EARLY
HISTORY
Artifacts
and Early Foreign Influences
The early
history of Bali can be divided into a prehistoric and an early
historic period. The former is marked by the arrival of Austronesian
(Malayo-Polynesian) migrants beginning perhaps three to four
thousand years ago. The Austronesians were hardy seafarers who
spread from Taiwan through the islands of Southeast Asia to
the Pacific in a series of extensive migrations that spanned
several millennia. The Balinese are thus closely related, culturally
and linguistically, to the peoples of the Philippines and Oceania
as well as the neighboring islands of Indonesia.
Stone
sarcophagi, seats and altars
Though
precious little is known about the long, formative stages of
Balinese prehistory, artifacts discovered around the island
provide intriguing clues about Bali's early inhabitants. Prehistoric
grave sites have been found in western Bali, the oldest probably
dating from the first several centuries B.C. The people buried
here were herders and farmers who used bronze, and in some cases
iron, to make implements and jewelry. Prehistoric stone sarcophagi
have also been discovered, mainly in the mountains. They often
have the shape of huge turtles carved at either end with human
and animal heads with bulging eyes, big teeth and protruding
tongues.
Stone seats,
altars and big stones dating from early times are still to be
found today in several Balinese temples. Here, as elsewhere
in Indonesia, they seem to be connected with the veneration
of ancestral spirits who formed (and in many ways still form)
the core of Balinese religious practices.
Also apparently
connected with ancestor worship is one of Southeast Asia's greatest
prehistoric artifacts - the huge bronze kettledrum known as
the "Moon of Pejeng." Still considered to have significant
power, it is now enshrined in a temple in the central Balinese
village of Pejeng, in Gianyar Regency. More than 1.5 meters
in diameter and 1.86 meters high, it is decorated with frogs
and geometric motifs in a style that probably originated around
Dongson, in what is now northern Vietnam. This is the largest
of many such drums discovered in Southeast Asia.
Hindu-Javanese
influences
It is assumed
(but without proof so far) that the Balinese were in contact
with Hindu and Buddhist populations of Java from the early part
of the 8th century A.D. onwards, and that Bali was even conquered
by a Javanese king in A.D. 732. This contact is responsible
for the advent of writing and other important Indian cultural
elements that had come to Java along the major trading routes
several centuries earlier. Indian writing, dance, religion and
architecture were to have a decisive impact, blending with existing
Balinese traditions to form a new and highly distinctive culture.
Stone and
copper plate inscriptions in Old Balinese are known from A.D.
882 onwards, coinciding with finds of Hindu- and Buddhist inspired
statues, bronzes, ornamented caves, rock-cut temples and bathing
places. These are found especially in areas close to rivers,
ravines, springs and volcanic peaks.
At the end
of the 10th and the beginning of the 11th centuries there were
close, peaceful bonds with Indianized kingdoms in east Java,
in particular with the realm of Kadiri (10th century A.D. to
1222). Old Javanese was thereafter the prestige language, used
in all
Balinese
inscriptions, evidence of a strong Javanese cultural influence.
In 1284, Bali is said to have been conquered by King Krtanagara
of the east Javanese Singhasari dynasty (1222-1292). It is not
certain whether the island was actually colonized at this time,
but many new Javanese elements manifest themselves in the Balinese
art of this period.
According
to a Javanese court chronicle known as the Nagarakrtagama (dated
1365), Bali was conquered and colonized in 1343 by Javanese
forces under Gajah Mada, the legendary general or patih of the
powerful Majapahit kingdom who established hegemony over east
Java and all seaports bordering the Java Sea during the mid-14th
century. It is said that Gajah Mada, accompanied by contingents
of Javanese nobles, called aryas, came to Bali to subdue a rapacious
Balinese king. A Javanese vassal ruler was installed at a new
capital at Samprangan, near presentday lUungkung in east Bali,
and the nobles were granted apanages in the surrounding areas.
A Javanese court and courtly culture were thus introduced to
the island.
The separation
of Balinese society into four caste groups is ascribed to this
period, with the satriya warrior caste ruling from Samprangan.
Those who did not wish to participate in the new system fled
to remote mountain areas, where they lived apart from the mainstream.
These are the so-called 11 original Balinese," the Bali
Aga or Bali Mula.
Around 1460,
the capital moved to nearby Gelgel, and the powerful "Grand
Lord" or Dewa Agung presided over a flowering of the Balinese
arts and culture. Over time, however, the descendants of the
aryas became increasingly independent, and from around 1700
began to form realms in other areas.
Reconstructing
the past
Because ancestor
veneration plays such an important role in Balinese religion,
many groups possess family genealogies, known as babad. In such
texts, the brahmana, satriya and wesya clans trace their ancestry
to Majapahit kings, while the Bali Aga claim descent from even
earlier Javanese rulers. There are also groups which claim as
their ancestors Javanese Hindus and Buddhists who are said to
have taken refuge in Bali from invading Muslim forces. Ibis
probably gave rise to the story that entire Hindu-Buddhist populations
of Java, with their valuables, books and other cultural baggage,
fled to Bali after the fall of Majapahit. We do not know if
this is true, as even up to the present day it is a common for
families to re-write and improve their babad, depending on their
circumstances.