Fallen Majesty
You can be a republican and still be nostalgic when a historical institution bites the dust. That is what Nepal's 240-year-old monarchy is about to do. The New Year (Bikram Sambat 2065) greeting card that recently arrived in the mailbox from "Their Majesties Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev and Komal Rajya Laxmi Devi Shah, The King and Queen of Nepal" (see pic) will be the last one from the Narayanhiti Palace before Gyanendra is declared an ordinary citizen by the Constituent Assembly of Nepal, sometime in May. As 2064 turned to 2065 on 1 Baisakh (13 April), the 'Shri Panch Maharajadhiraj' title used by the monarch while he still (nominally) remained king will soon become a matter for the archival records.
It was the founder of the Shah dynasty, Prithvi Narayan Shah, who emerged from his principality of Gorkha and, after ending a consolidation spree with a win over the Kathmandu Valley in 1769, created the state structure that was to go on to be one of the oldest nation states in the world. Since then, the dynasty has continued in a single father-to-son line of succession over 12 generations to the present Gyanendra – even though, for a full century till 1950, the Shahs were sequestered in the palace while the country was run by the hereditary Rana shogunate. The dynasty ruled once again as an absolute monarchy between 1960 and 1990, and became a constitutional monarchy in 1990.