General Knowledge - Indian History - Discussion

Discussion Forum : Indian History - Indian History (Q.No. 2)
2.

The territory of Porus who offered strong resistance to Alexander was situated between the rivers of

Sutlej and Beas
Jhelum and Chenab
Ravi and Chenab
Ganga and Yamuna
Answer: Option
Explanation:
No answer description is available. Let's discuss.
Discussion:
77 comments Page 4 of 8.

Arun said:   1 decade ago
King of ancient punjab who had their realm from jhelum to chenab (in Greek, the Hydaspes and the Acesines) , he came on the way of king Alexander the Great during south asia invasion, he defeated in the year 326 bc near Hydaspes river thats why called Battle of the Hydaspes that one. After the defeat alexander asked pours how to treat you he replied"treat me as a king" by hearing this alexander returned his kingdom back to pours.

Manoranjandas said:   1 decade ago
The porus is famous territory and it has good condition for cultivation and it is situated in two rivers. So Alexander offered strong resistance territory

Anjana said:   1 decade ago
What is the mean of territory?

Khushboo said:   1 decade ago
A subdivision of the United States that is not a state and is administered by an appointed or elected governor and elected legislature.

Shashank said:   1 decade ago
The river Jhelum is called Vitasta in the Rigveda and Hydaspes by the ancient Greeks. The Vitasta is mentioned as one of the major rivers by the holy scriptures of the Indo-Aryans - the Rigveda. It has been speculated that the Vitasta must have been one of the seven rivers (sapta-sindhu) mentioned so many times in the Rigveda. The name survives in the Kashmiri name for this river as Vyeth. According to the major religious work Srimad Bhagavatam, the Vitasta is one of the many transcendental rivers flowing through land of Bharata, or ancient India.

The River Jhelum below the bridge beside Jhelum City.

The river was regarded as a god by the ancient Greeks, as were most mountains and streams; the poet Nonnus in the Dionysiaca (section 26, line 350) makes the Hydaspes a titan-descended god, the son of the sea-god Thaumas and the cloud-goddess Elektra. He was the brother of Iris, the goddess of the rainbow, and half-brother to the Harpies, the snatching winds. Since the river is in a country foreign to the ancient Greeks, it is not clear whether they named the river after the god, or whether the god Hydaspes was named after the river. Alexander the Great and his army crossed the Jhelum in BC 326 at the Battle of the Hydaspes River where it is believed that he defeated the Indian king, Porus. According to Arrian (Anabasis, 29) , he built a city "on the spot whence he started to cross the river Hydaspes", which he named Bukephala (or Bucephala[disambiguation needed]) to honour his famous horse Bukephalus or Bucephalus which was buried in Jalalpur Sharif. It is thought that ancient Bukephala was near the site of modern Jhelum City. According to a historian of Gujrat district, Mansoor Behzad Butt, Bukephalus was buried in Jalalpur Sharif, but the people of Mandi Bahauddin, a district close to Jehlum, believed that their tehsil Phalia was named after Bucephalus, Alexander's dead horse. They say that the name Phalia was the distortion of the word Bucephala. The waters of the Jhelum are allocated to Pakistan under the terms of the Indus Waters Treaty. India is working on a hydropower project on a tributary of Jhelum river to establish first-use rights on the river water over Pakistan as per the Indus waters Treaty.

Sanjeev said:   1 decade ago
King of ancient punjab who had their realm from jhelum to chenab (in Greek, the Hydaspes and the Acesines) , he came on the way of king Alexander the Great during south asia invasion, he defeated in the year 326 bc near Hydaspes river thats why called Battle of the Hydaspes that one. After the defeat alexander asked pours how to treat you he replied "treat me as a king" by hearing this alexander returned his kingdom back to pours.

BHAGYA said:   1 decade ago
Porus was the renowned ruler of his time.

Sindhu said:   1 decade ago
Porus was a king in India whom Alexander the Great met at the Battle of the Hydaspes River in 326 B.C.

Abhishek said:   1 decade ago
King Porus was the ancient Hindu King of Paurava, an ancient Indian Kingdom located between the Jhelum and Chenab rivers in modern-day Punjab, Pakistan, and later of dominions extending to the Beas. Porus fought Alexander the Great in the Battle of the Hydaspes River in 326 BC and was defeated. He then served Alexander as a client king.

Thakur said:   1 decade ago
Alexandra asked Porous, how to treat him, the Porous said treat me like a King.


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