Ujjayanta Palace

Coordinates: 23°30′04″N 91°09′57″E / 23.5010°N 91.1657°E / 23.5010; 91.1657
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23°30′04″N 91°09′57″E / 23.5010°N 91.1657°E / 23.5010; 91.1657

Ujjayanta Palace
Map
Established1901
LocationPalace Compound, Agartala, India
TypeMuseum
Kingdom of Tripura
Part of History of Tripura
Maha Manikyac. 1400–1431
Dharma Manikya I1431–1462
Ratna Manikya I1462–1487
Pratap Manikya1487
Vijaya Manikya I1488
Mukut Manikya1489
Dhanya Manikya1490–1515
Dhwaja Manikya1515–1520
Deva Manikya1520–1530
Indra Manikya I1530–1532
Vijaya Manikya II1532–1563
Ananta Manikya1563–1567
Udai Manikya I1567–1573
Joy Manikya I1573–1577
Amar Manikya1577–1585
Rajdhar Manikya I1586–1600
Ishwar Manikya1600
Yashodhar Manikya1600–1623
Interregnum1623–1626
Kalyan Manikya1626–1660
Govinda Manikya1660–1661
Chhatra Manikya1661–1667
Govinda Manikya1661–1673
Rama Manikya1673–1685
Ratna Manikya II1685–1693
Narendra Manikya1693–1695
Ratna Manikya II1695–1712
Mahendra Manikya1712–1714
Dharma Manikya II1714–1725
Jagat Manikya1725–1729
Dharma Manikya II1729
Mukunda Manikya1729–1739
Joy Manikya IIc. 1739–1744
Indra Manikya IIc. 1744–1746
Udai Manikya IIc. 1744
Joy Manikya II1746
Vijaya Manikya III1746–1748
Lakshman Manikya1740s/1750s
Interregnum1750s–1760
Krishna Manikya1760–1783
Rajdhar Manikya II1785–1806
Rama Ganga Manikya1806–1809
Durga Manikya1809–1813
Rama Ganga Manikya1813–1826
Kashi Chandra Manikya1826–1829
Krishna Kishore Manikya1829–1849
Ishan Chandra Manikya1849–1862
Bir Chandra Manikya1862–1896
Birendra Kishore Manikya1909–1923
Bir Bikram Kishore Manikya1923–1947
Kirit Bikram Kishore Manikya1947–1949
1949–1978 (titular)
Kirit Pradyot Manikya1978–present (titular)
Tripura monarchy data
Manikya dynasty (Royal family)
Agartala (Capital of the kingdom)
Ujjayanta Palace (Royal residence)
Pushbanta Palace (Royal residence)
Neermahal (Royal residence)
Rajmala (Royal chronicle)
Tripura Buranji (Chronicle)
Chaturdasa Devata (Family deities)

The Ujjayanta Palace ([উজ্জয়ন্ত প্রাসাদ, Ujjoyonto Prashad] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)) is a former royal palace of the Tripura (princely state) situated in Agartala, the capital of the Indian state of Tripura, and also served as the meeting place of the Tripura Legislative Assembly until 2011 and now a museum. Ujjayanta Palace is a tourist attraction of Agartala, and tours are conducted by the Tripura Tourism Department. The Palace stands on the banks of a small lake surrounded by the lush greenery of Mughal gardens in Agartala, sprawling over 28 hectares of parkland, the exotic palace has several Hindu temples dedicated to Lakshmi Narayan, Uma-Maheshwari, Kali and Jagannath. It is the largest museum in Northeast India covering an area of over 800 acres of land in the capital city, Ujjayanta Palace was the command hub until the erstwhile princely Tripura`s accession to India in October 1949.[1] The museum showcases the lifestyle, arts, culture, tradition and utility crafts, beside the customs and practices of various communities residing in northeast India. The name Ujjayanta Palace was given by Rabindranath Tagore.[2] The Palace was purchased from the royal family by the Tripura government in 1972-73 for Rs. 2.5 million, housed the state legislative assembly till July 2011. It was constructed between 1899 and 1901 by then Tripura king, Maharaja Radha Kishore Manikya.[3]

History

Tripura claims to be one of the oldest princely States of ancient India. The historical chapter of the Royal line of Tripura, known as the Manikya dynasty, began during the reign of Maharaja Maha Manikya, who ascended the throne, being crowned in 1400 A.D., and was the first ruler, started his governance of the State under the Royal title of Manikya.[4] Ujjayanta Palace was originally built in 1862 by then king Ishan Chandra Manikya (1849-1862) and it was devastated by a massive quake in June 1897 then the Palace was built by Maharaja Radha Kishore Manikya during 1899–1901[5] at a cost of 10 lakh (1 million) rupees[6] despite financial constraints.[7] The earlier royal palace of the Kingdom of Tripura was located 10 km (6 mi) away from Agartala. However, the earlier palace was destroyed as a result of a devastating earthquake in 1897, and replaced with Ujjayanta Palace in the heart of Agartala city.[6] The project, which cost a million rupees, was started in 1899, with construction by Martin & Burn Company, and continued for two years until finally being completed in 1901. It was the model of the Maharajah's palace in Tintin and the Cigars of the Pharaoh.

As state assembly building

A panoramic view of the palace during 2007

From 1972 to 2011 the Palace remained as meeting place of Tripura Legislative AssemblyFrom 1972 to 2011 the Palace remained as meeting place of Tripura Legislative Assembly.

Upon the merger of the Kingdom of Tripura with India in 1949, royal properties were nationalised. The main building along with the area of the palace was sold to the Government of Tripura during the period of Maharaja Radhakishor Manikya Bahadur and hence Ujjayanta Palace remained unoccupied for some time before beginning its role as the State Legislative. Building.

Ujjayanta Palace was provided with seismic retrofitting to prevent it from possible earthquake damage before making it a museum at a cost of Rs. 100 million. It was purchased from the royal family by the Tripura government in 1972-73 and housed the Tripura legislative assembly until July 2011.[8]

As state museum

In realisation of a century-old dream, Ujjayanta Palace is the home to Tripura Government Museum, the biggest museum in the region. The museum showcases northeast India’s art, culture, history, tradition and ethnic diversity. The Tripura government’s museum, which was established in 1970 at the heart of Agartala city, along with the state archive has also been shifted to the new museum. [9] The museum was inaugurated by the Vice President of India Mohammad Hamid Ansari on 26 September 2013.

Early in the museum's history, controversy erupted over the state government's proposed move to rename Ujjayanta Palace, erstwhile royal abode of the Manikya kings, to Tripura State Museum. The Indigenous Nationalist Party of Twipra has written to Vice President Hamid Ansari protesting against the move, INPT objected to the move saying deletion of the word 'Ujjayanta' is aimed at hurting sentiments of tribal populace of the state. Ujjayanta Palace served as the Tripura state legislative assembly till 2011. The royal family is reported to have spent Rs 1 million despite financial constraints at the time. Martin & Burn Company was assigned to build the palace which was completed in 1901. The government also said it had already decided to build a statue of Maharaj Radha Kishore Manikya at the museum premises. The clarification appeared to be made to end the ongoing palace controversy.[10]

The government also said it had already decided to build a statue of Maharaj Radha Kishore Manikya at the museum premises. The clarification, it appears, was made to end the ongoing palace controversy.[11]

Design

Ujjayanta Palace compound covers an area of approximately one km².[citation needed] The main block covers 800 acres (3.2 km2), comprising public halls such as the Throne room, the Durbar hall, Library and the Reception hall.[12] The Neoclassical palace was designed by Sir Alexander Martin of Messrs Martin & Co.[12] The Chinese Room is particularly notable, the ceiling of which was crafted by artisans brought from China.[13] The palace has a mixed type of architecture, the two-storied[14] palace has three large domes, the largest of which is 86 ft (26 m) high from the ground,[15] and which rests atop a four-storied central tower. The palace has tiled floors and carved front doors. Newer attractions are the musical fountain installed in front of the main entrance, and the night-time floodlights. The grounds are laid out as formal Mughal gardens adorned with fountains.[6] There are two large artificial ponds on either side of the garden which is decorated with pools and fountains. The main block includes public halls Throne room, Durbar hall, Library and the Reception hall. A Chinese room was later in the palace.[16]

Several Hindu temples occupy plots adjacent to Ujjayanta Palace, dedicated to Lakshmi Narayan, Uma-Maheshwari, Kali and Jagannath.[citation needed]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ "Museums are valuable source of history, heritage: Vice president". Zee News.
  2. ^ http://www.goibibo.com/travel-guide/agartala/places-to-visit/ujjayanta-palace/159/
  3. ^ Radha Kishore Manikya
  4. ^ Tripura Legislative Assembly
  5. ^ Indnav.com, retrieved on 31 May 2007.
  6. ^ a b c North-east-india.com, retrieved on 31 May 2007.
  7. ^ Westtripura.gov.in, retrieved on 3.6.2007
  8. ^ firstpost.com/tripuras-royal-mansion-to-house-northeasts-biggest-museum-1131429.html?utm_source=fwire&utm_medium=cat
  9. ^ "Tripura's royal mansion to house northeast's biggest museum". Firstpost.
  10. ^ Press Trust of India (17 September 2013). "Tribals protest renaming of Tripura palace". business-standard.com.
  11. ^ "Tripura museum to retain name of Ujjayanta Palace". The Times of India.
  12. ^ a b Twipra.com, retrieved on 3.6.2007
  13. ^ tourtravelworld.com, retrieved on 31 May 2007.
  14. ^ Tripura.nic.in. Retrieved 3.6.2007.
  15. ^ Indiatravelogue.com, retrieved on 31 May 2007.
  16. ^ goibibo.com/travel-guide/agartala/places-to-visit/ujjayanta-palace/159/