Everything about Pusyamitra Sunga totally explained
Pusyamitra Sunga (B. ???, R. 185-151 BCE, D. 151 BCE) was the founder and first King of the
Sunga Dynasty in Northern India.
Pusyamitra Sunga was originally a
Senapati (General) of the
Mauryan empire. In 185 BCE he assassinated the last Mauryan Emperor (
Brhadrata) during an army review, and proclaimed himself King. He then performed the
Ashwamedha Yajna (horse sacrifice) and brought much of Northern India under his rule. Inscriptions of the Shungas have been found as far as the
Jalandhar in the
Punjab, and the
Divyavadana mentions that his rule extended as far as
Sagala (Sialkot).
Pusyamitra Sunga's Reign
Pushyamitra's reign was marked by warfare which was characteristic of this age in India. He and his successors fought the
Indo Greeks,
Kalingas,
Satavahanas (Andhras), and possibly the kingdoms of
Panchala and
Mathura (which may not have been under his rule).
Following the assassination of
Brhadrata, in
180 BCE the
Greco-Bactrian Kingdom invaded Sunga lands with an army led by
Demetrius I of Bactria (an ally of Brhadrata). The Greco-Bactrians overran Arachosia, Gedrosia, the Punjab, and Mathura, and Demetrius may have campaigned as far as
Pataliputra before he was forced to retreat due to a revolt in Bactria. Pushyamitra may have regained some of the lost territory, with the
Ashvamedha terminating at the Indus late in his reign (Kulke? ).
Pusyamitra may have been attacked by King
Kharavela of
Kalinga (modern
Orissa). Kharavela's inscriptions claim that he forced a King of
Magadha named "Bahasatimita", (thought to be the Sunga King
Brhaspatimitra, or Pusyamitra himself) to bow at his feet. However, this hasn't been confirmed as dates for Kharavela range several centuries.
Accounts of Persecution
Legendary accounts
Pusyamitra Shunga is believed in
tradition to have been hostile towards Buddhists and to have persecuted the
Buddhist faith.
According to the 2nd century
Ashokavadana:
» "Then King Pusyamitra equipped a fourfold army, and intending to destroy the Buddhist religion, he went to the
Kukkutarama. (...) Pusyamitra therefore destroyed the
sangharama, killed the monks there, and departed.
After some time, he arrived in
Sakala, and proclaimed that he'd give a hundred dinara reward to whomever brought him the head of a Buddhist monk" (
Shramanas)
Ashokavadana, 133, trans. John Strong.
A Buddhist tradition holds him as having taken steps to check the spread of Buddhism as "the number one enemy of the sons of the
Shakya's and a most cruel persecutor of the religion". The
Divyavadana ascribes to him the razing of
stupas and
viharas built by Ashoka, and describes him as one who wanted to undo the work of Ashoka.
Academic debate
Some historians have rejected Pushyamitra' s persecution of Buddhists. The traditional narratives are dated to two centuries after Pushyamitra’s death in
Asokâvadâna and the
Divyâvadâna, Buddhist books of legend. The traditional accounts are often described as exaggerated. The Asokavadana legend is likely a Buddhist version of Pusyamitra's attack on the
Mauryas, reflecting the declining influence of Buddhism in the Sunga Imperial court.
Among the detractors is
Romila Thapar, who writes that archaeological evidence casts doubt on the claims of Buddhist persecution by Pushyamitra. Support of the Buddhist faith by the Sungas at some point is suggested by an epigraph on the gateway of Barhut, which mentions its erection "during the supremacy of the Sungas".
On the other hand,
Sir John Marshall noted that the
Sanchi stupa was vandalized during the 2nd century before it was rebuilt later on a larger scale, suggesting the possiblity that the original brick stupa built by Ashoka was destroyed by Pusyamitra and then restored by his successor
Agnimitra. Similarly, the
Deokothar Stupas (geographically located between Sanchi and Barhut) suffered destruction during the same period, also suggesting some kind of involvement of Sunga rule. Proponents also point to the proclamations and claim that the
Manu Smriti was propagated.
Succession of the Throne
Pusyamitra Shunga was succeeded in 151 BCE by his son
Agnimitra.
Further Information
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