AlmiStudy ›
Nepal › Pashupati Sanskrit University (Pashupati Multiple Campus + Sanskrit institutional network)
Verified university entry
Pashupati Sanskrit University (Pashupati Multiple Campus + Sanskrit institutional network)
Pashupati Sanskrit University (Pashupati Multiple Campus + Sanskrit institutional network) is a recognised university in Nepal. Below is what AlmiStudy
records about it — only verified fields are shown; anything not confirmed
is deliberately left out rather than guessed.
CityKathmandu
RegionAsia
TypePublic
SubjectsTheology & Religious Studies; Languages & Linguistics; Arts & Humanities
AccreditationUniversity Grants Commission (UGC) Nepal — apex regulator establishing under UGC Act 1994. Nepal HE: 1 oldest national (Tribhuvan 1959), 1 Sanskrit specialised (Nepal Sanskrit 1986), ~13 other universities, plus many private medical colleges affiliated to TU/KU. Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MoEST) supervises. Nepali language primary; English HE growing especially for medical/international programmes.
Founded 1953 heritage (PASHUPATI MULTIPLE CAMPUS founded 1953 attached to PASHUPATINATH TEMPLE — Nepal's holiest Hindu temple, UNESCO World Heritage; Sanskrit + Hindu studies). Major Sanskrit and Hindu studies institution attached to PASHUPATINATH TEMPLE — Nepal's HOLIEST HINDU TEMPLE (dedicated to Lord Shiva), UNESCO World Heritage Site 1979. Heritage to 1953 founding under Rana-era. ~2,000 students. Premier Pashupati Sanskrit + Veda + Hindu philosophy training. Important to Nepali Hindu cultural identity (Nepal was world's last Hindu kingdom until 2008 secular republic transition).
Always confirm a university's current accreditation with
the named national authority, and that the qualification is recognised in
the country where you intend to use it, before enrolling or paying any
fees. AlmiStudy records information to help you check — it is not an
endorsement.
Why this is free
AlmiStudy is part of AlmiWorld. It is free because its purpose is to
help people find their way to education — and the wider project
supports the Shamool Foundation, a free school for street children in
Lahore (60 students, lunch, books and uniforms provided).
About Shamool Foundation →