Datia Palace
Established | 1614 |
---|---|
Location | Datia, India |
Type | Monument |
Datia Palace, also known as Bir Singh Palace or Bir Singh Dev Palace[1] is situated nearly 75 km from Gwalior City in Madhya pradesh. The specialty of this palace is that it is of 7 floor. However neither member from the royal family did ever lived here. The founder of the Datia State in Bundelkhand - Maharaj Birsingh Deo Build many such 52 monuments all around the Country India. Datia's Palace or the Satkhanda Palace is also called Datia Mahal,[2] as well as the Purana Mahal or the "Old palace", Historian Abdul Hamid Lahori came to this city with Shahan Jahan on 19 November 1635. He said that the palace was nearly 80 meters long and was also this much broad. He said this as a very beautiful and strong palace.
This Palace was made by spending 35 Lakh Rupees (78 thousand us dollars) and it took nine years to build it. It is situated on an isolated rock on the western side of the city Datia. It represents Mughal architecture along with Rajput architecture. It is the biggest and most famous of all the 52 palaces build by Raja birsingh Deo and it can be seen easily from a long distance.
Structure of the palace
The palace mainly has four quadrangular part with a "Mandap" or the main center on the central point of the Palace. It is totally made using stones and neither wood nor iron is used in this whole palace.
The eastern part of the palace is most beautiful and the tombs contains beautiful pictorial drawings and windows are beautifully carved out of stones. The central tomb and the other two tombs forms an incredible view. the central tomb has a Lord Ganesha's Temple inside and there are Lord Durga's temple on both the entrances of the palace. On the first part on the main entrance there is a temple of the main house deity of Bundels and one the second part there's a Dargah. A 1985 cyclone destroyed some parts of the palace but still this palace one of the beautiful place to visit for those who are really interested in the Mughal and Rajputana architecture and their beauty.
See also
References
External links
- Media related to Datia Palace at Wikimedia Commons
- Datia Fort: directed by G.S Chani and Gyandev Singh
- MP tourism official website
Coordinates: 25°41′N 78°28′E / 25.683°N 78.467°E