charged towards Dakshinapatha and marched on the second Aryavarta War.
- Samudragupta was also in charge of the invasion of the Atavika or Forest Kingdoms in addition to these significant invasions.
- He was also engaged in political discussions with far-off foreign powers while maintaining diplomatic ties with countries on the fringes of the Gupta empire.
- Digvijaya, which requires subduing the southern enemy monarchs, Grahana, which entails seizing control of the nations, and Anugraha, which entails allowing them to rule their kingdoms under his Suzerainty, are the three pillars of Samudragupta’s strategy.
Samudragupta – Inscriptions
- Two inscriptions from the reign of Samudragupta have been discovered:
- Inscription on the Allahabad Pillar
- Inscription on the Eran stone
- The Allahabad Pillar inscription, according to Fleet, was issued posthumously during the reign of Chandragupta II, but modern scholars disagree.
- Two other records are attributed to Samudragupta’s reign, but their veracity is questioned:
- Gaya inscription, dated regnal year 9
- Nalanda inscription, dated regnal year 5
- Both of these inscriptions state that they were commissioned by Gupta officer Gopaswamin. These records, like Chandragupta II’s Mathura stone inscription, refer to Samudragupta as the “restorer of the Ashvamedha sacrifice.”
- It appears suspicious that this claim was made so early in Samudragupta’s reign, as it does not appear in the later Allahabad Pillar inscription.
- These records were issued during Samudragupta’s reign and were damaged after a while, so they were restored during Chandragupta II’s reign.
Allahabad Pillar
Eran Inscription
Art and Culture
Samudragupta – Art and Culture
- Samudragupta had a deep love for literature, art, and education.
- After penning several pieces of Sanskrit poetry, he was given the name Kaviraj.
- His grandeur and majesty were enhanced by the presence of many eminent scholars in his court.
- The Allahabad inscription’s author, Harisena, was well-known in his court.
- He had musical talent as well. He appears as a musician playing a Veena while sitting on a sofa on a number of his coins.
- His court poets hailed his sophisticated mind, gift for poetry, and musical talent. Additionally, Samudragupta was a philosopher.
- In order to merit the company of the wise men, he is reported to have wished to dive thoroughly into the tattva, or knowledge, of the Sastras.
- He also supported Buddhist novelist and philosopher Vasubandhu, under whose guidance he learned Buddhism’s core principles.
- Samudragupta was accepting of all other religions despite being a devout Hindu who adhered to the Brahmanical system.
- He authorised the construction of a Buddhist monastery at Bodh Gaya for monks of the religion by the king of Ceylon.
- Samudragupta’s wide range of gold coins not only exhibit the height of ancient technical mastery in the craft of coinage, but also the wealth of the empire.
Samudragupta – Asvamedha Yajna
- As a symbol of his dominion and imperial might, Samudragupta performed an Asvamedha Yajna and received the title of Maharajadhiraja.
- To commemorate the occasion, he issued special gold coins.
- The term Asvamedha prakarama appeared on the reverse of the coin, which also included a picture of the horse used as a sacrifice on the front.
- It is clear from this that he performed the yajna to elevate the Brahmanas back to their rightful place as the social elite.
Samudragupta – Coinage
- Following Samudragupta’s conquests in the northwest of the subcontinent, the Gupta Empire adopted the Kushan Empire’s coinage, adopting its weight standard, techniques, and designs.
- The Guptas even borrowed the name Dinara from the Kushans for their coinage, which ultimately came from the Roman name Denarius aureus.
- Samudragupta’s standard coin type is very similar to the coinage of later Kushan rulers, including the sacrificial scene over an altar and the depiction of a halo, while differences include the ruler’s headdress (a close-fitting cap instead of the Kushan pointed hat), the Garuda standard instead of the trident, and Samudragupta’s Indian jewellery.
Conclusion
Samudragupta is a remarkable character who ushers in a new era of unequaled material prosperity in the history of ancient India. The Gupta dynasty’s subsequent ruler, Chandragupta ll, succeeded Samudragupta.