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Mahasenagupta was King of Magadha from 562 until his defeat in 575 and thereafter the King of Malwa until his death in 601. He belonged to the Later Gupta dynasty of Magadha.[1]

Mahasenagupta
King of Magadha
Reign562–575
PredecessorDamodaragupta
SuccessorHimself as King of Malwa
King of Malwa
Reign575–601
PredecessorHimself as Emperor of Magadha
SuccessorDevagupta
Died601
HouseLater Gupta
FatherDamodaragupta

Just before his death, Mahasenagupta sent his sons Kumaragupta and Madhavagupta to Thanesar, where they became companions of Rajyavardhana and Harshavardhana. Madhavagupta was made the Kannauj vassal of Magadha after the war. In Malwa, he was succeeded by his son Devagupta, who was defeated by Rajyavardhana of Kannauj in 605.[2]

Reign

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In order to counter the hostility of the Kingdom of Kannauj, near the start of his reign he allied himself with the Kingdom of Thanesar by giving his sister's hand in marriage to Adityavardhana. Mahasenagupta went to war with the Kamarupa Kingdom around 575 during a period of anarchy in Bengal, and defeated the king of Kamarupa, Susthitavarman.

However, he soon faced two disastrous invasions following this event. A king of the Deccan, Kirttivarman I of the Chaulukya royal family, subdued Anga, Vanga, Kalinga and Magadha. The Tibetan ruler, Namri Songtsen (AD 570–618) successfully campaigned into central India (modern day Bihar and perhaps also Uttar Pradesh). This raid considerably weakened Magadha and the king of Kannauj, Sharvavarman succeeded in conquering a part of the already crumbling empire of Magadha. Mahasenagupta, therefore, fled to Malwa, which he ruled as rump state. Here too he faced adversaries in the form of the Kalachuri king, Shankaragana. The Kalachuris of Mahishmati occupied Vidisa in AD 608-9 and the Kingdom of Valabhi took over Ujjain in AD 616–17.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b Sailendra Nath Sen (1999). Ancient Indian History and Civilization. New Age International. pp. 247–8. ISBN 978-81-224-1198-0.
  2. ^ George E. Somers (1977). Dynastic History Of Magadha. Abhinav Publications. p. 140. ISBN 978-81-7017-059-4. This Mālava king has been taken to be Devagupta who may have succeeded Mahasenagupta's kingdom in Malwa or certainly East Malwa. 56 The Maukhari-Vardhana entente may have contributed to Malwa-Gauda alliance;