Several
buildings in the Square collapsed due to a major earthquake on 25 April 2015. Durbar Square was surrounded with
spectacular architecture and vividly showcases the skills of the Newar artists and craftsmen over
several centuries. The Royal Palace was originally at Dattaraya square and was
later moved to the Durbar square
The Kathmandu
Durbar Square held the palaces of the Malla and Shah kings who ruled over the city. Along
with these palaces, the square surrounds quadrangles, revealing courtyards and
temples. It is known as Hanuman Dhoka Durbar Square, a name derived from a
statue of Hanuman, the monkey devotee of Lord Ram, at the entrance of the palace.
History and construction
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 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.
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 no written archives stating the history of
Kathmandu Durbar Square, 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 the Taleju temple in 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.
Construction of the Karnel Chok is not clearly stated in any
historical inscriptions; although, it is probably the oldest among all the
courtyards in the square. The 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. 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,
Laksmi 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.
In Brief
Kathmandu’s
Durbar Square was where the city’s kings were once crowned and legitimised, and
from where they ruled (‘durbar’ means palace). As such, the square remains the
traditional heart of the old town and Kathmandu’s most spectacular legacy of
traditional architecture.
It’s easy to spend hours
wandering around the square and watching the world go by from the terraced
platforms of the towering Maju Deval; it’s a wonderful way to get a feel for
the city. Although most of the square dates from the 17th and 18th centuries
(many of the original buildings are much older), a great deal of rebuilding
happened after the great earthquake of 1934. The entire square was designated a
Unesco World Heritage Site in 1979.
The Durbar Sq area is actually
made up of three loosely linked squares. To the south is the open Basantapur Sq
area, a former royal elephant stables that now houses souvenir stalls and off
which runs Freak St. The main Durbar Sq area, with its popular
watch-the-world-go-by temples, is to the west. Running northeast is a second
part of Durbar Sq, which contains the entrance to the Hanuman Dhoka and an
assortment of temples. From this open area Makhan Tole, at one time the main
road in Kathmandu and still the most interesting street to walk down, continues
northeast.
A good place to start an
exploration of the square is with what may well be the oldest building in the
valley, the unprepossessing Kasthamandap.
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