Darul Aman Palace
Darul Aman Palace | |
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General information | |
Type | Palace |
Town or city | Kabul |
Country | Afghanistan |
Darul Aman Palace (Persian: قصر دارلامان) [Pashto: د دارال امن ماڼۍ] ("abode of peace" or, in a double meaning "abode of Aman[ullah]")[1] is a ruined palace located about sixteen kilometers (ten miles) outside of the center of Kabul, Afghanistan.
Darul Aman Palace was built in the early 1920s as a part of the endeavours of King Amanullah Khan to modernize Afghanistan. It was to be part of the new capital city (also called Darul Aman or Darulaman) that the king intended to build, connected to Kabul by a narrow gauge railway.[2]
The palace is an imposing neoclassical building on a hilltop overlooking a flat, dusty valley in the western part of the Afghan capital. Intended as the seat of a future parliament, the building was unused for many years after religious conservatives forced Amanullah from power and halted his reforms.
Darul Aman Palace was gutted by fire in 1969. It was restored to house the Defence Ministry during the 1970s and 1980s. In the Communist coup of 1978, the building was set on fire. It was damaged again as rival Mujahideen factions fought for control of Kabul in the early 1990s after the end of the Soviet invasion. Heavy shelling by the Mujahideen left the building a gutted ruin.
In 2005, a plan was unveiled to refurbish the palace for use as the seat of Afghanistan's future parliament.[3] It was to be funded primarily by private donations from foreigners and wealthy Afghans. As of July 2010 there were no signs of renovation of the palace. The palace was reportedly part of the targets in attacks launched on 15 April 2012 for which the Taliban claimed responsibility.[4]
On a hill near the Darul Aman Palace stands the Tajbeg Palace, built as a residence for Amanullah, his wife, Queen Soraya, and their family. In December 2015, the new parliament building was completed opposite the Palace by the Indian government.[5]
Gallery
- Palace in 1986
- Darul Aman Palace northern elevation showing shelling damage inflicted during mujahideen fighting for Kabul after Soviet withdrawal
- Heavy snowfall at the Darul Aman Palace in Kabul
- Darul Aman Palace western elevation
- 2 US Special Forces soldiers view Kabul looking north.
- US Commandos patrolling a heavily bombed out room in the palace in 2002.
- The inside of the palace is in very bad shape, as of July 2010.
- View from the Afghan Parliament building's front, revealing the ruins of the Darul Aman palace, as of December 2015.
See also
- National Assembly of Afghanistan, the parliament of Afghanistan opposite the Darul Aman Palace.
- Tajbeg Palace
References
- ↑ Clements, Frank (2003) Conflict in Afghanistan, a Historical Encyclopaedia. ABC-CLIO, Santa Barbara, ISBN 1-85109-402-4, page 29, 67.
- ↑ "Kabul to Darulaman railway". Sndrewgrantham.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-02-24.
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20091221075848/http://everywheremag.com/places/4482. Archived from the original on December 21, 2009. Retrieved February 1, 2010. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ "Taliban strike across Afghanistan in 'spring offensive'". BBC News. 16 April 2012.
- ↑ "Modi inaugurates Afghan parliament building". The Hindu. 2015-12-25. Retrieved 2016-02-24.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Darul-Aman Palace. |
- Darul-Aman Project for Kabul
- The story of the german ingenieur Wilhelm Rieck. Lots of historical pictures
- The Shattered Remains of Afghanistan’s Versailles
- In restoring a century-old palace, a step toward rebuilding Afghanistan’s independence on YouTube, Sep 12, 2016 PBS NewsHour
Coordinates: 34°27′54.78″N 69°7′9.47″E / 34.4652167°N 69.1192972°E