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Why Land Powers Crash and Maritime Networks Outlast the Kings

From Ashoka's Fragmented Heirs to the Great Digital Sentries, How Control, Connectivity, and Generational Fatigue Shape the Fate of Nations India's imperial history follows a surprisingly predictable script: rapid expansion, a golden plateau, then post-peak contraction within three generations. After Ashoka's death in 232 BCE, the Mauryan state unraveled through administrative fatigue, frontier secession, and a military coup that swapped imperial ambition for regional pragmatism. This pattern echoed through the Guptas' tributary restraint, the Mughals' agonizing hollowing, and the Cholas' maritime resilience. Land empires fracture under indefensible borders and fiscal overstretch; sea-based and digital powers endure by controlling flows rather than occupying soil. Today, this ancient logic has migrated to undersea cables, semiconductor supply chains, and algorithmic gatekeeping. Understanding these cycles reveals how strategic positioning, cultural diffusion, ...

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