Welcome
to Bandung
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 >>
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