Preservation of historic manuscripts and documents from the Tirthalal Naghabhani Collection, Nepal (EAP760)

Aims and objectives

The Naghabhani Collection is the family collection of the late Tirtha Lal Naghabhani (Rajbhandari) (1930-2001). The Naghabhanis were the royal treasurers of the Kathmandu Malla court and the collection has materials dating back to the mid-17th century, a major portion belonging to Mansingh (fl. 1640s) and Navamisingh (fl.1690s). The latter's ninth descendant, historian Tirtha Lal Naghabhani (Rajbhandari), consolidated the value of the collection by adding more manuscripts, rubbings and copies of medieval inscriptions and family documents. The range of manuscripts and documents in the collection demonstrates how non‐academic sites are invaluable storehouses of knowledge preservation and generation.

The Naghabhani collection consists of around 2,000 leaves of manuscripts of different sizes, 50 Thyasaphus (lit. folded books), 5,000 folios of paper manuscripts, and three dozen palm‐leaf deeds. The contents of the collection include family chronicles of the Naghabhanis and other Malla aristocrats, personal writings of the past nine generations, sale deeds (17th ‐19th centuries), medieval texts on Saivatantra, astronomy, astrology, and secret rituals.

Since Tithalal Naghabhani himself specialised in medieval history and culture, his own field notes, diaries and article drafts also include images and rubbings of inscriptions, full texts or synopses from medieval documents. The originals of many of these have either disappeared from their locations, or are no longer accessible to historians. The significance of the collection lies in it being a 'live' archive which continues to provide a local, everyday, vernacular account of the medieval and modern Newar society. The collection has been visited and referred to by local and foreign curators, scholars and researchers alike, with research published based on the archive. The collection is a treasure trove of information on the socio‐cultural and economic information of pre‐industrial Nepal, from which historians, anthropologists and social scientists can draw to produce rich descriptions and analysis.

Currently, the collection is housed at Naghabhani's dilapidated family residence. The 16th century structure, if not safely dismantled, may collapse at anytime. The collection is bearing the brunt of poor storage conditions: the already time‐worn manuscripts are being attacked by mould; the dank and humid atmosphere caused by a leaky roof has drawn silverfish infestation; not to mention the threat from earthquakes to which Kathmandu Valley is so vulnerable. The caretakers are battling hard but it is obvious they are running against the time. Soon, it may not be possible to copy the collection. Urgent intervention is required to preserve it.

This project will scope, list, and classify the Naghabhani collection, digitise it according to EAP guidelines, and provide digital storage for use and dissemination through the host institution Madan Puraskar Pustakalaya (MPP) and Naghabhani family archive. The custodians have given consent for the works to be carried out on the collection including temporary relocation of the collection to MPP for digitisation.

Outcomes

Following has been achieved:
a. Listing of 721 items of documents that provide title, a brief description/summary of the document, date, and information on author, publisher, as available and applicable.
b. A total of 11,034 images that include some 13,000 folios of manuscripts and documents and some photographs and negatives (1,019 images). The collection includes medieval, pre-modern and papers generated by the late Tirhalal Naghabhani during his research. The date ranges from 1650 copperplate to 1742 family copy of edicts to 19th century government documents, personal loan deeds and correspondence, to papers generated by
Tirthalal during his career as historian. This is a unique collection that has medieval books, pre-modern documents and correspondence that not only traces the fortunes of an elite Newar family from Kathmandu from the medieval to present day, but also reflects the trajectory of the Nepali society in general. The collection has potential to feed decades of research.

The records copied by this project have been catalogued as:

  • EAP760/1 The Tīrthalāl Naghabhanī Archive (TLA) ‎ (1125-2006)

You can search theArchives and Manuscripts Catalogue for this collection.

Project details

Grant holder(s):
Dr Yogesh Ram Mishra
Host Institution:
Madan Puraskar Pustakalaya
Archival partners:
The Naghabhani Family Collection, Madan Puraskar Pustakalaya
Award year:
Project duration:
12 months
Location(s) of archival material:
Award:
£30,149
Type:
Legal:
Access for research purposes only.

27.708199, 85.309907

Related projects

Preservation through digitisation of rare negatives and photographs from Nepal

Work on photographic archiving is very important in Nepal - photographic records for as late as the 1950s and 1960s of all of rural and much of urban Nepal are historically significant because such pictures actually record the landscape and human scope of a hundred to two hundred years previously…

Survey of Buddhist Sanskrit manuscripts in the possession of Vajrayana Viharas and Newar Buddhist families in Lalitpur in the Kathmandu valley, Nepal

Due to the significance of the Buddhist Sanskrit manuscripts of Nepal as the only original sources of Mahayana Buddhism, Buddhist scholars and monks around the world have collected and studied them. All efforts to date have been focused on researching institutional holdings. However, the prevailing…

Digitisation of pre-modern Hindu ritual manuscripts from Kathmandu Valley

This project aims to digitise the collection of Mr Upendra Bhakta Subedi, alias Govinda Baje, 81, a descendant of an illustrious family of Rajopadhyaya Brahmins from the heart of Kathmandu Valley. The Rajopadhyayas were the priests of the Malla Kings and Mr Subedi's family have been priests in…

Preservation of ritual history through digitising ritual manuscripts in the Kathmandu Valley, and eastern and western Hill Districts of Nepal

The primary aim of the project was to explore, survey, and digitize ritual manuscripts thathave been kept in institutional collections, individual possession or in the possession of theritual performing priests. These manuscripts have been preserved in Vihara collections, with Vajracharya priests,…