fbpx
Wikipedia

Ambon Island

Ambon Island is part of the Maluku Islands of Indonesia. The island has an area of 743.37 km2 (287.02 sq mi) and is mountainous, well watered, and fertile. Ambon Island consists of two territories: the city of Ambon to the south and various districts (kecamatan) of the Central Maluku Regency to the north. The main city and seaport is Ambon (with a 2020 Census population of 347,288),[1] which is also the capital of Maluku province, while those districts of Maluku Tengah Regency situated on Ambon Island had a 2020 Census population of 128,069.[2] Ambon has an airport and is home to the Pattimura University and Open University (Universitas Terbuka), state universities, and a few private universities, which include Darussalam University (Universitas Darussalam, UNDAR) and Universitas Kristen Indonesia Maluku (UKIM).

Ambon
Ambon (left) and the Lease Islands
Ambon
Ambon
Geography
LocationSouth East Asia
Coordinates3°38′17″S 128°07′02″E / 3.63806°S 128.11722°E / -3.63806; 128.11722Coordinates: 3°38′17″S 128°07′02″E / 3.63806°S 128.11722°E / -3.63806; 128.11722
ArchipelagoMaluku Islands
Area743.37 km2 (287.02 sq mi)
Highest elevation1,225 m (4019 ft)
Highest pointMount Salahutu
Administration
Indonesia
ProvinceMaluku
Largest settlementAmbon
Demographics
Population475,357 (2020 Census)
Pop. density639.46/km2 (1656.19/sq mi)
LanguagesAmbonese
Ethnic groupsAmbonese
Additional information
Time zone
Ambon Island in the center of Maluku Islands

Geography

Ambon Island lies off the southwest coast of the much larger Seram island. It is on the north side of the Banda Sea, part of a chain of volcanic islands that encircle the sea. It is 51 kilometres (32 miles) long and is of very irregular shape, being almost divided in two. The southeastern and smaller portion, a peninsula (called Leitimur) is united to the northern (called Leihitu or Hitoe) by a narrow neck of land. The Ambon Bay thus formed cuts about 20 kilometres (12 mi) into the island with the airport on the northern shore and the city of Ambon on the southern side. The city of Ambon covers the entirety of Leitimur, with its centre on the northwest coast of Leitimur, facing Leihitu, and has a safe harbor on Amboina Bay.

The highest mountains, Wawani at 1,100 metres (3,600 feet) and Salahutu at 1,225 metres (4,019 feet), have hot springs and solfataras. They are volcanoes, and the mountains of the neighboring Lease Islands are extinct volcanoes. Granite and serpentine rocks predominate, but the shores of Amboina Bay are of chalk and contain stalactite caves.

Wild areas of Ambon Island are covered by tropical rainforest, part of the Seram rain forests ecoregion, together with neighboring Seram. Seram, Ambon, and most of Maluku are part of Wallacea, the group of Indonesian islands that are separated by deep water from both the Asian and Australian continents and have never been linked to the continents by land.

As a result of this isolation, Ambon has few indigenous mammals; birds are more abundant. The insect diversity of the island, however, is rich, particularly in butterflies. Seashells are obtained in great numbers and variety. Tortoise shell is also exported.

The population of the island (administered as Kota Ambon, Kecamatan Leihitu, Kecamatan Leihitu Barat, and Kecamatan Salahutu), including a tiny sparsely populated island to the north, was just below 441,000 in the 2010 Census,[3] but by 2020 had risen to over 475,000.[4]

Climate

The average temperature is 27 °C (81 °F), rarely falling below 22 °C (72 °F). Rainfall can be heavy, especially after the eastern monsoons, and the island is vulnerable to violent typhoons. The wet season (October to April) coincides with the period of the west monsoon.

Economy

Cassava and sago are the chief crops, which also include breadfruit, sugarcane, coffee, cocoa, pepper and cotton. In addition to these, hunting and fishing supplement the local diet. Nutmeg and cloves were once the dominant export crops but are now produced in limited quantities. Copra is also exported. Amboina wood, obtained from the angsana tree and highly valued for ornamental woodwork, is now mostly grown on Seram. The main employers in Ambon Island are the Gubernatorial Office (PEMDA), the Mayoral Office (PEMKOT), Raiders 733 (Indonesian military unit).

The whole economy of Ambon Island is starting to shift out of the "Old Towne" ("Kota Lama") toward Passo, which is the newly appointed central business district of the island region. The economy of Ambon Island was recently boosted by the investment made by Ciputra Group in creating a whole new satellite city in Lateri, Kotamadya Ambon, Maluku: Citraland Bay View City. The new international standard shopping center, Ambon City Center, opened in 2012.

Demographics

 
A woman in traditional attire from the Southeastern Maluku Islands

The Ambonese are of mixed Malay-Papuan origin. They are mostly Christians or Muslims. The predominant language of the island is Ambonese Malay, also called Ambonese. It developed as the trade language of central Maluku and is spoken elsewhere in Maluku as a second language. The old creole trade language called Portugis has died out. Bilingualism in Indonesian is high around Ambon City. There have been strong religious tensions on the island between Muslims and Christians[5] and ethnic tensions between indigenous Ambonese and migrants from Sulawesi, primarily Butonese, Bugis and Makassarese migrants.[citation needed]

History

Colonial era

In 1512, the Portuguese were the first Europeans to land in Ambon, and it became the new centre for Portuguese activities in Maluku following their expulsion from Ternate.[6] The Portuguese, however, were regularly attacked by native Muslims on the island's northern coast, in particular Hitu, which had trading and religious links with major port cities on Java's north coast. They established a factory in 1521 but did not obtain peaceable possession of it until 1580. Indeed, the Portuguese never managed to control the local trade in spices and failed in attempts to establish their authority over the Banda Islands, the nearby centre of nutmeg production. The creole trade language Portugis, however, was spoken well into the 19th century, and many families still have Portuguese names and claim Portuguese ancestry, for example Muskita and De Fretes.[7]

 
Coat of arms of Amboina during Dutch colonial era. The charge in the lower half of the arms represents Fort Victoria.[8]

The Dutch dispossessed the Portuguese in 1605, when Steven van der Hagen took over the fort without a single shot. Ambon was the headquarters of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) from 1610 to 1619 until the founding of Batavia (now Jakarta) by the Dutch.[9] About 1615 the English formed a settlement on the island at Cambello, which they retained until 1623, when the Dutch destroyed it. Frightful tortures inflicted on its unfortunate inhabitants were connected with its destruction. In 1654, after many fruitless negotiations, Oliver Cromwell compelled the United Provinces to give the sum of 300,000 gulden, as compensation to the descendants of those who suffered in the "Ambon Massacre", together with Manhattan.[10] In 1673, the poet John Dryden produced his tragedy Amboyna; or the Cruelties of the Dutch to the English Merchants. The British, under Admiral Peter Rainier, captured Ambon in 1796, but they restored it to the Dutch at the Peace of Amiens in 1802. They retook the island in 1810 but once more restored it to the Dutch in 1814. Ambon used to be the world center of clove production; until the nineteenth century, the Dutch prohibited the rearing of the clove tree on all the other islands subject to their rule, in order to secure the monopoly to Ambon.[11]

 
Ambonese burghers congregating at the church in Ambon town.

Under the Dutch Empire, Ambon city was the seat of the Dutch resident and military commander of the Moluccas. The town was protected by Fort Victoria, and a 1902 Encyclopædia characterized it as "a clean little town with wide streets, well planted".[12] The population was divided into two classes: orang burger or citizens and orang negri or villagers, the former being a class of native origin enjoying certain privileges conferred on their ancestors by the old Dutch East India Company. There were also, besides the Dutch, some Arabs, Chinese and a few Portuguese settlers.

Ambon city was the site of a major Dutch military base that Imperial Japanese forces captured from Allied forces in the World War II Battle of Ambon in 1942. The battle was followed by the summary execution of more than 300 Allied prisoners of war in the Laha massacre.

A large Far East prisoner of war camp was situated in the north near Liang. This was made up of British men of the 77th HAA, 3rd Kings Own Hussars and some RAF volunteers. Approximately 1,000 men arrived in April 1943 and were marched from Ambon town over two days without food or water (see 1000 men of Liang to follow).

The FEPOWs built the camp including a water pipeline. They were ordered to build an airfield and runway alongside the beach and cleared coconut trees for the task. They did all they could to sabotage construction.

Conditions were horrendous and many men died due to disease, starvation and ill treatment by the Japanese. Many men also suffered blindness due to working chipping at the coral.

Conflicts since independence

Indonesia won its independence in 1945–49. As a consequence of ethnic and religious tensions, and President Sukarno making Indonesia a unitary state, Ambon was the scene of a revolt against the Indonesian government, resulting in the rebellion of the Republic of South Maluku in 1950.

In April and May 1958 during the Permesta rebellion in North Sulawesi, the USA supported and supplied the rebels. Pilots from a Taiwan-based CIA front organisation, Civil Air Transport, flying CIA B-26 Invader aircraft, repeatedly bombed and machine-gunned targets on Ambon. From 27 April until 18 May there were CIA air raids on Ambon city. Also, on 8 May 1958 CIA pilot Allen Pope bombed and machine-gunned the Indonesian Air Force base at Liang in the northeast of the island, damaging the runway and destroying a Consolidated PBY Catalina.[13] The Indonesian Air Force had only one serviceable fighter aircraft on Ambon Island, a North American P-51 Mustang at Liang. Pope's last air raid was on 18 May, when an Indonesian pilot at Liang, Captain Ignatius Dewanto, was scrambled to the P-51.[14] Pope had attacked Ambon city before Dewanto could catch him, but Dewanto intercepted him just as Pope was attacking one of a pair of troop ships in an Indonesian fleet west of Ambon Island.[15] The B-26 was brought down by fire from both Dewanto and shipborne anti-aircraft gunners.[16] Pope and his Indonesian radio operator bailed out and were captured,[17] which immediately exposed the level of CIA support for the Permesta rebellion. Embarrassed, the Eisenhower administration quickly ended CIA support for Permesta and withdrew its agents and remaining aircraft from the conflict.[18]

Between 1999 and 2002, Ambon was at the centre of sectarian conflict across the Maluku Islands. In 2007, Ambon resident Leonard Joni Sinay was sentenced to fifteen years' imprisonment for treason after he and other activists protested a visit by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono with a dance and a raising of the banned regional flag; both Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International called for his release, the latter organization designating him a prisoner of conscience.[19][20]

See also

References

  1. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2021.
  2. ^ Biro Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2015.
  3. ^ Kabupaten Maluku Tengah (PDF). Hasin Sensus Penduduk 2010 Agregat Data per Kecamatan. Ambon: Badan Pusat Statistik Kabupatan Maluku Tengah.
  4. ^ Birp Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2021.
  5. ^ Mardai, Gadis (30 January 1999). "Ambon rioting leaves 100 dead in Indonesia". World Socialist Website. from the original on 15 December 2006. Retrieved 10 January 2007.
  6. ^ Ricklefs 1991, p. 25.
  7. ^ Sneddon, James (2003). The Indonesian language: its history and role in modern society. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press. p. 80. ISBN 9780868405988.
  8. ^ "Maluku". hubert-herald.nl.
  9. ^ Ricklefs 1991, p. 28.
  10. ^ Milton, Giles (2000). Nathaniel's Nutmeg: How one man's courage changed the course of history. Sceptre. p. not cited. ISBN 0-374-21936-2.
  11. ^ Corn, Charles (1998). The Scents of Eden: A Narrative of the Spice Trade. New York: Kodansha Amer Inc. ISBN 1568362021.
  12. ^ ""Amboyna" island and town". Encyclopædia Britannica. London. 1902. p. 351.
  13. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 122.
  14. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 136.
  15. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 138.
  16. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 139.
  17. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, pp. 139, 141.
  18. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 143.
  19. ^ "Indonesia: Surging Sectarian Violence, Papua Crackdown". Amnesty International. 24 January 2012. from the original on 5 September 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  20. ^ "Prisoner of Conscience Beaten". Amnesty International. 24 August 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2012.

Sources

Further reading

External links

    ambon, island, city, island, ambon, maluku, part, maluku, islands, indonesia, island, area, mountainous, well, watered, fertile, consists, territories, city, ambon, south, various, districts, kecamatan, central, maluku, regency, north, main, city, seaport, amb. For the city on the island see Ambon Maluku Ambon Island is part of the Maluku Islands of Indonesia The island has an area of 743 37 km2 287 02 sq mi and is mountainous well watered and fertile Ambon Island consists of two territories the city of Ambon to the south and various districts kecamatan of the Central Maluku Regency to the north The main city and seaport is Ambon with a 2020 Census population of 347 288 1 which is also the capital of Maluku province while those districts of Maluku Tengah Regency situated on Ambon Island had a 2020 Census population of 128 069 2 Ambon has an airport and is home to the Pattimura University and Open University Universitas Terbuka state universities and a few private universities which include Darussalam University Universitas Darussalam UNDAR and Universitas Kristen Indonesia Maluku UKIM AmbonAmbon left and the Lease IslandsAmbonShow map of MalukuAmbonShow map of IndonesiaGeographyLocationSouth East AsiaCoordinates3 38 17 S 128 07 02 E 3 63806 S 128 11722 E 3 63806 128 11722 Coordinates 3 38 17 S 128 07 02 E 3 63806 S 128 11722 E 3 63806 128 11722ArchipelagoMaluku IslandsArea743 37 km2 287 02 sq mi Highest elevation1 225 m 4019 ft Highest pointMount SalahutuAdministrationIndonesiaProvinceMalukuLargest settlementAmbonDemographicsPopulation475 357 2020 Census Pop density639 46 km2 1656 19 sq mi LanguagesAmboneseEthnic groupsAmboneseAdditional informationTime zoneIEST UTC 09 00 Ambon Island in the center of Maluku Islands Contents 1 Geography 2 Climate 3 Economy 4 Demographics 5 History 5 1 Colonial era 5 2 Conflicts since independence 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksGeography EditAmbon Island lies off the southwest coast of the much larger Seram island It is on the north side of the Banda Sea part of a chain of volcanic islands that encircle the sea It is 51 kilometres 32 miles long and is of very irregular shape being almost divided in two The southeastern and smaller portion a peninsula called Leitimur is united to the northern called Leihitu or Hitoe by a narrow neck of land The Ambon Bay thus formed cuts about 20 kilometres 12 mi into the island with the airport on the northern shore and the city of Ambon on the southern side The city of Ambon covers the entirety of Leitimur with its centre on the northwest coast of Leitimur facing Leihitu and has a safe harbor on Amboina Bay The highest mountains Wawani at 1 100 metres 3 600 feet and Salahutu at 1 225 metres 4 019 feet have hot springs and solfataras They are volcanoes and the mountains of the neighboring Lease Islands are extinct volcanoes Granite and serpentine rocks predominate but the shores of Amboina Bay are of chalk and contain stalactite caves Wild areas of Ambon Island are covered by tropical rainforest part of the Seram rain forests ecoregion together with neighboring Seram Seram Ambon and most of Maluku are part of Wallacea the group of Indonesian islands that are separated by deep water from both the Asian and Australian continents and have never been linked to the continents by land As a result of this isolation Ambon has few indigenous mammals birds are more abundant The insect diversity of the island however is rich particularly in butterflies Seashells are obtained in great numbers and variety Tortoise shell is also exported The population of the island administered as Kota Ambon Kecamatan Leihitu Kecamatan Leihitu Barat and Kecamatan Salahutu including a tiny sparsely populated island to the north was just below 441 000 in the 2010 Census 3 but by 2020 had risen to over 475 000 4 Climate EditThe average temperature is 27 C 81 F rarely falling below 22 C 72 F Rainfall can be heavy especially after the eastern monsoons and the island is vulnerable to violent typhoons The wet season October to April coincides with the period of the west monsoon Economy EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Cassava and sago are the chief crops which also include breadfruit sugarcane coffee cocoa pepper and cotton In addition to these hunting and fishing supplement the local diet Nutmeg and cloves were once the dominant export crops but are now produced in limited quantities Copra is also exported Amboina wood obtained from the angsana tree and highly valued for ornamental woodwork is now mostly grown on Seram The main employers in Ambon Island are the Gubernatorial Office PEMDA the Mayoral Office PEMKOT Raiders 733 Indonesian military unit The whole economy of Ambon Island is starting to shift out of the Old Towne Kota Lama toward Passo which is the newly appointed central business district of the island region The economy of Ambon Island was recently boosted by the investment made by Ciputra Group in creating a whole new satellite city in Lateri Kotamadya Ambon Maluku Citraland Bay View City The new international standard shopping center Ambon City Center opened in 2012 Demographics Edit A woman in traditional attire from the Southeastern Maluku Islands The Ambonese are of mixed Malay Papuan origin They are mostly Christians or Muslims The predominant language of the island is Ambonese Malay also called Ambonese It developed as the trade language of central Maluku and is spoken elsewhere in Maluku as a second language The old creole trade language called Portugis has died out Bilingualism in Indonesian is high around Ambon City There have been strong religious tensions on the island between Muslims and Christians 5 and ethnic tensions between indigenous Ambonese and migrants from Sulawesi primarily Butonese Bugis and Makassarese migrants citation needed History EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ambon Island news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Colonial era Edit See also Governorate of Ambon In 1512 the Portuguese were the first Europeans to land in Ambon and it became the new centre for Portuguese activities in Maluku following their expulsion from Ternate 6 The Portuguese however were regularly attacked by native Muslims on the island s northern coast in particular Hitu which had trading and religious links with major port cities on Java s north coast They established a factory in 1521 but did not obtain peaceable possession of it until 1580 Indeed the Portuguese never managed to control the local trade in spices and failed in attempts to establish their authority over the Banda Islands the nearby centre of nutmeg production The creole trade language Portugis however was spoken well into the 19th century and many families still have Portuguese names and claim Portuguese ancestry for example Muskita and De Fretes 7 Coat of arms of Amboina during Dutch colonial era The charge in the lower half of the arms represents Fort Victoria 8 The Dutch dispossessed the Portuguese in 1605 when Steven van der Hagen took over the fort without a single shot Ambon was the headquarters of the Dutch East India Company VOC from 1610 to 1619 until the founding of Batavia now Jakarta by the Dutch 9 About 1615 the English formed a settlement on the island at Cambello which they retained until 1623 when the Dutch destroyed it Frightful tortures inflicted on its unfortunate inhabitants were connected with its destruction In 1654 after many fruitless negotiations Oliver Cromwell compelled the United Provinces to give the sum of 300 000 gulden as compensation to the descendants of those who suffered in the Ambon Massacre together with Manhattan 10 In 1673 the poet John Dryden produced his tragedy Amboyna or the Cruelties of the Dutch to the English Merchants The British under Admiral Peter Rainier captured Ambon in 1796 but they restored it to the Dutch at the Peace of Amiens in 1802 They retook the island in 1810 but once more restored it to the Dutch in 1814 Ambon used to be the world center of clove production until the nineteenth century the Dutch prohibited the rearing of the clove tree on all the other islands subject to their rule in order to secure the monopoly to Ambon 11 Ambonese burghers congregating at the church in Ambon town Under the Dutch Empire Ambon city was the seat of the Dutch resident and military commander of the Moluccas The town was protected by Fort Victoria and a 1902 Encyclopaedia characterized it as a clean little town with wide streets well planted 12 The population was divided into two classes orang burger or citizens and orang negri or villagers the former being a class of native origin enjoying certain privileges conferred on their ancestors by the old Dutch East India Company There were also besides the Dutch some Arabs Chinese and a few Portuguese settlers Ambon city was the site of a major Dutch military base that Imperial Japanese forces captured from Allied forces in the World War II Battle of Ambon in 1942 The battle was followed by the summary execution of more than 300 Allied prisoners of war in the Laha massacre A large Far East prisoner of war camp was situated in the north near Liang This was made up of British men of the 77th HAA 3rd Kings Own Hussars and some RAF volunteers Approximately 1 000 men arrived in April 1943 and were marched from Ambon town over two days without food or water see 1000 men of Liang to follow The FEPOWs built the camp including a water pipeline They were ordered to build an airfield and runway alongside the beach and cleared coconut trees for the task They did all they could to sabotage construction Conditions were horrendous and many men died due to disease starvation and ill treatment by the Japanese Many men also suffered blindness due to working chipping at the coral Conflicts since independence Edit Indonesia won its independence in 1945 49 As a consequence of ethnic and religious tensions and President Sukarno making Indonesia a unitary state Ambon was the scene of a revolt against the Indonesian government resulting in the rebellion of the Republic of South Maluku in 1950 In April and May 1958 during the Permesta rebellion in North Sulawesi the USA supported and supplied the rebels Pilots from a Taiwan based CIA front organisation Civil Air Transport flying CIA B 26 Invader aircraft repeatedly bombed and machine gunned targets on Ambon From 27 April until 18 May there were CIA air raids on Ambon city Also on 8 May 1958 CIA pilot Allen Pope bombed and machine gunned the Indonesian Air Force base at Liang in the northeast of the island damaging the runway and destroying a Consolidated PBY Catalina 13 The Indonesian Air Force had only one serviceable fighter aircraft on Ambon Island a North American P 51 Mustang at Liang Pope s last air raid was on 18 May when an Indonesian pilot at Liang Captain Ignatius Dewanto was scrambled to the P 51 14 Pope had attacked Ambon city before Dewanto could catch him but Dewanto intercepted him just as Pope was attacking one of a pair of troop ships in an Indonesian fleet west of Ambon Island 15 The B 26 was brought down by fire from both Dewanto and shipborne anti aircraft gunners 16 Pope and his Indonesian radio operator bailed out and were captured 17 which immediately exposed the level of CIA support for the Permesta rebellion Embarrassed the Eisenhower administration quickly ended CIA support for Permesta and withdrew its agents and remaining aircraft from the conflict 18 Between 1999 and 2002 Ambon was at the centre of sectarian conflict across the Maluku Islands In 2007 Ambon resident Leonard Joni Sinay was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment for treason after he and other activists protested a visit by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono with a dance and a raising of the banned regional flag both Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International called for his release the latter organization designating him a prisoner of conscience 19 20 See also Edit Islands portalE U Pupella Sikula RiverReferences Edit Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2021 Biro Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2015 Kabupaten Maluku Tengah PDF Hasin Sensus Penduduk 2010 Agregat Data per Kecamatan Ambon Badan Pusat Statistik Kabupatan Maluku Tengah Birp Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2021 Mardai Gadis 30 January 1999 Ambon rioting leaves 100 dead in Indonesia World Socialist Website Archived from the original on 15 December 2006 Retrieved 10 January 2007 Ricklefs 1991 p 25 Sneddon James 2003 The Indonesian language its history and role in modern society Sydney University of New South Wales Press p 80 ISBN 9780868405988 Maluku hubert herald nl Ricklefs 1991 p 28 Milton Giles 2000 Nathaniel s Nutmeg How one man s courage changed the course of history Sceptre p not cited ISBN 0 374 21936 2 Corn Charles 1998 The Scents of Eden A Narrative of the Spice Trade New York Kodansha Amer Inc ISBN 1568362021 Amboyna island and town Encyclopaedia Britannica London 1902 p 351 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 122 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 136 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 138 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 139 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 pp 139 141 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 143 Indonesia Surging Sectarian Violence Papua Crackdown Amnesty International 24 January 2012 Archived from the original on 5 September 2012 Retrieved 24 August 2012 Prisoner of Conscience Beaten Amnesty International 24 August 2012 Retrieved 24 August 2012 Sources EditConboy Kenneth Morrison James 1999 Feet to the Fire CIA Covert Operations in Indonesia 1957 1958 Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 193 9 Ricklefs M C 1991 A History of Modern Indonesia Since c 1300 2nd ed London Macmillan pp 25 28 ISBN 0 333 57689 6 Further reading EditKahin Audrey R Kahin George McT 1997 1995 Subversion as Foreign Policy The Secret Eisenhower and Dulles Debacle in Indonesia Seattle and London University of Washington Press ISBN 0 295 97618 7 External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ambon Ambon Banda Island Tourism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ambon Island amp oldid 1142578562, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.