Skandagupta, who ruled between 455 and 467 CE, was the last powerful ruler of the Gupta Empire that ruled Northern and Central India from the 4th to the late 6th century CE. He ascended the throne after the death of his father Kumar Gupta I. Though not the regular claimant to the throne as he was not born of the chief queen, he was chosen due to his superior ability. And he proved equal to the task.
Soon after his accession to the Gupta throne, Skanda Gupta had to deal with the Hunas, the barbaric tribes from Central Asia who after terrorizing parts of the Roman Empire made incursions into Indian plains.
Skanda Gupta succeeded in keeping the Hunas at bay by defeating them. To mark the occasion he justifiably assumed the title of Vikramaditya. His victory over the Hunas has been referred to in the Kathasaritsagara, written by Somadeva in the 11th century AD. Skanda Gupta died in AD 467 and with that the glory of the Guptas began to dwindle.
The Bhitari pillar inscription in the Ghazipur distract of Uttar Pradesh gives a detailed account of his reign.
An inscription in the Girnar hills near Junagarh in Gujarat commemorates the rebuilding of the embankment of the three century old Sudarsana Lake which broke due to heavy rains. The dam was reconstructed by local city governor Chakrapalita, son of Parnadatta, provincial governor of Saurashtra, in the first year of Skandagupta's rule.
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