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Nepal: A detail of the Golden Gate (Sun Dhoka) showing the Hindu deities decorating the left side of the gate. The Golden Gate leads to the Taleju Temple within the Royal Palace complex, Bhaktapur, Kathmandu Valley (1997)

Nepal: A detail of the Golden Gate (Sun Dhoka) showing the Hindu deities decorating the left side of the gate. The Golden Gate leads to the Taleju Temple within the Royal Palace complex, Bhaktapur, Kathmandu Valley (1997)

The Golden Gate or Sun Dhoka, marks the entry to the Taleju Temple within the palace complex. The gate was built in 1753 by Ranajita Malla (r. 1722 - 1769) and his wife Jayalakshmi to commemorate the performance of a religious fire rite (kotyahuti-yagya), and it turned out to be the finest piece of gilded copper-work in Bhaktapur, possibly in the whole Kathmandu Valley.

Highly ornate in itself, the panels left and right of the door, depicting ten different deities, are superb examples of the art of repoussé. On the panels, Ranajita is mentioned as the ruler of a territory that extended as far as the Dudhkoshi River in the east, including the town of Dolakha.

Above the door, the golden torana shows Taleju Bhavani with her sixteen arms radiating out like some strange kind of half-insect, half-goddess. Above her, at the top of the torana, an image shows the Garuda with serpents coiling all around him.






Copyright:

CPA Media Co. Ltd.

Photographer:

Chaweewan Chuchuay

Credit:

Pictures From Asia

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