Documents on Royal Goddesses
Goddesses have played a vital role for the conception, constitution and expression of rulership in Nepal. In royal ideology kings have depended one their śakti, "might" or "regal power", that manifests in many forms. Accordingly the Shah kings, as earlier dynasties too, sponsored rituals and worship places of different goddesses both, at their capitals as well as all throughout their realm. Tracing the relation between female deities and human rulers as well as the goddesses' relations to one another with a particular focus on the history and development of specific local worship traditions is the aim of this project.
Digutaleju
Guhyeśvarī
Kaḍelacoka Bhagavatī
Kumārī
Manakāmanā
Palāñcoka Bhagavatī
Taleju
Tripurasundarī
K_0025_0027C: A copy of a lālamohara from King Surendra ordering Colonel Kṛṣṇadhvaja Kũvara Rāṇā to extend the period of Vīsnupada Pādhyā's oversight of the Tripurasundarī guṭhī in Tripurākoṭ (VS 1911)
K_0316_0009: A lagata of a guṭhī of the Tripurasundarī temple in Tauthali, Sindhupalchok (VS 2008)
The Rāṇās' iṣṭadevatā/kuladevatā
Places
Baitadi
Bhaktapur
Dhading
Dolpa
K_0025_0027C: A copy of a lālamohara from King Surendra ordering Colonel Kṛṣṇadhvaja Kũvara Rāṇā to extend the period of Vīsnupada Pādhyā's oversight of the Tripurasundarī guṭhī in Tripurākoṭ (VS 1911)