Klungkung
Regency
This
small district in eastern Bali derives its name from the
old court town of Klungkung. The name means "beauty"
or "happiness" and the town was founded several
centuries ago on a site chosen for its many auspicious
qualities.
The
founding of Klungkung was not as idyllic as the name suggests,
however. Prior to 1651 ancestors of the Klungkung kings
ruled Bali from their capital at Gelgel, some 5 km to
the south. At its height, Gelgel was a great and powerful
court, governing a realm that extended to the adjacent
islands of Java, Lombok and Sumbawa. In 1651, the prime
minister of Gelgel revolted and forced the royal family
to flee. Some 30 years later, a young prince chose the
present site for a new capital, and a smaller kingdom
was born here.
Despite
its small size and lack of natural resources compared
to the other kingdoms of Bali, Klungkung has always maintained
the mystique of being the island's original royal center.
The Klungkung royal family is still considered more regal
than any other on the island, and up until recent times
this meant having exclusive rights to certain ritual status-symbols,
such as the 11-tiered cremation towers. In the intricate
etiquette of the formal Balinese language, moreover, the
Klungkung royalty have the right to speak down, literally,
to everyone else.
The
people of Klungkung are still extremely proud of this
heritage, and uphold a reputation for being more traditional
than other Balinese. This is supported by the active role
the royal family takes in the life of the area, and by
the presence of many famous Priestly families in the region,
all of whom once participated in the great rituals of
the court, and to whom Bali's most famous and venerable
pedanda priests trace their origin.
The
prestige of Klungkung and its illustrious past is such
that most Balinese aristocrats trace their ancestry back
to Gelgel. Pamily histories will often tell why their
ancestors left the center, and temples in Klungkung still
draw people from all over the island for major rituals
to celebrate their heritage. Gelgel is full of sites of
legendary deeds by ancient kings, ministers and priests.
Perhaps
because of its past, Klungkung today seems rather removed
from the hustle and bustle of tourist activity. Its main
tourist spots are the Kerta Gosa - the famed judgment
hall of the former Klungkung palace and the bat cave temple
near Kusamba.
In
general, its income derives more from trade than from
tourism, since it is a stopping point on the busy inter-island
trade route, which runs from East Java, via the port of
Padangbai, and on to Lombok and eastern Indonesia. A visitor
to Klungkung can get a sense of this lively commercial
activity from a visit to the city's market - the largest
in Bali. Since most of the trade passes along the main
road through the town, visitors to Klungkung find the
side-roads quiet and serene.
Outside
the busy town, Klungkung offers a contrast of landscapes
- from the lush hills on the road leading to Besakih temple,
to the stark gravel pits to the east, formed when Mt Agung
erupted in 1963, its lava flows laying waste to the rice
fields of the area. The villages of Klungkung are among
the most charming in Bali, and have been major prize winners
in the all-Bali "beautiful village" competitions
sponsored by the government.
One
of the natural highlights of the Klungkung area is the
great Unda River just east of the city. Floods and changes
in the river's course figure in many episodes of Klungkung's
traditional history. Nowadays its caprices are kept in
check by a system of dams and man-made dikes, built with
the voluntary aid of those who live by the river and are
dependent on its waters for their survival.