The changing map of India from 1 AD to the 20th century

The Indo-Parthian and Indo-Synthian era: 1 AD


The Kushan Empire: 100 AD

  • The Kushan Empire was founded under Kujula Kadphises but it was under his grandson, the Buddhist emperor Kanishka, that it reached its peak. Kanishka expanded the kingdom till as far as Varanasi and captured areas in present-day China.

The Gupta and Huna Empire – 400 – 500 AD

  • This was the period of the domination of the Gupta Empire, referred to by some as the Golden Age of India.
  • During this time, literature, art, astronomy and math flourished in the region and much of the subcontinent was unified under one kingdom.
  • The Huna Empire extended from parts of eastern Iran to northwestern India.
  • This proximity is the reason why, some believe, the Huna tribe finds a mention in the Mahabharata.

After the collapse of the Gupta Empire, a minor line of the clan ruled in Magadha. Down south, the Kalabhras kingdom crumbled.


The Chalukyas ruled southern and central India from the 6th century to the 12th century. Kannada and Telugu literature thrived in this era, as did Chalukyan architecture. In the north, the Chachas dynasty began ruling over Sindh by 700 AD.


The Gurjar-Pratihara dynasty, in 900 AD, spread its kingdom from Rajasthan to the east in India. Meanwhile, the Deccan was under the Rashtrakuta dynasty.


The Ghaznavid Empire gradually moved in and conquered India and later the Delhi Sultanate, a Delhi-based Muslim kingdom that stretched over large parts of India from 1206–1526, the fall of which eventually led to the Mughal rule in the country.


  • By 1500 AD, the Rajput states had established their presence. The Vijayanagar Empire in the south was still strong.

Source:Scroll.in

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