Why Civilization Always Rises, Falls, and Begins Again — Fexingo History

Ashoka's Kalinga War: The Massacre That Changed an Emperor

7 min · 14. Juni 2026
Episode Ashoka's Kalinga War: The Massacre That Changed an Emperor Cover

Beschreibung

In this episode, we revisit the turning point that transformed Ashoka the Cruel into Ashoka the Righteous: the Kalinga War of 261 BCE. Drawing from the emperor's own words in Rock Edict XIII, Lucas and Luna piece together what happened when Mauryan armies clashed with the fiercely independent Kalinga kingdom on the eastern coast of India. They explore the scale of the carnage—150,000 deported, 100,000 killed, many more dead from famine and disease—and the moment of horror that broke through Ashoka's imperial ambition. The conversation digs into the aftermath: how the war triggered a personal crisis, a turn toward Buddhism, and the invention of a new political philosophy called dhamma. They also examine the strategic reasons behind the conquest—Kalinga's control of trade routes and ports—and the moral cost of empire. No prior context needed beyond knowing who Ashoka was; this episode dives straight into the event that shattered and remade him. #Ashoka #KalingaWar #RockEdictXIII #MauryaEmpire #Dhamma #Buddhism #AncientIndia #LucasAndLuna #FexingoHistory #261BCE #Kalinga #Prakrit #Bherighosha #Dhammaghosha #MoggaliputtaTissa #Pataliputra #History #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle Folgen

110 Folgen

Episode Ashoka's Rock Edict XIII: The Emperor's Regret Engraved in Stone Cover

Ashoka's Rock Edict XIII: The Emperor's Regret Engraved in Stone

Episode 110 of Why Civilization Always Rises, Falls, and Begins Again revisits Ashoka's most famous inscription—Rock Edict XIII—where the Mauryan emperor openly confesses his remorse for the Kalinga War and proclaims his conversion to dhamma. But what did this edict actually say in its original Prakrit and Greek versions? How did Ashoka balance conquest and moral governance? Lucas and Luna examine the edict's wording, compare it with later pillar edicts, and explore the political calculation behind Ashoka's public repentance. They also discuss the discovery of the edict by James Prinsep in 1837, the role of the Yona king Antiochus II in Ashoka's worldview, and the tension between bherighosha (the war drum) and dhammaghosha (the drum of righteousness). This episode dives into the text itself—its clauses, its echoes of earlier Mauryan policy, and its legacy for later Indian rulers like Harsha. Perfect for listeners who want to understand how one emperor's regret reshaped an empire and influenced centuries of statecraft. #Ashoka #RockEdictXIII #KalingaWar #MauryanEmpire #JamesPrinsep #BrahmiScript #Prakrit #Dhamma #AntiochusII #Bherighosha #Dhammaghosha #MoggaliputtaTissa #Pataliputra #EdictsOfAshoka #IndianHistory #AncientHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

21. Juni 20266 min
Episode Ashoka's Dhamma Mahamattas: Empire's Moral Officers Revisited Cover

Ashoka's Dhamma Mahamattas: Empire's Moral Officers Revisited

In this episode, Lucas and Luna revisit Ashoka's dhamma mahamattas, the empire's moral officers, exploring their role beyond the Rock Edicts. They discuss the officers' duties in spreading dhamma across the Mauryan Empire, including interactions with borderlands like the Yona (Greeks) in Gandhara. The conversation touches on the officers' judicial and welfare responsibilities, their selection process, and the legacy of Ashoka's moral governance. #Ashoka #DhammaMahamattas #MauryanEmpire #RockEdicts #PillarEdicts #MoggaliputtaTissa #Kalinga #Pataliputra #Arthashastra #Yona #Gandhara #Prakrit #Brahmi #Kandahar #Chanakya #History #FexingoHistory #AncientIndia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

21. Juni 20266 min
Episode The Pillars of Ashoka: Mauryan Empire's Stone Edicts Cover

The Pillars of Ashoka: Mauryan Empire's Stone Edicts

In episode 108 of Why Civilization Always Rises, Falls, and Begins Again, hosts Lucas and Luna explore the monumental stone pillars erected by Emperor Ashoka across the Indian subcontinent during the 3rd century BCE. These finely polished sandstone columns, some weighing over 50 tons, were inscribed with edicts promoting dhamma—a moral code emphasizing non-violence, tolerance, and social welfare. The conversation delves into the engineering marvels of their quarrying and transport from Chunar to sites like Sarnath and Lauriya Nandangarh, the symbolic use of the lion capital as India's national emblem, and the debates over whether Ashoka's pillars were inspired by Persian or indigenous traditions. Lucas explains how the pillars served as public announcements, blending imperial authority with ethical revolution, and why their distribution reveals the reach and limits of Mauryan power. The episode also touches on the Schism Edict at Kausambi, which targeted Buddhist sectarian divisions, and the puzzle of why some pillars lack inscriptions. A fresh angle: the pillars as a fusion of Achaemenid courtly aesthetics and local Indian craftsmanship, challenging earlier assumptions of direct Persian borrowing. #Ashoka #MauryanEmpire #PillarsOfAshoka #Edicts #Dhamma #LionCapital #Sarnath #Chunar #SchismEdict #Kausambi #IndianHistory #AncientEngineering #Buddhism #AchaemenidInfluence #HistoricalDebate #WorldHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gestern9 min
Episode Mauryan Roads: Ashoka's Lost Highway Network Cover

Mauryan Roads: Ashoka's Lost Highway Network

Before the Romans built their famous roads, the Mauryan Empire under Chandragupta and Ashoka constructed a vast highway system spanning over 2,000 miles from Pataliputra to the Hindu Kush. This episode uncovers the engineering, logistics, and political vision behind the Uttarapatha and Dakshinapatha — the royal roads that moved armies, merchants, and Buddhist monks across ancient India. We explore Megasthenes' descriptions of the 'royal road', the rest houses and mile markers mentioned in the Arthashastra, and how these arteries held the empire together. Discover how Ashoka's edicts were posted along these routes at key junctions, turning road networks into instruments of moral policy. No prior episodes have covered this specific infrastructure — a fresh look at how roads shaped the first unified subcontinent. #MauryanRoads #Uttarapatha #Dakshinapatha #Ashoka #ChandraguptaMaurya #Arthashastra #Megasthenes #Pataliputra #RoyalRoad #AncientInfrastructure #MauryanEmpire #BuddhistMonks #RockEdicts #AncientTrade #History #FexingoHistory #IndianHistory #AncientEngineering Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gestern6 min
Episode Ashoka's Pillar Edicts: The Emperor's Final Moral Testament Cover

Ashoka's Pillar Edicts: The Emperor's Final Moral Testament

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Ashoka's Pillar Edicts—the monumental stone columns erected in the final years of his reign that represent the emperor's mature vision of dhamma. They discuss where the pillars were placed, what they say, and why they differ from the earlier rock edicts. The conversation covers the seven major pillar edicts, their themes of social responsibility, non-violence, and religious tolerance, and the enduring mystery of how these massive pillars were transported and erected across the Mauryan Empire. Lucas also explains the significance of the Schism Edict on the pillar at Sarnath, which aimed to maintain unity within the Buddhist sangha, and the Queen's Edict that mentions Ashoka's second queen, Karuvaki. The episode highlights Ashoka's shift from a ruler concerned with conquest to one focused on moral governance, and asks whether these pillars were his final attempt to leave a lasting legacy. #Ashoka #PillarEdicts #MauryanEmpire #Dhamma #Buddhism #Sarnath #SchismEdict #Karuvaki #QueensEdict #RockEdicts #Prakrit #Brahmi #EmperorAshoka #AncientIndia #History #FexingoHistory #NonViolence #StonePillars Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. Juni 20266 min