Parliament of Kingdom of Nepal, 1959–1962 The 1959 constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal, proclaimed on 12 February 1959, first mentions the Pratinidhi Sabha first as follows: "There shall be a Parliament which shall consist of His Majesty and two Houses, to be known respectively as the Senate (
Maha Sabha) and the House of Representatives (Pratinidhi Sabha)"
(Article No. 18, Constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal, 1959). The 1959 constitution was abrogated on 16 December 1962 when the new
Constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal, 1962 was proclaimed and the parliament of the kingdom became unicameral.
Post-Panchayat, 1990–2002 The House of Representatives was first provided for by the "Constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal 1990", which replaced the former
panchayat system of parliament with a bicameral parliament. It consisted of 205 members directly elected from single-member constituencies. It had five-year terms, but it could be dissolved by the
King on the advice of the Prime Minister before the end of its term.
Dissolution, 2002–2007 In May 2002, the House of Representatives was dissolved by
King Gyanendra on advice of the then prime minister,
Sher Bahadur Deuba, in order to hold new elections. Elections could not take place due to the ongoing
civil war, which eventually led King Gyanendra to stage a royal coup. Following the democracy movement of 2006, the King reinstated the earlier legislature. On 15 January 2007, the House of Representatives was transformed into an
Interim legislature. This consisted of members appointed under an agreement between the
Seven Party Alliance and the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (known by the name
Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre), since 2009).
Federal Parliament of Nepal, 2015–present The
Constitution of Nepal was drafted by the
2nd Constituent Assembly and the provision for a
bicameral legislature was re-adopted. The House of Representatives became the lower house of the
Federal Parliament of Nepal and its first election was held
in 2017. == Members ==