Inside the fort, the Fateh Prakash Palace complex stands out with its long façade, arcaded halls and courtyards, representing a more “modern” 19th-century palace style compared to the older stone ruins. Now housing the Chittorgarh Government Museum, its galleries display sculptures from early-medieval temples, inscriptions, weapons, coins and artefacts related to Mewar history. The museum helps visitors connect scattered ruins—temple fragments, idols, architectural pieces—with the broader story of the region’s art and religion.
About this place
History & highlights
Fateh Prakash Palace was built by Maharana Fateh Singh (r. 1884–1930) as a guest palace and administrative building within the fort, long after the capital had shifted to Udaipur. In the 20th century the Rajasthan state government converted part of the complex into a museum to house antiquities collected from Chittorgarh and nearby areas—particularly sculptural pieces dating from the 6th–15th centuries that had been left scattered due to temple destruction or abandonment. The museum thus represents the archaeological and curatorial phase of Chittorgarh’s life, where the fort is no longer an active capital but a heritage site being studied, preserved and interpreted for the public.
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