(9:00 am-4:30 pm, closed Fridays)
The undisputed heavyweight champion of Murshidabad, this bright yellow Indo-Italian palace dominates the landscape. Built in 1837, its name means “a thousand doors,” and the legend is beautifully specific: it has 1,000 doors, but only 900 are real. The 100 false doors were designed to confuse intruders, a detail that feels straight out of an adventure novel.
Now a museum managed by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), Hazarduari’s displayed galleries hold a deep cross-section of Nawabi life, with paintings, weapons, furniture, manuscripts, and courtly objects that make the 18th and 19th centuries feel unnervingly close.
Don't miss:
The Durbar Hall: Home to a colossal crystal chandelier, wrapped in local lore and often linked (rightly or not) to imperial gift-giving, that still manages to steal the room, even in a palace built to overwhelm.
The Armoury: An astonishing collection of over 2,700 weapons, including swords that belonged to Siraj-ud-Daulah and his grandfather, Alivardi Khan.
The Library: Contains rare manuscripts, including a handwritten Quran and the priceless Ain-i-Akbari by Abul Fazl.
The “Trick” Mirrors: A set of large mirrors in the entrance hall that, due to their angle, prevent you from seeing your own reflection, but everyone else can see you.
Note: Photography rules here are enforced strictly, but they’re also the kind of thing that can change with signage and seasons. Expect videography to be off-limits, and be prepared to deposit phones/cameras in the locker room if the staff require it; when in doubt, assume “no photos indoors” and enjoy the palace the old-fashioned way.
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