Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Raj Bhavan (from Hindi: Government House) [2] [3] is the official residence of the governor of the Indian state of Bihar. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It is located in the state capital of Patna . Construction started in 1912 and was completed in 1917. [ 1 ]
Rajasthan – Justice G.G. Sohoni: 2 February 1990 16 February 1990 14 days Not Known 15. Mohammad Saleem: 16 February 1990 13 February 1991 362 days Uttar Pradesh – B. Satya Narayan Reddy: 14 February 1991 18 March 1991 32 days Andhra Pradesh: 16. Mohammad Shafi Qureshi: 19 March 1991 13 August 1993 2 years, 147 days Jammu and Kashmir (10).
Patna Secretariat, also known as Patna Sachivalaya or Old Secretariat, is the administrative headquarters of the state Government of Bihar in India. It is located in Bihar's capital city of Patna. This building is situated between two iconic buildings of the city, Raj Bhavan in the west and Patna High Court in the far east. [1]
Raj Bhavan (lit. ' Government House ' ) is the common name of the official residences of the governors of the states of India and may refer to: List of Raj Bhavan
Residence Official Location Notes Rashtrapati Bhavan: President of India: New Delhi: Residence of the President. Rashtrapati Ashiana: Dehradun, Uttarakhand: Presidential retreat.
Sadaqat Ashram is located in Patna, Bihar, beside the main road of Digha area, on the banks of the River Ganges, almost seven kilometres from the airport.This was one of the residences of Dr. Rajendra Prasad, the first President of India, who lived there after retirement and spent the last days of his life there.
Meetings of the faculties were held in the hall located at the new college, now known as Patna College, while senate meetings were held in the conference room of the Patna Secretariat. [3] University convocations were held in the Durbar hall of the Governor House, present day Raj Bhavan building prior to wheeler Senate hall. [3]
Sher Shah Suri hailed from Sasaram, about 160 km south-west of Patna and revived Patna in the middle of the 16th century. On his return from one of the expeditions, while standing by the Ganges, he visualised a fort and a town. Sher Shah's fort in Patna does not survive, but the mosque built by Sher Shah in 1545 survives.