Chandragupta Maurya: The Fugitive Who Built India’s First Great Empire

In this episode of pplpod, we explore the life of Chandragupta Maurya, the founder of the Maurya Empire and the first ruler to unite much of the Indian subcontinent under one political system. The episode begins with the strange legends surrounding his rise: a hunted fugitive spared by a lion, aided by a kneeling elephant, and destined for power according to ancient storytellers. Behind those myths was a real man who stepped into a world of political chaos after Alexander the Great abandoned his Indian campaign and died in Babylon. In the northwest, Greek and Macedonian satraps fought over the fragments of Alexander’s empire. In the east, the wealthy but hated Nanda dynasty ruled Magadha under Dhanananda. Chandragupta’s origins remain disputed, with some Hindu sources portraying him as low-born and Buddhist sources connecting him to the peacock-taming Moriya clan, but every tradition agrees on one crucial point: he did not rise alone.

The episode also follows Chandragupta’s partnership with Chanakya, the brilliant Brahmin strategist who turned a humiliated insult from the Nanda king into a lifelong mission of revenge. After discovering Chandragupta’s leadership potential, Chanakya trained him in warfare, law, politics, espionage, and ruthless statecraft at Taxila. Together, they built an army from mercenaries, militias, and resistance forces, failed in their first direct attack on the Nanda capital, then learned to conquer from the edges inward through guerrilla tactics, bribery, supply disruption, and siege warfare. After toppling the Nandas and founding the Maurya Empire, Chandragupta faced Seleucus Nicator, one of Alexander’s former generals, and negotiated a stunning settlement that gave him vast western territories in exchange for 500 war elephants. The discussion also examines his administrative genius, highways, reservoirs, spy networks, paranoia, female bodyguards, and the debated Jain tradition that says he abdicated, became an ascetic, and died through ritual fasting at Shravanabelagola. His life remains a blend of fact, legend, empire-building, and unresolved mystery.

Key topics covered:

• Alexander’s withdrawal, the Nanda dynasty, and the fractured world Chandragupta entered

• Conflicting origin stories, the Moriya clan, peacock symbolism, and low-born traditions

• Chanakya, Taxila, revenge, espionage, guerrilla warfare, and the fall of Dhanananda

• Seleucus Nicator, the 500 war elephants, western expansion, and Mauryan diplomacy

• Administration, highways, Sudarshana Lake, spies, paranoia, Jain abdication, and legacy

Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical, religious, and biographical sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.

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