Surendra Bikram Shah | |
---|---|
King of Nepal | |
Reign | 12 May 1847 – 17 May 1881 |
Coronation | 12 May 1847 |
Predecessor | Rajendra Bikram Shah |
Successor | Prithvi Bir Bikram Shah |
Born | 20 October 1829 Basantapur, Nepal |
Died | 17 May 1881 (aged 51) Basantapur, Nepal |
Spouse | Sura Rajya Lakshmi Devi Trailokya Rajya Lakshmi Devi Deva Rajya Lakshmi Devi |
Issue |
Crown Prince Trailokya Prince Narendra Princess Tika (among others) |
Dynasty | Shah dynasty |
Dynasty | House of Shah |
Father | Rajendra Bikram Shah |
Mother | Samrajya Laxmi Devi |
Religion | Hinduism |
Surendra Bikram Shah (Nepali: सुरेन्द्र बिक्रम शाह) (1829–1881) was King of Nepal between 1847 and 1881. He became king after Prime Minister Jung Bahadur Rana forced the abdication of Surendra's father, Rajendra Bikram Shah. Surendra wielded little real power, with Jang Bahadur Rana effectively ruling the country during Surendra's reign.
Surendra was the son of King Rajendra and his first wife, Queen Samrajya. He was born the crown prince of Nepal and was relatively unpopular.
Name Surendra means "Chief of Deities".
Surendra's stepmother, Queen Rajya Laxmi, was ambitious to have her son, Prince Ranendra, sit on the throne. However, Jung Bahadur- who was ambitious and wanted power- might have cooperated with Rajya Laxmi for his own motive. After the Kot massacre, in which Jung Bahadur managed to eliminate a large number of nobles, Jung Bahadur turned against the queen, who in turn plotted to kill him (though the plot failed). Thinking Queen Rajya Laxhmi might be a threat to him, Jung Bahadur- who had become the prime minister- exiled Rajyalakshmi to Varanasi. King Rajendra also accompanied her to Varanasi. Before leaving, he made Surendra the prince regent. However, later Jung Bahadur Rana forced the abdication of King Rajendra and then Surendra was made the king.
King Surendra was like a prisoner in his own palace: with the exception of his immediate family, nobody could visit him without the permission of Jung Bahadur Rana. The king was only allowed to read literature. Frustrated at all these, the king wanted to abdicate in favor of his eldest son Trailokya, but the Rana prime minister did not allow it.
Surendra was allowed to meet his father, the ex-king Rajendra, once every month. Rajendra continued to live under house arrest until his death.
In 1856, King Surendra issued a sanad- which formalized the dominance and political leadership of the Kunwar family- the family of Jung Bahadur Rana. The king and his descendants could use the honorific title of 'Shri' five times with their names, while the members of the Kunwar family used the title thrice- placing the Kunwar family in a rank that was second only to the royal family. While Surendra remained the king (Maharajadhiraja), he had little power; Jung Bahadur Rana ruled the country.