Golden Jubilee Lecture: 'Ashoka and Kautilya: Dhamma and Artha...' by Prof. Upinder Singh
University of Hyderabad The School of Social Sciences -- Institution of Eminence Golden Jubilee Distinguished Lecture Series Lecture Title Ashoka and Kautilya: Dhamma and Artha Perspectives on the Problem of Violence Speaker Prof. Upinder Singh Professor of History, Ashoka University Date Friday, 8 March 2024 Venue C. V. Raman Auditorium University of Hyderabad TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Prof. Jyotirmaya, Dean, School of Social Sciences, Welcome Address 01:45 Prof. Suchandra Ghosh, Head, Department of History, introduces Prof. Singh 05:23 Prof. Singh's Lecture 57:48 Q&A 01:23:48 Dr. Vijaya Ramdas proposes vote of thanks

▶︎
Golden Jubilee Lecture: "The Curse of Kohinoor: The Making of A Myth" by Prof Neeladri Bhattacharya

▶︎
When Barbarians became Kings: The Shakas in India by Prof. Upinder Singh

▶︎
Prof. Sudipta Kaviraj | Illuminations of Black Marxism | JNU Lecture Series

▶︎
#JLF 2013: Readings- Ashoka the Great

▶︎
RSS and Hindu Mahasabha were never nationalists, they are only communalists: Irfan Habib

▶︎
"The Past Before Us: Historical Traditions of Early North India."

▶︎
Why Gandhi Matters | Ramachandra Guha | India Lecture Series

▶︎
Romila Thapar—I don't like Modi's India, it's too Narrow & Limited; History won’t be Kind to Him

▶︎
Lit for Life 2015: Ashoka – The Emperor of Good and Evil

▶︎
Is Science Catching Up to Vedanta? The Evolution of Consciousness Studies | Swami Sarvapriyananda

▶︎
Rarely Do Those in Power Admit They Were Wrong – That's What Makes Emperor Ashoka Unique

▶︎
Conversation with Ramachandra Guha, “Gandhi 1914-1948: The Years That Changed the World"

▶︎
'Searching for Ashoka' by Nayanjot Lahiri - Part 1

▶︎
New Book On Political Violence In Ancient India

▶︎
Golden Jubilee Lecture: 'Constructing a Lineage of Indian Feminist Thought' by V. Geetha

▶︎
Christianity Defeats Buddhism? | Buddhist PhD Responds to Timothy Tennent

▶︎
Making Emperor Ashoka Great Again, with Patrick Olivelle's new book

▶︎
The Origins of Indians Were Never as Simple as We Thought — Ancient DNA Reveals Why

▶︎
In India, we don't teach Historiography commonly - Prof. Romila Thapar

▶︎
