Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BimbisaraBimbisara - Wikipedia

    Bimbisāra (in Buddhist tradition) or རྒྱལ་པོ་གཟུགས་ཅན་སྙིང་པོ་ (Tibetan) or Shrenika (Śreṇika) and Seniya (Seṇiya) in the Jain histories (c. 558 – c. 491 BCE or c. 472 – c. 405 BCE) was the King of Magadha (r. 543 – 492 BCE or r.

  2. Durante el reinado de Bimbisara, Magadha se convirtió en el imperio más poderoso de la India. Anexionó el estado de Anga (Bengala), situado al este de Magadha, de gran importancia económica por su puerto, al que ingresaban al río Ganges los barcos del sur de la India.

  3. 491 bce. Bimbisara (born c. 543—died 491 bce) was one of the early kings of the Indian kingdom of Magadha. His expansion of the kingdom, especially his annexation of the kingdom of Anga to the east, is considered to have laid the foundations for the later expansion of the Mauryan empire. He is also known for his cultural achievements and was ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 5 de dic. de 2019 · Bimbisara (c. 545/544 BCE - c. 493/492 BCE) was a king of the Magadha Kingdom who is credited with establishing imperial dominance in the Indian subcontinent. Son of a minor king called Bhattiya, he belonged to the Haryanka Dynasty, which is said to be the second imperial dynasty of Magadha. However, it is only from Bimbisara's reign that the ...

    • Saurav Ranjan Datta
  5. Bimbisāra (T. gzugs can snying po གཟུགས་ཅན་སྙིང་པོ་; C. pinposuoluo) was a king of Magadha and a great patron of Gautama Buddha. There are several accounts of how the Buddha and the king first met.

  6. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › bimbisaraBimbisara _ AcademiaLab

    Bimbisāra (en la tradición budista) o Shrenika (Śreṇika) y Seniya (Seṇiya) en el Historias jainistas (c. 558 – c. 491 a.C. o c. 472 – c. 405 a.C.) fue el rey de Magadha (r. 543 – 492 a. C. o r. 457 – 405 a. C.) y perteneció a la dinastía Haryanka. Era hijo de Bhattiya.

  7. Buddhism. Hinduism Jainism. Bimbisara (ruled 544-491 B.C.E.) was a king of the Magadha empire and belonged to Haryanaka dynasty, which ruled until approximately 326 B.C.E. when Alexander the Great invaded India. He ruled an area of what is now Bihar and Bengal with his capital at modern day Rajgir. In Buddhist sources, he is recorded as having ...