‘Himalaya’ and ‘City’ aren’t words that go so well together. Or that’s what the conventional wisdom is.
The result of years of painstaking research and stunning erudition, the book approaches its subject from various per- spectives. One is the role of the natural environment. The Himalaya, as Shankar maintains, plays a very important role in the mythical and cultural imagination of the sub-continent. While this is true throughout the South Asian landmass, in a way it’s even more intense in the regions that either lie smack in the middle of the range or in the areas that abut the Himalayan setting. A combination of this and the fact that the mountains have historically been home to a large array of ‘distinct ethno-political communities’ — as Shankar astutely puts it — has resulted in a wide variety of cities, public spaces and architecture.
The most stunning of these is certainly the Kathmandu valley. In this small valley, at least a thousand years of cultural efflorescence and trade gave rise to a unique and highly artistically evolved architecture and urban planning. With their unique syncretic culture, the three city-states of the valley — Kathmandu, Patan and Bhaktapur — have been designing public spaces with a very clear idea of what lies within a city and what lies without. Even within the city, following the conception of a mandala, the centre of the city, usually the designated area holding the royal courts and (Hindu) royal temples are surrounded by a radiating hierarchy of residential quarters grouped around courtyards (mostly Buddhist). This interplay of religious motifs — with their respective symbolism and philosophical perspectives — inform the urban landscape.
That’s just Nepal. Shankar painstakingly investigates the spaces of other notable Himala- yan cities, like the capitals of the kingdoms of Chamba, Mandi and Ladakh, among others. He also devotes a section on the coming of the British and the Colonial imaginary that produced so much original architecture in our hill stations. Assisted by lavishly illustrated floorplans, cross-sections, sketches and photographs of the outstanding structures — temples, castles, monasteries — Shankar goes deep into his subject, and produces an exhaustive and lively work.
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