History, asked by shobhana8198, 11 months ago

In which inscription is the description of achievements of Shaka ruler Rudradaman found?

Answers

Answered by ayshazubin2002
1

Answer:

Explanation:

The Junagadh rock inscription of Rudradaman, also known as the Girnar Rock inscription of Rudradaman, is a Sanskrit prose inscribed on a rock by the Indian Satraps ruler Rudradaman I. It is located near Girnar hill near Junagadh, Gujarat, India. The inscription is dated to shortly after 150 CE.

Writing: Sanskrit, Brahmi script

Place: Junagadh, Gujarat

Present location: near Girnar mountain

Created: circa 150 CE

Brainlist if helpful

Answered by stefangonzalez246
0

Explanation:

The successors of Kanishka dominated for a hundred and fifty years, but Kushana's energy step by step diminished. Events in Persia had been once again to intervene in the records of northwestern India. In A.D. 226 Ardashir overthrew the Parthians and mounted Sassanian ascendancy. His successor conquered Peshawar and Taxila in the mid-third century and the Kushana kings had been decreased to subsidiaries of the Sassanians.

The coming of the Kushanas had pushed the Shakas south into the place of Cutch, Kathiawar, and Malwa in western India. Here they dramatically burst into the Indian political scene in the mid-second century below Rudradaman. With the weakening of Kushana's power after the dying of Kanishka, Shakas once greater asserted themselves. Rudradaman got here from the place of Cutch.  The inscription dated in A.D. a hundred and fifty records the repairing of the Mauryan dam and refers in eulogistic terms to Rudradaman's conquest in the Narmada valley, his campaigns towards the Satavahana king.

After the demise of Rudradaman, the Shakas lapsed into political quietude until the closing years of the fourth century A.D.

To Learn more:

i) https://brainly.in/question/2070660

ii) https://brainly.in/question/6660750

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