10-522: Nazarbaug Palace or Nazar Bāgh Palace was the Gaekwad 's royal palace in the city of Vadodara , Gujarat state, western India . Located in the heart of the city, the palace was built by Malhar Rao Gaekwad in 1871. Considered to be the oldest palace in Baroda, in its later years it was used as a treasury and was still the first choice of the royal family for conducting large-scale ceremonies, including
20-728: A basement, along with a gazebo in the gardens. Built on a high platform formed by the basement below, with small flight of steps leading to the entrance. The sizes of the successive storeys decreased in size and formed verandahs and balconies on every floor. Each floor was distinguished using elaborately decorated architraves featuring stucco work. All the walls of the building were divided into symmetrical sections using elements such as pilasters and belt course . These sections were then inscribed with arched windows. Elements of classical architecture such as fluted columns of Corinthian order , arcaded verandahs, pedimented windows, balustraded parapets and blind arcade embellished every façade of
30-690: A palace in India is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Gaekwad Gaekwad (also spelt Gaikwar and Gaikwad ; Marathi : Gāyǎkǎvāḍǎ ) is a surname native to the Indian state of Maharashtra . The surname is found among the Marathas , Kolis , Mali and in Scheduled castes . It is also a common surname among Bharadis , Dhor , and Mahar communities of Maharashtra . The Marathi historian D.S. Parasnis and his co-author,
40-521: A state of ruin and did not reflect its former glory. The inside was ripped out after an alleged robbery. The grounds were used as a car park. Visitors were allowed to walk around but not allowed to take photos. In October, 2014, the palace was completely razed with only rubble and some parts of the floor remaining. As of now, a shopping mall of the same name stands in its place. 22°18′03″N 73°12′41″E / 22.3007°N 73.2115°E / 22.3007; 73.2115 This article about
50-488: The British Raj High Court judge, C.A. Kincaid of colonial-era India, wrote in 1908 that the origin of the name Gaekwad is a combination of two Marathi words. In Marathi : gai means cow and kavad means small door . Therefore, gaekwad (or gaikwad ) denotes cow door . Notable people with the surname include: Dattatray Balwant Parasnis Dattatray Balwant Parasnis (1870–1926)
60-468: The English Dresden . An important part of the collection was the famed Pearl Carpet of Baroda , set with precious stones, diamonds and seed pearls and was meant as an offering to the tomb of prophet Muhammed . Other displays of the palace were works by artists like Raphael , Titian and Bartolomé Esteban Murillo . Many of these valuables were stolen from inside the palace. The palace was in
70-707: The Mahrattas and the Nawabs of Oudh. Parasnis also published collections of letters in his two monthly magazines, the Bharatavarsha and the Ithihasa Sangraha , of which the first covered two years and the second seven years from August 1907. In 1894, Parasnis published an authoritative biography of Maharani Jhansi Lakshmibai, Maharani Laxmibaisaheb Yanche Charitra . His book was based on interviews with Dhanodar Rao, adopted son of Rani Lakshmibai, who
80-573: The building. Till recently, it housed the royal family heirlooms. It had solid gold and silver guns, each barrel weighing over 100 kg. The white-stucco palace was the depository of the jewels of the Gaekwad family, and in 1927 the collection was believed to be worth $ 10,000,000 at the time, including a diamond necklace which carried both the Star of the South diamond, weight around 125 carats, and
90-553: The coronation of Sir Sayajirao Gaekwad III . The Palace had a classic look, so in Gujarati it was told about its look as 'Nazar Na Laage' (may it be protected from the evil eye) from which it was named Nazar. The Palace also had beautiful garden from which its name included "baug". So it was named as Nazarbaug Palace. Built in the Italian- Renaissance style, the palace was a towering structure with four storeys and
100-529: Was a historian from Maharashtra , India, who lived during the British Raj days. Parasnis had been granted a lifelong pension of two hundred rupees a month by the Government of Bombay. Parasnis was born on 27 November 1870 in a traditional middle-class Deshastha Brahmin family. Parasnis authored biographies of Bramhendra Swami, Rani's Laxmi Bai of Jhansi and Baija Bai of Gwalior and works on
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