History, asked by jitendra5420, 10 months ago

do you think that the Mauryan empire was a centralised one?state reasons in​

Answers

Answered by mahigedam
4

Answer:

The Mauryan Empire was divided into four provinces, with the imperial capital at Pataliputra, near the Ganges River in the modern state of Bihar in India. ... The Maurya Empire provided political stability with a unified central government, which in turn encouraged economic prosperity.

Answered by skyfall63
0

Comprising the majority of South Asia, the Mauryan Empire was centralised by the "conquest" "Indo-Gangetic Plain", and its capital city was located at "Pataliputra"

Explanation:

  • The Maurya Empire had been able to preserve stability and political cohesion in many parts of Western and Southern Asia through its well structured bureaucratic structure. This involved a common economic structure that promoted stable agriculture and productive exchange and commerce in its large holdings. The empire rulers united the formerly divided regions of the Indian subcontinent through this unified authority that included a strong military.
  • The Mauryan Empire had been split into four provinces, each with the Kumara as the representative of the Emperor. Emperor Ashoka preserved the Mauryan Empire 's large standing military forces to protect the Mauryan Empire, thus fostering harmony & peace, in Western and South Asia
  • The grandfather of Ashoka, Chandragupta Maurya, set up a single currency across India, a network of provincial governors & administrators, & a civil service in order to ensure justice and protection for farmers, traders, & merchants,  which continued all through  the Mauryan Dynasty.
  • The Mauryan network of global trade had spread to western Asia and to southeastern Asia's Hellenic kingdoms &  also to the Greek states .

To know more

Describe the geographical boundaries of the mauryan empire ...

https://brainly.in/question/2345041

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