Jakarta
happens to be located in Java, but it is hardly of Java. The
contrast between the metropolitan capital and the surrounding
province is dramatic. For, although West Java contains some
big cities of its own, its soul is rural. The least densely
populated province of the island, it offers unrivaled scenery,
extensive nature reserves and refreshing mountain weather, all
within a few hours of Jakarta's confusion. Its prosperity, friendly
people and excellent transportation facilities make it one of
the most genuinely relaxing parts of rural Indonesia in which
to travel. West Java also offers much that is of cultural and
historical interest.
West Java
was first known to Europe as Sunda - a land, kingdom, language
and people all distinct from Java. The l6th-century Portuguese
were so impressed by this country that they misapplied its name
not only to the island of Java, but to the whole archipelago;
to this day, Sumatra, Java, Borneo and Celebes are still known
collectively as the "Greater Sunda Islands." The first
known kingdom on Java, the Hindu state of Tarumanegara, flourished
on the north coastal plain of West Java in the 5th century.
A millenium later, the first Portuguese ships to weigh anchor
here were welcomed by another great Hindu kingdom, Pajajaran,
a contemporary and rival of the great East Javanese Majapahit.
Since 1433, the capital had been at an inland location, Pakuan,
today's Bogor, where Dutch governors- general would later reside.
However, in 1522, when Pajajaran concluded an alliance with
Portuguese Goa, it was still master of the north coast, including
the lucrative ports of Banten and Sunda Kelapa (now Jakarta).
The Portuguese were to help protect the Hindu power against
Islam's rapid westward expansion along the coast. However, when
they returned in 1527, both ports had been captured by Muslims
and made vassals of the young sultanate of Demak, 400 kilometers
to the east. Landlocked, Pajajaran declined, and 50 years later
its capital was conquered by Banten.
While
Javanese speakers flocked to the booming coastlands, and Banten
became a great trading and military power, the Sundanese retreated
to the mountains and high plateau in the south and developed
a rural folk culture without cities or courts. In this condition,
and so close to Batavia, what now became known as the "Sundalands"
were easy prey for the VOC; by 1684, the entire Sundanese-speaking
area was under direct Dutch control, while the coastal sultanates
of Banten and Cirebon retained nominal independence into the
19th century. In due course, the Sundanese too were Islamized
and indeed, became known as purer and stricter Muslims than
their Central Javanese neighbours. However, in language, customs
and art, and in their own minds, the Sundanese never assimilated
with the outgrowth of ethnic Java which had cut them off from
the Java Sea.
So, today
there are two West Javas; the Javanized, maritime north coast
and the Sundanese interior. This human division coincides closely
with the most obvious physical one; the north is flat and featureless,
a hot, wet, 50 kilometer-wide littoral plain, advancing a little
further seawards each year, laden with the rice which feeds
Jakarta's masses, while Sunda proper is a towering, stately
mass of welded volcanoes - the Priangan, or Parahyangan, "Abode
of the Gods," clothed in tea plantations and virgin forest,
shrouded in cloud, falling steeply into the sea on the wave-lashed,
portless south coast.
The broken island of Krakatau, out in the Sunda Strait, is an
outlier; many of Priangan's other volcanoes are still active.
At Cianjur, Bandung, Garut and Tasikmalaya, the mountains part
to cradle high depressions which are meticulously terraced to
grow fragrant rice. To the east, the Priangan fades imperceptibly
into the more intermittent volcanic terrain of Central Java.
Ninety
kilometers west of Jakarta, via Serang, is the fishing village
of Banten, known to history as Bantam. Looking at this quiet
little place today, it is hard to believe that for a century
this was the greatest trading port on Java; the city which Batavia
itself was founded to challenge. Wrested from Hindu control
in the 1520s, by Gunungjati of Demak, Banten became an independent
Muslim sultanate which grew rich on the trade of the Sunda Strait
and the pepper of Lampung. Banten attracted English, French
and Danish "factories" before a civil war presented
the VOC with the opportunity to intervene and end its glory
forever in 1682.
BANTEN
The
village is dominated by the tiered meru roof of the l6th-century
Mesjid Agung, one of Java's oldest mosques and a good example
of transitional Hindu Islamic architecture. Its peculiar pagodalike
minaret is said to be the work of a Chinese Muslim, and the
adjacent shuttered building that of a Dutch Muslim; reflections
of early-Javan Islam's ecclectic interpretations. South of the
alun-alun (central square) are the remains of two large palaces,
the Pakuwonan and the Istana Kaibon. A little further on is
the tomb of the third king, Maulana Yusuf, who ruled in the
1570s. Northwest of these remnants of Banten's greatness is
a monument to its fall - the ruins of Fort Speelwijk, constructed
in 1682 to keep the city safety under the Dutch heel. Built
overlooking the sea, the fort is now some 200 meters inland;
coastal silting has played its part in the decline of Banten.
Since 1985, local archaeological finds have been displayed in
the Banten Site Museum on JI. Mesjid Banten Lama.
For most
visitors, the most important attractions of Java's far west
are natural. The national park at Ujung Kulon ("West End")
is one of Indonesia's prime nature reserves, and a fine example
of successful state action to preserve wildlife. This unsullied
wilderness shelters hornbill, banteng (wild cattle) and crocodile,
as well as the only breeding population of Javan rhinoceros
to survive Java's long transformation fronijungle to market
garden. Krakatau, 40 kilometers out in the Sunda Strait, is
the remains of a great volcano which blew itself to pieces in
1883, in one of the greatest explosions ever recorded. Its scarred,
primordial landscapes are reached by sea from Labuhan, which
is also the usual jumping off point for Ujung Kulon. Along the
coast north of Labuhan are West Java's finest and safest beaches,
with accommodations in Carita, Anyer Kidul and Florida Beach
(near Merak, the terminal for the ferry to Sumatra).
Travelling
from Jakarta, Sunda proper begins in the rain-drenched town
of Bogor, 50 kilometers south of the capital, where the first
big volcano, Salak, begins to rise. The area has a long history
of civilization. Fifteen hundred years ago it was part of Tarumanegara,
Java's first Hindu kingdom. Fifteen kilometers west of the town,
near Ciampea, the footprints of a 5th-century king and a miraculously
clear inscription adorn the great riverside boulder of Batutulis
Ciampea. Three kilometers southeast of town, another batutulis
(inscribed stone) is the only surviving reminder that 15th-century
Pajajaran had its capital here; but, Bogor's kings had already
vanished into legend before Gustaaf Willem Baron van Imhoff
founded a country estate here in 1745. Bogor began its rise
to renown as Buitenzorg ("Carefree"), retreat and
later official residence of the governor-general of Dutch East
India. The present Istana Bogor (Bogor Palace), elegant and
white on its undulating green lawns, dates from 1856, and has
seen many a lavish gathering of both Batavia's and Jakarta's
elite. Its pre-war furnishings were looted by the Japanese;
the present contents are owed to the acquisitive zeal of the
late President Sukarno and the generosity of his many benefactors.
They include paintings and sculptures, erotic and otherwise,
by many of Indonesia's foremost artists. Sukarno was under de
facto house arrest here from 1967 until his death in 1970.
The real pride of Bogor is the Kebun Raya, or Bogor Botanical
Garden, which covers a beautiful 87 hectares next to the palace
compound. It was founded in 1817, by the Prussian-bom, Dutch
government naturalist Caspar Reinwardt, with the help of two
Englishmen from Kew Gardens. This institution was in the forefront
of the Victorian colonial enterprise of documenting, classifying,
taming
Travelling
from Jakarta, Sunda proper begins in the rain-drenched town
of Bogor, 50 kilometers south of the capital, where the first
big volcano, Salak, begins to rise. The area has a long history
of civilization. Fifteen hundred years ago it was part of Tarumanegara,
Java's first Hindu kingdom. Fifteen kilometers west of the town,
near Ciampea, the footprints of a 5th-century king and a miraculously
clear inscription adorn the great riverside boulder of Batutulis
Ciampea. Three kilometers southeast of town, another batutulis
(inscribed stone) is the only surviving reminder that 15th-century
Pajajaran had its capital here; but, Bogor's kings had already
vanished into legend before Gustaaf Willem Baron van Imhoff
founded a country estate here in 1745. Bogor began its rise
to renown as Buitenzorg ("Carefree"), retreat and
later official residence of the governor-general of Dutch East
India. The present Istana Bogor (Bogor Palace), elegant and
white on its undulating green lawns, dates from 1856, and has
seen many a lavish gathering of both Batavia's and Jakarta's
elite. Its pre-war furnishings were looted by the Japanese;
the present contents are owed to the acquisitive zeal of the
late President Sukarno and the generosity of his many benefactors.
They include paintings and sculptures, erotic and otherwise,
by many of Indonesia's foremost artists. Sukarno was under de
facto house arrest here from 1967 until his death in 1970.
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