- Ayo
Gorkhali: A
History of the
Gurkhas is a 2020 book by
Nepalese author Tim Gurung. The book
contains the
history of Gurkhas. Ayo
Gorkhali: A History...
- 5,000 men
entered British service in 1815, most of whom were not just
Gorkhalis, but Kumaonis,
Garhwalis and
other Himalayan hill men.
These groups, eventually...
-
Bhaktapur fell to the
Gorkhalis between 1768 and 1769. The
Gorkhali king
subsequently moved his
capital to Kathmandu. In 1788, the
Gorkhalis turned their attention...
-
Gorkhali was a Nepali-language w****ly
newspaper published in Varanasi, India. It
began publication in 1919. Devi
Prasad Sapkota was the
editor of the newspaper...
- palace. The
Gorkhalis,
under Prithvi Narayan's
brother Nandu Shah, held off the invaders.
Supplemented by reinforcements, the
Gorkhalis counter-attacked...
- The
Nepalese royal m****acre (also
called “Durbar Hatyakanda”)
occurred on 1 June 2001 at the
Narayanhiti Palace, the then-residence of the
Nepali monarchy...
- (Nepali: नेपाली सेना, romanized: Nēpālī Sēnā), also
referred to as the
Gorkhali Army (गोरखाली सेना, Gōrakhālī Sēnā; see Gorkhas), is the land
service branch...
-
dislodge the
Gorkhalis from
their positions. A
noble of
Lalitpur named Danuvanta crossed over to Shah's side and
treacherously let the
Gorkhalis into the...
- The King of
Nepal (traditionally
known as the Mahārājdhirāja i.e.
Great King of Kings; Nepali: महाराजधिराज) was Nepal's head of
state and
monarch from...
- East
India Company erected a war
memorial at
Nalapani in
honor of the
Gorkhalis and Capt.
Balbhadra Kunwar (often
referred to
wrongly as
Bulbuder Singh...