Rasuwa Fort or Rasuwa Gadhi (Nepali: रसुवागढी) is a historical fort ruin in the Rasuwa District of Nepal roughly at the border with Tibet, China.[1] It is located along the Trishuli River 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) north of the Nepalese town of Timure in Langtang National Park, yet 25 km south of the nearest locality of China at Gyirong Town.
A trekking permit obtained in Kathmandu will allow tourists to visit the border, but not to cross the bridge into Tibet.
The area was the site of a three-day battle during the second campaign of Sino-Nepalese War in July 1792.[2][3] In 1855 during the Rana dynasty when Jung Bahadur Rana invaded Qing-ruled Tibet in Nepalese–Tibetan War, the fort was constructed on the site.[4][2]
In 2012, Nepal and China agreed to open new border crossings, Rasuwagadhi site being one of the crossings.[5] The fort was damaged during the construction of border crossing in 2013.[6] In December 2014, the port of entry was opened near the fort.[7] This route between China (via Gyirong Town / Kyirong on the Chinese side) and Nepal was considered to be more reliable than the crossing through Zhangmu–Kodari.[8] The border side of Rasuwagadi was closed after Covid-19 and remains close to the general public for visits.[9]
It was these five regiments which arrived before the destroyed bridge, in Sravan, 1849 Vikram Samvat, July 1792, according to D. R. Regmi, in the 8th month (July) according to Wei Yuan; according to Weizang-tongzhi, the battle was fought on July 15th. According to Kirkpatrik the battle lasted three days.
热索瓦根底