Singha Durbar

This article is about the palace. For the TV series, see Singha Durbar (TV series).
"Lion Palace" redirects here. For other uses, see Palace of the Lions.
Singha Durbar
General information
Architectural style Neoclassical architecture, Palladian architecture, and European styles of architecture
Town or city Kathmandu
Country Nepal
Cost Unknown
Client Chandra Shumsher JBR
Technical details
Structural system Brick and Mortar
Design and construction
Architect Kumar Narsingh Rana, Kishor Narsingh Rana[1]
Aerial shot of Tundikhel along with Singha durbar

Singha Durbar (Nepali: सिंहदरवार; translation: Lion's Palace) is a Rana palace in Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal. The palace complex lies in the centre of Kathmandu, to the north of the Babar Mahal and Thapathali Durbar and east of Bhadrakali.[2] This palace was built by Chandra Shumsher JBR in June 1908.[3]

History

It was built by Shumsher immediately after accession to the post of Prime Minister. It was initially a small private residence, but grew bigger during the construction. Immediately after construction Shumsher sold this property to the Government of Nepal for 20 million Nepali rupee as the official residence of Prime minister.[3] After his death in 1929, it was used as the official residence of prime ministers of Rana dynasty except Padma Shumsher JBR, who lived in his own Bishalnagar Durbar. The last Rana Prime minister to occupy Singha Durbar was Mohan Shumsher JBR. Even after the fall of Rana Dynasty in 1951, Mohan used this place, but in 1953 he was ordered by His Majesty's Government to leave the palace which became a National Property.[3]

Shingha Durbar

Design

Exterior structure

The structure was designed by Kumar Narsingh Rana, Kishor Narsingh Rana. The architecture of the palace is a unique example of merging building traditions, including Palladian, Corinthian, Neoclassical mansions along with Baroque architecture.[1][3]

Interior space

Before the fire of 1973, Singha Durbar had 7 courtyards and 1700 rooms with marbled floor, painted ceilings, silver furniture and expanses of crystal lighting.[1][4]

State Hall

View of the Durbar from the gardens

The State Hall is the largest and the most decorated room in this palace. This hall is adorned with foreign imported art pieces like Murano glass crystal chandeliers, Belgian mirrors along with English stained glass doors and Italian marble floors with floral patterns in walls and ceilings.[3]

Chandra Shumsher built a private theater and named it Gallery Baithak. It is used as a parliament building.

Under Government of Nepal

Main Gate of Singha Durbar

After the end of the hereditary Prime Minister system (Ranas), the government of Nepal used this palace compound to house government offices. The palace compound is occupied by both chambers of the Parliament of Nepal (the Pratinidhi Sabha, or House of Representatives, and the Rashtriya Sabha, or House of the States). It holds 20 ministries and government offices. Singh Darbar is also the headquarters of Radio Nepal and Nepal Television.

Disasters

Fire of 1973

On Monday, 9 July 1973, a huge fire broke out in Singha Durbar engulfing all three wings of the palace except the front facing wing . To prevent the front wing from catching fire, cannon destroyed three wings facing North, South and West.[4] After the fire was put out, the whole area was rebuilt on the old foundation.[4]

Earthquake of 2015

Singha Durbar was seriously damaged during the April 2015 Nepal earthquake. It was designated unsafe and was condemned.[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Mark Tushnet; Madhav Khosla (4 September 2015). Unstable Constitutionalism. Cambridge University Press. pp. 66–. ISBN 978-1-107-06895-7.
  2. "THE HISTORIC DURBARS OF KATHMANDU". 2014-10-19. Retrieved 2015-06-05.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 JBR, PurushottamShamsher (2007). Ranakalin Pramukh Atihasik Darbarharu [Chief Historical Palaces of the Rana Era] (in Nepali). Vidarthi Pustak Bhandar. ISBN 978-9994611027. Retrieved 2015. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  4. 1 2 3 http://www.thetaranights.com/singha-durbar/
  5. http://nepalitimes.com/blogs/mycity/2015/05/20/rana-palaces-after-the-earthquake/

Coordinates: 27°41′53.77″N 85°19′30.91″E / 27.6982694°N 85.3252528°E / 27.6982694; 85.3252528

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Singha Durbar, Kathmandu.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.