Aryabhatta provides no information about his place of birth. The only information                     comes from Bhaskara I, who describes Aryabhatta as asmakiya, "one belonging                     to the Asmaka country." During the Buddha's time, a branch of the Asmaka people                     settled in the region between the Narmada and Godavari rivers in central India;                     Aryabhatta is believed to have been born there. 
  
                
              Education      
                        It is fairly certain that, at some point, he went to Kusumapura for advanced studies                     and lived there for some time. Both Hindu and Buddhist tradition, as well as Bhaskara                     I (CE 629), identify Kusumapura as Pataliputra, modern Patna. A verse mentions that                     Aryabhatta was the head of an institution (kulapa) at Kusumapura, and, because the                     university of Nalanda was in Pataliputra at the time and had an astronomical observatory,                     it is speculated that Aryabhatta might have been the head of the Nalanda university                     as well.Aryabhatta is also reputed to have set up an observatory at the Sun temple                     in Taregana, Bihar                 
                
                         
                
                 Works      
                                      Aryabhatta is the author of several treatises on mathematics and astronomy, some                     of which are lost. His major work, Aryabhatiya, a compendium of mathematics and                     astronomy, was extensively referred to in the Indian mathematical literature and                     has survived to modern times. The mathematical part of the Aryabhatiya covers arithmetic,                     algebra, plane trigonometry, and spherical trigonometry. It also contains continued                     fractions, quadratic equations, sums-of-power series, and a table of sines.