Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

जनरल भीमसेन थापा: यिनलाई मैले जस्तो देखे

Rate this book
This book is the story of a general and prime minister of Nepal, Bhimsen Thapa, who ruled the country for 32 years. Mostly the citizen of Nepal and all over the world know that, Bhimsen Thapa was a powerful and successful ruler. Due to his leadership, the country fought bravely against British and saved the land although they lost some important lands like darjeeling,sikkim ,nainital,nalapani, kangada,etc. But Baburam Acharya,the writer of this book criticises most of the works of Bhimsen Thapa. Here in this book we can find his thoughts for Bhimsen Thapa...from the birth to the death of this gaint leader!!!

87 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published July 1, 2008

5 people are currently reading
136 people want to read

About the author

Baburam Acharya

14 books21 followers
Baburam Acharya (Nepali: बाबुराम आचार्य) was a Nepalese historian and literary scholar who coined the name Sagarmatha (सगरमाथा), for the mountain better known as Mount Everest or Chomolungma (in Sherpa language; Quomolungma in Tibetan).

His main work was the study of ancient Nepalese inscriptions. Baburam Acharya is known as the "Itihas Siromani" of Nepal

Nepal’s eminent historian late Baburam Acharya is credited with the Nepali name Sagarmatha for Mount Everest that straddles Nepal-China border. Nepal had no official name of its own for the world’s tallest peak in Nepali (although official name among many Nepalese peoples - Sherpa, Limbu, etc., existed long ago) until the historian found out one. What may not be true however is that he coined the name for the mountain (as is put in the Wikipedia under his name). Baburam wrote an essay in late 1930s in which he said that among the local populace of the remote Everest region the mountain was popular by the name Sagarmatha (meaning the Head of the Earth touching the Heaven); some even called it Jhomolongma. In his own words:

"In the map of Nepal published by the then Survey of India Office, the name of the tallest peak of the Himalayan Mountain range was written as Mount Everest. In the map's second edition, the peak had two names: Mount Everest and the Tibetan name Chomolongma; but there was no Nepalese name was there. With a view to providing a Nepalese name, especially for the map, an investigative essay entitled as Sagarmatha or Jhomolongma was published in the Sharada, a Nepalese-language monthly. ”

The then rulers of Nepal took exception of publication of the essay and its publication, and the historian was admonished. In his book A Brief Account of Nepal, Baburam wrote

"I was charged with attempting to bring about insult to the British by giving a Nepalese name to the peak already named after 'our friends,' and nearly deported from the country for publishing the article..."

In his another book China, Tibet and Nepal Baburam wrote: "The name Sagarmatha already existed; I only discovered it; it is not that I christened the mountain with a new name."

Two decades after publication of the essay, the Nepalese government gave official recognition to the name.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
5 (35%)
4 stars
3 (21%)
3 stars
2 (14%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
4 (28%)
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Shisir Thapa.
2 reviews1 follower
October 14, 2012
The writer quotes everything wrong of Bhimsen Thapa. We know dat human life works ups and downs. good and bad are always in human life. but here writer quotes as if he is cruel than hitler...
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.