LOOK: Historic Nepal Sites Before And After The Quake
By
Krishnadev Calamur |
NPR
Monday, April 27, 2015
(Left) Nepalese devotees participating in a procession of chariots of god and goddess Ganesh, Kumari and Bhairav during the last day of the Indrajatra festival at Durbar Square in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Sept. 22, 2013. (Right) The ruins on the Durbar Square after an earthquake in Kathmandu on Saturday.
Sunil Sharma
/
Xinhua/Landov
More than 4,000 people are dead in Nepal after a devastating earthquake over the weekend.
The human toll of the quake is extensive, but the temblor also damaged some of Kathmandu's historic structures.
Here are some before-and-after images of some of those sites.
Durbar Square
Kathmandu's Durbar Square is home to many of the city's main religious sites. The square is one of seven Kathmandu monuments on UNESCO's list of World Heritage Sites. According to UNESCO, the square was built between the 12th and 18th centuries. The images below tells us what Durbar Square looked like before the quake — and after it.
Swayambhunath
Swayambhunath, which was built in the fifth century, is one of the city's two Buddhist centers; the stupa is the oldest Buddhist monument in the valley where the capital sits. The Swayambhunath complex was badly damaged by the quake, as can be seen in the following pictures.
Dharahara Tower
The Dharahara was built in 1832 and offered panoramic views of Kathmandu. It was severely damaged in an earthquake in 1834 and destroyed in another quake in 1934, after which it was rebuilt.
For more coverage of the quake, please click here.
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