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  1. El Delhi Durbar de 1877. Delhi Durbar (en hindi: दिल्ली दुर्बार, urdu: دلی دربار; que significa Tribunal de Delhi) era una asamblea de masas realizada en el Parque de la Coronación en Delhi, India, para conmemorar la coronación del rey y la reina del Reino Unido.También conocido como el Durbar Imperial, se llevó a cabo en tres ocasiones, en 1877, 1903 y 1911.

  2. r of 1911, proclaiming an Empire at High NoonExactly one hundred years ago, Delhi was witness to a dazzling spectacle — an Imperial Durbar, the ma. nificence of which the world had rarely seen. It was held in what i. now known as Coronation Park in North Delhi. The occasion was to celebrate the visit to India and the coronation of the King ...

  3. 2 de jul. de 2017 · Delhi Durbar of 1911. The Delhi Durbar of 1911 was perhaps the grandest extravaganza of the British Raj. An event to mark the coronation of King George V as King-Emperor of India, it was attended by the who's who of the British Empire. At that time, it cost around one million pounds and a year of preparation went into executing it.

  4. A Maratha durbar showing the raja and the princely state's nobles: sardars, jagirdars, istamuradars, and mankaris. Mughal emperor Shah Jahan and prince Aurangzeb in the royal court, 1650. Durbar is a Persian-derived term (from Persian: دربار, romanized: darbār) referring to the noble court of a king or ruler or a formal meeting where the king held all discussions regarding the state.

  5. 14 de ene. de 2024 · Enter the era of the so-called Delhi Durbars, the massive royal ceremonies held in 1877, 1903, and 1911 in Delhi’s Coronation Park by the imperial government. Alan Trevithick, in a special issue of Modern Asian Studies on civil ritual in India, argues that these “three great Durbars, royal assemblages… were explicitly political rituals ...

  6. Delhi Coronation Durbar was held on 12 December 1911 before an assembly of about 80,000 select people of British India and the princely states apparently to mark the accession of King George V to the throne of Great Britain on the death of Edward VII. But the real intention behind holding the darbar in the presence of the King and Queen was to pacify the Bengal agitators who were becoming ...

  7. "The Great Coronation Durbar - Delhi 1911". www.britishpathe.com. British Pathé Delhi, India. Pan across huge dais in the midst of a massive arena. Thousands of troops form up and hundreds of civil and military dignitaries arrive. King George V and Queen Mary arrive and take the place on the dais where they receive homage.