Talatal Ghar

Talatal Ghar
তলাতল ঘৰ

Talatal Ghar or "The Rangpur Palace", Sivasagar
(View of one of the wings of the Talatal Ghar)
General information
Architectural style Tai Ahom Architecture
Location Sivasagar
Assam
India
Coordinates 26°55′25″N 75°49′36″E / 26.923611°N 75.826667°E / 26.923611; 75.826667Coordinates: 26°55′25″N 75°49′36″E / 26.923611°N 75.826667°E / 26.923611; 75.826667
Construction started 1751
Completed 1769
Client ChaoPha Suremphaa aka Swargadeu Rajeswar Singha
Technical details
Structural system Bricks and indigenous varieties of cement
Design and construction
Architect Ghanashyam

The Talatal Ghar (Assamese: তলাতল ঘৰ [tɔlatɔl ɡʱɔɹ]) is located in Rangpur, 4 km from present-day Sivasagar, in Upper Assam. Of all Ahom ruins, it is one of the grandest examples of Tai Ahom architecture. The Talatal Ghar, together with its above-ground counterpart the Kareng Ghar, is also the largest of all Tai Ahom monuments.

History

Swargadeo Rudra Singha shifted the capital of the Ahom Kingdom from Garhgaon to Rangpur in AD 1702-03. For about a century thereafter, Rangpur remained the capital. It is located in the western part of Sivasagar. The earliest constructions were commissioned by Swargadeo Rudra Singha in AD 1698.[1][2] Rangpur was the capital of the Ahom Kingdom and served as its military-station.

Architecture

Talatal Ghar

The Talatal Ghar is a palace which was initially built as an army base. It houses two secret tunnels, and three floors below ground level which were used as exit routes during the Ahom wars (and which give the structure its name).

After Swargadeo Rudra Singha's death the Talatal Ghar, which together with the above-ground Kareng Ghar constitutes the "Rangpur Palace", went through many architectural alterations to its structure, which resulted in its irregular shape.

Rangpur Palace

Talatal Ghar

Kareng Ghar

Visitors nowadays can only view the ground floor, the first floor, and what remains of the 2nd and 3rd floors of the Kareng Ghar. The floors of the Talatal Ghar below ground have been sealed off, and most of the wooden parts of the palace have disappeared over time.

The Rangpur Palace was once surrounded by a brick fortification and an earthen fort (Garh) with dikes filled with water. There is a Khar Ghar (gunpowder and ammunition store) near the palace.

Photo Gallery

See also

Notes and references

    Citations
    Bibliography
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