News India Live, Digital Desk: If you watch TV news, you must have often seen that whenever a foreign Prime Minister or President (like Vladimir Putin or Joe Biden) comes to India, PM Modi meets him at ‘Hyderabad House’. There is lunch, photographs are taken and big agreements are signed. Have you ever wondered why it is named ‘Hyderabad House’, while it is located near India Gate in Delhi? And who was the person who built it, who had so much money that he built his ‘private palace’ in the most expensive area of ​​Delhi? Come, today let us take it out of the pages of history and tell you a very interesting story. The ‘guest house’ of the world’s richest man. This luxurious building was built by the last Nizam of Hyderabad, Mir Osman Ali Khan. Friends, he was not a common king. There was a time when Time magazine declared him the richest man in the world. It is said that he had so much gold and diamonds that he used ‘Jacob Diamond’ (185 carat diamond) only for paperweight! Why did he build a house in Delhi? When the British shifted the capital of India from Kolkata to Delhi in 1911, they asked the kings and emperors across the country to build houses for their living in Delhi. Lutyens’ Delhi was being settled. Nizam Osman Ali Khan felt that when he came to Delhi to meet the Viceroy, why should he stay in a hotel or a small house? This would be an insult to his honour. Therefore, to show his wealth, he started building this palace in 1926 and it was completed in 1928. The specialty of this building is its architecture. It was designed by the famous English architect Edwin Lutyens. Its map is in the shape of a butterfly. It is spread over more than 8 acres of land. It has such a confluence of Mughal and European architecture that it is visible. Its dome gives it a royal look. It is said that the Nizam was so happy to see it that he told his sons, “This palace will remain a symbol of our pride.” Now how did it come to the government? After independence, when the princely states merged with India, Hyderabad House also came under the Government of India. Now it is used by the Ministry of External Affairs of the Government of India. This place is not just a building, but is the biggest center of ‘hospitality’ of India. Even today, when you see its grand staircase and chandeliers on TV, remember that this is the gift of the regime that once controlled the world’s wealth.

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