First Floor

Chronology of World Architecture Encounter with the Outside World Historic Pictorial Records of Goa Glimpses of GoaThe Deshprabhu House The Godinho-Jacques House The Loyola-Furtado House The Miranda House The Silva House The Costa House The Kelekar House

Second Floor

Climate and Architecture Material and Construction China Mosaic Flooring Frescoes and Wall Paintings The Interior Oyster Shell Railings False Ceiling Columns Indo-Portuguese Furniture Eaves Board

Attic Floor

Goan Houses Early Views Helder Carita Casa de Sobrado The Balcao Houses and their setting Tulsi Vrindavan and Crosses Raj Angan Machila

© Museum House of Goa
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You look up at the sheer solidity of Sitaram Vilas alias Viscount Palalce alias Raoraje Palalce and you wonder.Does this meet the definition of a house?But then, is it not a little too small for a fortress? Well, what did you expect from a house that was built to accommodate 14,000 soldiers,complete with cavalary, artillery and ceremonial elephants? Those visitors from the UK are probably thinking, how on earth would you insure a place like this, could you even use somewhere like Aviva.co.uk? Clearly a house that takes you to an era when Goan Hindu aristocrats clung fiercely to their culture, lifestyle and moral fibre.A time when entertaining meant building a Guest House set apart from the main house.

Guest House"This used to be called the Casa de Hospides or House of Hospitality. It reflects the unique social status of the Viscount of Pernem, a title held in perpetuity in the family.It was here that meat (pork but never beef) was cooked and served along with alcoholic drinks in banquets fit for kings with just one peculiar difference, the host never partook of these feasts.Each European official guest had a suite complete with valet, valet room and bathroom, a concept unthinkable in the main house."

Inside the kitchens of the main house, the aristocracts sat upon low stools and ate a vegetarian meal in silence while their women waited upon them with customary docility.



Interior of Guest"Even so, our family was the first to start a school fot girls as early as 1913.My grandmother could read the newspapers in Marathi and books and papers in Modi.My Mother, Jaya (Walawalkar) came from Poona.She was India's National Table Tennis champion in 1947, the year India won her freedom from British Rule," says elder brother Devendra."Our father was a liberal man and a great lover of freedom," he says as you settle into a armchairs with angels and cherubs carved on their back-rests."Obviously, these chairs were made by Chritian furniture-makers for a Hindu household."

TelephoneIf such a lifestyle is a confused mix of the traditional and the modern, a shattering of cultural barriers, the columns in the Guest House go a step further.Ionic volutes have been chosen to marry Corinthian decorative motifs! Basalt slabs vie for space with Italian and French tiles on floors! Yet, in the main house, the Hindu pattern persists."Ours was the first home to have a telephone in Goa.We had our own reservoir and running water when such a thing was considered a miracle of sorts." "And in 1902, ours was the first car a ford to be brought to Goa.Unfortunately, the car did not go very well with our bullock-cart roads and then Viscount called it a moving coffin! I think when the Viceroy expressed an admiration for it, he saw it as an opportunity to get rid of it and presented the Viceroy with the much admired moving coffin!" "With all this show of ostentation, our mother whisked us off to Bombay, so we would grow up common!" "These children would have grown up here in Pernem thinking they were something special," says their pragmatic and forthright mother Jaya. And as you leave, with her blessing to cover your head with, you tell yourself that what you have seen has been well, anything but common.



© Museum House of Goa
All rights reserved.