Gupta American Era

616 Words3 Pages

On June 19, 2070 a time traveling machine was released to the surface of this earth. This time traveling machine went back to the Time of the Guptas (320-720). Nathaniel Johnson, a twenty-three year old inventor that helped build this machine and the traveler to test this machine is the man I am to interview. Nathaniel went to the time where the Gupta Period had just begun, it was June 19, 320 A.D.
He was set in a little village like place in the small empire of India. He looked around and described the houses as “flat roofed temples”(Walsh. Judith E) and said that the people of the Guptas were classified by their wealth. The people high in society were treated with honor as for the less wealthier were treated as peasants. Nathaniel told me …show more content…

He looked around and saw the bricks of the buildings and the friendly people of india on the move. He mentioned how the land is very fertile and the large deposit of iron ores. “The land was beautiful” he said, “This empire was filled with life and majestic forests, I have never in my 23 years seen something this beautiful”.
Nathaniel met the first king of the Gupta Empire “Sri Gupta was a kind man and a great ruler, he built this empire to how it was told to be.” The next person in line to rule was Ghatokacha with the title of Maharja. The title of the name was often born by the feudatory Chiefs. Rulers took great pride in their empire, they build it up to where the next ruler in line, which was mostly family, would take on what they couldn’t accomplish. The Guptas had a traditional machinery of bureaucratic administration, most of which were Chiefs.
The people of India were very industrail, they created varieties of silk and cloth, also known as “Kshauma and Pattavastra”. Their production of crafts covered large ranges of items such as texts like Amarakosha of Amarasimha and Brihat. They also had a wide variety and use of Jewelry. They also had lists and lists of metals but the most resourceful was iron. The Guptas were not very far in technology as other empires. Yet they were advanced in their tactics of trade, texts, and their