Kathmandu Durbar Square, or Basantapur Durbar Square is the plaza in front of the old royal palace of the Kathmandu Kingdom. It is one of three Durbar Squares in the Kathmandu Valley in Nepal, all of which are UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
The Durbar square is surrounded with spectacular architecture and vividly showcases the skills of the Newar
artists and craftsmen over several centuries. The royal palace was
originally situated at Dattaraya square and was only later moved to the
Durbar square location.
The Kathmandu Durbar Square holds the palaces of the Malla and Shah
kings who ruled over the city. Along with these palaces, the square also
surrounds quadrangles revealing courtyards and temples. The square is
presently known as Hanuman Dhoka, a name derived from the statue of
Hanuman, the monkey devotee of Lord Ram, near the entrance of the
palace. The preference for the construction of royal palaces at this
site dates back to as early as the Licchavi period in the third century.
Even though the present palaces and temples have undergone repeated and
extensive renovations and nothing physical remains from that period,
names like Gunapo and Gupo, which are the names referred to the palaces
in the square in early scriptures, imply that the palaces were built by
Gunakamadev, a king ruling late in the tenth century. When Kathmandu
City became independent under the rule of King Ratna Malla (1484–1520)
the palaces in the square became the royal palaces for its Malla kings.
When Prithvi Narayan Shah invaded the Kathmandu Valley in 1769, he also
favored the Kathmandu Durbar Square for his palace. Other subsequent
Shah kings continued to rule from the square until 1896 when they moved
to the Narayan Hiti Palace. However, the square is still the center of
important royal events like the coronation of King Birendra Bir Bikram
Shah in 1975 and King Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah in 2001.
Though there are not any written archives stating the history of the
Kathmandu Durbar Square, the construction of the palace in the square is
credited to Sankharadev (1069–1083). As the first king of the
independent Kathmandu City, Ratna Malla is said to have built a Taleju
temple at the Northern side of the palace in 1501. For this to be true
then the temple would have had to have been built in the vihara style as
part of the palace premise surrounding the Mul Chok courtyard for no
evidence of a separate structure that would match this temple can be
found within the square.
The construction of the Karnel Chok is also not clearly stated in any
historical inscriptions although it is probably the oldest among all
the courtyards in the square. A Bhagavati Temple, originally known as a
Narayan Temple, rises above the mansions surrounding it and was added
during the time of Jagajaya Malla in the early eighteenth century. The
Narayan idol within the temple was stolen so Prithvi Narayan Shah
replaced it with an image of Bhagavati, completely transforming the name
of the temple.
The oldest temples in the square are those built by Mahendra Malla
(1560–1574). They are the temples of Jagannath, Kotilingeswara Mahadev,
Mahendreswara, and the Taleju Temple. This three-roofed Taleju Temple
was established in 1564, in a typical Newari architectural style and is
elevated on platforms that form a pyramid-like structure. It is said
that Mahendra Malla, when he was residing in Bhaktapur, was highly
devoted to the Taleju Temple there; the Goddess being pleased with his
devotion gave him a vision asking him to build a temple for her in the
Kathmandu Durbar Square. Then with a help of a hermit, he designed the
temple to give it its present form and the Goddess entered the temple in
the form of a bee.
His successors Sadasiva (1575–1581), his son, Shiva Simha
(1578–1619), and his grandson, Laxmi Narsingha (1619–1641), do not seem
to have made any major additions to the square. During this period of
three generations the only constructions to have occurred were the
establishment of Degutale Temple dedicated to Goddess Mother Taleju by
Shiva Simha and some enhancement in the royal palace by Laksminar Simha.
It was in the time of Pratap Malla, son of Laksminar Simha, that the
square was extensively developed. He was an intellectual, a pious
devotee, and he was especially interested in arts. He called himself a
Kavindra, king of poets, and boasted that he was learned in fifteen
different languages. A passionate builder, following his coronation as a
king, he immediately began enlargements to his royal palace, and
rebuilt some old temples and constructed new temples, shrines and stupas
around his kingdom. there also took the massacre called Kot Parva where
the queen, prime minister, head of the states,and other people with
guards died. this massacre took place in the court yard inside the
palace.
At the Southern end of the square, near Kasthamandap at Maru,
which was the main city crossroads for early traders, he built another
pavilion named Kavindrapura, the mansion of the king of poets. In this
mansion he set an idol of dancing Shiva, Nasadyo, which today is highly
worshipped by dancers in the Valley.
In the process of beautifying his palace, he added fountains, ponds, and
baths. In Sundari Chok, he established a low bath with a golden
fountain. He also built a small pond, the Naga Pokhari, in the palace
adorned with Nagakastha, a wooden serpent, which is said he had ordered
stolen from the royal pond in the Bhaktapur Durbar Square. He also
restored the Licchavi stone sculptures such as the Jalasayana Narayana,
the Kaliyadamana, and the Kala Bhairav. An idol of Jalasayana Narayana
was placed in a newly created pond in the Bhandarkhal garden in the
Eastern wing of the palace. As a substitute to the idol of Jalasayana
Narayana in Buddhanilkantha, he channeled water from Buddhanilkantha to
the pond in Bhandarkhal due bestow authenticity. The Kalyadana, a
manifestation of Lord Krishna destroying Kaliya, a water serpent, is
placed in Kalindi Chok, which is adjacent to the Mohan Chok. The
approximately ten feet high image of terrifyingly portrayed Kal Bhairav is placed near the Jagannath Temple. This image is the focus of worship in the chok especially during Durga Puja.
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