Nepal Mandala

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Kirtipur with the Himalaya in the background.
View of Kathmandu Valley.
Map from 1886 showing Nepal Mandala between Gorkha in the west, Khatang in the east and Muckwanee in the south.
Silver coin issued by the kingdoms of Nepal Mandala, circulated in Tibet till the 18th century.

Nepal Mandala (

Newars in Nepal Mandala ended with its conquest by the Gorkha Kingdom and the rise of the Shah dynasty in 1768.[4]

According to the Outline History of Nepal, Nepal consisted of three kingdoms during the early medieval period:

Khas in the west, Karnatak in the south and Nepal Mandala in the center.[5]

Lalitpur, were established.[6]

Cultural area

The extent of Nepal Mandala has traditionally been defined by the locations of 64

Nuwakot district in the west to Bhimeswar in Dolakha District
in the east.

The 24 Buddhist pilgrimage sites are spread from the

Chakrasamvara, the principal deity of Vajrayana Buddhism. The Nepal Mandala was conceived on the basis of the Chakrasamvara Mandala.[7]

Francis Buchanan-Hamilton has written in An Account of the Kingdom Of Nepal published in 1819 that four pilgrimage spots marked the boundaries of Nepal Proper: Nilkantha (an eight-day journey north from Kathmandu), Nateswar (three days to the south), Kaleswar (two days to the west), and Bhimeswar (four days to the east).[8]

Political area

The term mandala also means country,

Malla
period is generally known as Nepal Mandala.

According to the Outline History of Nepal, Nepal Mandala was situated between the Khas and Simraungarh kingdoms. The

Khas kingdom extended from Garhwal in the west to the Trishuli River in the east, and from Lake Manasarovar in the north to the Terai in the south. Karnataka, also called Simraungarh, was situated in the Terai.[10]

Western travelers in the late 18th century have written that Nepal's borders extended to Tibet in the north, the nation of the Kirata in the east, the kingdom of Makwanpur in the south[11] and the Trishuli River in the west which separated it from the kingdom of Gorkha.[12]

In 1661, Jesuit Fathers Johann Grueber and Albert d'Orville travelled from Tibet to India through Nepal. They mentioned in their report that they passed through "Cuthi", the first town in the kingdom of "Necbal" (Nepal), and arrived in "Cadmendu" (Kathmandu), the capital of "Necbal". From "Cadmendu", a journey of five days brings one to "Hedouda", a market town in the kingdom of "Maranga".[13] The town of Hedouda is known as Hetauda today.

The inhabitants

The oldest inhabitants of Nepal Mandala are the

Newars who are of multiple racial strains that have combined over millennia. Newar civilization is a blend of different cultures that came together in Nepal Mandala.[14] According to sociologists, the people of Nepal gradually became known as Newar during the fifteenth century under the reign of Pratap Malla of Kathmandu.[15]

History

The Buddhist text Manjushrimula Kalpa mentions Manadeva (reigned 464-506 AD) as being the king of Nepal Mandala. The term Nepal Mandala also appears in the popular Buddhist text

Licchavi king Jayadeva II.[16] Legends also speak about the fact that old Kirati kings offered the throne of the Mandala to the Shakya clan, which is attributed to the origins of Buddhism
.

The term Nepal Mandala has been used through the centuries in stone and copper inscriptions and the colophons of manuscripts when mentioning the dedicator's address. It is also referred to during important Buddhist ceremonies.[17]

See also

  • Mandala (Southeast Asian history)

References

  1. . Pages 9-11.
  2. ^ Dhungel, Ramesh K. (January 2007). "Anguished Cry of a Defeated Ruler: A Raga Song Composed by Ranajit Malla". Contributions to Nepalese Studies. Retrieved 22 February 2013. Pages 95-102.
  3. . Page vii.
  4. .
  5. ^ "Outline History of Nepal" (PDF). Higher Secondary Education Board. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 5 April 2012. Page 2.
  6. . Page 1062.
  7. ^ Vajracharya, Naresh Man. "Buddhism in Nepal and Nepal Mandala". Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  8. ^ Hamilton, Francis Buchanan (1819). An Account of the Kingdom Of Nepal and of the Territories Annexed to This Dominion by the House of Gorkha. Edinburgh: Longman. Retrieved 4 June 2012. Page 192.
  9. ^ Subedi, Abhi (January 2002). "Travel as Theatre in Nepal Mandala" (PDF). Contributions to Nepalese Studies. Retrieved 16 April 2012. Page 173.
  10. ^ "Outline History of Nepal" (PDF). Higher Secondary Education Board. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2012. Page 2.
  11. ^ Giuseppe, Father (1799). "Account of the Kingdom of Nepal". Asiatick Researches. London: Vernor and Hood. Retrieved 9 March 2012. Page 308.
  12. ^ Kirkpatrick, Colonel (1811). An Account of the Kingdom of Nepaul. London: William Miller. Retrieved 9 March 2012. Page 123.
  13. ^ Levi, Sylvain. Nepal. Retrieved 14 March 2012. Page 50.
  14. . Page 11.
  15. . Retrieved 24 August 2013.
  16. ^ Shrestha, Rajendra (7 November 2010). "Various Communities of Historical Nepal Mandala and Newa: Autonomous State". Jheegu Swanigah (Special Issue). Page 60.
  17. . Page 15.

Further reading