History, asked by nandini7922, 9 months ago

list the rulers of kannauj​

Answers

Answered by mk8926391
2

Answer:

Gurjara Pratiharas, Palas

Explanation:

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Answered by MridSharma
2

Answer:

Harshavardhana (590–647 AD), famously known as Harsha, was an Indian emperor who ruled North India from 606 AD to 647 AD and Kannauj was his capital. He belonged to Pushyabhuti Dynasty and son of Prabhakarvardhana. His realm of supremacy and kingdom spread over Punjab, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Bengal, Odisha and the entire Indo-Gangetic plain North of the Narmada River. He was vanquished by the south Indian Emperor Pulakeshin II of the Chalukya tradition when Harsha attempted to expand his Empire into the southern peninsula of India.

The Empire of Harsha was an old Indian empire established and ruled by Emperor Harsha from the capital Kannauj. Even though his realm was brief, it was peaceful and flourishing conditions in the empire made the court of Harsha a focal point of cosmopolitanism, pulling in researchers, craftsmen and religious guests from distant locations abroad, for example, the Chinese voyager Xuanzang.

Harsha died in 647 A.D., having ruled for a long time, leading to the decline of this empire, which broke down quickly into small states. The succeeding period is extremely obscure; however it denotes the perfection of a procedure that had started with the intrusion of the Huns in the most recent years of the Gupta Empire.

Yashovarman

He was the ruler of Kannauj in the early part of the eighth century. The city had already been ruled by Harsha who died without a beneficiary. This went on for around a century before Yashovarman developed it as its ruler.

Vakpati was among his courtiers and his work has portrayed Yashovarman differently. He is described as either a perfect incarnation of Vishnu or a Kshatriya of the lunar administration. Cunningham thought of him as one likely to be identified with the Maukharis who had ruled Kannauj before Harsha, and some Jain works say that he was identified with the Chandragupta’s who ruled the Mauryan realm.

The Gaudavaho portrays Yashovarman as vanquishing extensive swathes of northern India, including Bihar, Bengal, western Deccan, Indus Valley, and Kashmir before returning in power to Kannauj. On the other hand, Kalhana, a Kashmiri court recorder who lived around the 12th century AD, gives an altogether different account in his Rajatarangini, portraying Yashovarman as a ruler who was among those crushed by Lalitaditya Muktapida, a ruler of Kashmir. He defeated Yashovarman.

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