Patan officially Lalitpur Sub-Metropolitan City, is one of
the major cities
of Nepal
located in the south-central part of Kathmandu Valley. Patan is also known as Manigal. It is best known for its
rich cultural heritage, particularly its tradition of arts and crafts. It is
called city of festival and feast, fine ancient art, making of metallic and
stone carving statue. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 226,728 in 54,748 individual
households.[1]
|
Patan is on the elevated tract of
land in Kathmandu Valley on the south side of the Bagmati River,
which separates it from the city of Kathmandu on the northern and western side.
The Nakkhu Khola acts as the boundary on the southern side. It was developed on
relatively thin layers of deposited clay and gravel in the central part of a
dried ancient lake known as the Nagdaha.It
is among the largest cities in the country, along with Kathmandu,
Pokhara,
and Biratnagar.
Lalitpur is believed to have been
founded in the third century BC by the Kirat dynasty and later
expanded by Licchavis in the sixth century. It was further expanded by the Mallas
during the medieval period.
One of them was called Lalit, a
farmer who carried God Rato Machhindranath to the valley all the way from Assam, India. The purpose of bringing the God
Rato Machhindranath to the valley was to overcome the worst drought there.
There was a strong belief that the God Rato Machhindranath would bring rain in
the valley. It was due to Lalit's effort that the God Rato Machhindranath was
settled in Lalitpur. Many believe that the name of the town is kept after his
name Lalit and pur meaning township.
Lalitpur said to have been founded
by King Veer Deva in 299 AD, but there is unanimity among scholars that Patan
was a well established and developed town since ancient times. Several
historical records including many other legends indicate that Patan is the
oldest of all the cities of Kathmandu Valley. According to a very old Kirat chronicle, Patan was founded by
Kirat rulers long before the Licchavi rulers came into the political scene in Kathmandu Valley. According to that chronicle, the earliest known capital of
Kirat rulers was Thankot. Kathmandu,
the present capital was most possibly removed from Thankot to Patan after the
Kirati King Yalamber came into power sometimes around second century AD.
In 1768, Lalitpur was annexed to the
Gorkha Kingdom by Prithvi Narayan Shah in the Battle of Lalitpur.
Historical
monuments in Patan
The city was initially designed in
the shape of the Buddhist Dharma-Chakra (Wheel of Righteousness). The four thurs
or mounds on the perimeter of Patan are ascribed around, one at each corner of
its cardinal points, which are popularly known as Asoka Stupas. Legend has it
that Emperor Asoka
(the legendary King of India) visited with his daughter Charumati to Kathmandu
in 250 BC and erected five Asoka Stupas, four in the surrounding and one at the
middle of the Patan. The size and shape of these stupas seem to breathe their
antiquity in a real sense. There are more than 1,200 Buddhist
monuments of various shapes and sizes scattered in and around the city.
The most important monument of the
city is Patan Durbar Square, which has been listed by UNESCO as one of seven Monument Zones that
make up the Kathmandu Valley World Heritage Site. The seven monument zones were included in the World Heritage List in 1979 as one integrated site. The monument zones are
declared as protected and preserved according to the Monuments Preservation Act
of 1956.
No comments:
Post a Comment