Mahala-Palace





In favour of Govindadevji: historical documents relating to a ...
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Monika Horstmann, Heike Bill, Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts - 1999 - 374 pages - Snippet view
"Govinda Mahala" obviously refers to the Surya Mahala, which now houses the temple of Sri Govindadeva; it is noteworthy that it is named "Mahala" (palace) instead of "Mandira" (temple). This implies that Sri Govindadeva was now the ...
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Royal palaces, residences, and pavilions of India: 13th through ...
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Fredrick W. Bunce - 2006 - 342 pages - Snippet view
The plan of the Athar Mahal is eminently suited for a Palace of Justice (Dad Mahal). The supplicants could have presented their petitions to the sultan as he was enthroned within the central porch of the second storey. ...
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The artists of Nathadwara: the practice of painting in Rajasthan - Page 41
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Tryna Lyons - 2004 - 360 pages - Preview
Built over a period of several centuries, this garh-mahal (fort-palace) is richly painted. ... whose place of origin is unknown. In 1883-86, two brothers from Udaipur named Nathu and Chhagan worked extensively at the Juna Mahal, ...
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Seeing Krishna: the religious world of a Brahman family in Vrindaban - Page 99
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Margaret H. Case - 2000 - 167 pages - Google eBook - Preview
Jaipur was laid out on a grid or mandala of nine squares, with the palace complex in the central square: a long mall ... palace was named Candra Mahala ( Moon Palace), and Govindadeva's temple was named Stirya Mahala (Sun Palace). ...
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International Sanskrit Conference: Volume 2, Issue 1
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Venkatarama Raghavan, India. Ministry of Education and Social Welfare - Snippet view
Mahal, Woman ; Mahala, Palace 3. Cancala, horse ; Cancala, fickle (2) In Vedic Sanskrit accent or stress on a particular syllable determines the meaning of a word, in Rajasthani stress on a particular syllable or lack of it changes the ..
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The making of Sikh scripture - Page 137
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Gurinder Singh Mann - 2001 - 193 pages - Google eBook - Preview
The hymns of the gurus are recorded under the title of Mahala (Arabic mahal, " palace"), which refers to the guru as the palace where God resides, and hence Mahala 1, Mahala 2, and so on. Some scholars associate this with Sanskrit mahila ...
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