Gorkha Empire, for article on Nepal unification

Prithvi Narayan Shah unifies the kingdoms of Nepal into one nation

In the mid-eighteenth century, the land that would become Nepal was a patchwork of competing principalities, each with its own rulers, armies, and alliances. From his base in the small hill kingdom of Gorkha, one monarch spent more than two decades pulling those pieces together — and in 1768 C.E., King Prithvi Narayan Shah completed the unification that gave birth to the Kingdom of Nepal.

Key facts about Nepal unification

  • Nepal unification: Prithvi Narayan Shah began his campaign in 1742 C.E., systematically bringing rival hill kingdoms under Gorkha control over more than 25 years of military and diplomatic effort.
  • Gorkhali Army: The fighting force he built drew from multiple ethnic communities, including Chhetri and Magar noble families, with Kaji Kalu Pande serving as the first civilian army commander — a cross-community coalition from the start.
  • Kathmandu Valley: The conquest of the three Malla kingdoms of the valley — Kathmandu, Patan, and Bhaktapur — in 1768–1769 C.E. marked the symbolic and strategic completion of unification.

A kingdom built from smaller kingdoms

Prithvi Narayan Shah inherited the Gorkha throne in 1742 C.E. at around 20 years old. What he also inherited was a vision — described in his own words in the Dibya Upadesh, a collection of his political instructions — of a unified Himalayan state that could hold its own against the expanding powers pressing in from every direction.

The land he sought to unite was not empty or politically simple. The Kathmandu Valley alone held three powerful Malla kingdoms with centuries of art, trade, and religious tradition behind them. The surrounding hills were home to Magar, Newar, Gurung, and other peoples with deep roots and distinct governance systems. The Shahs themselves had risen to power in Gorkha by displacing Magar rulers — Dravya Shah had captured the Ligligkot kingdom from Magar King Dalsur Ghale Magar in the sixteenth century C.E., with the help of local allies including Gangaram Rana Magar.

Prithvi Narayan Shah’s military campaign began in earnest with the Battle of Nuwakot in 1744 C.E. Kaji Kalu Pande led the surprise assault on Nuwakot fort — a strategic stronghold of the Malla king of Kathmandu — attacking from multiple sides at dawn. It was the first of many victories that would slowly encircle the valley and bring it to terms.

What made unification possible

Military skill alone does not explain how a small hill principality absorbed dozens of rival states. Prithvi Narayan Shah was also a careful political strategist who understood that a new kingdom needed a coherent identity.

He famously described Nepal as a yam between two boulders — meaning a small nation squeezed between the Qing Chinese empire to the north and the expanding British East India Company to the south. That geopolitical pressure made unity not just desirable but urgent. A fragmented Nepal would be absorbed; a unified one might survive.

The Gorkhali forces he built were multi-ethnic by necessity and by design. The officer corps drew from Chhetri, Magar, Thapa, Basnyat, and Pande families. Gorkha’s military reputation — later carried around the world by Gurkha soldiers in British service — was built on this coalition of highland peoples, not on any single group.

He also leveraged trade. By controlling the mountain passes that connected Indian plains merchants with Tibetan markets, Prithvi Narayan Shah gave Kathmandu Valley traders a reason to accept new political realities. Economic integration reinforced military conquest.

Lasting impact

The kingdom Prithvi Narayan Shah founded in 1768 C.E. lasted 240 years, formally ending only when the Constituent Assembly declared a republic on 28 May 2008 C.E. That is a remarkable run for any political institution, and it was built on a foundation that proved genuinely durable.

Nepal remained one of only two countries in Asia never formally colonized by a European power — the other being Japan. That fact is directly traceable to the unified kingdom Prithvi Narayan Shah created. When the Anglo-Nepalese War of 1814–1816 C.E. ended in Nepal’s defeat and the Treaty of Sugauli, Nepal lost territory but retained its sovereignty and internal independence — a negotiated outcome available only because a coherent kingdom existed to negotiate.

The Nepali language, Nepali national identity, and the administrative structures of the modern Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal all trace their lineage through the institutions Prithvi Narayan Shah established. His Dibya Upadesh remains studied today as an early articulation of Nepali statecraft.

Beyond Nepal’s borders, the unification shaped the military history of South Asia and beyond. The Gorkhali soldiers who became Gurkha regiments in British and Indian service carried the traditions and martial culture of the unified kingdom into conflicts across the globe — from the trenches of the First World War to United Nations peacekeeping operations in the twenty-first century C.E.

Blindspots and limits

The founding of Nepal was also a conquest, and peoples who had governed themselves for centuries — Newars, Magars, and others — found their political autonomy sharply curtailed under the new order. Prithvi Narayan Shah’s own instructions described a vision of Nepal as “Asal Hindustan” (Real Land of the Hindus), a framing that privileged high-caste Hindu identity and marginalized Buddhist, animist, and Indigenous traditions that had flourished in the region for far longer.

The kingdom he founded also became, within a century, an instrument of Rana oligarchy — with hereditary prime ministers reducing the Shah monarchs to figureheads and ruling, in the words of Nepal’s own historical record, through “tyranny, debauchery, economic exploitation and religious persecution” from 1846 to 1951 C.E. The nation-state that emerged from 1768 C.E. was real and consequential; what its people experienced inside it varied enormously depending on who they were.

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For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Kingdom of Nepal

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