Category
page 15th-century maharajadhirajas
Chandragupta II
Ruler of Gupta Empire from c. 375 to c. 415

Kumaragupta I
Gupta Emperor (399-455)

Skandagupta
Skandagupta (Ska-nda-gu-pta, r. –467) was a Gupta Emperor. His Bhitari pillar inscription suggests that he restored the Gupta power by defeating his enemies, who may have been rebels or foreign invaders. He repulsed an invasion by the Indo-Hephthalites (known as Hunas in India), probably the Kidarites. He seems to have maintained control of his inherited territory, and is generally considered the last of the great Gupta Emperors. The Gupta genealogy after him is unclear, but he was most probably succeeded by Purugupta, who appears to have been his younger half-brother.

Budhagupta
Budhagupta (Gupta script: 10px12px14px12px Bu-dha-gu-pta, ) was a Gupta emperor and the successor of Kumaragupta II. He was the son of Purugupta and was succeeded by Narasimhagupta.

Narasimhagupta
Narasimhagupta (Gupta script: 12px12px16px16px14px12px Na-ra-si-ṅha-gu-pta) Baladitya was the Gupta Emperor from 495 to 530. He was son of Purugupta and probably the successor of Budhagupta. Hiuen Tsang refers to him as the king of Magadha.
Kumaragupta II
10Th Gupta emperor

Purugupta
Purugupta (Gupta script: 12px12px14px14px Pu-ra-gu-pta, ) (reigned 467–473 CE) was an emperor of the Gupta dynasty in northern India. Purugupta was a son of the Gupta emperor Kumaragupta I by his queen Anantadevi. He succeeded his half-brother Skandagupta. No inscription of Purugupta has been found so far. He is known from the Bhitari silver-copper seal of his grandson Kumaragupta III and Nalanda clay sealings of his sons Narasimhagupta and Budhagupta and his grandson Kumaragupta III. From the Saranath Buddha image inscription, it is concluded that he was succeeded by Kumaragupta II. According