Assaka (Asmaka) Mahajanapada c. 700 BCE – 300 BCE | Ancient Telangana’s First State-Level Society One of the Sixteen Great Mahajanapadas | Capital: Potali (Bodhan) | Godavari Valley Civilization The Assaka (Asmaka) Mahajanapada flourished in the region of present-day Telangana from approximately 700 BCE to 300 BCE. It was one of the shodasa (sixteen) great mahajanapadas of ancient India, as listed in the Buddhist text Anguttara Nikaya . The name means "stony region," aptly describing the Deccan plateau. The core territory of Asmaka lay in the Godavari River Valley, and its capital was Potali (or Potana) , identified with the Paudanya of the Mahabharata and modern Bodhan in Nizamabad district, Telangana. Excavations at Kotilingala have revealed punch-marked coins of local rulers, proving the region had an advanced economy and administration. The Assaka mahajanapada represents the earliest known state-level society in Telangana, ...
Mauryan Empire in Telangana c. 300 BCE – 232 BCE | First Imperial Power to Unite the Deccan Over 68 Years of Influence | Ashoka’s Edicts | Dakshiṇāpatha Province | Precursor to Satavahanas The Mauryan Empire (c. 322 – 185 BCE) was the first and one of the largest empires to ever encompass most of the Indian subcontinent. Its geography was vast and diverse, stretching from the fertile plains of the Ganges to the mountainous frontiers of the northwest and the plateaus of the south. While the core of the Mauryan Empire was in Magadha (modern-day Bihar), its influence extended deep into the Deccan Plateau, including Telangana (c. 300 BCE – 232 BCE). The empire came to power by overthrowing the Nanda Dynasty in 322 BC, and under Chandragupta, Bindusara, and Ashoka, it brought the Deccan under a single administration for the first time. Founder: Chandragupta Maurya (c. 322 – 298 BCE) Capital: Pataliputra (modern Patna, Bihar) L...