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Nepalese architectural beauty is worth to explain it’s an art that has become an
important part of the Nepalese cultural heritage, where temples and palaces are
decorated with intricately carved windows, sculptural roof struts, and repoussé
metalwork facades. This architectural style is characteristic of the Newars,
the ethnic group that has traditionally lived in the Kathmandu Valley.
Stylistically, architecture of Nepal may be divided into three broad groups-the
pagoda style, the stupa style, and the shikhara style.
The Pagoda Style
The Pagoda style architecture refers to multi-roofed structures with wide eaves
supported by carved wooden struts. Windows, either latticed or grilled, are
usually projecting, while the roof is generally topped off by triangular spires
enclosing an inverted bell of stucco or burnished gold. The pagoda style shows
the finest specimens of the architectural genius of Nepal. The style was later
adopted in China and from there spread to other Asian countries. For this, the
tribute goes to a young architect-sculptor-painter named Balbahu, (or Ar-ni-ko
as the Chinese call him), who led a delegation of eighty Nepalese artists to
Tibet during the late 13th century at the invitation of the Chinese Emperor
Kublai Khan. The best example of the pagoda style in the Katmandu Valley is
Kasthamandap a wooden pagoda built in the Malla period; this is also the
structure from which the capital city is derived. The nine-storied Basantpur
Palace built by King Prithvi Narayan Shah is another outstanding pagoda
specimen. The Pashupati, Taleju and Changu Narayan temples are also notable
examples
The Stupa Style
The Swayambhu and Baudhanath Shrines are Nepal's first examples of stupa or
Chaitya style. This style is purely Buddhist in concept and execution. The
outstanding feature of stupas is a hemispherical mound topped by a square base
supporting a seried of thirteen circular rings. Narrowing towards the top these
are crowned by parasol. The four sides of the square base or the harmika, as it
is called, are painted with pairs of mystic "all-seeing eyes." The stupas in
Patan, said to have been built by King Ashoka, are considered to be the most
ancient stupas of Nepal.
The Shikhara style
The Shikhara style forms yet another architectural design found in Nepal. The
super-structure of this style is a tall curvilinear or pyramidal tower whose
surface is broken up vertically into five or nine sections. The final section
consists of a bell-shaped part at the top. The Krishna temple in Patan,
consecrated by Kind Siddhi Narasingh Malla is the finest specimen of the
relatively less popular Shikhara style.
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