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From the decline of Guptas until the rise of Harshavardhana in the early seventh century, which of the following kingdoms were holding power in Northern India? 1. The Guptas of Magadha 2. The Paramaras of Malwa 3. The Pushyabhutis of Thanesar 4. The Maukharis of Kanauj 5. The Yadavas of Devagiri 6. The Maitrakas of Valabhi Select the correct answer using the code given below.
Explanation
The correct answer is Option 2 (1, 3, 4, and 6). This period (c. 550 CE – 606 CE) is characterized by political fragmentation following the collapse of the Imperial Guptas.
- The Guptas of Magadha (1): Known as the "Later Guptas," they ruled parts of Magadha and Malwa after the main dynasty declined.
- The Pushyabhutis of Thanesar (3): This dynasty rose in the late 6th century; its most famous ruler was Harshavardhana himself.
- The Maukharis of Kanauj (4): They were powerful rivals to the Later Guptas and controlled much of present-day Uttar Pradesh.
- The Maitrakas of Valabhi (6): They established an independent kingdom in Gujarat and were significant regional players during this transition.
Why others are incorrect: The Paramaras of Malwa (2) emerged much later, around the 9th century. Similarly, the Yadavas of Devagiri (5) rose to power in the Deccan only in the 12th century. Thus, options containing 2 or 5 are chronologically inaccurate for the early 7th-century context.
PROVENANCE & STUDY PATTERN
Guest previewThis is a classic 'Chronological Cluster' question. It rewards knowing the *era* of a dynasty rather than just its name. It is directly solvable from the Tamil Nadu Class XI History textbook (Chapter 8), which explicitly lists these specific dynasties as the 'sub-regional kingdoms' filling the vacuum after the Guptas.
This question can be broken into the following sub-statements. Tap a statement sentence to jump into its detailed analysis.
- Statement 1: Did the Guptas of Magadha hold political power in Northern India during the period from the decline of the Gupta Empire (c. 6th century CE) to the rise of Harshavardhana (early 7th century CE)?
- Statement 2: Did the Paramara dynasty of Malwa hold political power in Northern India during the period from the decline of the Gupta Empire (c. 6th century CE) to the rise of Harshavardhana (early 7th century CE)?
- Statement 3: Did the Pushyabhuti dynasty of Thanesar hold political power in Northern India during the period from the decline of the Gupta Empire (c. 6th century CE) to the rise of Harshavardhana (early 7th century CE)?
- Statement 4: Did the Maukharis of Kanauj hold political power in Northern India during the period from the decline of the Gupta Empire (c. 6th century CE) to the rise of Harshavardhana (early 7th century CE)?
- Statement 5: Did the Yadavas of Devagiri hold political power in Northern India during the period from the decline of the Gupta Empire (c. 6th century CE) to the rise of Harshavardhana (early 7th century CE)?
- Statement 6: Did the Maitraka dynasty of Valabhi hold political power in Northern India during the period from the decline of the Gupta Empire (c. 6th century CE) to the rise of Harshavardhana (early 7th century CE)?
- Explicitly identifies Later Guptas of Magadha as sub-regional kingdoms in the interregnum between the imperial Guptas and the Vardhanas.
- States North India lacked a strong central power in this period, implying regional Gupta authority persisted at a sub-imperial level.
- Places the decline of the Gupta Empire in the 5th–6th century and records successors continuing into the mid-6th century (last recognised king c. 540–550 CE).
- Provides a timeline anchor showing Gupta line persisted into the 6th century, consistent with later local/regional Gupta presence.
- Notes the Gupta Empire showed signs of decline by the 6th century due to Hūṇa invasions and the rise of powerful regional rulers.
- Supports the context of weakening imperial control while regional (including Magadha) actors continued to exert political power.
- Identifies the Paramara dynasty and its region (Malwa) and gives its founding date.
- Founding date c. 800 CE is well after the period c. 6th century–early 7th century, so the Paramaras could not have held power then.
- Lists the kingdoms that 'effectively held power in northern India' until the rise of Harsha in the early seventh century.
- The list (Guptas of Magadha; the Maukharis of Kanauj; the Pushyabhutis of Thanesar; and the Maitrakas of Valabhi) does not include the Paramaras, implying they were not a power in that period.
States that by the 6th century the Gupta Empire was weakening and that the rise of powerful regional rulers followed.
A student could infer that regional dynasties (not the Guptas) might control areas like Malwa in the 6th c and then check which dynasties (by name and dates) held Malwa then.
Notes that Malwa was a contested region attacked/conquered by neighboring powers (Vakataka gains over Malwa) during the late Gupta period.
One could use this pattern (Malwa changing hands) to ask whether the Paramaras were already present or emerged later — by checking Paramara origins and dates against these conflicts.
Describes the Pushyabhuti/Prabhakaravardhana family (pre-Harsha) establishing authority 'as far as Malwa and Gujarat' before Harsha's rise.
Suggests that in the period immediately before Harsha, other regional powers claimed Malwa; a student could compare the Pushyabhuti territorial reach and dates with Paramara chronology to judge Paramara presence then.
Lists the Paramaras of Malwa among important Rajput dynasties but in a context describing the political landscape by the 10th century.
This indicates the Paramaras are documented as a later medieval power; a student can therefore test the statement by checking whether Paramara rule in Malwa already existed in the 6th–7th centuries or arose later (e.g., by comparing known Paramara dates).
Records that Chandragupta II conquered western Malwa under the Guptas, showing Malwa's incorporation into earlier imperial structures.
A student could use this to note a pattern: Malwa alternated between imperial control and regional powers — so to evaluate Paramara control in 6th–7th c they should place Paramara origins relative to earlier imperial control.
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- Identifies Pushvabhuti as founder ruling from Thaneswar and rising to power after the fall of the Guptas.
- Gives dated ruler Prabhakaravardhana (580–605 CE) and records his military expansion into Malwa and Gujarat, demonstrating regional political power.
- States that after the downfall of the Gupta Empire North India splintered and Thaneswar was formed into an independent state by the Pushyabhutis.
- Directly links Pushyabhutis to the post-Gupta political landscape of northern India.
- Lists the Pushyabhutis of Thaneswar among the sub-regional kingdoms existing between the Guptas and the Vardhanas.
- Confirms absence of a strong central power and the Pushyabhutis' status as a regional polity in that interval.
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- Lists Maukharis of Kanauj among the sub-regional kingdoms that emerged after the Guptas, implying they were a political power in North India.
- Explicitly states North India lacked a strong central power in this period, making regional dynasties like the Maukharis politically significant.
- Directly asserts that Agra and Awadh were organised into an independent and sovereign state by the Maukharis, showing territorial and political control.
- Places this Maukhari state in the post-Gupta fragmentation of North India, linking their authority to the period in question.
- States Kanauj was the capital of the Maukhari kingdom, indicating a clear political centre under Maukhari control.
- Notes that Kanauj magnates played a decisive political role by inviting Harsha to the throne, demonstrating local elite power and influence.
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- Explicitly lists the four kingdoms that 'effectively held power in northern India' until Harsha's rise in the early 7th century.
- The Seuna Yadavas of Devagiri are not included in this list, indicating they were not among the northern powers during that period.
- Reiterates that four kingdoms held power in North India from the decline of the Guptas until Harsha's rise, naming the same four dynasties.
- Again does not include the Yadavas of Devagiri among the northern ruling powers for that timeframe.
- Identifies the Seuna Yadavas of Devagiri as 'contemporaneous feudatory families of the Deccan', placing them in the Deccan region rather than northern India.
- Supports the conclusion that the Yadavas of Devagiri were a Deccan power, not one of the northern kingdoms holding power in the 6th–early 7th century.
Shows that by the 6th century the Gupta central control weakened due to Hun invasions and the rise of powerful regional rulers.
A student could use this pattern to ask whether a Deccan-based dynasty (like the Yadavas of Devagiri) plausibly expanded northward into power vacuums created in this period.
Describes concrete examples of regional rulers (Vakatakas) attacking and taking territories from the Guptas during the later Gupta period.
One could compare the geography and timing of Vakataka expansion with where/when Yadavas of Devagiri are known to have been active to judge possible northern influence.
Provides a timeline placing the fall of classical Gupta power (c. 320–600 CE) and the accession of Harshavardhana (c. 606–647 CE), defining the exact interval in question.
A student can use this dated window to check whether the Yadavas of Devagiri were politically active in that same interval (comparing known Yadava dates from outside sources).
Explains that the Pushyabhuti (Harsha's family) rose from a regional generalship under the Guptas to control northern territories after the Guptas' collapse.
This illustrates how military or regional elites could convert local power into northern rule, a model one could test for the Yadavas by checking their origins and routes of expansion.
Notes that southern/Deccan polities (e.g., Satavahanas) had considerable autonomy and were politically distinct from north Indian empires.
A student could use this geographic-political separation to assess how feasible it would be for a Deccan dynasty (Devagiri Yadavas) to exert power in northern India during the stated period.
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- Explicitly states which four kingdoms held power in northern India between the decline of the Guptas and Harsha's rise.
- Includes the Maitrakas of Valabhi in that list, directly tying them to political power in northern India in the stated period.
- Reiterates the same time-frame (decline of the Guptas until rise of Harsha) and the list of four ruling powers.
- Names the Maitrakas of Vallabhi among those four, supporting their political significance in northern India then.
- Also lists the four kingdoms that 'effectively held power in northern India' up to Harsha's rise.
- Specifically includes the Maitrakas of Valabhi, corroborating the claim across multiple sources.
Explicitly lists the 'Maithrakas of Valabhi' among sub-regional kingdoms that existed between the Guptas and the Vardhanas, indicating they were a recognised political entity in that interregnum.
A student could combine this with a map of contemporary political boundaries to judge whether Valabhi's influence reached into what is classed as 'Northern India' at that time.
States that the Maithrakas organised a powerful state in Saurashtra (Gujarat) with Valabhi as their capital, giving a clear geographic base and degree of political strength.
Using basic geography, a student can estimate the distance from Valabhi (Saurashtra/Gujarat) to core northern regions to assess whether their power extended into northern India.
Describes the Gupta Empire's decline by the 6th century CE due to Huna invasions and rise of powerful regional rulers, establishing the time-frame and the general pattern of regional powers filling the vacuum.
A student can align the timing of Gupta decline with the known chronology of the Maitrakas to see if their period of activity overlaps the stated interval.
Explains that Pushyabhutis (Vardhanas) rose after the fall of the Guptas, illustrating that several regional dynasties were contemporaries in the period between Gupta decline and Harsha's rise.
A student could compare the territorial reach and chronology of Pushyabhutis and Maitrakas to infer whether Maitraka power was significant in the north during that interval.
Gives a general pattern that empires weaken and new regional kingdoms emerge to fill the space, supporting the idea that regional dynasties like the Maitrakas could gain power after imperial decline.
A student might use this pattern plus archaeological or inscriptional maps (outside sources) to judge whether Valabhi's rise followed this common post-imperial pattern and whether its influence reached northern territories.
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- [THE VERDICT]: Sitter. Directly lifted from TN Class XI History, Chapter 8 ('Harsha and Rise of Regional Kingdoms'). If you read the intro to the Harsha chapter, you solve this.
- [THE CONCEPTUAL TRIGGER]: The 'Dark Age' or Interregnum periods. UPSC loves the transition zones: Post-Mauryan (200 BC-300 AD) and Post-Gupta (550 AD-750 AD).
- [THE HORIZONTAL EXPANSION]: Memorize the '6th Century Map': 1. Maukharis (Kanauj - Harsha's brother-in-law), 2. Maitrakas (Valabhi - Gujarat/Education), 3. Gaudas (Bengal - Sasanka), 4. Later Guptas (Magadha), 5. Varmans (Kamarupa/Assam). Contrast this with the '10th Century Map' (Rajputs: Paramaras, Chandelas).
- [THE STRATEGIC METACOGNITION]: Stop memorizing lists alphabetically. Group dynasties by 'Time-Slices' (e.g., 600 CE vs. 1000 CE). The exam tests if you can distinguish Early Medieval (Pre-Rajput) from High Medieval (Rajput era).
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Later Guptas of Magadha operated as sub-regional kingdoms in northern India after imperial decline.
High-yield for questions on the post-Gupta political landscape: explains continuity of Gupta line at regional level and helps distinguish imperial versus sub-imperial authority. Links to topics on regional polities, succession, and state formation.
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 8: Harsha and Rise of Regional Kingdoms > I Harsha > p. 115
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 7: The Guptas > Fahien's account on Mathura and Pataliputra > p. 93
Northern India lacked a strong central power in the period between the Guptas and the Vardhanas, producing many independent principalities.
Essential for answering questions on transition periods, nature of polity in 6th–7th centuries, and causes/effects of feudalisation. Connects to themes of invasions, regionalism, and the rise of new dynasties.
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 8: Harsha and Rise of Regional Kingdoms > I Harsha > p. 115
- Exploring Society:India and Beyond ,Social Science-Class VII . NCERT(Revised ed 2025) > Chapter 7: The Gupta Era: An Age of Tireless Creativity > The Decline of the Guptas > p. 161
The Gupta line continued into the mid-6th century (Vishnugupta c. 540–550 CE), providing a temporal marker for the transition to later regional powers and the subsequent rise of Harsha.
Useful for timeline-based questions and comparative chronology; helps place political events and regional powers in correct sequence and supports essays on decline-to-rise transitions.
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 7: The Guptas > Fahien's account on Mathura and Pataliputra > p. 93
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 7: The Guptas > 7.71Decline of the Gupta Empire > p. 101
The Gupta Empire began weakening in the 6th century, creating a chronological window for regional powers to emerge.
High-yield for chronology questions: mastering when Gupta authority waned helps place subsequent regional dynasties in correct temporal context, connect continuity/disruption themes, and eliminate anachronistic claims about who ruled when.
- Exploring Society:India and Beyond ,Social Science-Class VII . NCERT(Revised ed 2025) > Chapter 7: The Gupta Era: An Age of Tireless Creativity > The Decline of the Guptas > p. 161
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 7: The Guptas > 7.71Decline of the Gupta Empire > p. 101
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 7: The Guptas > Introduction > p. 89
The Pushyabhuti (Vardhana) family expanded authority as far as Malwa in the late 6th/early 7th century, identifying a key polity active in Malwa around Harsha's rise.
Important for mapping regional power-contests: knowing which dynasties controlled Malwa around Harsha's rise helps assess competing claims about control of Northern India and supports comparative questions on regional consolidation.
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 8: Harsha and Rise of Regional Kingdoms > Pushyabhutis 8.1 > p. 105
The Paramaras of Malwa are listed among important Northern Indian dynasties in the 10th century, placing their major political role later than the 6th–7th century interval in question.
Crucial for avoiding chronological errors: recognizing the Paramaras as primarily a 10th-century force helps answer questions about medieval polity timelines, Rajput-era state formation, and correct attribution of regional control.
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 10: Advent of Arabs and Turks > Rajput Kingdoms > p. 139
North India fragmented into multiple warrior and regional kingdoms between the fall of the Guptas and Harsha's consolidation.
High-yield for UPSC because it explains the political context for state formation and regional identities after imperial decline; connects to questions on causes and consequences of political decentralisation and timelines of medieval polities.
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 8: Harsha and Rise of Regional Kingdoms > Introduction > p. 104
- History , class XI (Tamilnadu state board 2024 ed.) > Chapter 8: Harsha and Rise of Regional Kingdoms > I Harsha > p. 115
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The Maitrakas of Valabhi (Option 6) are the next logical target. They patronized the 'Valabhi University' (rival to Nalanda), which specialized in Hinayana Buddhism and administrative subjects. Expect a question on Valabhi University or its destruction by Arabs.
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1. 'Yadavas of Devagiri' (Statement 5): Devagiri is in Maharashtra (Deccan), not 'Northern India' power politics of that specific era, and they are famous for fighting Alauddin Khilji (13th century). Eliminate 5 -> Options A and D gone.
2. 'Paramaras of Malwa' (Statement 2): These are Rajputs (King Bhoja). Rajputs rise after the 8th century. Eliminate 2 -> Option C gone.
Answer remains B.
Mains History/Society Link: This period marks the crystallization of 'Indian Feudalism' (Samanta system). The fragmentation of the Gupta empire into these specific regional kingdoms (Maukharis, Maitrakas) is the classic case study for the decentralization of power and the rise of landed intermediaries.
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