The Hyderabad Residency : a mansion with a love story
The Koti area of Hyderabad, also a part of ''Chadarghat'' ot ''Chudderghat'' in the past, as mentioned in many sources has a very interesting building with an amazing history. The British Residency commissioned by James Achilles Kirkpatrick. It has been referred to as Hyderabad Residency, Koti Rersidency and Chudderghat Residency at various places. However today the building has grown old but still retains some of its charm and opulence and whispers stories of times gone by.
The British Residency, Hyderabad.
James Achilles Kirkpatrick, a Scottish bureaucrat was the British resident in the erstwhile princely state of Hyderabad during 1798 -1805 A.D.The stately residence was designed by Samuel Russell of Madras Engineers and construction began in 1803. It was paid for by the NIzam who had adopted him as his son and given the name Hashmat Jung. The building is in the Palladian style with a classical portico with six Corinthian pillars.
Kirkpatrick wore Mughal-style clothing at home, smoked a hookah, chewed betelnut, enjoyed nautch parties, Kirkpatrick was born at Madras in India, was educated in Britain, spoke Tamil as his first language, wrote poetry in Urdu, and added Persian and Hindustani to his linguistic armoury.
With fluent Hindustani and Persian, he openly mingled with the social elite of Hyderabad. Kirkpatrick fell in love with Khairunnisa and married her, who belonged to an aristocratic Muslim family. She was the granddaughter of Nawab Mahmood Ali Khan, the prime minister of Hyderabad.She stayed at the ''zenana'' or the women's quarters in ''purdah''. There is a miniature model of the building at which Khairunnissa looked at from her ''zenana''. Their love story created much furore in Hyderabad and British India of that time. They had two children who left for England when they were very young. Kirkpatrick died in Kolkata in 1805.
James A. Kirkpatrick and Khairunnisa, portraits by George Chinnery,1805.
The mansion served the residents to came after him as successors. It was the embassy of the East India Company in Hyderabad. During the rebellion of 1857 Maulvi Allaudin and Turrebaz Khan attacked the Residency, after this marte towers were erected which were however demolished in 1954.
The building built in broadly European neo-classical style has a Palladian style in its north side and an Indian style on south side, corridors with lattices, a magnificent Durbar hall and a double staircase which divides at a landing adding a sense of mystique to the place. The building campus has few graves of residents and others. The bastions add a sense of old worldliness to the campus of over 40 acres. The building and the love story form the main plot in William Dalrymples's popular book ''The White Mughals''.
Double staircase, The British Residency, Hyderabad.
The Darbar Hall, British Residency, Hyderabad.
Image source - @theworldofinteriors) on InstagramIt houses a College for Women after Independence, though the main buidling is now emptied for restoration. This building is now a protected monument with the Archaeological Survey of India.
The British Residency, Hyderabad, posterior view.
Posted by
Soma Ghosh
© author
References:
1. https://alchetron.com/British-Residency,-Hyderabad
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Achilles_Kirkpatrick
3. http://www.minorsights.com/2014/04/the-hyderabad-residency.html
4. Images are from Wikimedia Commons and Flickr. Darbar Hall is from @theworldofinteriors) on Instagram
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