Aparanta

Aparanta, or Aparantaka (meaning "Western border") was a geographical region of ancient India. It corresponded to the northern part of the Konkan region on the western coast of India. English civil servant-turned-historian J. F. Fleet believed that the Aparanta region included Kathiawad, Kutch, and Sindh, beside Konkan. However, historical records make it clear that the extent of Aparanta was much smaller.

South Asia
500 BCE
PUṆḌRA
VAṄGA
RĀḌHA
SUHMA
SAVARA
ANDHRA
MŪLAKA
VIDARBHA
PULINDA
SAURAṢṬRA
SAUVĪRA
SINDHU
ŚIVI
MADRA
YAUDHEYA
TRIGARTA
ŚĀKYA
PAÑCĀLA
VATSA
MALLA
VṚJI
ŚŪRASENA
MATSYA
MAGADHA
South Asia circa 500 BCE, with location of Aparanta.

The Junagadh inscription of Rudradaman mentions that during Ashoka's reign, a Yonaraja (literally; Ionian, or Greek, King), Tushaspha was the governor of Aparanta. A Buddhist text, the Mahavamsa states (xii.5) that at the conclusion of the Third Buddhist Council (c.250 BCE), a Yona (Greek) Thera (monk) Dhammarakkhita was sent here by the emperor Ashoka to preach Dhamma and 37,000 people embraced Buddhism due to his effort (Mahavamsa, xii.34-6). According to Buddhist scholar A.K. Warder, the Dharmaguptaka sect originated here.

Aparanta is regarded as an umbrella term for Shurparakadesha for Konkan, to include in the North and Gomantaka in the south with the river Kundalika to serving as a dividing line in between the two.

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