Khasa Kingdom Jumla was a part of
Khasa kingdom during the 11th to 13th century. After 13th-century, Khasa Kingdom collapsed and divided into
Baise Rajya (22 principalities) in the Karnali-Bheri region and the Kingdom of Jumla was one of them.
Kingdom of Jumla The Jumla Kingdom was one of the many kingdoms that dotted Nepal before its reunification by King
Prithvi Narayan Shah of
Gorkha and later by his younger son
Bahadur Shah. The kingdom was founded around 1404 when Baliraja, who married the daughter of the last ruler of the
Yatse (Malla) Kingdom, succeeded his father-in-law. It was one of the most powerful kingdoms in western Nepal, being one of the 22 Baise principalities of the
Karnali region which had once been part of the larger Yatse Kingdom. After centuries of intermittent warfare, it appropriated the kingdom of
Mustang in 1760. In the late 18th century the Jumla kingdom successfully defended itself against the first attack by King Prithivi Narayan Shah, and legend even has it that he got injured in the battle. Later, with the help of the kingdoms surrounding Jumla, Bahadur Shah attacked again and annexed Jumla for the Gorkha kings in 1789. The Jumla kings were Thakuris (Sijapati, Malla, Shahi) like the Gorkha Kings. The Jumla Kingdom belonged to the more extensive pre-unification kingdoms in Nepal. At the height of its power it extended from
Mustang in the east to present-day
Uttarakhand, a state in modern-day
India, territory that the Kingdom of Nepal lost to the
East India Company in 1816 during the partition of Nepal. The Jumla kings belonged to the Kalyal dynasty. There have also been marriages between the Jumla royal family and the Shah's royal family of Nepal. The direct descendants of the erstwhile Jumla royal family include Nepali Film legend
Nir Shah, Maya Kumar Shah SP (Retd.) of Nepal Police, former Director-General of Nepal Electricity Authority Harish Chandra Shah, DIGP (Retd) Sher Bahadur Shah, Colonel Nepal Army (Retd.) Bhim Bahadur Shah and AIGP (Retd.) of Nepal Police, Surendra Bahadur Shah.
Kings of Jumla The kings of Jumla, post-1400: • Baliraja 1404-1445 • Vaksaraja 1445-? (son) • Vijayaraja (son) • Visesaraja fl. 1498 (son) • Vibhogaraja (?) • Matiraja (?) • Sahiraja (?) • Bhanasahi c. 1529-90 (son) • Saimalsahi c. 1590-1599 (son) • Vasantaraja 1599-1602 (son) • Visekaraja 1599-1602 (brother) • Vikramasahi 1602-c. 1635 (brother) • Bahadurasahi c. 1635-65 (son) • Virabhadrasahi 1665-after 1704 • Prithvipatisahi after 1704-1719 (son) • Surathasahi 1719-1740 (son) • Sudarasanasahi 1740-c. 1758 (son) • Suryabhanasahi c. 1758-1789 (son) ==Geography and climate==