fbpx
Wikipedia

Banten

Banten (Indonesian: Banten, Sundanese: ᮘᮔ᮪ᮒᮨᮔ᮪, romanized: Banten) is the westernmost province on the island of Java, Indonesia. Its capital city is Serang and its largest city is in Tangerang. The province borders West Java and the Special Capital Region of Jakarta on the east, the Java Sea on the north, the Indian Ocean on the south, and the Sunda Strait (which separates Java from the neighbouring island of Sumatra) on the west and shares a maritime border with Bengkulu and Lampung to the east and Bangka Belitung Islands to the north. The province covers an area of 9,662.82 km2 (3,730.84 sq mi). It had a population of over 11.9 million in the 2020 census,[5] up from about 10.6 million in 2010.[6] The estimated mid-2022 population was 12.25 million.[1] Formerly part of the province of West Java, Banten become a province in 2000. The northern half (particularly the areas near Jakarta and the Java Sea coast) has recently experienced rapid rises in population and urbanization, and the southern half (especially the region facing the Indian Ocean) has a more traditional character but an equally fast-rising population.

Banten
Province of Banten
Nickname(s): 
Tanah Jawara (Sundanese)
Land of the Champions
Motto(s): 
Iman Taqwa (Indonesian)
(Faith and Piety)
   Banten in    Indonesia
OpenStreetMap
Coordinates: 6°30′S 106°15′E / 6.500°S 106.250°E / -6.500; 106.250
CapitalSerang
Largest cityTangerang
Established4 October 2000
Government
 • BodyBanten Provincial Government
 • Acting GovernorAl Muktabar
 • Vice GovernorVacant
Area
 • Total9,662.92 km2 (3,730.87 sq mi)
 • Rank34th in Indonesia
Highest elevation1,929 m (6,329 ft)
Population
 (mid 2022 estimate)[1]
 • Total12,251,985
 • Rank5th in Indonesia
 • Density1,300/km2 (3,300/sq mi)
DemonymBantenese
Demographics
 • ReligionIslam (94.62%)
Christianity (3.94%)
Protestant (2.65%)
Catholic (1.29%)
Buddhism (1.30%)
Hindu (0.10%)
Aliran Kepercayaan (0.03%)
Konghucu (0.01%)[2]
 • LanguagesIndonesian (official)
Sundanese (lingua franca)
Javanese (minor areas)
Betawi
Time zoneUTC+7 (Indonesia Western Time)
ISO 3166 codeID-BT
GDP (nominal)2022[3]
 - TotalRp 747.3 trillion (8th)
US$ 50.3 billion
US$ 157.0 billion (PPP)
 - Per capitaRp 61.00 million (15th)
US$ 4,107
US$ 12,817 (PPP)
 - Growth 5.03%[4]
HDI 0.733 (8th) – high
Websitebantenprov.go.id

Present-day Banten was part of the Sundanese Tarumanagara kingdom from the fourth to the seventh centuries AD. After the fall of Tarumanegara, it was controlled by Hindu-Buddhist kingdoms such as the Srivijaya Empire and the Sunda Kingdom. The spread of Islam in the region began in the 15th century; by the late 16th century, Islam had replaced Hinduism and Buddhism as the dominant religion in the province, with the establishment of the Banten Sultanate. European traders began arriving in the region – first the Portuguese, followed by the British and the Dutch. The Dutch East India Company (VOC) finally controlled the regional economy, gradually weakening the Banten Sultanate. On 22 November 1808, Dutch Governor-General Herman Willem Daendels declared that the Sultanate of Banten had been absorbed into the Dutch East Indies.[7] This began the Bantam Residency, 150 years of direct Dutch rule. In March 1942, the Japanese invaded the Indies and occupied the region for three years before their August 1945 surrender. The region was returned to Dutch control for the next five years before the Dutch left and it was ruled by the Indonesian government. Banten then became part of the province of West Java, and separatist efforts led to the creation of the province of Banten in 2000.[8]

Etymology Edit

The name "Banten" has several possible origins. The first is from the Sundanese phrase katiban inten, which means "struck down by diamonds". The phrase comes from the history of the Bantenese people, who were animists before adopting Buddhism and Hinduism. After Islam began to spread in Banten, the community began to recognize and embrace Islam. The spread of Islam in Banten is described as being "struck down by diamonds".[9]

Another origin story is that the Indonesian Hindu god Batara Guru traveled from east to west, arriving at Surasowan (present-day Serang). When he arrived, Batara Guru sat on a stone which became known as watu gilang. The stone glowed, and was presented to the king of Surasowan. Surasowan was reportedly surrounded by a clear, star-like river, and was described as a ring covered with diamonds (Sundanese: ban inten). This evolved into "banten".[9]

Another possibility is that "Banten" comes from the Indonesian word bantahan (rebuttal), because the local Bantenese people resisted the Dutch colonial government.[9] The word "Banten" appeared before the establishment of the Banten Sultanate as the name of a river. The high plains on its banks were called Cibanten Girang, shortened to Banten Girang (Upper Banten). Based on research in Banten Girang, the area has been settled since the 11th and 12th centuries.[10] During the 16th century, the region developed rapidly towards Serang and the northern coast. The coastal area later became the Sultanate of Banten, founded by Sunan Gunung Jati, which controlled almost all of the former Sunda Kingdom in West Java. Sunda Kelapa (Batavia) was captured by the Dutch, and Cirebon and the Parahiyangan region were captured by the Mataram Sultanate. The Banten Sultanate was later converted into a residency by the Dutch.[9]

History Edit

Early history Edit

 
Bird's-eye view of the town of Banten in 1599
 
With his father, Sunan Gunungjati, Sultan Maulana Hasanuddin founded the Sultanate of Banten.

During the fifth century, Banten was part of the kingdom of Tarumanagara. The fourth-century Lebak inscription, discovered in 1947 in a lowland village on the Cidanghiyang River in Munjul, Pandeglang [id], contains two lines of Sanskrit poetry in the Pallawa script[11] which describes life in the kingdom under the reign of Purnawarman.[12] The kingdom collapsed after an attack by Srivijaya, and western Java became part of the Sunda Kingdom. In the Chinese Chu-fan-chi, written around 1225, Chou Ju-kua wrote that Srivijaya ruled Sumatra, the Malay peninsula, and western Java during the early 13th century. Chu-fan-chi identified the port of Sunda as strategic and thriving, with pepper from Sunda among the highest quality. The population were made up of farmers, and their houses were built on wooden poles (rumah panggung). Robbery, however, was common.[13]

According to Portuguese explorer Tome Pires, Bantam (Banten) was an important early-16th-century port in the Kingdom of Sunda along with the ports of Pontang, Cheguide (Cigede), Tangaram (Tangerang), Calapa (Sunda Kelapa) and Chimanuk (on the Cimanuk river estuary).[14] In 1527, as the Portuguese fleet arrived off the coast, newly-converted Javanese Muslims under Sunan Gunungjati captured the port of Banten and the surrounding area from the Sundanese and established the Sultanate of Banten. According to Portuguese historian João de Barros, Banten was the center of the sultanate and a major Southeast Asian port (rivaling Malacca and Makassar). The town of Banten was in the middle of the bay, about 3 mi (4.8 km) across. It was 850 fathoms in length. A river, navigable by junks, flowed through the center of the town; a small tributary extended to the town's edge. The present-day river is smaller, and only navigable by small boats. A fortress near the town had brick walls seven palms thick. Armed, wooden defence buildings were two stories high. The town square was used for military activities and folk art, with a market in the morning. The palace was on the south side of the square. Next to the palace is a tall, flat-roofed building known as Srimanganti, which was used by the king to meet his subjects. West of the square is the Great Mosque of Banten.

Colonial era Edit

 
Warriors of Banten in 1596
 
In 1808, Dutch Governor-general Herman Willem Daendels ordered the annexation of the Banten Sultanate. This marked the end of the four-century-old sultanate and the beginning of 150 years of Dutch rule in the region.

When the Dutch arrived in Indonesia, the Portuguese had long been in Banten. The English established a factory in Banten, followed by the Dutch. The French and the Danish also came to trade in Banten. In the competition among European traders, the Dutch emerged victorious. The Portuguese left Banten in 1601 after their fleet was destroyed by the Dutch off the coast during the Dutch–Portuguese War.

Although the Dutch won the war, they preserved the Banten Sultanate. The maritime sultanate relied on trade, and the pepper monopoly in Lampung made the Banten authorities intermediaries. The sultanate grew rapidly, becoming a commercial center.[15] As sea trade increased throughout the archipelago, Banten became a multi-ethnic region. Assisted by the British, Danish and Chinese, Banten traded with Persia, India, Siam, Vietnam, the Philippines, China and Japan.[16] The reign of Sultan Ageng Tirtayasa was the sultanate's height.[17] Under his reign, Banten had one of the strongest navies in the region, built to European standards with help from European shipbuilders and attracted Europeans to the sultanate.[18] To secure its shipping lanes, Banten sent its fleet to Sukadana (the present-day Ketapang Regency in West Kalimantan) and conquered it in 1661.[19] Banten also tried to escape the pressure of the Dutch East India Company (VOC), which had blockaded incoming merchant ships.[18]

A power struggle developed around 1680 between Ageng Tirtayasa and his son, Abu Nashar Abdul Qahar (also known as Sultan Haji). The disagreement was exploited by the VOC, who supported Haji and causing a civil war. Strengthening his position, Haji sent two envoys to meet King Charles II of England in London in 1682 to obtain support and weapons.[20] In the ensuing war, Ageng withdrew from his palace to Tirtayasa (present-day Tangerang); on 28 December 1682, the region was seized by Haji with Dutch assistance. Ageng and his other sons, Pangeran Purbaya and Syekh Yusuf from Makassar, retreated to the southern Sunda interior. On 14 March 1683, Sultan Ageng was captured and imprisoned in Batavia.

The VOC continued to pursue and suppress Sultan Ageng's followers, led by Prince Purbaya and Sheikh Yusuf. On 5 May 1683, the VOC sent Lieutenant Untung Surapati and his Balinese troops, joining forces led by VOC Lieutenant Johannes Maurits van Happel to subdue the Pamotan [id] and Dayeuhluhur regions; on 14 December 1683, they captured Sheikh Yusuf.[21] Heavily outnumbered, Prince Purbaya surrendered. Surapati was ordered by Captain Johan Ruisj to pick up Purbaya and bring him to Batavia. They met with VOC forces led by Willem Kuffeler, but a dispute between them destroyed Kuffeler's forces; Surapati and his followers became fugitives from the VOC.[22]

 
François Valentijn's painting of Banten in 1694

Lampung was given to the VOC on 12 March 1682 by Sultan Haji as compensation for the company's support, and a 22 August 1682 letter gave the VOC the province's pepper monopoly.[23] The sultanate also had to reimburse the VOC for losses caused by the war.[24] After Sultan Haji's death in 1687, the VOC's influence in the sultanate began to increase; the appointment of a new sultan required the approval of the governor-general in Batavia. Sultan Abu Fadhl Muhammad Yahya ruled for about three years before he was replaced by his brother, Pangeran Adipati (Sultan Abul Mahasin Muhammad Zainul Abidin). The civil war in Banten left instability for the next government, due to dissatisfaction with the VOC's interference in local affairs.[19] Popular resistance peaked again at the end of the reign of Sultan Abul Fathi Muhammad Syifa Zainul Arifin. The sultan sought VOC assistance against the rebellion, and Banten became a vassal state of the company in 1752.[25]

In 1808, at the peak of the Napoleonic Wars, Governor-general Herman Willem Daendels ordered the construction of the Great Post Road to defend Java from British attack.[26] Daendels ordered the sultan of Banten to move his capital to Anyer and provide labor to build a port in Ujung Kulon. The sultan defied Daendels' order, and Daendels ordered an attack on Banten and the destruction of Surosowan Palace. The sultan and his family were held in the palace before their imprisonment in Fort Speelwijk. Sultan Abul Nashar Muhammad Ishaq Zainulmutaqin was then exiled to Batavia. On 22 November 1808, Daendels announced from his Serang headquarters that the sultanate had been absorbed into the Dutch East Indies.[27] The sultanate was abolished in 1813 by the British after the invasion of Java.[28] That year, Sultan Muhammad bin Muhammad Muhyiddin Zainussalihin was disarmed and forced to abdicate by Thomas Stamford Raffles; this ended the sultanate. After the British returned Java to the Dutch in 1814 as part of the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1814, Banten became a residentie (residency) of the Dutch East Indies.[8]

Japanese occupation and independence Edit

 
Rōmusha after their liberation by the Dutch. Thousands of labourers died during the construction of the Saketi–Bayah railway under Japanese occupation.

Japan invaded the East Indies, expelling the Dutch, and occupied Banten in March 1942. During their three years of occupation, the Japanese built the Saketi–Bayah railway in southern Lebak to transport brown coal from the Bayah mines. The project involved a workforce of about 1,000 rōmusha (local forced labourers) and a few engineers and technicians (mainly Dutch), supervised by the Japanese.[29] The rōmusha working in the mines were taken from Central and East Java, the railway rōmusha were primarily from Banten. The construction took 12 million human days over 14 months.[30] Working conditions were harsh due to food shortages, lack of medical care, and the tropical climate.[31] Casualties are estimated at 20,000 to 60,000, not including mine workers.[29]

After Japan surrendered in August 1945, the Dutch East Indies declared independence as the Republic of Indonesia. This was opposed by the returning Dutch, resulting in the Indonesian war of independence. During the war, Banten remained under Indonesian control. On 26 February 1948, the State of West Java (Indonesian: Negara Jawa Barat, Sundanese: Negara Jawa Kulon) was established; on 24 April 1948, it was renamed Pasundan. Pasundan became a federal state of the United States of Indonesia in 1949, and was incorporated into the Republic of Indonesia on 11 March 1950.[32]

After Indonesian independence, Banten became part of the province of West Java. Separatist sentiment led to the creation of the province of Banten in 2000.[33]

Geography Edit

 
Tanjung Lesung beach, Pandegelang Regency
 
Mangrove forest in Ujung Kulon National Park

Banten lies between 5°7'50" and 7°1'11" south latitude and 105°1'11" and 106°7'12" east longitude.[34] The province has an area of 9,662.92 km2 (3,730.87 sq mi).[35]

It is near the Sunda Strait's sea lanes, which link Australia and New Zealand with Southeast Asia. Banten also links Java and Sumatra. The region has a number of industries; its seaports handle overflow cargo from the seaport in Jakarta,[36] and are intended to be an alternative to the Port of Singapore.[37]

Its location on the western tip of Java makes Banten the gateway to Java, Sumatra and the adjacent areas of Jakarta, Indonesia's capital. Bordering the Java Sea on the north, the Sunda Strait on the west and the Indian Ocean on the south, the province has abundant marine resources.[38]

Topography Edit

 
Sawarna Banten Green View, Lebak Regency
 
Rawa Danau, Serang Regency

The province ranges in altitude from sea level to 2,000 m (6,600 ft). Banten is primarily lowland (below 50 metres above sea level) in Cilegon, Tangerang, Pandeglang Regency, and most of Serang Regency. The central Lebak and Pandeglang Regencies range from 201 to 2,000 m (659 to 6,562 ft), and the eastern Lebak Regency ranges in altitude from 501 to 2,000 m (1,644 to 6,562 ft) at the summit of Mount Halimun.

Banten's geomorphology generally consists of lowlands and sloping and steep hills.[39] The lowlands are generally in the north and south.

The sloping hills have a minimum height of 50 m (160 ft) above sea level. Mount Gede, north of Cilegon, has an altitude of 553 m (1,814 ft) above sea level; there are also hills in the southern Serang Regency, in the Mancak and Waringin Kurung Districts. The southern Pandeglang Regency is also hilly. In eastern Lebak Regency, bordering Bogor Regency and Sukabumi Regency in West Java, most of the region consists of steep hills of old sedimentary rock interspersed with igneous rocks such as granite, granodiorite, diorite and andesite. It also contains valuable tin and copper deposits.[40]

Climate Edit

 
Administrative map of Banten

Banten's climate is influenced by the South and East Asian Monsoons and the alternating La Niña or El Niño. During the rainy season, the weather is dominated by a west wind (from Sumatra and the Indian Ocean south of the Indian subcontinent) joined by winds from Northern Asia crossing the South China Sea. The dry season is dominated by an east wind which gives Banten severe droughts, especially on the northern coast during El Niño. Temperatures on the coast and in the hills range from 22 to 32 °C (72 to 90 °F), and temperatures in the mountains from 400 to 1,350 m (1,310 to 4,430 ft) above sea level range from 18 to 29 °C (64 to 84 °F).

The heaviest rainfall ranges from 2,712 to 3,670 mm (106.8 to 144.5 in) during the rainy season from September to May, covering half of the western Pandeglang Regency. Rainfall from 335 to 453 mm (13.2 to 17.8 in) covers half of Tangerang Regency, the northern Serang Regency, and the cities of Cilegon and Tangerang. In the dry season (from April to December), the peak rainfall of 615 to 833 mm (24.2 to 32.8 in) covers half of the northern Serang and Tangerang Regencies and the cities of Cilegon and Tangerang. The lowest dry-season rainfall, 360 to 486 mm (14.2 to 19.1 in) from June to September, covers half of the southern Tangerang Regency and 15 percent of southeastern Serang Regency.

Administrative divisions Edit

Cities of Banten
 
The city of Serang is the capital and administrative center of the province.
 
Cilegon is the westernmost city in Java and the location of the Port of Merak, the gateway to Sumatra.
 
Tangerang, a suburb of Jakarta
 
South Tangerang is another suburb of Jakarta.

Banten consists of four regencies (kabupaten) and four autonomous cities (kota), listed below with their populations in the 2010[6] and 2020 censuses[5] and in official mid-2022 estimates.[1] The cities and regencies are subdivided into 140 districts (kecamatan), 262 urban villages (kelurahan) and 1,242 rural villages (desa).

Over half (54.37% in mid 2022) of the population lives in the northeast corner of the province on just 13.6% of its land area. This corner, which comprises Tangerang Regency, Tangerang City and South Tangerang City, is part of the Jakarta metropolitan area (Jabodetabek).

Kode
Wilayah
Name of
City or
regency
Capital Area
(km2)
Pop'n
2010
census
Pop'n
2020
census
Pop'n
estimate
mid-2022
HDI[41] 2014
estimate
36.72 Cilegon 175.50 374,559 434,896 450,271 0.715 (high)
36.73 Serang 266.71 577,785 692,101 720,362 0.702 (high)
36.02 Lebak Regency Rangkasbitung 3,426.56 1,204,095 1,386,793 1,433,853 0.616 (medium)
36.01 Pandeglang Regency Pandeglang 2,746.89 1,149,610 1,272,687 1,307,090 0.620 (medium)
36.04 Serang Regency Ciruas 1,734.28 1,402,818 1,622,630 1,678,915 0.639 (medium)
Western Banten totals
8,349.94 4,708,867 5,409,107 5,590,491
36.74 South Tangerang 147.19 1,290,322 1,354,350 1,378,466 0.791 (high)
36.71 Tangerang 153.93 1,798,601 1,895,486 1,930,556 0.758 (high)
36.03 Tangerang Regency Tigaraksa 1,011.86 2,834,376 3,245,619 3,352,472 0.695 (medium)
Eastern Banten totals
(Greater Tangerang)
1,312.98 5,923,299 6,495,455 6,661,494
Banten totals 9,662.92 10,632,166 11,904,562 12,251,985 0.698 (medium)

Regency capitals Edit

Tangerang was incorporated as a city on 27 February 1993 from the Tangerang Regency, of which it had been the administrative capital. It was replaced by Cipasera.
Cilegon was incorporated as a city on 20 April 1999 from the Serang Regency, of which it had been the administrative capital. It was replaced by Serang.
Serang was incorporated as a city on 17 July 2007 from the Serang Regency, of which it had been the administrative capital. It was replaced by Ciruas.
South Tangerang (formerly Cipasera) was incorporated as a city on 29 October 2008 from the Tangerang Regency, of which it had been the administrative capital. It was replaced by Tigaraksa.

Demographics Edit

 
Baduy people in Serang during the Seba Baduy event

The 2006 population of Banten was 9,351,470, with 3,370,182 children (36.04 percent), 240,742 elderly people (2.57 percent), and the remaining 5,740,546 people aged between 15 and 64. It was Indonesia's fifth-most-populous province, after West Java, East Java, Central Java and North Sumatra. By mid-2022, the estimated total had risen to 12,251,985.[1]

Ethnic groups Edit

 
Mass Benteng wedding ceremony

The Bantenese people are the largest group in the province, forming 47% of the total population. They mostly inhabit the central and southern part of the province. The origins of the Bantenese people; which are closely related to the Banten Sultanate, are different from the Cirebonese people whom are not part of the Sundanese people nor the Javanese people (unless it is from the result of a mixture of two major cultures, namely Sundanese and Javanese). The Bantenese people along with the Baduy people (Kanekes) are essentially a subdivision of the Sundanese people which occupies the former region of the Banten Sultanate (region of Bantam Residency after the abolishment and annexation by the Dutch East Indies). Only after the formation of the Banten Province did people began to regard the Bantenese as a group of people with a culture and language of their own.[42]

Most of the north Banten population is Javanese. Most of the Javanese are migrants from central and eastern Java. The Betawi people live in greater Jakarta, including Tangerang. Chinese Indonesians may also be found in urban areas, also primarily in the greater Jakarta area. The Benteng Chinese (a subgroup of Chinese Indonesians) lives in Tangerang and the surrounding area, and are distinct from other Chinese Indonesians.[43][44][45]

Languages Edit

 
Linguistic map of Banten

The province's dominant language is Sundanese.[46][47] Its indigenous people speak a dialect derived from archaic Sundanese, classified as informal in modern Sundanese.[48][49]

The Mataram Sultanate tried to control West Java, including Banten; the Sultanate of Banten defended its territory except for Banten. In the mountains and most of present-day Banten, the "loma" version of the Sundanese language is dominant; this version is considered "harsh" by people from Parahyangan. Bantenese is commonly spoken, especially in the southern Pandeglang and Lebak Regencies.[50] Near Serang and Cilegon, the Javanese Banyumasan dialect is spoken by about 500,000 people.[51] In northern Tangerang, Betawi is spoken by Betawi immigrants. Indonesian is also widely spoken, especially by urban migrants from other parts of Indonesia. The Baduy people speak the Baduy language, also an archaic form of Sundanese.[52]

Religion Edit

Religion in Banten

  Islam (94.62%)
  Protestantism (2.65%)
  Buddhism (1.30%)
  Roman Catholicism (1.29%)
  Hinduism (0.10%)
  Confucianism and others (0.04%)
 
A rampak bedug performance at a Serang culinary festival

Most residents are Muslims, and the Banten Sultanate was one of the largest Islamic kingdoms on the island of Java. The province also has other ethnicities and religions, including the Benteng Chinese community in Tangerang and the Baduy people who practice Sunda Wiwitan in Kanekes, Leuwidamar, Lebak Regency.

Based on archaeological data, early Banten society was influenced by the Hindu-Buddhist Tarumanagara, Sriwijaya and Sunda Kingdoms. According to the Babad Banten, Sunan Gunung Jati and Maulana Hasanuddin spread Islam extensively in the region. Maulana Yusuf reportedly engaged in da'wah in the interior, and conquered Pakuan Pajajaran.

The sultan of Banten's genealogy reportedly traced back to Muhammad, and the ulamas were influential. Tariqa Sufism developed in the region.

Culture Edit

 
Selection of Kang Nong Banten in 2017. The finalists wear traditional Bantenese dress.

Banten's culture is based on Hinduism, Buddhism and Islam. It includes the pencak silat martial arts, the Saman dance, and Palingtung [id]. Religious sites include the Great Mosque of Banten and the Keramat Panjang Tomb.

The Baduy people live in central and southern Banten. The Inner Baduy tribes are native Sundanese who are opposed to modernization in dress and lifestyle, and the Outer Baduy tribes are more open to modernization. The Baduy-Rawayan tribe lives in the Kendeng Cultural Heritage Mountains, an area of 5,101.85 ha (19.70 sq mi) spanning the Kanekes area, Leuwidamar District, Lebak Regency. Baduy villages are generally located on the Ciujung River in the Kendeng Mountains.[53]

Weapons Edit

The golok, similar to a machete, is Banten's traditional weapon. Formerly a self-defence weapon, it is now a martial-arts tool. The Baduy people use goloks for farming and forest hunting. Other traditional weapons include the kujang, kris, spear, sledgehammer, machete, sword and bow and arrow.

Traditional housing Edit

Traditional housing in Banten has thatched roofing, with floors made of split and pounded bamboo. This type of traditional house is still widely found in areas inhabited by the Kanekes and Baduy peoples.

Clothing Edit

Bantenese men traditionally wear closed-neck shirts and trousers belted with batik, perhaps with a golok tucked into the belt. Bantenese women traditionally wear a kebaya, decorated with a hand-crafted brooch at the waist. Hair is tied into a bun, and decorated with a flower.

Islamic architecture Edit

Three-level mosque architecture is symbolic of tariqa ihsan (beauty) and sharia (law).[53]

Pencak silat Edit

Pencak silat is a group of martial arts, rooted in Indonesian culture, which reportedly existed throughout the archipelago since the seventh century. It began to be recorded when it was influenced by the ulamas during the spread of Islam in the 15th century. At that time, martial arts were taught with religious studies in pesantren (Islamic boarding schools). Religion and pencak silat became intertwined. Silat evolved from folk dancing, becoming part of the region's defense against invaders.

Banten is known for its warriors, who are proficient in the martial arts.[53] Debus (from Arabic: دَبُّوس, romanizeddabbūs) is a Bantenese martial art which was developed during the 16th century.[54]

Transport Edit

Banten is in western Java. In 2006, 249.246 km (155 mi) of its national roads were in good condition; 214.314 km (133 mi) were in fair condition, and 26.840 km (16.7 mi) were in poor condition. At the end of that year, 203.67 km (127 mi) of Banten's 889.01 km (552 mi) provincial road network were in good condition; 380.02 km (236 mi) were in fair condition, and 305.320 km (190 mi) were in poor condition. The province's national roads are congested; provincial roads have less traffic, and congestion is generally localized.

Rail transport is declining; 48 percent of Banten's 305.9 km (190.1 mi) rail network was operational in 2005, with an average of 22 passenger trains and 16 freight trains per day. Most lines were single-track, and the main line was the 141.6 km (88.0 mi) Merak-Tanah Abang, Tangerang-Duri, Cilegon-Cigading line, and Soekarno–Hatta Airport Rail Link serving Manggarai-Soetta Airport along with the Skytrain. Then Jakarta MRT Phase 3 with Balaraja to Cikarang, will be construction in 2024.[55][56]

Soekarno–Hatta International Airport is Indonesia's main national airport. Other airports include the general-aviation Pondok Cabe Airport in South Tangerang, Budiarto Airport in Tangerang (for training), and Gorda Airport in Serang (used by the Indonesian Air Force).

Economy Edit

Banten GDP share by sector (2022)[57]

  Agriculture (5.09%)
  Manufacturing (30.47%)
  Other Industrial (14.58%)
  Service (49.86%)
 
Bantenese men during a debus performance

Banten's 2006 population totaled 9,351,470, with 36.04 percent children, 2.57 percent elderly, and the remainder 15 to 64 years old. The province's 2005 Gross Regional Domestic Product (GDP) was primarily from the manufacturing industry sector (49.75 percent), followed by the trade, hotel and restaurant sector (17.13 percent), transportation and communication (8.58 percent), and agriculture (8.53 percent). Industry had 23.11 percent of jobs, followed by agriculture (21.14 percent), trade (20.84 percent) and transportation and communication (9.5 percent). The northern part of the province is more economically developed than the southern part.

It is strategically located between Java and Sumatra. Most investment is in Tangerang, South Tangerang and the rest of the north because of their infrastructure and proximity to Jakarta. Infrastructure in southern Banten lags behind that of the north, and Banten's development policies have prioritised growth over equality in Pandeglang and Lebak regencies; investors choose areas with existing infrastructure to ensure competitiveness.

Tourism Edit

 
The Great Mosque of Banten

Ujung Kulon National Park is a national park and nature preserve which includes the island of Panaitan. Its highest point is Mount Honje. Species protected in the park include the Javan rhino, deer, antelope, buffalo, several primate species, wild boar, jungle cat, sloth, and several species of birds. It can be reached via Labuan in Pandeglang Regency or by boat. The park has telecommunications networks, electricity, clean water, accommodations, information centers, travel guides, and transportation facilities. In 1991, it became a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[58]

Pulau Dua, covering about 30 ha (74 acres) near Serang, is known for its ocean coral, fish and of birds. Between April and August each year, it is visited by about 40,000 birds from 60 species from Australia, Asia and Africa. Originally an island, sedimentation has joined it to mainland Java.

Tanjung Lesung Beach, in the Panimbang district of western Pandeglang Regency, covers about 150 ha (370 acres). A proposed special economic zone in 2012, the Tanjung Lesung SEZ became operational on 23 February 2015.

Cuisine Edit

 
Jojorong, a food originating in Pandeglang. Made with rice flour, brown sugar, coconut milk and pandan leaves, it is served in a bowl made of banana leaves.

Rabeg [id] is a Bantenese food similar to goat or curried rawon. Found in Serang Regency, it is believed to have originated in the Arabian Peninsula and was brought by Arab traders during the spread of Islam in Indonesia.[59] Other Bantenese foods include nasi sumsum (from Serang Regency, made of white rice and buffalo-bone marrow), mahbub, shark fin soup, milkfish and duck satays, duck soup, laksa Tangerang, rice vermicelli, beef jerky and emping.

Sports Edit

Football Edit

Persita Tangerang (with its home ground at Benteng Taruna Stadium), Cilegon United (with its home ground at Krakatau Steel Stadium) and Perserang Serang (with its home ground at Maulana Yusuf Stadium) represent Banten in Liga 2.

Motorsports Edit

In 2009, the Lippo Village International Formula Circuit was built in a bid to host the A1 Grand Prix. The series was removed from the schedule, and the track was used for local motorsports before it was dismantled for the Lippo Village expansion; the paddock area was reclaimed by Pelita Harapan University. A replacement street circuit, BSD City Grand Prix, was built in BSD City for local motorsports.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2023, Provinsi Banten Dalam Angka 2023 (Katalog-BPS 1102001.36)
  2. ^ . Biro Pemerintahan Provinsi Banten. Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  3. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik (2023). "Produk Domestik Regional Bruto (Milyar Rupiah), 2020–2022" (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Badan Pusat Statistik.
  4. ^ Badan Pembangunan Nasional (2023). "Capaian Indikator Utama Pembangunan" (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Badan Pembangunan Nasional.
  5. ^ a b Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2021.
  6. ^ a b Biro Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2011.
  7. ^ Ekspedisi Anjer-Panaroekan, Laporan Jurnalistik Kompas. Penerbit Buku Kompas, PT Kompas Media Nusantara, Jakarta Indonesia. November 2008. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-979-709-391-4.
  8. ^ a b Gorlinski, Virginia. "Banten". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  9. ^ a b c d Banten, BPCB (28 February 2017). "Banten, arti kata dan toponimi". Balai Pelestarian Cagar Budaya Banten. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  10. ^ Guillot, Claude, Lukman Nurhakim, Sonny Wibisono, "La principauté de Banten Girang", Archipel, 1995, Volume 50, No. 50, pp. 13-24.
  11. ^ OV (Oudheidkundige Verslag) 1949; 1950:20
  12. ^ Soekmono, Raden (1973). Pengantar Sejarah Kebudayaan Indonesia (5th reprint ed.). Yogyakarta: Kanisius. p. 36. ISBN 9794131741. OCLC 884261720.
  13. ^ Soekmono, Raden (1973). Pengantar Sejarah Kebudayaan Indonesia (5th reprint ed.). Yogyakarta: Kanisius. p. 60. ISBN 9794131741. OCLC 884261720.
  14. ^ Heuken, A. (1999). Sumber-sumber asli sejarah Jakarta, Jilid I: Dokumen-dokumen sejarah Jakarta sampai dengan akhir abad ke-16. Cipta Loka Caraka. p. 34.
  15. ^ Untoro, Heriyanti Ongkodharma (2007). Kapitalisme pribumi awal Kesultanan Banten, 1522-1684 : kajian arkeologi ekonomi (in Indonesian) (1st ed.). Depok: Fakultas Ilmu Pengetahuan Budaya UI. ISBN 978-979-8184-85-7. OCLC 271724805.
  16. ^ Ishii, Yoneo (1998). The junk trade from Southeast Asia : translations from the Tôsen fusetsu-gaki, 1674-1723. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN 981-230-022-8. OCLC 40418802.
  17. ^ Nana Supriatna, Sejarah, PT Grafindo Media Pratama, ISBN 979-758-601-4.
  18. ^ a b Guillot, C. (1990). The Sultanate of Banten. Hasan Muarif Ambary, Jacques Dumarçay. Jakarta, Indonesia: Gramedia Book Pub. Division. ISBN 979-403-922-5. OCLC 23812664.
  19. ^ a b Ota, Atsushi (25 June 2003). "Banten Rebellion, 1750-1752: Factors behind the Mass Participation". Modern Asian Studies. 37 (3): 613–651. doi:10.1017/S0026749X03003044. ISSN 0026-749X.
  20. ^ Pudjiastuti, Titik (2007). Perang, dagang, persahabatan : surat-surat Sultan Banten (1st ed.). Jakarta: Yayasan Obor Indonesia. ISBN 978-979-461-650-5. OCLC 228631545.
  21. ^ Azra, Azyumardi (2004). The origins of Islamic reformism in Southeast Asia : networks of Malay-Indonesian and Middle Eastern 'Ulama' in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Crows Nest, New South Wales: Asian Studies Association of Australia in association with Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-74114-261-X. OCLC 54998728.
  22. ^ Kumar, Ann (1976). Surapati : man and legend : a study of three Babad traditions. Leiden: E.J. Brill. ISBN 90-04-04364-0. OCLC 3554749.
  23. ^ Amir Hendarsah, Cerita Kerajaan Nusantara, Great! Publisher, ISBN 602-8696-14-5.
  24. ^ Poesponegoro, Marwati Djoened (2008). Sejarah nasional Indonesia (Updated ed.). Jakarta: Balai Pustaka. ISBN 979-407-407-1. OCLC 435629543.
  25. ^ Ota, Atsushi (2006). Changes of regime and social dynamics in West Java : society, state, and the outer world of Banten, 1750-1830. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 90-04-15091-9. OCLC 62755670.
  26. ^ Pramono, Sidik (2008). Ekspedisi Anjer-Panaroekan : laporan jurnalistik Kompas : 200 tahun Anjer-Panaroekan, jalan untuk perubahan. = Expeditie Anjer-Panaroekan : journalistiek verslag van Kompas. Penerbit Buku Kompas. Jakarta: Penerbit Buku Kompas. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-979-709-391-4. OCLC 298706775.
  27. ^ Kartodirdjo, Sartono (1966). The peasants' revolt of Banten in 1888 : its conditions, course and sequel : a case study of social movements in Indonesia. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 978-94-017-6357-8. JSTOR 10.1163/j.ctt1w76vfh. OCLC 652424455.
  28. ^ Cribb, Robert; Kahin, Audrey (2004). Historical dictionary of Indonesia (2nd ed.). Lanham, Maryland.: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4935-6. OCLC 53793487.
  29. ^ a b Poeze, Harry A. "The Road to Hell: Construction of a Railway Line in West Java during the Japanese Occupation". In Kratoska, Paul H. (ed.). Asian Labor in the Wartime Japanese Empires. Armonk, New York: M.E.Sharpe. pp. 152–178. ISBN 978-0-7656-3335-4.
  30. ^ Shigeru Sato (1994). "The Bayah-Saketi Railway Construction". War, Nationalism and Peasants: Java Under the Japanese Occupation, 1942–1945. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 179–186. ISBN 978-0-7656-3907-3. OCLC 1307467455.
  31. ^ Bruin, Jan de; de Jager, Henk (2003). Het Indische spoor in oorlogstijd : de spoor- en tramwegmaatschappijen in Nederlands-Indië in de vuurlinie, 1873-1949 (in Dutch) (1st ed.). 's-Hertogenbosch: Uquilair. pp. 119–122. ISBN 90-71513-46-7. OCLC 66720099.
  32. ^ "United States of Indonesia".
  33. ^ Gorlinski, Virginia. "Banten". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  34. ^ According to the Law of the Republic of Indonesia No. 23 (2000).
  35. ^ Biro Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2014.
  36. ^ Deslatama, Yandhi. "Pemprov Banten Ajukan Enam Pelabuhan 'Pembantu' Tanjung Priok". ekonomi (in Indonesian). Jakarta: CNN Indonesia. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  37. ^ "Banten dan Lampung Bakal Jadi Pelabuhan Penting Internasional". Redaksi Indonesia | Jernih – Tajam – Mencerahkan. 18 October 2015. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  38. ^ "Perikanan Jadi Komoditi Andalan Provinsi Banten". SINDOnews.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  39. ^ Dokumen Rencana Pembangunan Daerah. "Geografi – Profil Provinsi". Website Resmi Pemerintah Provinsi Banten. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  40. ^ "Dinas Energi dan Sumber Daya Mineral Provinsi Banten | Potensi Pertambangan". desdm.bantenprov.go.id. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 November 2016. Retrieved 14 February 2017.
  42. ^ . Kebudayaan Indonesia. 26 August 2013. Archived from the original on 22 March 2017. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  43. ^ Lohanda, Mona (1996). The Kapitan Cina of Batavia, 1837–1942: A History of Chinese Establishment in Colonial Society. Jakarta: Djambatan. ISBN 9789794282571. Retrieved 20 September 2017.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 January 2012. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  45. ^ Knorr, Jacqueline (2014). Creole Identity in Postcolonial Indonesia. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-78238-269-0. Retrieved 20 September 2017.
  46. ^ Language maps of Indonesia (Java and Bali)
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 February 2009. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  48. ^ "Bahasa Sunda Banten". Perpustakaan Digital Budaya Indonesia. 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  49. ^ Purwo, Bambang K. (1993). Factors influencing comparison of Sundanese, Javanese, Madurese, and Balinese.
  50. ^ Parisi, Batur (16 March 2017). . Metro TV News. Archived from the original on 1 June 2018. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  51. ^ Ethnologue. Retrieved 1 February 2009.
  52. ^ . Badan Pusat Statistik. 2010. Archived from the original on 10 July 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  53. ^ a b c Banten, Website Resmi Pemerintah Provinsi. "Kebudayaan – Profil Provinsi". Website Resmi Pemerintah Provinsi Banten. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  54. ^ "Debus". www.indonesia.travel. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  55. ^ Kamalina, Annasa Rizki (23 January 2023). "Jepang Alirkan Rp160 Triliun untuk Proyek MRT Cikarang-Balaraja, Konstruksi 2024". Bisnis com.
  56. ^ Al Hikam, Herdi Alif (18 February 2023). "Cek! Rincian 48 Wilayah Bakal Dilewati MRT Fase 3 Cikarang-Balaraja". finance.detik.com.
  57. ^ "Provinsi Banten Dalam Angka 2023". Statistics Indonesia. Retrieved 22 September 2023.
  58. ^ "Ujung Kulon National Park". UNESCO World Heritage Convention. Retrieved 16 September 2022.
  59. ^ . en.tempo.co. Archived from the original on 15 April 2016. Retrieved 2 April 2016.

Further reading Edit

  • Dinar Boontharm. "The Sultanate of Banten AD 1750-1808: A Social and Cultural History." PhD thesis, University of Hull, 2003.

External links Edit

  • Sekolah dan Daycare Alam Sutera
  • Official website (in Indonesian)
  • Research and Development Agency 8 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine (in Indonesian)
  • Informasi Tempat Wisata Di Banten (in Indonesian)

banten, other, uses, disambiguation, indonesian, sundanese, ᮘᮔ, romanized, westernmost, province, island, java, indonesia, capital, city, serang, largest, city, tangerang, province, borders, west, java, special, capital, region, jakarta, east, java, north, ind. For other uses see Banten disambiguation Banten Indonesian Banten Sundanese ᮘᮔ ᮒ ᮔ romanized Banten is the westernmost province on the island of Java Indonesia Its capital city is Serang and its largest city is in Tangerang The province borders West Java and the Special Capital Region of Jakarta on the east the Java Sea on the north the Indian Ocean on the south and the Sunda Strait which separates Java from the neighbouring island of Sumatra on the west and shares a maritime border with Bengkulu and Lampung to the east and Bangka Belitung Islands to the north The province covers an area of 9 662 82 km2 3 730 84 sq mi It had a population of over 11 9 million in the 2020 census 5 up from about 10 6 million in 2010 6 The estimated mid 2022 population was 12 25 million 1 Formerly part of the province of West Java Banten become a province in 2000 The northern half particularly the areas near Jakarta and the Java Sea coast has recently experienced rapid rises in population and urbanization and the southern half especially the region facing the Indian Ocean has a more traditional character but an equally fast rising population BantenProvinceProvince of BantenCoat of armsNickname s Tanah Jawara Sundanese Land of the ChampionsMotto s Iman Taqwa Indonesian Faith and Piety Banten in IndonesiaOpenStreetMapCoordinates 6 30 S 106 15 E 6 500 S 106 250 E 6 500 106 250CapitalSerangLargest cityTangerangEstablished4 October 2000Government BodyBanten Provincial Government Acting GovernorAl Muktabar Vice GovernorVacantArea Total9 662 92 km2 3 730 87 sq mi Rank34th in IndonesiaHighest elevation Mount Halimun 1 929 m 6 329 ft Population mid 2022 estimate 1 Total12 251 985 Rank5th in Indonesia Density1 300 km2 3 300 sq mi DemonymBanteneseDemographics ReligionIslam 94 62 Christianity 3 94 Protestant 2 65 Catholic 1 29 Buddhism 1 30 Hindu 0 10 Aliran Kepercayaan 0 03 Konghucu 0 01 2 LanguagesIndonesian official Sundanese lingua franca Javanese minor areas BetawiTime zoneUTC 7 Indonesia Western Time ISO 3166 codeID BTGDP nominal 2022 3 TotalRp 747 3 trillion 8th US 50 3 billionUS 157 0 billion PPP Per capitaRp 61 00 million 15th US 4 107US 12 817 PPP Growth5 03 4 HDI0 733 8th highWebsitebantenprov wbr go wbr idPresent day Banten was part of the Sundanese Tarumanagara kingdom from the fourth to the seventh centuries AD After the fall of Tarumanegara it was controlled by Hindu Buddhist kingdoms such as the Srivijaya Empire and the Sunda Kingdom The spread of Islam in the region began in the 15th century by the late 16th century Islam had replaced Hinduism and Buddhism as the dominant religion in the province with the establishment of the Banten Sultanate European traders began arriving in the region first the Portuguese followed by the British and the Dutch The Dutch East India Company VOC finally controlled the regional economy gradually weakening the Banten Sultanate On 22 November 1808 Dutch Governor General Herman Willem Daendels declared that the Sultanate of Banten had been absorbed into the Dutch East Indies 7 This began the Bantam Residency 150 years of direct Dutch rule In March 1942 the Japanese invaded the Indies and occupied the region for three years before their August 1945 surrender The region was returned to Dutch control for the next five years before the Dutch left and it was ruled by the Indonesian government Banten then became part of the province of West Java and separatist efforts led to the creation of the province of Banten in 2000 8 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 Colonial era 2 3 Japanese occupation and independence 3 Geography 3 1 Topography 3 2 Climate 4 Administrative divisions 5 Regency capitals 6 Demographics 6 1 Ethnic groups 6 2 Languages 6 3 Religion 7 Culture 7 1 Weapons 7 2 Traditional housing 7 3 Clothing 7 4 Islamic architecture 7 5 Pencak silat 8 Transport 9 Economy 10 Tourism 11 Cuisine 12 Sports 12 1 Football 12 2 Motorsports 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology EditThe name Banten has several possible origins The first is from the Sundanese phrase katiban inten which means struck down by diamonds The phrase comes from the history of the Bantenese people who were animists before adopting Buddhism and Hinduism After Islam began to spread in Banten the community began to recognize and embrace Islam The spread of Islam in Banten is described as being struck down by diamonds 9 Another origin story is that the Indonesian Hindu god Batara Guru traveled from east to west arriving at Surasowan present day Serang When he arrived Batara Guru sat on a stone which became known as watu gilang The stone glowed and was presented to the king of Surasowan Surasowan was reportedly surrounded by a clear star like river and was described as a ring covered with diamonds Sundanese ban inten This evolved into banten 9 Another possibility is that Banten comes from the Indonesian word bantahan rebuttal because the local Bantenese people resisted the Dutch colonial government 9 The word Banten appeared before the establishment of the Banten Sultanate as the name of a river The high plains on its banks were called Cibanten Girang shortened to Banten Girang Upper Banten Based on research in Banten Girang the area has been settled since the 11th and 12th centuries 10 During the 16th century the region developed rapidly towards Serang and the northern coast The coastal area later became the Sultanate of Banten founded by Sunan Gunung Jati which controlled almost all of the former Sunda Kingdom in West Java Sunda Kelapa Batavia was captured by the Dutch and Cirebon and the Parahiyangan region were captured by the Mataram Sultanate The Banten Sultanate was later converted into a residency by the Dutch 9 History EditEarly history Edit nbsp Bird s eye view of the town of Banten in 1599 nbsp With his father Sunan Gunungjati Sultan Maulana Hasanuddin founded the Sultanate of Banten During the fifth century Banten was part of the kingdom of Tarumanagara The fourth century Lebak inscription discovered in 1947 in a lowland village on the Cidanghiyang River in Munjul Pandeglang id contains two lines of Sanskrit poetry in the Pallawa script 11 which describes life in the kingdom under the reign of Purnawarman 12 The kingdom collapsed after an attack by Srivijaya and western Java became part of the Sunda Kingdom In the Chinese Chu fan chi written around 1225 Chou Ju kua wrote that Srivijaya ruled Sumatra the Malay peninsula and western Java during the early 13th century Chu fan chi identified the port of Sunda as strategic and thriving with pepper from Sunda among the highest quality The population were made up of farmers and their houses were built on wooden poles rumah panggung Robbery however was common 13 According to Portuguese explorer Tome Pires Bantam Banten was an important early 16th century port in the Kingdom of Sunda along with the ports of Pontang Cheguide Cigede Tangaram Tangerang Calapa Sunda Kelapa and Chimanuk on the Cimanuk river estuary 14 In 1527 as the Portuguese fleet arrived off the coast newly converted Javanese Muslims under Sunan Gunungjati captured the port of Banten and the surrounding area from the Sundanese and established the Sultanate of Banten According to Portuguese historian Joao de Barros Banten was the center of the sultanate and a major Southeast Asian port rivaling Malacca and Makassar The town of Banten was in the middle of the bay about 3 mi 4 8 km across It was 850 fathoms in length A river navigable by junks flowed through the center of the town a small tributary extended to the town s edge The present day river is smaller and only navigable by small boats A fortress near the town had brick walls seven palms thick Armed wooden defence buildings were two stories high The town square was used for military activities and folk art with a market in the morning The palace was on the south side of the square Next to the palace is a tall flat roofed building known as Srimanganti which was used by the king to meet his subjects West of the square is the Great Mosque of Banten Colonial era Edit nbsp Warriors of Banten in 1596 nbsp In 1808 Dutch Governor general Herman Willem Daendels ordered the annexation of the Banten Sultanate This marked the end of the four century old sultanate and the beginning of 150 years of Dutch rule in the region When the Dutch arrived in Indonesia the Portuguese had long been in Banten The English established a factory in Banten followed by the Dutch The French and the Danish also came to trade in Banten In the competition among European traders the Dutch emerged victorious The Portuguese left Banten in 1601 after their fleet was destroyed by the Dutch off the coast during the Dutch Portuguese War Although the Dutch won the war they preserved the Banten Sultanate The maritime sultanate relied on trade and the pepper monopoly in Lampung made the Banten authorities intermediaries The sultanate grew rapidly becoming a commercial center 15 As sea trade increased throughout the archipelago Banten became a multi ethnic region Assisted by the British Danish and Chinese Banten traded with Persia India Siam Vietnam the Philippines China and Japan 16 The reign of Sultan Ageng Tirtayasa was the sultanate s height 17 Under his reign Banten had one of the strongest navies in the region built to European standards with help from European shipbuilders and attracted Europeans to the sultanate 18 To secure its shipping lanes Banten sent its fleet to Sukadana the present day Ketapang Regency in West Kalimantan and conquered it in 1661 19 Banten also tried to escape the pressure of the Dutch East India Company VOC which had blockaded incoming merchant ships 18 A power struggle developed around 1680 between Ageng Tirtayasa and his son Abu Nashar Abdul Qahar also known as Sultan Haji The disagreement was exploited by the VOC who supported Haji and causing a civil war Strengthening his position Haji sent two envoys to meet King Charles II of England in London in 1682 to obtain support and weapons 20 In the ensuing war Ageng withdrew from his palace to Tirtayasa present day Tangerang on 28 December 1682 the region was seized by Haji with Dutch assistance Ageng and his other sons Pangeran Purbaya and Syekh Yusuf from Makassar retreated to the southern Sunda interior On 14 March 1683 Sultan Ageng was captured and imprisoned in Batavia The VOC continued to pursue and suppress Sultan Ageng s followers led by Prince Purbaya and Sheikh Yusuf On 5 May 1683 the VOC sent Lieutenant Untung Surapati and his Balinese troops joining forces led by VOC Lieutenant Johannes Maurits van Happel to subdue the Pamotan id and Dayeuhluhur regions on 14 December 1683 they captured Sheikh Yusuf 21 Heavily outnumbered Prince Purbaya surrendered Surapati was ordered by Captain Johan Ruisj to pick up Purbaya and bring him to Batavia They met with VOC forces led by Willem Kuffeler but a dispute between them destroyed Kuffeler s forces Surapati and his followers became fugitives from the VOC 22 nbsp Francois Valentijn s painting of Banten in 1694Lampung was given to the VOC on 12 March 1682 by Sultan Haji as compensation for the company s support and a 22 August 1682 letter gave the VOC the province s pepper monopoly 23 The sultanate also had to reimburse the VOC for losses caused by the war 24 After Sultan Haji s death in 1687 the VOC s influence in the sultanate began to increase the appointment of a new sultan required the approval of the governor general in Batavia Sultan Abu Fadhl Muhammad Yahya ruled for about three years before he was replaced by his brother Pangeran Adipati Sultan Abul Mahasin Muhammad Zainul Abidin The civil war in Banten left instability for the next government due to dissatisfaction with the VOC s interference in local affairs 19 Popular resistance peaked again at the end of the reign of Sultan Abul Fathi Muhammad Syifa Zainul Arifin The sultan sought VOC assistance against the rebellion and Banten became a vassal state of the company in 1752 25 In 1808 at the peak of the Napoleonic Wars Governor general Herman Willem Daendels ordered the construction of the Great Post Road to defend Java from British attack 26 Daendels ordered the sultan of Banten to move his capital to Anyer and provide labor to build a port in Ujung Kulon The sultan defied Daendels order and Daendels ordered an attack on Banten and the destruction of Surosowan Palace The sultan and his family were held in the palace before their imprisonment in Fort Speelwijk Sultan Abul Nashar Muhammad Ishaq Zainulmutaqin was then exiled to Batavia On 22 November 1808 Daendels announced from his Serang headquarters that the sultanate had been absorbed into the Dutch East Indies 27 The sultanate was abolished in 1813 by the British after the invasion of Java 28 That year Sultan Muhammad bin Muhammad Muhyiddin Zainussalihin was disarmed and forced to abdicate by Thomas Stamford Raffles this ended the sultanate After the British returned Java to the Dutch in 1814 as part of the Anglo Dutch Treaty of 1814 Banten became a residentie residency of the Dutch East Indies 8 Japanese occupation and independence Edit nbsp Rōmusha after their liberation by the Dutch Thousands of labourers died during the construction of the Saketi Bayah railway under Japanese occupation Japan invaded the East Indies expelling the Dutch and occupied Banten in March 1942 During their three years of occupation the Japanese built the Saketi Bayah railway in southern Lebak to transport brown coal from the Bayah mines The project involved a workforce of about 1 000 rōmusha local forced labourers and a few engineers and technicians mainly Dutch supervised by the Japanese 29 The rōmusha working in the mines were taken from Central and East Java the railway rōmusha were primarily from Banten The construction took 12 million human days over 14 months 30 Working conditions were harsh due to food shortages lack of medical care and the tropical climate 31 Casualties are estimated at 20 000 to 60 000 not including mine workers 29 After Japan surrendered in August 1945 the Dutch East Indies declared independence as the Republic of Indonesia This was opposed by the returning Dutch resulting in the Indonesian war of independence During the war Banten remained under Indonesian control On 26 February 1948 the State of West Java Indonesian Negara Jawa Barat Sundanese Negara Jawa Kulon was established on 24 April 1948 it was renamed Pasundan Pasundan became a federal state of the United States of Indonesia in 1949 and was incorporated into the Republic of Indonesia on 11 March 1950 32 After Indonesian independence Banten became part of the province of West Java Separatist sentiment led to the creation of the province of Banten in 2000 33 Geography Edit nbsp Tanjung Lesung beach Pandegelang Regency nbsp Mangrove forest in Ujung Kulon National ParkBanten lies between 5 7 50 and 7 1 11 south latitude and 105 1 11 and 106 7 12 east longitude 34 The province has an area of 9 662 92 km2 3 730 87 sq mi 35 It is near the Sunda Strait s sea lanes which link Australia and New Zealand with Southeast Asia Banten also links Java and Sumatra The region has a number of industries its seaports handle overflow cargo from the seaport in Jakarta 36 and are intended to be an alternative to the Port of Singapore 37 Its location on the western tip of Java makes Banten the gateway to Java Sumatra and the adjacent areas of Jakarta Indonesia s capital Bordering the Java Sea on the north the Sunda Strait on the west and the Indian Ocean on the south the province has abundant marine resources 38 Topography Edit nbsp Sawarna Banten Green View Lebak Regency nbsp Rawa Danau Serang RegencyThe province ranges in altitude from sea level to 2 000 m 6 600 ft Banten is primarily lowland below 50 metres above sea level in Cilegon Tangerang Pandeglang Regency and most of Serang Regency The central Lebak and Pandeglang Regencies range from 201 to 2 000 m 659 to 6 562 ft and the eastern Lebak Regency ranges in altitude from 501 to 2 000 m 1 644 to 6 562 ft at the summit of Mount Halimun Banten s geomorphology generally consists of lowlands and sloping and steep hills 39 The lowlands are generally in the north and south The sloping hills have a minimum height of 50 m 160 ft above sea level Mount Gede north of Cilegon has an altitude of 553 m 1 814 ft above sea level there are also hills in the southern Serang Regency in the Mancak and Waringin Kurung Districts The southern Pandeglang Regency is also hilly In eastern Lebak Regency bordering Bogor Regency and Sukabumi Regency in West Java most of the region consists of steep hills of old sedimentary rock interspersed with igneous rocks such as granite granodiorite diorite and andesite It also contains valuable tin and copper deposits 40 Climate Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Administrative map of BantenBanten s climate is influenced by the South and East Asian Monsoons and the alternating La Nina or El Nino During the rainy season the weather is dominated by a west wind from Sumatra and the Indian Ocean south of the Indian subcontinent joined by winds from Northern Asia crossing the South China Sea The dry season is dominated by an east wind which gives Banten severe droughts especially on the northern coast during El Nino Temperatures on the coast and in the hills range from 22 to 32 C 72 to 90 F and temperatures in the mountains from 400 to 1 350 m 1 310 to 4 430 ft above sea level range from 18 to 29 C 64 to 84 F The heaviest rainfall ranges from 2 712 to 3 670 mm 106 8 to 144 5 in during the rainy season from September to May covering half of the western Pandeglang Regency Rainfall from 335 to 453 mm 13 2 to 17 8 in covers half of Tangerang Regency the northern Serang Regency and the cities of Cilegon and Tangerang In the dry season from April to December the peak rainfall of 615 to 833 mm 24 2 to 32 8 in covers half of the northern Serang and Tangerang Regencies and the cities of Cilegon and Tangerang The lowest dry season rainfall 360 to 486 mm 14 2 to 19 1 in from June to September covers half of the southern Tangerang Regency and 15 percent of southeastern Serang Regency Administrative divisions EditCities of Banten nbsp The city of Serang is the capital and administrative center of the province nbsp Cilegon is the westernmost city in Java and the location of the Port of Merak the gateway to Sumatra nbsp Tangerang a suburb of Jakarta nbsp South Tangerang is another suburb of Jakarta Banten consists of four regencies kabupaten and four autonomous cities kota listed below with their populations in the 2010 6 and 2020 censuses 5 and in official mid 2022 estimates 1 The cities and regencies are subdivided into 140 districts kecamatan 262 urban villages kelurahan and 1 242 rural villages desa Over half 54 37 in mid 2022 of the population lives in the northeast corner of the province on just 13 6 of its land area This corner which comprises Tangerang Regency Tangerang City and South Tangerang City is part of the Jakarta metropolitan area Jabodetabek KodeWilayah Name ofCity orregency Capital Area km2 Pop n2010census Pop n2020census Pop nestimatemid 2022 HDI 41 2014 estimate36 72 Cilegon 175 50 374 559 434 896 450 271 0 715 high 36 73 Serang 266 71 577 785 692 101 720 362 0 702 high 36 02 Lebak Regency Rangkasbitung 3 426 56 1 204 095 1 386 793 1 433 853 0 616 medium 36 01 Pandeglang Regency Pandeglang 2 746 89 1 149 610 1 272 687 1 307 090 0 620 medium 36 04 Serang Regency Ciruas 1 734 28 1 402 818 1 622 630 1 678 915 0 639 medium Western Banten totals 8 349 94 4 708 867 5 409 107 5 590 49136 74 South Tangerang 147 19 1 290 322 1 354 350 1 378 466 0 791 high 36 71 Tangerang 153 93 1 798 601 1 895 486 1 930 556 0 758 high 36 03 Tangerang Regency Tigaraksa 1 011 86 2 834 376 3 245 619 3 352 472 0 695 medium Eastern Banten totals Greater Tangerang 1 312 98 5 923 299 6 495 455 6 661 494Banten totals 9 662 92 10 632 166 11 904 562 12 251 985 0 698 medium Regency capitals EditTangerang was incorporated as a city on 27 February 1993 from the Tangerang Regency of which it had been the administrative capital It was replaced by Cipasera Cilegon was incorporated as a city on 20 April 1999 from the Serang Regency of which it had been the administrative capital It was replaced by Serang Serang was incorporated as a city on 17 July 2007 from the Serang Regency of which it had been the administrative capital It was replaced by Ciruas South Tangerang formerly Cipasera was incorporated as a city on 29 October 2008 from the Tangerang Regency of which it had been the administrative capital It was replaced by Tigaraksa Demographics Edit nbsp Baduy people in Serang during the Seba Baduy eventThe 2006 population of Banten was 9 351 470 with 3 370 182 children 36 04 percent 240 742 elderly people 2 57 percent and the remaining 5 740 546 people aged between 15 and 64 It was Indonesia s fifth most populous province after West Java East Java Central Java and North Sumatra By mid 2022 the estimated total had risen to 12 251 985 1 Ethnic groups Edit nbsp Mass Benteng wedding ceremonyThe Bantenese people are the largest group in the province forming 47 of the total population They mostly inhabit the central and southern part of the province The origins of the Bantenese people which are closely related to the Banten Sultanate are different from the Cirebonese people whom are not part of the Sundanese people nor the Javanese people unless it is from the result of a mixture of two major cultures namely Sundanese and Javanese The Bantenese people along with the Baduy people Kanekes are essentially a subdivision of the Sundanese people which occupies the former region of the Banten Sultanate region of Bantam Residency after the abolishment and annexation by the Dutch East Indies Only after the formation of the Banten Province did people began to regard the Bantenese as a group of people with a culture and language of their own 42 Most of the north Banten population is Javanese Most of the Javanese are migrants from central and eastern Java The Betawi people live in greater Jakarta including Tangerang Chinese Indonesians may also be found in urban areas also primarily in the greater Jakarta area The Benteng Chinese a subgroup of Chinese Indonesians lives in Tangerang and the surrounding area and are distinct from other Chinese Indonesians 43 44 45 Languages Edit nbsp Linguistic map of BantenThe province s dominant language is Sundanese 46 47 Its indigenous people speak a dialect derived from archaic Sundanese classified as informal in modern Sundanese 48 49 The Mataram Sultanate tried to control West Java including Banten the Sultanate of Banten defended its territory except for Banten In the mountains and most of present day Banten the loma version of the Sundanese language is dominant this version is considered harsh by people from Parahyangan Bantenese is commonly spoken especially in the southern Pandeglang and Lebak Regencies 50 Near Serang and Cilegon the Javanese Banyumasan dialect is spoken by about 500 000 people 51 In northern Tangerang Betawi is spoken by Betawi immigrants Indonesian is also widely spoken especially by urban migrants from other parts of Indonesia The Baduy people speak the Baduy language also an archaic form of Sundanese 52 Religion Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Religion in Banten Islam 94 62 Protestantism 2 65 Buddhism 1 30 Roman Catholicism 1 29 Hinduism 0 10 Confucianism and others 0 04 nbsp A rampak bedug performance at a Serang culinary festivalMost residents are Muslims and the Banten Sultanate was one of the largest Islamic kingdoms on the island of Java The province also has other ethnicities and religions including the Benteng Chinese community in Tangerang and the Baduy people who practice Sunda Wiwitan in Kanekes Leuwidamar Lebak Regency Based on archaeological data early Banten society was influenced by the Hindu Buddhist Tarumanagara Sriwijaya and Sunda Kingdoms According to the Babad Banten Sunan Gunung Jati and Maulana Hasanuddin spread Islam extensively in the region Maulana Yusuf reportedly engaged in da wah in the interior and conquered Pakuan Pajajaran The sultan of Banten s genealogy reportedly traced back to Muhammad and the ulamas were influential Tariqa Sufism developed in the region Culture Edit nbsp Selection of Kang Nong Banten in 2017 The finalists wear traditional Bantenese dress Banten s culture is based on Hinduism Buddhism and Islam It includes the pencak silat martial arts the Saman dance and Palingtung id Religious sites include the Great Mosque of Banten and the Keramat Panjang Tomb The Baduy people live in central and southern Banten The Inner Baduy tribes are native Sundanese who are opposed to modernization in dress and lifestyle and the Outer Baduy tribes are more open to modernization The Baduy Rawayan tribe lives in the Kendeng Cultural Heritage Mountains an area of 5 101 85 ha 19 70 sq mi spanning the Kanekes area Leuwidamar District Lebak Regency Baduy villages are generally located on the Ciujung River in the Kendeng Mountains 53 Weapons Edit The golok similar to a machete is Banten s traditional weapon Formerly a self defence weapon it is now a martial arts tool The Baduy people use goloks for farming and forest hunting Other traditional weapons include the kujang kris spear sledgehammer machete sword and bow and arrow Traditional housing Edit Traditional housing in Banten has thatched roofing with floors made of split and pounded bamboo This type of traditional house is still widely found in areas inhabited by the Kanekes and Baduy peoples Clothing Edit Bantenese men traditionally wear closed neck shirts and trousers belted with batik perhaps with a golok tucked into the belt Bantenese women traditionally wear a kebaya decorated with a hand crafted brooch at the waist Hair is tied into a bun and decorated with a flower Islamic architecture Edit Three level mosque architecture is symbolic of tariqa ihsan beauty and sharia law 53 Pencak silat Edit Pencak silat is a group of martial arts rooted in Indonesian culture which reportedly existed throughout the archipelago since the seventh century It began to be recorded when it was influenced by the ulamas during the spread of Islam in the 15th century At that time martial arts were taught with religious studies in pesantren Islamic boarding schools Religion and pencak silat became intertwined Silat evolved from folk dancing becoming part of the region s defense against invaders Banten is known for its warriors who are proficient in the martial arts 53 Debus from Arabic د ب وس romanized dabbus is a Bantenese martial art which was developed during the 16th century 54 Transport 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 September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Banten is in western Java In 2006 249 246 km 155 mi of its national roads were in good condition 214 314 km 133 mi were in fair condition and 26 840 km 16 7 mi were in poor condition At the end of that year 203 67 km 127 mi of Banten s 889 01 km 552 mi provincial road network were in good condition 380 02 km 236 mi were in fair condition and 305 320 km 190 mi were in poor condition The province s national roads are congested provincial roads have less traffic and congestion is generally localized Rail transport is declining 48 percent of Banten s 305 9 km 190 1 mi rail network was operational in 2005 with an average of 22 passenger trains and 16 freight trains per day Most lines were single track and the main line was the 141 6 km 88 0 mi Merak Tanah Abang Tangerang Duri Cilegon Cigading line and Soekarno Hatta Airport Rail Link serving Manggarai Soetta Airport along with the Skytrain Then Jakarta MRT Phase 3 with Balaraja to Cikarang will be construction in 2024 55 56 Soekarno Hatta International Airport is Indonesia s main national airport Other airports include the general aviation Pondok Cabe Airport in South Tangerang Budiarto Airport in Tangerang for training and Gorda Airport in Serang used by the Indonesian Air Force nbsp Soekarno Hatta International Airport in Tangerang gateway to Jakarta and Indonesia nbsp KRL Commuterline train at the Tangerang railway station nbsp Bus at Poris terminal in Tangerang nbsp The Port of Merak has ferry service to Sumatra Economy EditBanten GDP share by sector 2022 57 Agriculture 5 09 Manufacturing 30 47 Other Industrial 14 58 Service 49 86 nbsp Bantenese men during a debus performanceBanten s 2006 population totaled 9 351 470 with 36 04 percent children 2 57 percent elderly and the remainder 15 to 64 years old The province s 2005 Gross Regional Domestic Product GDP was primarily from the manufacturing industry sector 49 75 percent followed by the trade hotel and restaurant sector 17 13 percent transportation and communication 8 58 percent and agriculture 8 53 percent Industry had 23 11 percent of jobs followed by agriculture 21 14 percent trade 20 84 percent and transportation and communication 9 5 percent The northern part of the province is more economically developed than the southern part It is strategically located between Java and Sumatra Most investment is in Tangerang South Tangerang and the rest of the north because of their infrastructure and proximity to Jakarta Infrastructure in southern Banten lags behind that of the north and Banten s development policies have prioritised growth over equality in Pandeglang and Lebak regencies investors choose areas with existing infrastructure to ensure competitiveness Tourism Edit nbsp The Great Mosque of BantenUjung Kulon National Park is a national park and nature preserve which includes the island of Panaitan Its highest point is Mount Honje Species protected in the park include the Javan rhino deer antelope buffalo several primate species wild boar jungle cat sloth and several species of birds It can be reached via Labuan in Pandeglang Regency or by boat The park has telecommunications networks electricity clean water accommodations information centers travel guides and transportation facilities In 1991 it became a UNESCO World Heritage Site 58 Pulau Dua covering about 30 ha 74 acres near Serang is known for its ocean coral fish and of birds Between April and August each year it is visited by about 40 000 birds from 60 species from Australia Asia and Africa Originally an island sedimentation has joined it to mainland Java Tanjung Lesung Beach in the Panimbang district of western Pandeglang Regency covers about 150 ha 370 acres A proposed special economic zone in 2012 the Tanjung Lesung SEZ became operational on 23 February 2015 Cuisine Edit nbsp Jojorong a food originating in Pandeglang Made with rice flour brown sugar coconut milk and pandan leaves it is served in a bowl made of banana leaves Rabeg id is a Bantenese food similar to goat or curried rawon Found in Serang Regency it is believed to have originated in the Arabian Peninsula and was brought by Arab traders during the spread of Islam in Indonesia 59 Other Bantenese foods include nasi sumsum from Serang Regency made of white rice and buffalo bone marrow mahbub shark fin soup milkfish and duck satays duck soup laksa Tangerang rice vermicelli beef jerky and emping Sports EditFootball Edit Persita Tangerang with its home ground at Benteng Taruna Stadium Cilegon United with its home ground at Krakatau Steel Stadium and Perserang Serang with its home ground at Maulana Yusuf Stadium represent Banten in Liga 2 Motorsports Edit In 2009 the Lippo Village International Formula Circuit was built in a bid to host the A1 Grand Prix The series was removed from the schedule and the track was used for local motorsports before it was dismantled for the Lippo Village expansion the paddock area was reclaimed by Pelita Harapan University A replacement street circuit BSD City Grand Prix was built in BSD City for local motorsports References Edit nbsp Indonesia portal nbsp Islands portal a b c d Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2023 Provinsi Banten Dalam Angka 2023 Katalog BPS 1102001 36 Laporan Penduduk Berdasarkan Agama Provinsi Banten Semester I Tahun 2014 Biro Pemerintahan Provinsi Banten Archived from the original on 31 March 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Badan Pusat Statistik 2023 Produk Domestik Regional Bruto Milyar Rupiah 2020 2022 in Indonesian Jakarta Badan Pusat Statistik Badan Pembangunan Nasional 2023 Capaian Indikator Utama Pembangunan in Indonesian Jakarta Badan Pembangunan Nasional a b Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2021 a b Biro Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2011 Ekspedisi Anjer Panaroekan Laporan Jurnalistik Kompas Penerbit Buku Kompas PT Kompas Media Nusantara Jakarta Indonesia November 2008 pp 1 2 ISBN 978 979 709 391 4 a b Gorlinski Virginia Banten Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c d Banten BPCB 28 February 2017 Banten arti kata dan toponimi Balai Pelestarian Cagar Budaya Banten Retrieved 16 March 2019 Guillot Claude Lukman Nurhakim Sonny Wibisono La principaute de Banten Girang Archipel 1995 Volume 50 No 50 pp 13 24 OV Oudheidkundige Verslag 1949 1950 20 Soekmono Raden 1973 Pengantar Sejarah Kebudayaan Indonesia 5th reprint ed Yogyakarta Kanisius p 36 ISBN 9794131741 OCLC 884261720 Soekmono Raden 1973 Pengantar Sejarah Kebudayaan Indonesia 5th reprint ed Yogyakarta Kanisius p 60 ISBN 9794131741 OCLC 884261720 Heuken A 1999 Sumber sumber asli sejarah Jakarta Jilid I Dokumen dokumen sejarah Jakarta sampai dengan akhir abad ke 16 Cipta Loka Caraka p 34 Untoro Heriyanti Ongkodharma 2007 Kapitalisme pribumi awal Kesultanan Banten 1522 1684 kajian arkeologi ekonomi in Indonesian 1st ed Depok Fakultas Ilmu Pengetahuan Budaya UI ISBN 978 979 8184 85 7 OCLC 271724805 Ishii Yoneo 1998 The junk trade from Southeast Asia translations from the Tosen fusetsu gaki 1674 1723 Singapore Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 981 230 022 8 OCLC 40418802 Nana Supriatna Sejarah PT Grafindo Media Pratama ISBN 979 758 601 4 a b Guillot C 1990 The Sultanate of Banten Hasan Muarif Ambary Jacques Dumarcay Jakarta Indonesia Gramedia Book Pub Division ISBN 979 403 922 5 OCLC 23812664 a b Ota Atsushi 25 June 2003 Banten Rebellion 1750 1752 Factors behind the Mass Participation Modern Asian Studies 37 3 613 651 doi 10 1017 S0026749X03003044 ISSN 0026 749X Pudjiastuti Titik 2007 Perang dagang persahabatan surat surat Sultan Banten 1st ed Jakarta Yayasan Obor Indonesia ISBN 978 979 461 650 5 OCLC 228631545 Azra Azyumardi 2004 The origins of Islamic reformism in Southeast Asia networks of Malay Indonesian and Middle Eastern Ulama in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Crows Nest New South Wales Asian Studies Association of Australia in association with Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 74114 261 X OCLC 54998728 Kumar Ann 1976 Surapati man and legend a study of three Babad traditions Leiden E J Brill ISBN 90 04 04364 0 OCLC 3554749 Amir Hendarsah Cerita Kerajaan Nusantara Great Publisher ISBN 602 8696 14 5 Poesponegoro Marwati Djoened 2008 Sejarah nasional Indonesia Updated ed Jakarta Balai Pustaka ISBN 979 407 407 1 OCLC 435629543 Ota Atsushi 2006 Changes of regime and social dynamics in West Java society state and the outer world of Banten 1750 1830 Leiden Brill ISBN 90 04 15091 9 OCLC 62755670 Pramono Sidik 2008 Ekspedisi Anjer Panaroekan laporan jurnalistik Kompas 200 tahun Anjer Panaroekan jalan untuk perubahan Expeditie Anjer Panaroekan journalistiek verslag van Kompas Penerbit Buku Kompas Jakarta Penerbit Buku Kompas pp 1 2 ISBN 978 979 709 391 4 OCLC 298706775 Kartodirdjo Sartono 1966 The peasants revolt of Banten in 1888 its conditions course and sequel a case study of social movements in Indonesia Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 978 94 017 6357 8 JSTOR 10 1163 j ctt1w76vfh OCLC 652424455 Cribb Robert Kahin Audrey 2004 Historical dictionary of Indonesia 2nd ed Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4935 6 OCLC 53793487 a b Poeze Harry A The Road to Hell Construction of a Railway Line in West Java during the Japanese Occupation In Kratoska Paul H ed Asian Labor in the Wartime Japanese Empires Armonk New York M E Sharpe pp 152 178 ISBN 978 0 7656 3335 4 Shigeru Sato 1994 The Bayah Saketi Railway Construction War Nationalism and Peasants Java Under the Japanese Occupation 1942 1945 M E Sharpe pp 179 186 ISBN 978 0 7656 3907 3 OCLC 1307467455 Bruin Jan de de Jager Henk 2003 Het Indische spoor in oorlogstijd de spoor en tramwegmaatschappijen in Nederlands Indie in de vuurlinie 1873 1949 in Dutch 1st ed s Hertogenbosch Uquilair pp 119 122 ISBN 90 71513 46 7 OCLC 66720099 United States of Indonesia Gorlinski Virginia Banten Encyclopaedia Britannica According to the Law of the Republic of Indonesia No 23 2000 Biro Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2014 Deslatama Yandhi Pemprov Banten Ajukan Enam Pelabuhan Pembantu Tanjung Priok ekonomi in Indonesian Jakarta CNN Indonesia Retrieved 16 March 2019 Banten dan Lampung Bakal Jadi Pelabuhan Penting Internasional Redaksi Indonesia Jernih Tajam Mencerahkan 18 October 2015 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Perikanan Jadi Komoditi Andalan Provinsi Banten SINDOnews com in Indonesian Retrieved 16 March 2019 Dokumen Rencana Pembangunan Daerah Geografi Profil Provinsi Website Resmi Pemerintah Provinsi Banten Retrieved 16 March 2019 Dinas Energi dan Sumber Daya Mineral Provinsi Banten Potensi Pertambangan desdm bantenprov go id Retrieved 16 March 2019 Indeks Pembangunan Manusia 2014 Archived from the original on 10 November 2016 Retrieved 14 February 2017 Suku Banten Kebudayaan Indonesia 26 August 2013 Archived from the original on 22 March 2017 Retrieved 22 March 2017 Lohanda Mona 1996 The Kapitan Cina of Batavia 1837 1942 A History of Chinese Establishment in Colonial Society Jakarta Djambatan ISBN 9789794282571 Retrieved 20 September 2017 Sejarah Cina Benteng di Indonesia Archived from the original on 7 January 2012 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Knorr Jacqueline 2014 Creole Identity in Postcolonial Indonesia Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 78238 269 0 Retrieved 20 September 2017 Language maps of Indonesia Java and Bali ECAI Pacific Language Mapping Archived from the original on 22 February 2009 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Bahasa Sunda Banten Perpustakaan Digital Budaya Indonesia 2014 Retrieved 12 September 2017 Purwo Bambang K 1993 Factors influencing comparison of Sundanese Javanese Madurese and Balinese Parisi Batur 16 March 2017 Bahasa dan Sastra Sunda Banten Terancam Punah Metro TV News Archived from the original on 1 June 2018 Retrieved 12 September 2017 Ethnologue Retrieved 1 February 2009 Kewarganegaraan Suku Bangsa Agama Dan Bahasa Sehari Hari Penduduk Indonesia Badan Pusat Statistik 2010 Archived from the original on 10 July 2017 Retrieved 18 July 2017 a b c Banten Website Resmi Pemerintah Provinsi Kebudayaan Profil Provinsi Website Resmi Pemerintah Provinsi Banten Retrieved 16 March 2019 Debus www indonesia travel Retrieved 16 March 2019 Kamalina Annasa Rizki 23 January 2023 Jepang Alirkan Rp160 Triliun untuk Proyek MRT Cikarang Balaraja Konstruksi 2024 Bisnis com Al Hikam Herdi Alif 18 February 2023 Cek Rincian 48 Wilayah Bakal Dilewati MRT Fase 3 Cikarang Balaraja finance detik com Provinsi Banten Dalam Angka 2023 Statistics Indonesia Retrieved 22 September 2023 Ujung Kulon National Park UNESCO World Heritage Convention Retrieved 16 September 2022 Banten Introduces Distinctive Dish at Culinary Festival en tempo co Archived from the original on 15 April 2016 Retrieved 2 April 2016 Further reading EditDinar Boontharm The Sultanate of Banten AD 1750 1808 A Social and Cultural History PhD thesis University of Hull 2003 External links Edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Bantam nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Banten Sekolah dan Daycare Alam Sutera Official website in Indonesian Research and Development Agency Archived 8 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine in Indonesian Informasi Tempat Wisata Di Banten in Indonesian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Banten amp oldid 1177725699, 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.