mahajanapadas
Mahajanapadas, meaning “great realms,” were the major political units of ancient India during the second urbanization, roughly from the 6th to the 4th centuries BCE. They comprised both monarchies and republican oligarchies and were centered in the Indo-Gangetic plain and its foothills. The term is used in Buddhist and Jain literature, which provides a canonical list of sixteen major mahajanapadas. These polities varied in size and power, but all exercised authority over their hinterlands and engaged in diplomatic and military relations with neighbors. The period is notable for urban growth, rising trade, and the emergence of state institutions such as revenue administration and standing forces. Magadha eventually became the most influential, expanding at the expense of rivals and laying the groundwork for the Maurya Empire.
Among the mahajanapadas were Anga in the eastern Ganges plain, Magadha in the south-central plains, Kosala around