NCERT Solutions for Class 7 Social Science (Exploring Society) Chapter 7: The Gupta Era – An Age of Tireless Creativity (NCERT 2026–27)

These Class 7 Social Science Exploring Society Chapter 7 solutions cover The Gupta Era: An Age of Tireless Creativity from Exploring Society: India and Beyond (Part 1), the new NCF-2023 textbook for the 2026–27 session. The chapter follows Dhruv and Bhavisha’s time-machine journey into the Gupta Empire, which flourished from the 3rd to the 6th century CE with its capital at Pāṭaliputra. It explains who the Guptas were, why this period is called the ‘classical age’ of India, the great rulers Samudragupta and Chandragupta II (Vikramāditya), and remarkable figures like Āryabhaṭa, Varāhamihira and Kālidāsa. Below you get step-by-step answers to all Questions and activities, clear notes on key terms, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason and FAQs.

Class: 7 Subject: Social Science Book: Exploring Society: India and Beyond (Part 1) Chapter: 7 Theme: Tapestry of the Past Session: 2026–27

Class 7 Social Science Exploring Society Chapter 7 – Overview

Chapter 7, The Gupta Era: An Age of Tireless Creativity, traces the rise of the Gupta dynasty after the decline of the Kuṣhāṇa Empire by the 3rd century CE. The Guptas ruled most of north and west India from their capital at Pāṭaliputra (present-day Patna). Two great rulers stand out: Samudragupta, the ‘warrior king’ praised in the prayāga praśhasti by his court poet Harisena, and his son Chandragupta II (Vikramāditya), in whose reign art, literature and science flourished. The chapter uses sources like the rust-free Iron Pillar of Delhi, Gupta coins, inscriptions and the travelogue of the Chinese pilgrim Faxian to picture Gupta society and governance. The long peace produced India’s ‘classical age’, with Āryabhaṭa, Varāhamihira and Kālidāsa, codified Āyurveda, and the art of Sārnāth, Ajanta and Udayagiri. It also notes the contemporary Vākāṭakas, Pallavas and the Kāmarūpa kingdom, before the Guptas declined under Hūṇa invasions by the 6th century CE.

Key Concepts & Terms

Gupta Empire: the most powerful empire of its time, flourishing from the 3rd to the 6th century CE with its capital at Pāṭaliputra (present-day Patna), covering most of present-day north and west India and parts of central and east India.

Chandragupta I: an early Gupta ruler remembered for his coins and strategic alliances, who helped consolidate power and lay the foundation of a strong empire; named after his grandfather’s line, hence the ‘I’ added by historians.

Samudragupta: the ‘warrior king’, father of Chandragupta II, praised in the prayāga praśhasti for his ambition to be dharaṇi-bandha (‘unify the Earth’); shown as a veena player on his coins.

Chandragupta II (Vikramāditya): a renowned Gupta ruler and devotee of Viṣhṇu; the Iron Pillar inscription speaks of a king ‘Chandra’ identified with him. Art, literature and science especially flourished in his reign.

prayāga praśhasti: a pillar inscription in Prayagraj, composed by the court poet Harisena, that praises Samudragupta’s conquests and his support of art, learning and trade.

Iron Pillar of Delhi: a 6-tonne pillar over 1,600 years old at Mehrauli, erected in the reign of Chandragupta II and dedicated to Viṣhṇu; it does not rust, a testament to ancient India’s metallurgy.

Faxian: a Chinese Buddhist pilgrim who visited India in the early 5th century CE; his travelogue A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms describes a prosperous, charitable Gupta society (while also noting the harsh treatment of the chanḍālas).

Royal titles: Gupta rulers adopted grand titles like mahārājadhirāja, samrāṭ and chakravartin, claiming supreme authority over earlier rulers who used simpler titles like rājan and mahārāja.

Land grants: instead of ruling everything centrally, the Guptas divided the empire into provinces and granted land to local rulers, priests and chieftains, recording these grants on copper plates for accurate tax records.

Classical age: the term used by some historians for the Gupta period, when prolonged peace promoted great achievements in literature, art, mathematics, astronomy, medicine and metallurgy.

Other key terms: Regent ruler (one who temporarily governs for a monarch unable to do so), Outcastes (the chanḍālas, considered socially too low to be part of the varṇa system), aśhvamedha yajña (a horse sacrifice performed by ambitious kings to build mighty empires) and Hūṇas (a fierce central-Asian tribe whose attacks weakened the Guptas).

“Questions and activities” — Full Solutions

All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook’s end-of-chapter Questions and activities section. Answers are original, written in exam-ready style.

1. Imagine you receive a letter from someone living in the Gupta Empire. The letter starts like this: “Greetings from Pāṭaliputra! Life here is vibrant and full of excitement. Just yesterday, I witnessed …” Complete the letter with a short paragraph (250–300 words) describing life in the Gupta Empire.

ANSWER This is a creative-writing activity; a model answer is given below. “Greetings from Pāṭaliputra! Life here is vibrant and full of excitement. Just yesterday, I witnessed a grand procession in honour of our great king Chandragupta II, whom people lovingly call Vikramāditya. The streets of our capital are clean and the lanes are kept in good order; merchants from far-off lands — even Romans and traders from the islands of the western sea — fill our markets with pearls, spices and fine cloth. Our city stands proudly on the banks of the Gangā, and travellers say it is the greatest in all the Middle Kingdom. The people here are happy and prosperous. Wealthy Vaishya families have set up free rest-houses, hospitals and charities, where the poor, the sick and orphans are cared for, and doctors give treatment and medicines without charge. Those who farm the royal land simply give a share of their grain as tax, and there is no need to register our households or trouble the officials. What amazes me most is the learning of our age. In the city of Ujjayinī lives the scholar Varāhamihira, and near Kusumapura the astronomer Āryabhaṭa, who says the Earth itself spins to make day and night! Poets recite the verses of Kālidāsa, and craftsmen carve images of the Buddha and of Viṣhṇu so beautiful that they seem alive. Only yesterday I saw a tall iron pillar that has not rusted in living memory — a marvel of our metalworkers. Of course, not everyone shares in this good fortune; the chanḍālas live outside the city walls and are treated harshly, which troubles my heart. Still, this is a golden time of peace, art and knowledge. I wish you could see it for yourself. With warm regards, your friend in Pāṭaliputra.”

2. Which Gupta ruler was also known as the ‘Vikramāditya’?

ANSWER Chandragupta II was the Gupta ruler who was also known as ‘Vikramāditya’. He was one of the most renowned rulers of the Gupta dynasty and a devotee of Viṣhṇu. The Iron Pillar of Delhi, whose inscription speaks of a king named ‘Chandra’, was erected during his reign, and it was in his time that art, architecture, literature and science especially flourished.

3. “Periods of peace support the development of various aspects of sociocultural life, literature, and the development of science and technology.” Examine this statement in the light of the Gupta empire.

ANSWER The Gupta period clearly proves this statement. The prolonged period of peace and stability the Guptas maintained allowed energy and resources to be turned away from war and towards creativity, which is why historians often call this the ‘classical age’ of India. Sociocultural life: a stable economy let the state support scholars, artists and scientists. Cities were prosperous and orderly, charity flourished, and many key centres of art — Sārnāth, the Ajanta caves and Udayagiri — produced iconic sculptures, rock-cut caves and paintings that set high standards of beauty. Literature: Sanskrit literature flourished, with the works of Kālidāsa (such as Meghadūtam) and the compilation of many major Purāṇas. Knowledge from earlier eras was consolidated into numerous texts. Science and technology: Āryabhaṭa advanced mathematics and astronomy (proposing that the Earth spins on its axis and explaining eclipses), Varāhamihira wrote his encyclopedic Bṛihat Samhitā, Āyurveda was codified through the Charaka and Suśhruta Saṃhitās, and metallurgy progressed, as the rust-free Iron Pillar shows. Thus the peace and stability of the Gupta Empire directly enabled remarkable progress in culture, literature, science and technology — confirming the statement.

4. Recreate a scene from a Gupta ruler’s court. Write a short script, assign roles like the king, ministers, and scholars, and enact a role play to bring the Gupta era to life!

ANSWER This is a role-play activity; a sample short script is given below for the court of Chandragupta II (Vikramāditya). Roles: King Chandragupta II, Minister, the poet Kālidāsa, the astronomer Āryabhaṭa, and a court attendant. Attendant: “All rise! His Majesty Mahārājadhirāja Chandragupta Vikramāditya enters the court.” King: “Be seated, friends. A kingdom is strengthened not by luxuries but by wisdom and knowledge. What news do you bring today?” Minister: “Your Majesty, trade with the Mediterranean and Southeast Asia is thriving, and the copper-plate land grants have improved our tax records.” Āryabhaṭa: “Sire, I have completed my treatise, the Āryabhaṭīya. I propose that the Earth spins on its own axis, which is why we see day and night.” King: “Remarkable! Such learning is the true wealth of our empire. And you, Kālidāsa?” Kālidāsa: “I have composed Meghadūtam, the story of a yakṣha who sends a message to his beloved through a passing cloud.” King: “Then let our court honour both poetry and science. Let the world remember this age as one of tireless creativity!” (All bow.)

5. Match the two columns:

ANSWER The correct matches are given in the table below.
Column AColumn B (correct match)
(1) Kānchipuram(d) Known as ‘a city of a thousand temples’.
(2) Ujjayinī(e) A prominent centre of learning in ancient India.
(3) Udayagiri(b) Famous for rock-cut caves featuring intricate carvings of Hindu deities, especially Viṣhṇu.
(4) Ajanta(a) Known for vibrant cave paintings that depict the Jātaka tales.
(5) Pāṭaliputra(c) Capital of the Guptas.
Answer key: 1–(d), 2–(e), 3–(b), 4–(a), 5–(c).

6. Who were the Pallavas and where did they rule?

ANSWER The Pallavas were a powerful dynasty that rose in the south while the Guptas ruled in the north. Their origins are not clearly known, but they appear to have been a tributary power under the Sātavāhanas and gained power as the Sātavāhanas declined. They gradually consolidated their power in parts of present-day Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, with their capital at Kānchipuram (in present-day Tamil Nadu), often called the ‘city of a thousand temples’. The Pallavas were great patrons of art and architecture, and most of them were devotees of Śhiva, credited with building magnificent temples and rock-cut caves. They ruled until the latter half of the 9th century CE.

7. Organise an exploration trip with your teachers to a nearby historical site, museum, or heritage building. After the trip, write a detailed report describing your experience. Include key observations about the site’s historical significance, the architecture, artefacts, and any interesting facts you learned during the visit. Reflect on how the trip enhanced your understanding of history.

ANSWER This is a field-trip activity; a model report is given below. Replace the site name with the place you actually visit. Report on our visit to the State Museum: Last week our class, along with our teachers, visited the State Museum in our city. The visit helped us connect the Gupta era we had studied with real artefacts. Historical significance: the guide explained that many objects in the gallery, such as gold coins and copper-plate inscriptions, were the very kinds of sources our textbook describes. We saw how coins showing a king playing the veena or an aśhvamedha horse tell us about a ruler’s achievements. Architecture and artefacts: we observed stone sculptures of deities like Viṣhṇu and the Buddha, carved with great skill, and a model of rock-cut caves similar to Ajanta and Udayagiri. The carvings reminded us of ‘Gupta art’, known for its beauty and balance. Interesting facts: we learnt that inscriptions on copper plates recorded land grants, and that an iron object kept in the gallery had resisted rust for centuries, just like the famous Iron Pillar of Delhi. Reflection: the trip made history come alive. Reading about sources in a book is useful, but seeing real coins, sculptures and inscriptions helped me understand how historians piece together the past from many different kinds of evidence.

Extra Practice Questions

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. When did the Gupta Empire flourish and where was its capital?

ANSWERThe Gupta Empire was the most powerful empire of its time and flourished from the 3rd to the 6th century CE. Its capital was at Pāṭaliputra, which is present-day Patna in Bihar. At its peak it covered most of present-day north and west India, along with parts of central and east India.

Q2. Why does the Iron Pillar of Delhi not rust?

ANSWERThe 6-tonne Iron Pillar at Mehrauli is over 1,600 years old yet still does not rust. Scientists believe this is because a unique thin protective layer, formed by the special iron used and oxygen from the air, develops on its surface and protects it from corrosion. It is a testament to the advanced metallurgical skills of ancient India.

Q3. What was the prayāga praśhasti, and who composed it?

ANSWERThe prayāga praśhasti is a pillar inscription in Prayagraj that praises the achievements of Samudragupta, the father of Chandragupta II. It was composed by his court poet Harisena, who wrote that the king’s ambition was to be dharaṇi-bandha (‘to unify the Earth’) and described how he supported art, learning and trade.

Q4. Who was Faxian and why is his account important?

ANSWERFaxian was a Chinese Buddhist pilgrim who visited India in the early 5th century CE to see sacred Buddhist sites and collect manuscripts. His travelogue, A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms, is important because it records his observations of Gupta society, governance and culture — describing a prosperous and charitable people — and has survived to this day as a valuable historical source.

Q5. How did the Guptas administer their empire?

ANSWERThe Gupta Empire had a well-organised administration. Instead of controlling everything from a central authority, the Guptas divided the empire into provinces and granted land to local rulers, priests and chieftains. These land grants were inscribed on copper plates for accurate records. This system ensured proper tax collection while still giving local leaders some control over their regions.

Long Answer Type Questions

Q1. Describe the contributions of Āryabhaṭa and Varāhamihira to science.

ANSWERĀryabhaṭa lived around 500 CE in Kusumapura (near present-day Patna), a famous centre of learning, and authored a short treatise on mathematics and astronomy called the Āryabhaṭīya. He gave formulas to calculate the motions of the Sun, the Moon and the planets, and proposed that the Earth spins on its axis, which explains day and night. He gave the length of a year as 365 days, 6 hours, 12 minutes and 30 seconds — only a few minutes off the modern value — estimated the size of the Earth, and correctly explained solar and lunar eclipses. In mathematics he described many techniques of calculation and equation-solving still studied today. Varāhamihira was a mathematician, astronomer and astrologer from Ujjayinī. His encyclopedic work, the Bṛihat Samhitā, covered astronomy, astrology, weather forecasting, architecture, town planning and even farming. His ability to observe the world and combine logical reasoning with traditional knowledge made him a pioneer in science.

Q2. Why is the Gupta period called the ‘classical age’ of India? Give examples from art, literature and science.

ANSWERThe Gupta period is called the ‘classical age’ because the prolonged peace and stability of the empire allowed remarkable achievements in many fields, which became models for later times. In literature, Sanskrit flourished with the works of Kālidāsa, such as Meghadūtam, and many major Purāṇas were compiled. In science and mathematics, Āryabhaṭa advanced astronomy and mathematics, Varāhamihira wrote the Bṛihat Samhitā, Āyurveda was codified through the Charaka and Suśhruta Saṃhitās, and metallurgy progressed, as the rust-free Iron Pillar shows. In art and architecture, key centres such as Sārnāth (Buddha sculptures), the Ajanta caves (paintings) and Udayagiri (rock-cut carvings of deities) produced iconic works that set high standards of aesthetics and beauty. A stable economy let the state support scholars, artists and scientists, leading to cultural and intellectual growth whose legacy still inspires India today.

Q3. Explain the strategies the Gupta rulers used to expand and consolidate their empire.

ANSWERThe Gupta rulers used a combination of strategies to build and hold their vast empire. First, they relied on military conquest: Samudragupta fought many wars, defeating kings and taking over their kingdoms, while many defeated rulers were reinstated and paid tribute. Second, they used diplomacy and alliances, recalling Kauṭilya’s advice to form alliances (mitra) as part of the saptānga. A special form of this was matrimonial alliance — for example, Prabhāvatī Gupta, daughter of Chandragupta II, married a Vākāṭaka prince and, as regent ruler after his early death, kept the ties between the two kingdoms strong. Third, they used a system of land grants and titles: the empire was divided into provinces, land was granted to local rulers and chieftains and recorded on copper plates, and grand titles like mahārājadhirāja, samrāṭ and chakravartin proclaimed their supreme authority. In the south and northeast, Samudragupta often defeated rulers (like the Pallavas and the ruler of Kāmarūpa) but let them keep their thrones in return for accepting his rule and paying tribute — a pattern that maintained peaceful relations while extending Gupta influence.

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. The capital of the Gupta Empire was at:

(a) Ujjayinī    (b) Pāṭaliputra    (c) Kānchipuram    (d) Nandivardhana

2. The Gupta ruler also known as ‘Vikramāditya’ was:

(a) Samudragupta    (b) Chandragupta I    (c) Chandragupta II    (d) Skandagupta

3. The prayāga praśhasti praises the achievements of:

(a) Chandragupta II    (b) Samudragupta    (c) Harisena    (d) Prabhāvatī Gupta

4. The Iron Pillar of Delhi was dedicated to:

(a) Śhiva    (b) the Buddha    (c) Viṣhṇu    (d) Garuḍa

5. The Chinese pilgrim who described Gupta society in his travelogue was:

(a) Xuanzang    (b) Faxian    (c) Kālidāsa    (d) Harisena

6. Āryabhaṭa proposed that:

(a) the Sun moves around the Earth    (b) the Earth is flat    (c) the Earth spins on its axis    (d) eclipses are caused by demons

7. The encyclopedic work Bṛihat Samhitā was written by:

(a) Āryabhaṭa    (b) Kālidāsa    (c) Varāhamihira    (d) Harisena

8. Meghadūtam, the story of a yakṣha sending a message through a cloud, was composed by:

(a) Varāhamihira    (b) Kālidāsa    (c) Faxian    (d) Samudragupta

9. Prabhāvatī Gupta, daughter of Chandragupta II, became the regent ruler of which kingdom?

(a) Pallava    (b) Kāmarūpa    (c) Vākāṭaka    (d) Kuṣhāṇa

10. The decline of the Gupta Empire by the 6th century CE was hastened by repeated attacks of the:

(a) Sātavāhanas    (b) Hūṇas    (c) Pallavas    (d) Romans

Answer key: 1-(b), 2-(c), 3-(b), 4-(c), 5-(b), 6-(c), 7-(c), 8-(b), 9-(c), 10-(b).

For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.

A-R 1. Assertion: The Gupta period is often called the ‘classical age’ of India.

Reason: A prolonged period of peace and stability promoted notable achievements in art, literature, science and mathematics.

A-R 2. Assertion: The Iron Pillar of Delhi has rusted badly over the centuries.

Reason: A unique thin protective layer formed on the iron protects it from corrosion.

A-R 3. Assertion: Gupta rulers adopted grand titles such as mahārājadhirāja, samrāṭ and chakravartin.

Reason: These titles reflected their claim to supreme authority and superiority over earlier rulers.

A-R 4. Assertion: The Guptas governed the whole empire directly from one central authority.

Reason: They divided the empire into provinces and granted land to local rulers, priests and chieftains.

A-R 5. Assertion: Faxian’s travelogue must be read carefully as one source among many.

Reason: A historical account reflects only the writer’s perspective at one point in time and for a limited portion of society.

Answer key: 1-(A), 2-(D), 3-(A), 4-(D), 5-(A).

Exam Tips & Common Mistakes

How to score full marks in this chapter

Fix the timeline clearly in your mind: the Guptas flourished from the 3rd to the 6th century CE with capital at Pāṭaliputra. Remember the two key rulers — Samudragupta (warrior king of the prayāga praśhasti) and Chandragupta II / Vikramāditya (Iron Pillar, golden age of art). For ‘classical age’ questions, give one example each from literature (Kālidāsa), science (Āryabhaṭa, Varāhamihira), medicine (Āyurveda) and art (Ajanta, Sārnāth, Udayagiri). Use the textbook’s sources — coins, inscriptions, copper-plate land grants and Faxian’s travelogue — to show how historians reconstruct the past, and remember the contemporary Vākāṭakas, Pallavas and Kāmarūpa kingdom.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Confusing Chandragupta II (Gupta dynasty) with Chandragupta Maurya (Maurya dynasty) — they are different rulers from different times.
  • Saying the Iron Pillar “rusts” — its special protective layer keeps it rust-free for over 1,600 years.
  • Crediting the Bṛihat Samhitā to Āryabhaṭa — it was written by Varāhamihira; the Āryabhaṭīya is Āryabhaṭa’s.
  • Forgetting that Faxian also recorded the harsh treatment of the chanḍālas, so his account is not the whole picture.
  • Treating activity questions (Q1, Q4, Q7) as no-answer questions — write your own letter, script or report.
  • Mixing up the Guptas’ allies the Vākāṭakas with their northern rivals; the Vākāṭakas ruled the central subcontinent.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Chapter 7 of Class 7 Social Science Exploring Society about?

Chapter 7, The Gupta Era: An Age of Tireless Creativity, explains who the Guptas were, why their rule (3rd–6th century CE, capital Pāṭaliputra) is called the ‘classical age’ of India, the great rulers Samudragupta and Chandragupta II (Vikramāditya), the sources like the Iron Pillar and Faxian’s travelogue, and the achievements of Āryabhaṭa, Varāhamihira and Kālidāsa.

Which Gupta ruler was known as Vikramāditya?

Chandragupta II was known as Vikramāditya. He was a renowned Gupta ruler and a devotee of Viṣhṇu, and the Iron Pillar of Delhi was erected during his reign. Art, literature and science especially flourished in his time.

What is the exercise heading for Chapter 7 of Exploring Society?

The end-of-chapter exercise in Exploring Society: India and Beyond (Part 1) Chapter 7 is headed Questions and activities and contains 7 numbered questions, all answered step by step on this page.

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