April 20, 2012

Chowmahalla or the Four Palaces of Hyderabad

My friend Sandhya Vasanth is excited about the Hyderabad Festival and one of the music programmes was  held at the chowmahalla Palace. A jugalbandi between Pt Balamuralikrishna and Pt. Vishwamohan Bhat. This reminded me that I had promised her that i would put in the pictures of the palace.

The first two days of our Hyderabad visit were spent at Ushegaon-tumriguda villages near Adilabad  accompanied by Prof. Trilochan shastri of IIM, Bangalore. We were there on a study tour regarding the constitution of SHGs and their mode of functioning in Andhra Pradesh and to replicate  anything new from them in Karnataka. Though we were accompanied by our colleagues Kempegouda and Satish Kattimani, they did not come with us to the choumahalla, citing tiredness , as on the previous day we had been to the charminar and  had done some shopping at night and it was quite hectic to say the least.

Chaumahalla was the most favorite place i visited in Hyderabad. the watchman in the premise was kind enough to tell us the story of these four palaces. I always say a place is good or bad by the vibes/energies it gives out. My family members of course call me crazy..but thats how i am . This place has very good vibes and i spent more than half a day here. Enjoy the pictures

The Palace has a history which goes back to over a period of 200 years built by the Nizams of Hyderabad. the four palaces are named Afzal Mahal, Mehtab Mahal, Tahniyath Mahal and Aftaab Mahal. Great architectural splendour, a  sight for the sore eyes. The structures are the confluence of many architectural styles mostly persian though.The buildings and the gardens are  maintained quite well.

A view of the three palaces and the Khilwat Clock tower in the midst

At the entrance. The public toilet is housed here. Some repair work being undertaken


Loved the pot shaped light holders


Miniature of a palace in Silver

Boom
Me with the Nizam

The palm tree lined walk

the arches and the art

three of us with fountain and Darbar hall at the backdrop



The rest house for the visiting dignitaries on the south courtyard

Exact replica of the resting house on the northern courtyard


Inside the grand Darbar Hall also called the Khilwat mubarak





A view of the chandeliers

The Royal seat or the takt-e-nishan


A hand made print depicting the location of palaces and its garden in parchment paper



A room full of black and white pictures/painting showing the various people reigning Hyderabad and some of the palaces.

A close up of one of the chandeliers

Guard Bhaiyya said they have to be on their feet for eight hours at a stretch without any respite. Its totally inhuman if you ask me

Dont know what this is

Entrance to the armory

The grand Darbar Hall. Srikanth with his cell phone and me grring at him long distance :-) Private functions can be held at the hall said the guard

the Chou-shenoys at the choumahalla


Naked wrestlers - in marble

In the Nizams Armory- most of the pic in Srikanth's cell phone and that cell phone was lost. The armory has swords, sheaths, knives, khukri all well displayed , some with intricate designs.

Mannequins in royal attire



Hind entrance to the Palaces

Temple Trees in full bloom


Sri, me and akka

The clock tower to your right
A vintage car musuem housed in the premise. But nothing beats the vintage car museum of Dharmasthala

A closer view of the resting house

hah at last tired of the tour of the palaces we rest under the canopy of a shady tree with birds twittering away. But no breeze mind you

Miya, biwi aur beti no. 1. While me and Srikanth give a romantic pose Malavika is lost in a dream world of her own



the tasty fruit salad coated in malai. fruits were Sapota/Chikku, papaya and a a few pieces of pine apple.
One of our enjoyable jampacked office cum pleasure trips
This post is for you Sandhya Vasanth! Cilck on the pictures for a larger view
:-)
Photographs by Srikanth and Niharika

8 comments:

Radhika said...

Malathi, I get inspired to visit places by reading your posts :-)

Sandhya Vasanth said...

Thanks a lot Malathi - for dedicating a post! I am thrilled...

Sandhya

nenapina sanchy inda said...

Radhika: thank u...how about pictures of kashmir?

Sandhya: Pleasure is mine!!

:-)
ms

Badarinath Palavalli said...

Nice article Malathi avare. Nice pictures too.

I have shared this article as "Best Blog of the Day series" on my wall.

NANJUNDARAJU said...

maanyare, olleya chitra sangraha. heegeye namma raajyada mattu bere raajyada prekshaneeya stalagala chitragalannu torisidare santoshavallave. vandanegalodane.

ವನಿತಾ / Vanitha said...

BUUUUTIFUL write up akka :)

Anonymous said...

Enjoyed the official-cum-pleasure trip of the chou-shenoys at the choumahalla!

-Shree Kar

Sudeepa ಸುದೀಪ said...

love this place a lot...bful