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nepal info »
history of nepal |
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History Of Nepal |
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For centuries the kingdom of Nepal remained
divided into many principalities. Kirats ruled in the east, the
Newars in the Kathmandu Valley, While Gurungs and Magars occupied
the mid-west. The Kirats ruled from 300 BC and during their reign,
emperor Ashoka arrived from India to build a pillar at Lumbini in
memory of Lord Buddha.
The Lichchhavis whose descendants today are believed to be the
Newars of the Kathmandu Valley followed the kirats. During this
period, art thrived in Nepal and many of the beautiful woodcarving
and sculptures that are found in the country belong to this era.
With the end of the Lichchhavi dynasty, mall kings came to power
in 1200 AD and they also contributed tremendously to Nepal's art
and culture. However, after almost 600 years of rule, the kings
were not united among themselves and during the late 18th century,
Prithvi Narayan Shah, King of Gorkha, conquered Kathmandu and
united Nepal into one kingdom. Recognizing the threat of the
British Raj in India, he dismissed European missionaries from the
country and for more than a century, Nepal remained in isolation.
During the mid-19th century Jung Bahadur Rana became Nepal's first
prime minister to wield absolute power. He set up and oligarchy
and the Shah kings remained figureheads. The Ranas were overthrown
in a democracy movement of the early 1950s.
Today, Nepal enjoys a multiparty democratic system with a
constitutional Monarch. |
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