Respuesta :
At first he ruled much like his grandfather,Chandragupta Maurya, using warfare and violence. But after a battle he felt sorrow for all the people that suffered and decided to promote peace. So he converted to Buddhism and spread its teachings to his people.
Answer:
Aśoka or Ashoka Vardhana (304-232 BC) was the third emperor of Maury. He was the son of Bindusara and grandson of Chandragupta. He reigned over most of the Indian subcontinent since circa 269 BC. C. to 232 a. From present Afghanistan to Bengal and also to the south, to the present Mysore. Around 260 a. C., conquered Kalinga in a destructive war, something that none of his predecessors had achieved. After witnessing the massacres of war, he gradually became Buddhism. "
Kalinga was a state on the east coast of India, a parliamentary monarchy. Aśoka undertook the war of conquest, eight years after his coronation. The war caused more than 100,000 deaths, and 150,000 deportees. When celebrating his victory, walking through the gardens of Kalinga, he was moved by the number of corpses, and the cries of relatives of the dead.
The deadly war with Kalinga transformed the vengeful Emperor Aśoka into a stable and peaceful patron of Buddhism. Whether or not Buddhism was converted to Buddhism is not clear, despite the Buddhist tradition that affirms it. According to the eminent indologist, AL Basham, the personal religion of Aśoka became Buddhism, at least after the war with Kalingal, but the Dharma propagated by him was not Buddhism. However, his patronage led to the expansion of Buddhism. Buddhism during its mandate in the Maurya Empire, in other kingdoms, and in the whole world towards the 250 a. C.