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Bir Keshar Pande

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Bir Keshar Pande
श्री कपर्दार
वीर केशर पाँडे
Personal details
Died14 September 1846
Kot Arsenal, Basantapur Darbar
ChildrenUday Bahadur
Colonel Shamsher Bahadur
Parent
RelativesBamsa Raj Pande (cousin-uncle)
Damodar Pande (cousin-uncle)
Ranajit Pande (father)
Mathabarsingh Thapa (nephew)
Rana Jang Pande (second-cousin)
Military service
AllegianceKingdom of Nepal    Nepal
Branch/serviceNepal Army
RankKapardar
Battles/warsAnglo-Nepalese War

Kaji Bir Keshar Pande (Nepali: वीर केशर पाँडे) a Nepalese politician, military personnel and courtier in the Kingdom of Nepal. He was member of the Gora Pande clan of Gorkha and the son of Kaji Ranajit Pande.[1] Bir Keshar Pande was the owner of Lazimpat Durbar. As Thapathali was abode of the Thapas, Lazimpat was abode of Pande family. At the time of the Kot massacre on 14 September 1846, Lazimpat Durbar was owned by Kaji Bir Keshar Pande and was massacred there. After which lazimpat Durbar was occupied by Kaji Mama Col.Tribikram Singh Thapa for 28 years until he left for Varanasi in 1875.[2]

Lazimpat Durbar of Kaji Bir Keshar Pande (Later known as Agni Bhawan) after 1964

Family

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He was the son of Kaji Ranajit Pande of Gora (White) Pande faction belonging to Pande family.[3][1] He was grandson of Kaji Tularam Pande[1] who died in the Battle of Kathmandu. His father Ranajit Pande was once a Mulkaji[4][5] while the other uncle Bhotu Pande was a military officer in the offence of Sino-Nepalese War.

Kot Massacre

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Raged by the news of her beloved and trustworthy general, Queen Rajya Lakshmi Devi vowed to punish the culprit. She immediately ordered all the noblemen and parties for an emergency inquiry. This gathering followed one of the worst massacres in the history of Nepal, called the Kot Massacre of September 14, 1846 that catapulted the Ranas into power. The queen suspected Kapardar Bir Keshar Pande for the killing of her secret lover and ordered Abhiman Singh Rana Magar, the then Commander-in-chief of Nepal Army, to kill the Pande leader. However having known the real culprit, he hesitated in doing so. Fighting broke out in the crowd, and he was wounded by a shot at his chest by Jung Bahadur Rana. The dying General Abhiman Singh Rana Magar, shouted, "Junge(aka Jung Bahadur) was the killer of Gagan Singh"("गगन सिंहको हत्त्यारा जंगे नै हो").

During the free-for-all that followed, swords and knives were used on all sides. Through some scheme that has never been explained adequately, the only leader with organized bodies of troops in the kot area was Jang Bahadur, whose troops suppressed the fighting, killing many of his opponents in the process. When the struggle subsided, the courtyard was strewn with the bodies of dozens of leading nobles and an unknown number of their followers The Pande and Thapa families in particular were devastated during this slaughter. That followed a seek and destroy approach taken by Jung Bahadur Rana against all nobles in the royal house and other in the country, that included many ethnic leaders as well.


Relation with the Thapas

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Bhimsen Thapa and his two wives

Bhimsen Thapa had three wives as per the stone inscription of Bhimbishwar Mahadev temple at Bungkot. His only son died at a young age in 1796 and his three daughters – Lalita Devi, Janak Kumari, and Dirgha Kumari were married to Pande nobles – Uday Bahadur Pande, Shamsher Bahadur Pande and Dal Bahadur Pande respectively.[6][7] Uday Bahadur and Colonel Shamsher Bahadur were the sons of Kaji Bir Keshar Pande[8] and Sardar Dal Bahadur was the son of Bir Keshar's cousin Garud Dhoj Pande, who were son of MulKaji Ranajit Pande.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Pradhan 2012, p. 198.
  2. ^ JBR, PurushottamShamsher (2007). Ranakalin Pramukh Atihasik Darbarharu [Chief Historical Palaces of the Rana Era] (in Nepali). Vidarthi Pustak Bhandar. ISBN 978-9994611027.
  3. ^ Karmacharya 2005, pp. 70–71.
  4. ^ Nepal 2007, p. 58.
  5. ^ Acharya 2012, p. 55.
  6. ^ Pradhan 2012, p. 23.
  7. ^ Paudel, Punya Prasad (2006). Aatreya dekhi Paudel samma. Paudel Society for Cultural Promotion. p. 101.
  8. ^ Whelpton 1991, p. 278.

Bibliography

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