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  1. Grand Delhi Coronation Durbar and Royal Visit to Calcutta Including Their Majesties' Arrival at Amphitheatre. 1912. IMDb RATING. 6.6 /10. 9. YOUR RATING. Rate. Add a plot in your language. Director. Hiralal Sen. Stars. King George V. Queen Mary. See production info at IMDbPro. Add to Watchlist. Photos. Add photo. Top cast. King George V. Self.

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    • King George V, Queen Mary
    • Hiralal Sen
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Delhi_DurbarDelhi Durbar - Wikipedia

    Commemorative Obelisk at Coronation Park, Delhi, erected at the exact place where King George V and Queen Mary sat in 'Delhi Durbar' of 1911 while declaring the shifting of capital of British Raj from Calcutta to Delhi

  3. Grand Delhi Coronation Durbar and Royal Visit to Calcutta Including Their Majesties' Arrival at Amphitheatre

  4. Description. Photograph of King George V (1865-1936) on the left and Queen Mary (1867-1953) walking down steps after landing at Princeps Ghat in Calcutta during the Royal visit to India and Durbar. The Queen holds a parasol in her left hand and on her left, an attendant holds a second parasol.

  5. The film records the 12 December 1911 celebrations in India which marked the coronation of George V and Mary of Teck and their proclamation as Emperor and Empress of India. The film is often referred to as The Delhi Durbar or The Durbar at Delhi .

  6. Abstract. The Coronation Durbar was a momentous interlude in the British imperial experience, not just contributing towards the creation of ‘a uniquely royal and ritualised realm’, 2 but also inaugurating a new political roadmap for the Raj. Held on the twelfth day of the twelfth month of 1911, the Durbar had preoccupied India for more than ...

  7. 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 Delhis 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 ...