At the time the term Nepal was applied only to Kathmandu valley. The nation did not exist. The present Nepal was divided into several small provinces. The Baise Chaubise Rajya in the west.The valley itself was divided into smaller fragments like Kathmadu, Patan and Bhaktapur. The prime concern of Prithivi Narayan Shah was to rule over Kathmandu valley. In some way his ambition was to rule a greater and powerful Nepal.
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Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Friday, June 3, 2011
Nepal - a dream by Prithivi Narayan Shah(पृथ्वी नारायण शाह) !
Nepal -- beautiful word in itself. With the name, Nepal is a beautiful country.A sovereign state located in South Asia.
The hilltop Royal Palace in Gorkha
Since ages Nepal has been known as the land of the brave Gurkhas, the name given owing to the bravery shown by the Nepali soldiers in war while serving their motherland and other nationalities as well.Initially the word Gurkhas came from the name of a place Gorkha situated in the mid-western hills of Nepal.
King Prithivi Narayan Shah
As depicted in the history Nepal was divided into small kingdoms and states. Such states were called baise chaoubise rajya in the native tongue.It was the dream,vision and farsightedness of Late king Prithivi Narayan Shah, a Shah monarch of Gorkha who conquered and united the small kingdom to a greater Nepal.Gorkha was itself a small kingdom with a small economy.Prithvi Narayan Shah was the eldest son of his father and king Narabhupal Shah born in the year 1723 AD(1779 BS).Prithivi Narayan Shah's mother Kaushalyawati was one among the four queens of his father(king).He was the ninth generation descendant of Dravya Shah (1559–1570), the founder of the ruling house of Gorkha. Though he was born to queen Kaushalyawati he was raised and educated by his senior step mother Chandra Prabhavati.It was through her schooling he learned all the good traits of a good king and a successful emperor.It was the inspiration of his senior mother that made him so loyal and dedicated with the unification and the dream of greater Nepal.He started taking general concern with the affairs of the state at a very young age as his father spent most of his time in the prayer room.From his very childhood he loved to walk around his kingdom, this helped him a lot to understand his kingdom and his citizens. His citizens also loved the future king.They believed in him.This was also quite inspirational for him.He believed in the existence of a greater and stronger Nepal. Since then he directed all of his actions, thoughts and deeds towards his campaign of unification.His fellow citizens were always strongly supportive in his campaign. To be precise it was the financial help from the people of Gorkha which laid the foundation of the campaign.Each household from the sacred land of Gorkha helped their beloved king in his campaign in every possible way they could.King Nrabhupal was highly spiritual in nature.He did not paid much attention to his royalness and ruling much.King Narabhupal left Gorkha and went to Kashi (an holy place in India ).So Prithivi Narayan Shah was in charged with the ruling of his nation at an age of 16.Later after the demise of his father in 1743 he was crowned as the king of Gorkha.
The hilltop Royal Palace in Gorkha
Since ages Nepal has been known as the land of the brave Gurkhas, the name given owing to the bravery shown by the Nepali soldiers in war while serving their motherland and other nationalities as well.Initially the word Gurkhas came from the name of a place Gorkha situated in the mid-western hills of Nepal.
King Prithivi Narayan Shah
As depicted in the history Nepal was divided into small kingdoms and states. Such states were called baise chaoubise rajya in the native tongue.It was the dream,vision and farsightedness of Late king Prithivi Narayan Shah, a Shah monarch of Gorkha who conquered and united the small kingdom to a greater Nepal.Gorkha was itself a small kingdom with a small economy.Prithvi Narayan Shah was the eldest son of his father and king Narabhupal Shah born in the year 1723 AD(1779 BS).Prithivi Narayan Shah's mother Kaushalyawati was one among the four queens of his father(king).He was the ninth generation descendant of Dravya Shah (1559–1570), the founder of the ruling house of Gorkha. Though he was born to queen Kaushalyawati he was raised and educated by his senior step mother Chandra Prabhavati.It was through her schooling he learned all the good traits of a good king and a successful emperor.It was the inspiration of his senior mother that made him so loyal and dedicated with the unification and the dream of greater Nepal.He started taking general concern with the affairs of the state at a very young age as his father spent most of his time in the prayer room.From his very childhood he loved to walk around his kingdom, this helped him a lot to understand his kingdom and his citizens. His citizens also loved the future king.They believed in him.This was also quite inspirational for him.He believed in the existence of a greater and stronger Nepal. Since then he directed all of his actions, thoughts and deeds towards his campaign of unification.His fellow citizens were always strongly supportive in his campaign. To be precise it was the financial help from the people of Gorkha which laid the foundation of the campaign.Each household from the sacred land of Gorkha helped their beloved king in his campaign in every possible way they could.King Nrabhupal was highly spiritual in nature.He did not paid much attention to his royalness and ruling much.King Narabhupal left Gorkha and went to Kashi (an holy place in India ).So Prithivi Narayan Shah was in charged with the ruling of his nation at an age of 16.Later after the demise of his father in 1743 he was crowned as the king of Gorkha.
To be continued.....
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Abbottabad - an unheard place!
A small city in Pakistan acquires a unique place in history.Abbottabad - the name which was rarely heard of in the past has acquired a fame of its own.
Life tends to be simpler, slower, safer in Abbottabad than in many Pakistani cities.
Drivers take their time on the winding mountain roads. Streets are largely empty at night, with people routinely turning in by 9 p.m. And violence found in tribal areas near the Afghanistan border, in the disputed territory of Kashmir, and denser cities including Lahore and Islamabad typically has no place in Abbottabad.
Until Monday morning, that is. That's when Abbottabad went from a sleepy northern Pakistani city 50 kilometers (31 miles) north of the Pakistani capital of Islamabad to the site of a bloody and historic firefight. There, in a city heavily populated with Pakistani army personnel, a handful of American special forces executed a daring 40-minute raid in which they killed Osama bin Laden, the world's most well-known terrorist leader.
The electricity was out in Abbottabad early Monday, recalled city resident Sohair Athar. This was not an especially unusual occurrence, he said. Nor was the buzz of a helicopter overhead, especially given the abundance of such flights since massive floods ravaged the region.
But the freelance software engineer, who also owns a coffee shop in town, noticed the helicopter didn't land immediately, as they usually do. Instead it hovered, prompting him to write on his Twitter feed: "Go away helicopter - before I take out my giant swatter :-/."
Shortly thereafter, Athar -- who had come to the typically restive city of Abbottabad in part for peace and security from Lahore -- heard a loud explosion.
"I thought to myself, I had moved all the way to Abbottabad from Lahore only to avoid bomb blasts and violence, and now this had even followed me even here," Athar told CNN.
Fayez Noor, a 24-year-old student at the Institute of Information and Technology, heard three explosions in all. After the first one at 1:08 a.m., he texted a friend to ask him what happened. The last -- coming just three minutes later -- was the biggest.
"My house, which is three kilometers (two miles) away (from the bid Laden compound), shook and the glass in the windows rattled," Noor recalled.
Helicopters were seen, too, heading out. Noor said that one flew over his house, while Sahndana Syed, a doctor in the city, saw one final chopper flying off very low.But within just a few minutes, by 1:15 a.m., the power was back on.
"I did not think much of it, other than these were odd occurrences," recalled Athar. "I shut my laptop and walked away."
As people went to sleep, Pakistani TV stations reported it was all part of a Pakistani military exercise. It was not until after dawn that the facts became evident: one of the world's most wanted fugitives, bin Laden, had been living in their midst and was now dead, killed by U.S. forces.
"Initially, I was too afraid to go out," Syed said. "I was terrified."
"It came as a big surprise," said Syed, the 28-year-old doctor. "Nobody knew."
By the next day, the blockage of streets around the housing compound where bin Laden lived was the most visible reminder of the raid. Residents talked over tea about the fact the mastermind of the September 11, 2001, and other attacks, just a few hours earlier, had lived in their midst -- and that a foreign military, too, had descended on their city.
Noor said that some in Abbottabad are angry at the Pakistani government, not just for letting other nation's military strike in their hometown but also for the fact its own military, despite having a major base down the street, never acted on its own.
Still, for the talk, the college student said that it didn't take the city long to return to normal.
"The truth is, we're all going about our lives as though nothing happened," said Noor. "I went to college today (with) my friends here, and traffic is at is always is."
Friday, April 29, 2011
Balcony kisses seal royal wedding
Prince William and Kate Middleton have kissed twice on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after their wedding service in Westminster Abbey.
They were cheered by 500,000 well-wishers who gathered outside the palace, as RAF planes flew past in honour of the new royal couple.
Police estimate a million people lined the procession route from the abbey to the palace.
The bride will now be Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cambridge.
Prince William drove his new bride back to Clarence House, following a buffet reception at Buckingham Palace, in Prince Charles's classic blue Aston Martin, decked in ribbons and balloons with "Just Wed" on the number plate.
They will return to the palace for evening celebrations later.Following a long tradition, the ring has been fashioned from Welsh gold given to Prince William by the Queen.The church service, watched by 1,900 guests, ran smoothly but the prince did struggle to place the wedding ring on the duchess's finger.
After the couple said their vows, in which she did not promise to obey William, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Reverend Rowan Williams, declared: "I pronounce that they be man and wife together, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen."
They spent a private moment together with their families, as they signed the marriage register.
Prince William has been given the title of the Duke of Cambridge by the Queen, and Miss Middleton has become Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cambridge on their marriage.
The duchess, who managed to keep her wedding dress a secret, is wearing an ivory and lace gown by Sarah Burton at Alexander McQueen. The prince is wearing the red tunic of an Irish Guards colonel - his most senior honorary appointment.
Well-known faces spotted at Westminster Abbey included singer-songwriter Sir Elton John and his partner David Furnish, former England rugby coach Sir Clive Woodward, and former England football captain David Beckham and his wife Victoria.
Actor Rowan Atkinson, a close friend of Prince Charles, Prince Harry's friend Chelsy Davy and film director Guy Ritchie were also there.
UK Prime Minister David Cameron and his wife Samantha, Australian prime minister Julia Gillard, former British PM Sir John Major, and Home Secretary Theresa May were among the politicians present.
For those lining the route, large speakers broadcast the wedding service, and hundreds of millions of people were estimated to watch the proceedings worldwide on television.
Royal wedding: Prince William drives bride in Aston Martin
Prince William has driven his newly titled bride the Duchess of Cambridge from Buckingham Palace to Clarence House in a car festooned with balloons and L-plates.
The vintage convertible Aston Martin, which belongs to Prince Charles, had been decorated with red, white and blue ribbons and bore a number plate reading JU5T WED.
The couple, leaving the palace after their buffet wedding reception for 650 people hosted by the Queen, were followed by some of the prince's RAF colleagues in a Sea King helicopter.
Monday, April 25, 2011
Sunday, April 3, 2011
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