The Most Brutal Empires the World Has Ever Seen — Fexingo History
Long before the Mongols and Assyrians refined terror as statecraft, the Mauryan Empire under Chandragupta and his grandson Ashoka experimented with a different kind of power. This episode dives into the Ashvamedha — the Vedic horse sacrifice that doubled as a ritual of imperial expansion. We trace how Chandragupta Maurya, advised by the wily Kautilya (author of the Arthashastra), united the warring mahajanapadas of northern India around 322 BCE, then handed his son Bindusara a realm stretching from the Indus to the Ganges. But the real pivot comes with Ashoka: his bloody conquest of Kalinga in 261 BCE left over 100,000 dead, and the horror of that war turned him from a ruthless prince into a Buddhist monarch who renounced violence. We explore the paradox of an empire built on sacrifice and then on dhamma — the moral law Ashoka inscribed on pillars and rocks across his domain. How did the man who slaughtered thousands become the ruler who urged non-violence? And did his conversion really stick, or was it just a smarter way to hold power? This is the story of a dynasty that tried to reconcile blood and conscience. #MauryaEmpire #ChandraguptaMaurya #Ashoka #KalingaWar #Ashvamedha #Arthashastra #Kautilya #Bindusara #Dhamma #Buddhism #IndianHistory #EdictsofAshoka #AncientIndia #Mahajanapada #Pataliputra #HorseSacrifice #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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