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16 Mahajanapadas (Modern Area) and their Capitals

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S. No.Mahajanapada (Modern Area)Capital(s)
1Anga (districts of Munger and Bhagalpur in Bihar)Champa / Champanagari
2Magadha (districts of Patna, Gaya and Nalanda in Bihar)Girivraj, Rajgir/Rajgir (Bimbisara), Patliputra (Udayin), Vaishali (Shishunaga), Patliputra (Kalasoka)
3Vajji (districts of Muzaffarpur & Vaishali in Bihar)Videha, Mithila, Vaishali
4Malla (districts of Deoria, Basti, Gorakhpur and Siddharthnagar in U.P.)Kushinara and Pawa
5Kashi (district of Varanasi in U.P.)Varanasi
6Kosala (districts of Faizabad, Gonda, Bahraich in U.P.)North Kosal–Sravasti / Sahet–Mahet, South Kosal–Saket / Ayodhya
7Vatsa (districts of Allahabad, Mirzapur in U.P.)Kausambi
8Chedi (Bundelkhand area)Shaktimati / Sotthivati
9Kuru (Haryana and Delhi area)Indraprastha (modern Delhi)
10Panchala (Ruhelkhand, Western U.P.)North Panchal–Ahichhatra, South Panchal–Kampilya
11Shurasena (Brajmandal)Mathura
12Matsya (Alwar, Bharatpur and Jaipur in Rajasthan)Viratangar
13Avanti (Malwa)North Avanti–Ujjayini, South Avanti–Mahishmati
14Ashmaka (between the rivers Narmada and Godavari)Potana / Patali
15Gandhara (western part of Pakistan and Afghanistan)Taxila (near Rawalpindi), Pushkalavati
16Kamboja (Hazara district of Pakistan)Rajapur / Hataka

Buddhist literature (Anguttara Nikaya, Mahavastu) and Jain literature (Bhagavati Sutta) present a list of 16 Mahajanapadas (e. great states) with minor variation in names

There were two types of states- monarchical and non monarchical/republican. Monarchial states-Anga, Magadha, Kashi, Kosala, Vatsa, Chedi, Shursena, Matsya, Avanti, Gandhara.

Republican States-Vajji, Malla, Kuru, Panchal, Kamboja, Shakya (Kapilvastu), Koliyas (Ramgrama), Moriya (Pipplivana)

Rise of Magadha

The political history of India from 6th century BC onwards is the history of struggle for supremacy between four states-Magadha, Kosala, Vatsa and Avanti.

Ultimately the kingdom of Magadha emerged as the most powerful one and succeeded in founding an empire.

Reason of Magadha’s Success

1. Magadha enjoyed an advantageous geographical position in the age of iron, because the richest iron deposits were situated not far away from Rajgir, the earliest capital of Magadha and could be used for making weapons and implements. Iron axes were perhaps useful in clearing the thick forests, and iron tipped plough-shares ploughed the land better and helped to increase grain production.

2 Magadha lay at the centre of the middle Gangetic plain. The alluvium, once cleared of the jungles, proved immense fertile and food surplus was thus available. 3. Magadha enjoyed a special advantage in military organisation. Although the Indian states were well acquainted with the use of horses and chariots, it was Magadha which first used elephants on a large scale in its war against its neighbours.


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