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Borneo

Borneo (/ˈbɔːrni/; also known as Kalimantan in the Indonesian language) is the third-largest island in the world, with an area of 748,168 km2 (288,869 sq mi). Situated at the geographic centre of Maritime Southeast Asia, it is one of the Greater Sunda Islands, located north of Java, west of Sulawesi, and east of Sumatra.

Borneo
Kalimantan
Topography of Borneo
Geography
LocationSoutheast Asia
Coordinates0°N 114°E / 0°N 114°E / 0; 114
ArchipelagoGreater Sunda Islands
Area748,168 km2 (288,869 sq mi)
Area rank3rd
Highest elevation13,435 ft (4095 m)
Highest pointMount Kinabalu
Administration
DistrictsBelait
Brunei and Muara
Temburong
Tutong
Largest settlementBandar Seri Begawan (pop. ~150,000)
ProvincesWest Kalimantan (Pontianak)
Central Kalimantan (Palangkaraya)
South Kalimantan (Banjarbaru)
East Kalimantan (Samarinda)
North Kalimantan (Tanjung Selor)
Largest settlementSamarinda (pop. 842,691)
States and FTSabah
Sarawak
Labuan
Largest settlementKota Kinabalu (pop. 500,421)
Demographics
Population21,258,000 (2023 Censuses)[1][2][3] (2023)
Pop. density30.8/km2 (79.8/sq mi)

The island is politically divided among three countries: Malaysia and Brunei in the north, and Indonesia to the south.[4] Approximately 73% of the island is Indonesian territory. In the north, the East Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak make up about 26% of the island. The population in Borneo is 23,053,723 (2020 national censuses).[1][2][3]

Additionally, the Malaysian federal territory of Labuan is situated on a small island just off the coast of Borneo. The sovereign state of Brunei, located on the north coast, comprises about 1% of Borneo's land area. A little more than half of the island is in the Northern Hemisphere, including Brunei and the Malaysian portion, while the Indonesian portion spans the Northern and Southern hemispheres.

Etymology Edit

The Native people of Borneo referred to their island as Pulu K'lemantang but not as an ethnic name, when the sixteenth century Portuguese explorer Jorge de Menezes made contact with the native which became the name for modern-day Indonesian Borneo.[5][6][7] The term kelamantan is used in Sarawak to refer to a group of people who consume sago in the northern part of the island.[8] According to Crowfurd, the word kelamantan is the name of a type of mango (Mangifera) so the island of Borneo is called a mango island by the native. But he adds that the word is fanciful and unpopular.[9] The local mango, called klemantan, is still widely found in rural areas in Ketapang and surrounding areas of West Kalimantan.[10]

Internationally it is known as Borneo, derived from European contact with the Brunei kingdom in the 16th century during the Age of Exploration. On a map from around 1601, Brunei city is referred to as Borneo, and the whole island is also labelled Borneo.[11][12] The name Borneo may derive from the Sanskrit word váruṇa (वरुण), meaning either "water" or Varuna, the Hindu god of rain.[13]

Another source said it was from the Sanskrit word Kalamanthana, meaning "burning weather" possibly to describe its hot and humid tropical weather.[14] In Indianized malay era the name Kalamanthana was derived from Sanskrit terms kala (time or season) and manthana (churning, kindling or creating fire by friction),[15] which possibly describes the heat of the weather.[16]

In 977, Chinese records began to use the term Bo-ni to refer to Borneo. In 1225, it was also mentioned by the Chinese official Chau Ju-Kua (趙汝适).[17] The Javanese manuscript Nagarakretagama, written by Majapahit court poet Mpu Prapanca in 1365, mentioned the island as Nusa Tanjungnagara, which means the island of the Tanjungpura Kingdom.[18]

Geography Edit

Geology Edit

 
Location of Borneo in Maritime Southeast Asia. The Red River Fault is included.

Borneo was formed through Mesozoic accretion of microcontinental fragments, ophiolite terranes and island arc crust onto a Paleozoic continental core. At the beginning of the Cenozoic Borneo formed a promontory of Sundaland which partly separated from Asian mainland by the proto-South China Sea.[19] The oceanic part of the proto-South China Sea was subducted during the Paleogene period and a large accretionary complex formed along the northwestern of the island of Borneo. In the early Miocene uplift of the accretionary complex occurred as a result of underthrusting of thinned continental crust in northwest.[19] The uplift may have also resulted from shortening due to the counter-clockwise rotation of Borneo between 20 and 10 mega-annum (Ma) as a consequence of Australia-Southeast Asia collision.[19] Large volumes of sediment were shed into basins, which scattered offshore to the west, north and east of Borneo as well into a Neogene basin which is currently exposed in large areas of eastern and southern Sabah. In southeast Sabah, the Miocene to recent island arc terranes of the Sulu Archipelago extend onshore into Borneo with the older volcanic arc was the result of southeast dipping subduction while the younger volcanics are likely resulted from northwest dipping subduction the Celebes Sea.[19]

 
Rich marine life off the coast of Borneo, in the Sulu Sea

Before sea levels rose at the end of the last ice age, Borneo was part of the mainland of Asia, forming, with Java and Sumatra, the upland regions of a peninsula that extended east from present day Indochina. The South China Sea and Gulf of Thailand now submerge the former low-lying areas of the peninsula. Deeper waters separating Borneo from neighbouring Sulawesi prevented a land connection to that island, creating the divide known as Wallace's Line between Asian and Australia-New Guinea biological regions.[20][21] The island today is surrounded by the South China Sea to the north and northwest, the Sulu Sea to the northeast, the Celebes Sea and the Makassar Strait to the east, and the Java Sea and Karimata Strait to the south. To the west of Borneo are the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra. To the south and east are islands of Indonesia: Java and Sulawesi, respectively. To the northeast are the Philippine Islands. With an area of 743,330 square kilometres (287,000 sq mi), it is the third-largest island in the world, and is the largest island of Asia (the largest continent). Its highest point is Mount Kinabalu in Sabah, Malaysia, with an elevation of 4,095 m (13,435 ft).[22]

 
Lake Sentarum, Kapuas Hulu Regency, West Kalimantan

The largest river system is the Kapuas in West Kalimantan, with a length of 1,143 km (710 mi).[23] Other major rivers include the Mahakam in East Kalimantan (980 km (610 mi) long),[24] the Barito, Kahayan, and Mendawai in South Kalimantan (1,090 km (680 mi), 658 km (409 mi), and 616 km (383 mi) long respectively),[25] Rajang in Sarawak (565 km (351 mi) long)[26] and Kinabatangan in Sabah (560 km (350 mi) long).[27] Borneo has significant cave systems. In Sarawak, the Clearwater Cave has one of the world's longest underground rivers while Deer Cave is home to over three million bats, with guano accumulated to over 100 metres (330 ft) deep.[28] The Gomantong Caves in Sabah has been dubbed as the "Cockroach Cave" due to the presence of millions of cockroaches inside the cave.[29][30] The Gunung Mulu National Park in Sarawak and Sangkulirang-Mangkalihat Karst in East Kalimantan which particularly a karst areas contains thousands of smaller caves.[31]

Ecology Edit

 
The critically endangered Bornean orangutan, a great ape endemic to Borneo

The Borneo rainforest is estimated to be around 140 million years old, making it one of the oldest rainforests in the world.[32] The current dominant tree group, the dipterocarps, has dominated the Borneo lowland rain forests for millions of years.[33] It is the centre of the evolution and distribution of many endemic species of plants and animals, and the rainforest is one of the few remaining natural habitats for the endangered Bornean orangutan. It is an important refuge for many endemic forest species, including the Borneo elephant, the eastern Sumatran rhinoceros, the Bornean clouded leopard, the Bornean rock frog, the hose's palm civet and the dayak fruit bat.[34][35]

 
NASA satellite image of Borneo on 19 May 2002

Peat swamp forests occupy the entire coastline of Borneo.[36] The soil of the peat swamp is comparatively infertile, while it is known to be the home of various bird species such as the hook-billed bulbul, helmeted hornbill and rhinoceros hornbill.[37] There are about 15,000 species of flowering plants with 3,000 species of trees (267 species are dipterocarps), 221 species of terrestrial mammals and 420 species of resident birds in Borneo.[38] There are about 440 freshwater fish species in Borneo (about the same as Sumatra and Java combined).[39] The Borneo river shark is known only from the Kinabatangan River.[40] In 2010, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) stated that 123 species have been discovered in Borneo since the "Heart of Borneo" agreement was signed in 2007.[41]

 
Logging road in East Kalimantan, Indonesia

The WWF has classified the island into seven distinct ecoregions. Most are lowland regions:[42][43][44]

According to analysis of data from Global Forest Watch,[45] the Indonesian portion of Borneo lost 10.7 million hectares (26 million acres) of tree cover between 2002 and 2019, of which 4 million hectares (9.9 million acres) was primary forest, compared with Malaysian Borneo's 4.4 million hectares (11 million acres) of tree cover loss and 1.9 million hectares (4.7 million acres) of primary forest cover loss. As of 2020, Indonesian Borneo accounts for 72% of the island's tree cover, Malaysian Borneo 27%, and Brunei 1%. Primary forest in Indonesia accounts for 44% of Borneo's overall tree cover.[46]

Conservation issues Edit

 
Logging near Crocker Range National Park. Borneo has lost more than half of its rainforests in the past half a century.[47]

The island historically had extensive rainforest cover, but the area was reduced due to heavy logging by the Indonesian and Malaysian wood industry, especially with the large demands of raw materials from industrial countries along with the conversion of forest lands for large-scale agricultural purposes.[42] Half of the annual global tropical timber acquisition comes from Borneo. Palm oil plantations have been widely developed and are rapidly encroaching on the last remnants of primary rainforest.[48] Forest fires since 1997, started by the locals to clear the forests for plantations were exacerbated by an exceptionally dry El Niño season, worsening the annual shrinkage of the rainforest.[49] During these fires, hotspots were visible on satellite images and the resulting haze frequently affected Brunei, Indonesia and Malaysia. The haze could also reach southern Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and the Philippines as evidenced on the 2015 Southeast Asian haze.[50]

A 2018 study found that Bornean orangutans declined by 148,500 individuals from 1999 to 2015.[51]

Topography Edit

 
Mount Kinabalu in Malaysia, the highest summit of the island[22]

List of highest peaks in Borneo by elevation.

  • Mount Kinabalu 13,435 ft (4,095 m)
  • Mount Trusmadi 8,668 ft (2,642 m)
  • Raya Hill 7.474 ft (2.278 m)
  • Muruk Miau 6,837 ft (2,084 m)
  • Mount Wakid 6,778 ft (2,066 m)
  • Monkobo Hill 5,866 ft (1,788 m)
  • Mount Lotung 5,843 ft (1,781 m)
  • Mount Magdalena 4,288 ft (1,307 m)
  • Talibu Hill 4,144 ft (1,263 m)

River systems Edit

 
Kapuas River in Indonesia; at 1,000 km (620 mi) in length, it is the longest river in Borneo.[23]

List of longest river in Borneo by length.

History Edit

Early history Edit

 
Dayak, the main indigenous people in the island, were feared for their headhunting practices.

In November 2018, scientists reported the discovery of the oldest known figurative art painting, over 40,000 (perhaps as old as 52,000) years old, of an unknown animal, in the cave of Lubang Jeriji Saléh on the island of Borneo.[52][53]

According to ancient Chinese (977),[54]: 129  Indian and Japanese manuscripts, western coastal cities of Borneo had become trading ports by the first millennium AD.[55] In Chinese manuscripts, gold, camphor, tortoise shells, hornbill ivory, rhinoceros horn, crane crest, beeswax, lakawood (a scented heartwood and root wood of a thick liana, Dalbergia parviflora), dragon's blood, rattan, edible bird's nests and various spices were described as among the most valuable items from Borneo.[56] The Indians named Borneo Suvarnabhumi (the land of gold) and also Karpuradvipa (Camphor Island). The Javanese named Borneo Puradvipa, or Diamond Island. Archaeological findings in the Sarawak river delta reveal that the area was a thriving centre of trade between India and China from the 6th century until about 1300.[56]

 
Territorial loss of the thalassocracy of the Sultanate of Brunei from 1400 to 1890 due to the beginning of Western imperialism

Stone pillars bearing inscriptions in the Pallava script, found in Kutai along the Mahakam River in East Kalimantan and dating to around the second half of the 4th century, constitute some of the oldest evidence of Hindu influence in Southeast Asia.[57] By the 14th century, Borneo became a vassal state of Majapahit (in present-day Indonesia),[58][59] later changing its allegiance to the Ming dynasty of China.[60] Pre-Islamic Sulu, then known locally as Lupah Sug, stretched from Palawan and the Sulu archipelago at the Philippines; to Sabah, Eastern, and Northern Kalimantan in Borneo.[61] The Sulu empire rose as a rebellion and reaction against former Majapahit Imperialism against Sulu which Majapahit briefly occupied. The religion of Islam entered the island in the 10th century,[62] following the arrival of Muslim traders who later converted many indigenous peoples in the coastal areas.[63]

The Sultanate of Brunei declared independence from Majapahit following the death of the Majapahit emperor in the mid-14th century. During its golden age under Bolkiah from the 15th to the 17th century, the Bruneian sultanate ruled almost the entire coastal area of Borneo (lending its name to the island due to its influence in the region) and several islands in the Philippines.[64] During the 1450s, Shari'ful Hashem Syed Abu Bakr, an Arab born in Johor,[65] arrived in Sulu from Malacca. In 1457, he founded the Sultanate of Sulu; he titled himself as "Paduka Maulana Mahasari Sharif Sultan Hashem Abu Bakr".[66] Following its independence in 1578 from Brunei's influence,[67] Sulu began to expand its thalassocracy to parts of the northern Borneo.[68][69] Both the sultanates who ruled northern Borneo had traditionally engaged in trade with China by means of the frequently-arriving Chinese junks.[70][71] Despite the thalassocracy of the sultanates, Borneo's interior region remained free from the rule of any kingdoms.[72]

British and Dutch control Edit

 
British flag hoisted for the first time on the island of Labuan on 24 December 1846

Since the fall of Malacca in 1511, Portuguese merchants traded regularly with Borneo, and especially with Brunei from 1530.[73] Having visited Brunei's capital, the Portuguese described the place as surrounded by a stone wall.[74] While Borneo was seen as rich, the Portuguese did not make any attempts to conquer it.[73] The Spanish had sailed from Latin America and conquered the Brunei's provinces in the Philippines and incorporated it into the Mexico-Centered Viceroyalty of New Spain. The Spanish visit to Brunei led to the Castilian War in 1578. The English began to trade with Sambas of southern Borneo in 1609, while the Dutch only began their trade in 1644: to Banjar and Martapura, also in the southern Borneo.[75] The Dutch tried to settle the island of Balambangan, north of Borneo, in the second half of the 18th century, but withdrew by 1797.[76] In 1812, the sultan in southern Borneo ceded his forts to the English East India Company. The English, led by Stamford Raffles, then tried to establish an intervention in Sambas but failed. Although they managed to defeat the sultanate the next year and declared a blockade on all ports in Borneo except Brunei, Banjarmasin and Pontianak, the project was cancelled by the British governor-general Lord Minto in India as it was too expensive.[76] At the beginning of British and Dutch exploration on the island, they described the island of Borneo as full of head hunters, with the indigenous in the interior practising cannibalism,[77] and the waters around the island infested with pirates, especially between the north eastern Borneo and the southern Philippines.[78][79] The Malay and Sea Dayak pirates preyed on maritime shipping in the waters between Singapore and Hong Kong from their haven in Borneo,[80] along with the attacks by Illanuns of the Moro pirates from the southern Philippines, such as in the Battle off Mukah.[81]

 
Map of the island divided between the British and the Dutch, 1898. The present boundaries of Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei are largely inherited from the British and Dutch colonial rules.

The Dutch began to intervene in the southern part of the island upon resuming contact in 1815, posting residents to Banjarmasin, Pontianak and Sambas and assistant-residents to Landak and Mampawa.[82][83] The Sultanate of Brunei in 1842 granted large parts of land in Sarawak to the English adventurer James Brooke, as a reward for his help in quelling a local rebellion. Brooke established the Raj of Sarawak and was recognised as its rajah after paying a fee to the sultanate. He established a monarchy, and the Brooke dynasty (through his nephew and great-nephew) ruled Sarawak for 100 years; the leaders were known as the White Rajahs.[84][85] Brooke also acquired the island of Labuan for Great Britain in 1846 through the Treaty of Labuan with the sultan of Brunei, Omar Ali Saifuddin II on 18 December 1846.[86] The region of northern Borneo came under the administration of North Borneo Chartered Company following the acquisition of territory from the Sultanates of Brunei and Sulu by a German businessman and adventurer named Baron von Overbeck, before it was passed to the British Dent brothers (comprising Alfred Dent and Edward Dent).[69][87] Further expansion by the British continued into the Borneo interior.[88] This led the 26th sultan of Brunei, Hashim Jalilul Alam Aqamaddin to appeal the British to halt such efforts, and as a result a Treaty of Protection was signed in 1888, rendering Brunei a British protectorate.[89]

 
The Dayak tribe during an Erau ceremony in Tenggarong

Before the acquisition by the British, the Americans also managed to establish their temporary presence in northwestern Borneo after acquiring a parcel of land from the Sultanate of Brunei. A company known as American Trading Company of Borneo was formed by Joseph William Torrey, Thomas Bradley Harris and several Chinese investors, establishing a colony named "Ellena" in the Kimanis area.[90] The colony failed and was abandoned, due to denials of financial backing, especially by the US government, and to diseases and riots among the workers.[91] Before Torrey left, he managed to sell the land to the German businessman, Overbeck.[92] Meanwhile, the Germans under William Frederick Schuck were awarded a parcel of land in northeastern Borneo of the Sandakan Bay from the Sultanate of Sulu where he conducted business and exported large quantities of arms, opium, textiles and tobacco to Sulu before the land was also passed to Overbeck by the sultanate.[93][94]

 
Arab-Malay Sultan of Pontianak in 1930

Prior to the recognition of Spanish presence in the Philippine archipelago, a protocol known as the Madrid Protocol of 1885 was signed between the governments of the United Kingdom, Germany and Spain in Madrid to cement Spanish influence and recognise their sovereignty over the Sultanate of Sulu—in return for Spain's relinquishing its claim to the former possessions of the sultanate in northern Borneo.[95][96] The British administration then established the first railway network in northern Borneo, known as the North Borneo Railway.[97][98] During this time, the British sponsored a large number of Chinese workers to migrate to northern Borneo to work in European plantation and mines,[99] and the Dutch followed suit to increase their economic production.[100] By 1888, North Borneo, Sarawak and Brunei in northern Borneo had become British protectorate.[101] The area in southern Borneo was made Dutch protectorate in 1891.[77] The Dutch who already claimed the whole Borneo were asked by Britain to delimit their boundaries between the two colonial territories to avoid further conflicts.[101] The British and Dutch governments had signed the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824 to exchange trading ports in Malay Peninsula and Sumatra that were under their controls and assert spheres of influence. This resulted in indirectly establishing British- and Dutch-controlled areas in the north (Malay Peninsula) and south (Sumatra and Riau Islands) respectively.[102]

In 1895, Marcus Samuel received a concession in the Kutei area of east Borneo, and based on oil seepages in the Mahakam River delta, Mark Abrahams struck oil in February 1897. This was the discovery of the Sanga Sanga Oil Field, a refinery was built in Balikpapan, and discovery of the Samboja Oil Field followed in 1909. In 1901, the Pamusian Oil Field was discovered on Tarakan, and the Bunyu Oil Field in 1929. Royal Dutch Shell discovered the Miri Oil Field in 1910, and the Seria oil field in 1929.[103][104][105]

World War II Edit

 
Japanese troops march through the streets of Labuan on 14 January 1942.
 
American support craft moving towards Victoria and Brown beach to assist the landing of the members of Australian 24th Infantry Brigade on the island during Operation Oboe Six, 10 June 1945

During World War II, Japanese forces gained control and occupied most areas of Borneo from 1941 to 1945. In the first stage of the war, the British saw the Japanese advance to Borneo as motivated by political and territorial ambitions rather than economic factors.[106] The occupation drove many people in the coastal towns to the interior, searching for food and escaping the Japanese.[107] The Chinese residents in Borneo, especially with the Sino-Japanese War in Mainland China mostly resisted the Japanese occupation.[108] Following the formation of resistance movements in northern Borneo such as the Jesselton Revolt, many innocent indigenous and Chinese people were executed by the Japanese for their alleged involvement.[109]

In Kalimantan, the Japanese also killed many Malay intellectuals, executing all the Malay sultans of West Kalimantan in the Pontianak incidents, together with Chinese people who were already against the Japanese for suspecting them to be threats.[110] Sultan Muhammad Ibrahim Shafi ud-din II of Sambas was executed in 1944. The sultanate was thereafter suspended and replaced by a Japanese council.[111] The Japanese also set-up Pusat Tenaga Rakjat (PUTERA)[112] in the Indonesian archipelago in 1943, although it was abolished the following year when it became too nationalistic.[113] Some of the Indonesian nationalist like Sukarno and Hatta who had returned from Dutch exile began to co-operate with the Japanese. Shortly after his release, Sukarno became president of the Central Advisory Council, an advisory council for south Borneo, Celebes, and Lesser Sunda, set up in February 1945.[113]

Since the fall of Singapore, the Japanese sent several thousand of British and Australian prisoners of war to camps in Borneo such as Batu Lintang camp. From the Sandakan camp site, only six of some 2,500 prisoners survived after they were forced to march in an event known as the Sandakan Death March.[114] In addition, of the total of 17,488 Javanese labourers brought in by the Japanese during the occupation, only 1,500 survived mainly due to starvation, harsh working conditions and maltreatment.[107] The Dayak and other indigenous people played a role in guerrilla warfare against the occupying forces, particularly in the Kapit Division. They temporarily revived headhunting of Japanese toward the end of the war,[115] with Allied Z Special Unit provided assistance to them.[116] Australia contributed significantly to the liberation of Borneo.[117] The Australian Imperial Force was sent to Borneo to fight off the Japanese.[118] Together with other Allies, the island was completely liberated in 1945.

Recent history Edit

 
Sukarno visiting Pontianak, West Kalimantan, in 1963

In May 1945, officials in Tokyo suggested that whether northern Borneo should be included in the proposed new country of Indonesia should be separately determined based on the desires of its indigenous people and following the disposition of Malaya.[119] Sukarno and Mohammad Yamin meanwhile continuously advocated for a Greater Indonesian republic.[120] Towards the end of the war, Japan decided to give an early independence to a new proposed country of Indonesia on 17 July 1945, with an Independence Committee meeting scheduled for 19 August 1945.[113] However, following the surrender of Japan to the Allied forces, the meeting was shelved. Sukarno and Hatta continued the plan by unilaterally declaring independence, although the Dutch tried to retake their colonial possession in Borneo.[113]

The southern part of the island achieved its independence through the Proclamation of Indonesian Independence on 17 August 1945. The southern part saw guerrilla conflicts followed by Dutch blockade to cut supplies for nationalist within the region.[121] While nationalist guerrillas supporting the inclusion of southern Borneo in the new Indonesian republic were active in Ketapang, and to lesser extent in Sambas where they rallied with the red-white flag which became the flag of Indonesia, most of the Chinese residents in southern Borneo expected to be liberated by Chinese Nationalist troops from mainland China and to integrate their districts as an overseas province of China.[122] Meanwhile, Sarawak and Sabah in northern Borneo became separate British crown colonies in 1946.[123][124]

 
Queen's Own Highlanders 1st Battalion conduct a patrol to search for enemy positions in the jungle of Brunei.

In 1961, Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman of the independent Federation of Malaya desired to unite Malaya, the British colonies of Sarawak, North Borneo, Singapore and the protectorate of Brunei under the proposed Federation of Malaysia.[125] The idea was heavily opposed by the governments in both Indonesia and the Philippines as well from communist sympathisers and nationalists in Borneo.[126][127] Sukarno, as the president of the new republic, perceiving the British trying to maintain their presence in northern Borneo and the Malay Peninsula, decided to launch a military infiltration, later known as the confrontation, from 1962 to 1969.[128] As a response to the growing opposition, the British deployed their armed forces to guard their colonies against Indonesian and communist revolts,[129] which was also participated by Australia and New Zealand.[130][131]

The Philippines opposed the newly proposed federation, claiming the eastern part of North Borneo (today the Malaysian state of Sabah) as part of its territory as a former possession of the Sultanate of Sulu.[132] The Philippine government mostly based their claim on the Sultanate of Sulu's cession agreement with the British North Borneo Company, as by now the sultanate had come under the jurisdiction of the Philippine republican administration, which therefore should inherit the Sulu former territories. The Philippine government also claimed that the heirs of the sultanate had ceded all their territorial rights to the republic.[133]

 
The proposed flag of the North Borneo Federation, an attempt to establish a sovereign state by unifying North Borneo, Brunei and Sarawak by A. M. Azahari

The Sultanate of Brunei at the first welcomed the proposal of a new larger federation.[134] Meanwhile, the Brunei People's Party led by A.M. Azahari desired to reunify Brunei, Sarawak and North Borneo into one federation known as the North Borneo Federation (Malay: Kesatuan Negara Kalimantan Utara), where the sultan of Brunei would be the head of state for the federation—though Azahari had his own intention to abolish the Brunei monarchy, to make Brunei more democratic, and to integrate the territory and other former British colonies in Borneo into Indonesia, with the support from the latter government.[135] This directly led to the Brunei Revolt, which thwarted Azahari's attempt and forced him to escape to Indonesia. Brunei withdrew from being part of the new Federation of Malaysia due to some disagreements on other issues while political leaders in Sarawak and North Borneo continued to favour inclusion in a larger federation.[136]

With the continuous opposition from Indonesia and the Philippines, the Cobbold Commission was established to discover the feeling of the native populations in northern Borneo; it found the people greatly in favour of federation, with various stipulations.[137][138] The federation was successfully achieved with the inclusion of northern Borneo through the Malaysia Agreement on 16 September 1963.[139] To this day, the area in northern Borneo is still subjected to attacks by Moro pirates since the 18th century and militant from groups such as Abu Sayyaf since 2000 in the frequent cross border attacks. During the administration of Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos, Marcos made some attempts to destabilise the state of Sabah,[140] although his plan failed and resulted in the Jabidah massacre and later the insurgency in the southern Philippines.[141][142]

In August 2019, Indonesian president Joko Widodo announced a plan to move the capital of Indonesia from Jakarta to a newly established location in the East Kalimantan province in Borneo.[143]

Demographics Edit

The demonym for Borneo is Bornean.[144]

Borneo had 23,053,723 inhabitants (in 2020 Censuses),[1][2] a population density of 30.8 inhabitants per square kilometre (80 inhabitants per square mile). Most of the population lives in coastal cities, although the hinterland has small towns and villages along the rivers.

Territories by population, size and timezone Edit

Country Population Area (km2) Density
per km2
Province/State Population Area (km2) Density
per km2
Capital Time zone
  Bruneia b 460,345[145]
(2% of the population)
5,765 km2
(1% of the land area)
72.11/km2
Bandar Seri Begawan UTC+8
  Indonesia (Kalimantan)a 16,544,696[146]
(72% of the population)
539,238 km2
(72% of the land area)
30.8/km2
  North Kalimantan 713,622
(3% of the population)
72,275 km2
(9.7% of the land area)
9.7/km2 Tanjung Selor UTC+8
  East Kalimantan 3,849,842
(16.8% of the population)
127,347 km2
(17.1% of the land area)
29.6/km2
Samarinda UTC+8
  South Kalimantan 3,808,235
(16.6% of the population)
38,744 km2
(5.2% of the land area)
105.1/km2
Banjarbaru UTC+8
  Central Kalimantan 2,702,200
(11.8% of the population)
153,565 km2
(20.6% of the land area)
17.4/km2
Palangka Raya UTC+7
  West Kalimantan 5,470,797
(23.8% of the population)
147,307 km2
(19.8% of the land area)
36.8/km2
Pontianak UTC+7
  Malaysia (East Malaysia)a 5,967,582
(25.9% of the population)
198,447 km2
(26% of the land area)
30.7/km2
  Sabah 3,418,785
(14.9% of the population)
73,904 km2
(9.9% of the land area)
46/km2
Kota Kinabalu UTC+8
  Sarawak 2,453,677
(10.7% of the population)
124,450 km2
(16.7% of the land area)
22/km2
Kuching UTC+8
  Labuan 95,120
(0.4% of the population)
92 km2
(0.1% of the land area)
1,000/km2
Victoria UTC+8
Total 22,972,623 743,450 km2
30.9~/km2

a May includes the offshore islands and its populations
b Due to its size, Brunei is further subdivided into 4 districts (mukim), which is similar to the size of smaller administrative units in Indonesia (kecamatan) and Malaysia (daerah)

10 largest cities and towns in Borneo by population Edit

 
Cities and major towns in Borneo
  •   Provincial/State capital
  •   National capital
Rank City Population[147] Country Province/State
1 Samarinda 727,500   Indonesia   East Kalimantan
2 Banjarmasin 625,481   Indonesia   South Kalimantan
3 Kuching 617,886   Malaysia   Sarawak
4 Balikpapan 557,579   Indonesia   East Kalimantan
5 Pontianak 554,764   Indonesia   West Kalimantan
6 Kota Kinabalu 462,963   Malaysia   Sabah
7 Tawau 412,375   Malaysia   Sabah
8 Sandakan 409,056   Malaysia   Sabah
9 Miri 300,543   Malaysia   Sarawak
10 Bandar Seri Begawan 300,000   Brunei

Urbanisation by region Edit

 
Kuching, the third largest city in Borneo after Samarinda and Banjarmasin
Country Province/State Urban-Rural Population (%)
Urban Rural
  Brunei[148][149] 78.25% 21.75%
  Indonesia (Kalimantan)[150]   East Kalimantan
  North Kalimantanc
68.9% 31.1%
  South Kalimantan 48.4% 51.6%
  Central Kalimantan 40.2% 59.8%
  West Kalimantan 36.2% 63.8%
  Malaysia (East Malaysia)[151][152]   Sabah 54.7% 45.3%
  Sarawak 57% 43%
  Labuan 88.9% 11.1%

c Data based on the projection in the former territories in East Kalimantan Province (prior to the separation of North Kalimantan in 2012)

Major ethnicities by region Edit

 
Young Dayak dancers in their traditional clothes, Pampang Cultural Village, Samarinda, East Kalimantan, Indonesia
 
A group of Bruneian men in Baju Melayu, the ethnic Malays of Borneo are primarily inhabited the coastal areas of the island

d Based on alphabetical order

Religion Edit

Religions based on regions

Religion in Brunei (2016)[153]

  Islam (80.9%)
  Christianity (7.1%)
  Buddhism (7%)
  Other (5%)

Religion in Indonesian Borneo (2022)[154]

  Islam (78.29%)
  Protestantism (9.29%)
  Roman Catholic (9.13%)
  Buddhism (2.03%)
  Hinduism (1.10%)
  Confucianism (0.096%)
  Folk religion (0.07%)

Religion in Malaysian Borneo (2020)[155]

  Islam (51.9%)
  Christianity (37.4%)
  Buddhism (9.0%)
  Confucianism and others (0.3%)
  Hinduism (0.1%)
  No religion (1.3%)

Administration Edit

The island of Borneo is divided administratively by three countries.

 
Political divisions of Borneo

Economy Edit

 
Seria Oil Refinery, Brunei Darussalam

Borneo's economy depends mainly on agriculture, logging and mining, oil and gas, and ecotourism.[156] Brunei's economy is highly dependent on the oil and gas production sector, and the country has become one of the largest oil producers in Southeast Asia. The Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak are both top exporters of timber.[156] Sabah is also known as the agricultural producer of rubber, cacao, and vegetables, and for its fisheries, while Sabah, Sarawak and Labuan export liquefied natural gas (LNG) and petroleum. The Indonesian provinces of Kalimantan are mostly dependent on mining sectors despite also being involved in logging and oil and gas explorations.[156]

List of territories by GDP/GRP Edit

Country Province/State GDP Nominal GDP/GRP per capita
  Brunei[148][149] US$ 14.1 billion US$ 42,939
  Indonesia (Kalimantan)[150]   North Kalimantan US$ 9.34 billion US$ 12,837
  East Kalimantan US$ 62.05 billion US$ 16,075
  South Kalimantan US$ 16.92 billion US$ 4,046
  Central Kalimantan US$ 13.47 billion US$ 4,913
  West Kalimantan US$ 17.23 billion US$ 3,109
  Malaysia (East Malaysia)[151][152]   Sabah US$ 22.74 billion US$ 6,654
  Sarawak US$ 36.19 billion US$ 14,653
  Labuan US$ 1.36 billion US$ 18,068

Human Development Index by territory Edit

HDI is a statistic of combined indicators that takes into account life expectancy, health, education and per-capita income.

Country Province/State HDI score Country comparison
  Brunei 0.829 (2022)   Kuwait (0.831)
  Indonesia (Kalimantan)   North Kalimantan 0.718 (2022)   Paraguay (0.717)
  East Kalimantan 0.774 (2022)   Iran (0.774)
  South Kalimantan 0.718 (2022)   Paraguay (0.717)
  Central Kalimantan 0.716 (2022)   Paraguay (0.717)
  West Kalimantan 0.686 (2022)   Iraq (0.686)
  Malaysia (East Malaysia)   Sabah 0.702 (2021)   Vietnam (0.703)
  Sarawak 0.737 (2021)   Mongolia (0.739)
  Labuan 0.777 (2021)   Saint Kitts and Nevis (0.777)

See also Edit

Notes Edit

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Further reading Edit

  • L. W. W Gudgeon; Allan Stewart (1913), British North Borneo / by L. W. W. Gudgeon ; with twelve full-page illustrations in colour by Allan Stewart, Adam and Charles Black
  • Redmond O'Hanlon (1984). Into the Heart of Borneo: An Account of a Journey Made in 1983 to the Mountains of Batu Tiban with James Fenton. Salamander Press. ISBN 978-0-9075-4055-7.
  • Eric Hansen (1988). Stranger in the Forest: On Foot Across Borneo. Century. ISBN 978-0-7126-1158-9.
  • Gordon Barclay Corbet; John Edwards Hill (1992). The mammals of the Indomalayan Region: a systematic review. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-854693-1.
  • Robert Young Pelton (1995). Fielding's Borneo. Fielding Worldwide. ISBN 978-1-5695-2026-0.
  • Ghazally Ismail (1996–2001). A Scientific Journey Through Borneo. Kota Samarahan: Universiti Malaysia Sarawak.
  • K. M. Wong; Chew Lun Chan (1997). Mount Kinabalu: Borneo's Magic Mountain: An Introduction to the Natural History of One of the World's Great Natural Monuments. Kota Kinabalu: Natural History Publications. ISBN 978-983-812-014-2.
  • Dennis Lau (1999). Borneo: a photographic journey. Travelcom Asia. ISBN 978-983-99431-1-5.
  • John Wassner (2001). Espresso with the Headhunters: A Journey Through the Jungles of Borneo. Summersdale. ISBN 978-1-84024-137-2.
  • Less S. Hall; Greg Richards; Mohamad Tajuddin Abdullah (2002), "The bats of Niah National Park, Sarawak", The Sarawak Museum Journal
  • Mohd Azlan J.; Ibnu Martono; Agus P. Kartono; Mohamad Tajuddin Abdullah (2003), "Diversity, Relative Abundance and Conservation of Chiropterans in Kayan Mentarang National Park, East Kalimantan, Indonesia", The Sarawak Museum Journal
  • Mohd Tajuddin Abdullah (2003), Biogeography and variation of Cynopterus brachyotis in Southeast Asia (PhD thesis ed.), Brisbane: University of Queensland
  • Catherine Karim; Andrew Alek Tuen; Mohamad Tajuddin Abdullah (2004), "Mammals", The Sarawak Museum Journal
  • Less S. Hall; Gordon G. Grigg; Craig Moritz; Besar Ketol; Isa Sait; Wahab Marni; M.T. Abdullah (2004), "Biogeography of fruit bats in Southeast Asia", The Sarawak Museum Journal
  • Stephen Holley (2004). A White Headhunter in Borneo. Kota Kinabalu: Natural History Publications. ISBN 978-983-812-081-4.
  • Wild Borneo: The Wildlife and Scenery of Sabah, Sarawak, Brunei, and Kalimantan. New Holland Publishers. 2006. ISBN 978-1-84537-378-8.
  • Mel White (November 2008), Borneo's Moment of Truth, National Geographic
  • Anton Willem Nieuwenhuis (2009). Quer durch Borneo (in Dutch). BoD – Books on Demand. ISBN 978-3-86195-028-8.
  • G. W. H. Davison (2010). A Photographic Guide to Birds of Borneo: Sabah, Sarawak, Brunei and Kalimantan. New Holland. ISBN 978-1-84773-828-8.
  • John Mathai (2010), Hose's Civet: Borneo's mysterious carnivore, Nature Watch 18/4: 2–8
  • John Mathai; Jason Hon; Ngumbang Juat; Amanda Peter; Melvin Gumal (2010), Small carnivores in a logging concession in the Upper Baram, Sarawak, Borneo, Small Carnivore Conservation 42: 1–9
  • Charles M. Francis (2013). A Photographic Guide to Mammals of South-East Asia. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. ISBN 978-1-84773-531-7.

External links Edit

  •   Borneo travel guide from Wikivoyage
  •   Media related to Borneo at Wikimedia Commons
  • Environmental Profile of Borneo – Background on Borneo, including natural and social history, deforestation statistics, and conservation news.

borneo, confused, with, brunei, barneo, ɔːr, also, known, kalimantan, indonesian, language, third, largest, island, world, with, area, situated, geographic, centre, maritime, southeast, asia, greater, sunda, islands, located, north, java, west, sulawesi, east,. Not to be confused with Brunei or Barneo Borneo ˈ b ɔːr n i oʊ also known as Kalimantan in the Indonesian language is the third largest island in the world with an area of 748 168 km2 288 869 sq mi Situated at the geographic centre of Maritime Southeast Asia it is one of the Greater Sunda Islands located north of Java west of Sulawesi and east of Sumatra Borneo KalimantanTopography of BorneoGeographyLocationSoutheast AsiaCoordinates0 N 114 E 0 N 114 E 0 114ArchipelagoGreater Sunda IslandsArea748 168 km2 288 869 sq mi Area rank3rdHighest elevation13 435 ft 4095 m Highest pointMount KinabaluAdministrationBruneiDistrictsBelaitBrunei and MuaraTemburongTutongLargest settlementBandar Seri Begawan pop 150 000 IndonesiaProvincesWest Kalimantan Pontianak Central Kalimantan Palangkaraya South Kalimantan Banjarbaru East Kalimantan Samarinda North Kalimantan Tanjung Selor Largest settlementSamarinda pop 842 691 MalaysiaStates and FTSabahSarawakLabuanLargest settlementKota Kinabalu pop 500 421 DemographicsPopulation21 258 000 2023 Censuses 1 2 3 2023 Pop density30 8 km2 79 8 sq mi The island is politically divided among three countries Malaysia and Brunei in the north and Indonesia to the south 4 Approximately 73 of the island is Indonesian territory In the north the East Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak make up about 26 of the island The population in Borneo is 23 053 723 2020 national censuses 1 2 3 Additionally the Malaysian federal territory of Labuan is situated on a small island just off the coast of Borneo The sovereign state of Brunei located on the north coast comprises about 1 of Borneo s land area A little more than half of the island is in the Northern Hemisphere including Brunei and the Malaysian portion while the Indonesian portion spans the Northern and Southern hemispheres Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 Geology 2 2 Ecology 2 2 1 Conservation issues 2 3 Topography 2 4 River systems 3 History 3 1 Early history 3 2 British and Dutch control 3 3 World War II 3 4 Recent history 4 Demographics 4 1 Territories by population size and timezone 4 2 10 largest cities and towns in Borneo by population 4 3 Urbanisation by region 4 4 Major ethnicities by region 4 5 Religion 5 Administration 6 Economy 6 1 List of territories by GDP GRP 7 Human Development Index by territory 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology EditThe Native people of Borneo referred to their island as Pulu K lemantang but not as an ethnic name when the sixteenth century Portuguese explorer Jorge de Menezes made contact with the native which became the name for modern day Indonesian Borneo 5 6 7 The term kelamantan is used in Sarawak to refer to a group of people who consume sago in the northern part of the island 8 According to Crowfurd the word kelamantan is the name of a type of mango Mangifera so the island of Borneo is called a mango island by the native But he adds that the word is fanciful and unpopular 9 The local mango called klemantan is still widely found in rural areas in Ketapang and surrounding areas of West Kalimantan 10 Internationally it is known as Borneo derived from European contact with the Brunei kingdom in the 16th century during the Age of Exploration On a map from around 1601 Brunei city is referred to as Borneo and the whole island is also labelled Borneo 11 12 The name Borneo may derive from the Sanskrit word varuṇa वर ण meaning either water or Varuna the Hindu god of rain 13 Another source said it was from the Sanskrit word Kalamanthana meaning burning weather possibly to describe its hot and humid tropical weather 14 In Indianized malay era the name Kalamanthana was derived from Sanskrit terms kala time or season and manthana churning kindling or creating fire by friction 15 which possibly describes the heat of the weather 16 In 977 Chinese records began to use the term Bo ni to refer to Borneo In 1225 it was also mentioned by the Chinese official Chau Ju Kua 趙汝适 17 The Javanese manuscript Nagarakretagama written by Majapahit court poet Mpu Prapanca in 1365 mentioned the island as Nusa Tanjungnagara which means the island of the Tanjungpura Kingdom 18 Geography EditGeology Edit See also Geological history of Borneo nbsp Location of Borneo in Maritime Southeast Asia The Red River Fault is included Borneo was formed through Mesozoic accretion of microcontinental fragments ophiolite terranes and island arc crust onto a Paleozoic continental core At the beginning of the Cenozoic Borneo formed a promontory of Sundaland which partly separated from Asian mainland by the proto South China Sea 19 The oceanic part of the proto South China Sea was subducted during the Paleogene period and a large accretionary complex formed along the northwestern of the island of Borneo In the early Miocene uplift of the accretionary complex occurred as a result of underthrusting of thinned continental crust in northwest 19 The uplift may have also resulted from shortening due to the counter clockwise rotation of Borneo between 20 and 10 mega annum Ma as a consequence of Australia Southeast Asia collision 19 Large volumes of sediment were shed into basins which scattered offshore to the west north and east of Borneo as well into a Neogene basin which is currently exposed in large areas of eastern and southern Sabah In southeast Sabah the Miocene to recent island arc terranes of the Sulu Archipelago extend onshore into Borneo with the older volcanic arc was the result of southeast dipping subduction while the younger volcanics are likely resulted from northwest dipping subduction the Celebes Sea 19 nbsp Rich marine life off the coast of Borneo in the Sulu SeaBefore sea levels rose at the end of the last ice age Borneo was part of the mainland of Asia forming with Java and Sumatra the upland regions of a peninsula that extended east from present day Indochina The South China Sea and Gulf of Thailand now submerge the former low lying areas of the peninsula Deeper waters separating Borneo from neighbouring Sulawesi prevented a land connection to that island creating the divide known as Wallace s Line between Asian and Australia New Guinea biological regions 20 21 The island today is surrounded by the South China Sea to the north and northwest the Sulu Sea to the northeast the Celebes Sea and the Makassar Strait to the east and the Java Sea and Karimata Strait to the south To the west of Borneo are the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra To the south and east are islands of Indonesia Java and Sulawesi respectively To the northeast are the Philippine Islands With an area of 743 330 square kilometres 287 000 sq mi it is the third largest island in the world and is the largest island of Asia the largest continent Its highest point is Mount Kinabalu in Sabah Malaysia with an elevation of 4 095 m 13 435 ft 22 nbsp Lake Sentarum Kapuas Hulu Regency West KalimantanThe largest river system is the Kapuas in West Kalimantan with a length of 1 143 km 710 mi 23 Other major rivers include the Mahakam in East Kalimantan 980 km 610 mi long 24 the Barito Kahayan and Mendawai in South Kalimantan 1 090 km 680 mi 658 km 409 mi and 616 km 383 mi long respectively 25 Rajang in Sarawak 565 km 351 mi long 26 and Kinabatangan in Sabah 560 km 350 mi long 27 Borneo has significant cave systems In Sarawak the Clearwater Cave has one of the world s longest underground rivers while Deer Cave is home to over three million bats with guano accumulated to over 100 metres 330 ft deep 28 The Gomantong Caves in Sabah has been dubbed as the Cockroach Cave due to the presence of millions of cockroaches inside the cave 29 30 The Gunung Mulu National Park in Sarawak and Sangkulirang Mangkalihat Karst in East Kalimantan which particularly a karst areas contains thousands of smaller caves 31 Ecology Edit See also Biodiversity of Borneo Fauna of Borneo Flora of Borneo List of endemic birds of Borneo and List of mammals of Borneo nbsp The critically endangered Bornean orangutan a great ape endemic to BorneoThe Borneo rainforest is estimated to be around 140 million years old making it one of the oldest rainforests in the world 32 The current dominant tree group the dipterocarps has dominated the Borneo lowland rain forests for millions of years 33 It is the centre of the evolution and distribution of many endemic species of plants and animals and the rainforest is one of the few remaining natural habitats for the endangered Bornean orangutan It is an important refuge for many endemic forest species including the Borneo elephant the eastern Sumatran rhinoceros the Bornean clouded leopard the Bornean rock frog the hose s palm civet and the dayak fruit bat 34 35 nbsp NASA satellite image of Borneo on 19 May 2002Peat swamp forests occupy the entire coastline of Borneo 36 The soil of the peat swamp is comparatively infertile while it is known to be the home of various bird species such as the hook billed bulbul helmeted hornbill and rhinoceros hornbill 37 There are about 15 000 species of flowering plants with 3 000 species of trees 267 species are dipterocarps 221 species of terrestrial mammals and 420 species of resident birds in Borneo 38 There are about 440 freshwater fish species in Borneo about the same as Sumatra and Java combined 39 The Borneo river shark is known only from the Kinabatangan River 40 In 2010 the World Wide Fund for Nature WWF stated that 123 species have been discovered in Borneo since the Heart of Borneo agreement was signed in 2007 41 nbsp Logging road in East Kalimantan IndonesiaThe WWF has classified the island into seven distinct ecoregions Most are lowland regions 42 43 44 Borneo lowland rain forests cover most of the island with an area of 427 500 square kilometres 165 100 sq mi Borneo peat swamp forests Kerangas or Sundaland heath forests Southwest Borneo freshwater swamp forests are found in the island s western and southern lowlands Sunda Shelf mangroves The Borneo montane rain forests lie in the central highlands of the island above the 1 000 metres 3 300 ft elevation The highest elevations of Mount Kinabalu are home to the Kinabalu montane alpine meadows a subalpine and alpine shrubland notable for its numerous endemic species including many orchids According to analysis of data from Global Forest Watch 45 the Indonesian portion of Borneo lost 10 7 million hectares 26 million acres of tree cover between 2002 and 2019 of which 4 million hectares 9 9 million acres was primary forest compared with Malaysian Borneo s 4 4 million hectares 11 million acres of tree cover loss and 1 9 million hectares 4 7 million acres of primary forest cover loss As of 2020 Indonesian Borneo accounts for 72 of the island s tree cover Malaysian Borneo 27 and Brunei 1 Primary forest in Indonesia accounts for 44 of Borneo s overall tree cover 46 Conservation issues Edit See also Deforestation in Borneo 1997 Indonesian forest fires 1997 Southeast Asian haze 2006 Southeast Asian haze 2013 Southeast Asian haze 2015 Southeast Asian haze 2016 Southeast Asian haze and 2019 Southeast Asian haze nbsp Logging near Crocker Range National Park Borneo has lost more than half of its rainforests in the past half a century 47 The island historically had extensive rainforest cover but the area was reduced due to heavy logging by the Indonesian and Malaysian wood industry especially with the large demands of raw materials from industrial countries along with the conversion of forest lands for large scale agricultural purposes 42 Half of the annual global tropical timber acquisition comes from Borneo Palm oil plantations have been widely developed and are rapidly encroaching on the last remnants of primary rainforest 48 Forest fires since 1997 started by the locals to clear the forests for plantations were exacerbated by an exceptionally dry El Nino season worsening the annual shrinkage of the rainforest 49 During these fires hotspots were visible on satellite images and the resulting haze frequently affected Brunei Indonesia and Malaysia The haze could also reach southern Thailand Cambodia Vietnam and the Philippines as evidenced on the 2015 Southeast Asian haze 50 A 2018 study found that Bornean orangutans declined by 148 500 individuals from 1999 to 2015 51 Topography Edit nbsp Mount Kinabalu in Malaysia the highest summit of the island 22 List of highest peaks in Borneo by elevation Mount Kinabalu 13 435 ft 4 095 m Mount Trusmadi 8 668 ft 2 642 m Raya Hill 7 474 ft 2 278 m Muruk Miau 6 837 ft 2 084 m Mount Wakid 6 778 ft 2 066 m Monkobo Hill 5 866 ft 1 788 m Mount Lotung 5 843 ft 1 781 m Mount Magdalena 4 288 ft 1 307 m Talibu Hill 4 144 ft 1 263 m River systems Edit nbsp Kapuas River in Indonesia at 1 000 km 620 mi in length it is the longest river in Borneo 23 List of longest river in Borneo by length Kapuas River 1 143 km 710 mi Barito River 1 090 km 680 mi Mahakam River 980 km 610 mi Kahayan River 658 km 409 mi Mendawai River 616 km 383 mi Kayan River 576 km 358 mi Rajang River 565 km 351 mi Kinabatangan River 560 km 350 mi Baram River 400 km 250 mi Sembakung River 352 km 219 mi Sesayap River 279 km 173 mi Pawan River 197 km 122 mi History EditEarly history Edit nbsp Dayak the main indigenous people in the island were feared for their headhunting practices In November 2018 scientists reported the discovery of the oldest known figurative art painting over 40 000 perhaps as old as 52 000 years old of an unknown animal in the cave of Lubang Jeriji Saleh on the island of Borneo 52 53 According to ancient Chinese 977 54 129 Indian and Japanese manuscripts western coastal cities of Borneo had become trading ports by the first millennium AD 55 In Chinese manuscripts gold camphor tortoise shells hornbill ivory rhinoceros horn crane crest beeswax lakawood a scented heartwood and root wood of a thick liana Dalbergia parviflora dragon s blood rattan edible bird s nests and various spices were described as among the most valuable items from Borneo 56 The Indians named Borneo Suvarnabhumi the land of gold and also Karpuradvipa Camphor Island The Javanese named Borneo Puradvipa or Diamond Island Archaeological findings in the Sarawak river delta reveal that the area was a thriving centre of trade between India and China from the 6th century until about 1300 56 nbsp Territorial loss of the thalassocracy of the Sultanate of Brunei from 1400 to 1890 due to the beginning of Western imperialismStone pillars bearing inscriptions in the Pallava script found in Kutai along the Mahakam River in East Kalimantan and dating to around the second half of the 4th century constitute some of the oldest evidence of Hindu influence in Southeast Asia 57 By the 14th century Borneo became a vassal state of Majapahit in present day Indonesia 58 59 later changing its allegiance to the Ming dynasty of China 60 Pre Islamic Sulu then known locally as Lupah Sug stretched from Palawan and the Sulu archipelago at the Philippines to Sabah Eastern and Northern Kalimantan in Borneo 61 The Sulu empire rose as a rebellion and reaction against former Majapahit Imperialism against Sulu which Majapahit briefly occupied The religion of Islam entered the island in the 10th century 62 following the arrival of Muslim traders who later converted many indigenous peoples in the coastal areas 63 The Sultanate of Brunei declared independence from Majapahit following the death of the Majapahit emperor in the mid 14th century During its golden age under Bolkiah from the 15th to the 17th century the Bruneian sultanate ruled almost the entire coastal area of Borneo lending its name to the island due to its influence in the region and several islands in the Philippines 64 During the 1450s Shari ful Hashem Syed Abu Bakr an Arab born in Johor 65 arrived in Sulu from Malacca In 1457 he founded the Sultanate of Sulu he titled himself as Paduka Maulana Mahasari Sharif Sultan Hashem Abu Bakr 66 Following its independence in 1578 from Brunei s influence 67 Sulu began to expand its thalassocracy to parts of the northern Borneo 68 69 Both the sultanates who ruled northern Borneo had traditionally engaged in trade with China by means of the frequently arriving Chinese junks 70 71 Despite the thalassocracy of the sultanates Borneo s interior region remained free from the rule of any kingdoms 72 British and Dutch control Edit Main articles British Borneo and Dutch East Indies nbsp British flag hoisted for the first time on the island of Labuan on 24 December 1846Since the fall of Malacca in 1511 Portuguese merchants traded regularly with Borneo and especially with Brunei from 1530 73 Having visited Brunei s capital the Portuguese described the place as surrounded by a stone wall 74 While Borneo was seen as rich the Portuguese did not make any attempts to conquer it 73 The Spanish had sailed from Latin America and conquered the Brunei s provinces in the Philippines and incorporated it into the Mexico Centered Viceroyalty of New Spain The Spanish visit to Brunei led to the Castilian War in 1578 The English began to trade with Sambas of southern Borneo in 1609 while the Dutch only began their trade in 1644 to Banjar and Martapura also in the southern Borneo 75 The Dutch tried to settle the island of Balambangan north of Borneo in the second half of the 18th century but withdrew by 1797 76 In 1812 the sultan in southern Borneo ceded his forts to the English East India Company The English led by Stamford Raffles then tried to establish an intervention in Sambas but failed Although they managed to defeat the sultanate the next year and declared a blockade on all ports in Borneo except Brunei Banjarmasin and Pontianak the project was cancelled by the British governor general Lord Minto in India as it was too expensive 76 At the beginning of British and Dutch exploration on the island they described the island of Borneo as full of head hunters with the indigenous in the interior practising cannibalism 77 and the waters around the island infested with pirates especially between the north eastern Borneo and the southern Philippines 78 79 The Malay and Sea Dayak pirates preyed on maritime shipping in the waters between Singapore and Hong Kong from their haven in Borneo 80 along with the attacks by Illanuns of the Moro pirates from the southern Philippines such as in the Battle off Mukah 81 nbsp Map of the island divided between the British and the Dutch 1898 The present boundaries of Malaysia Indonesia and Brunei are largely inherited from the British and Dutch colonial rules The Dutch began to intervene in the southern part of the island upon resuming contact in 1815 posting residents to Banjarmasin Pontianak and Sambas and assistant residents to Landak and Mampawa 82 83 The Sultanate of Brunei in 1842 granted large parts of land in Sarawak to the English adventurer James Brooke as a reward for his help in quelling a local rebellion Brooke established the Raj of Sarawak and was recognised as its rajah after paying a fee to the sultanate He established a monarchy and the Brooke dynasty through his nephew and great nephew ruled Sarawak for 100 years the leaders were known as the White Rajahs 84 85 Brooke also acquired the island of Labuan for Great Britain in 1846 through the Treaty of Labuan with the sultan of Brunei Omar Ali Saifuddin II on 18 December 1846 86 The region of northern Borneo came under the administration of North Borneo Chartered Company following the acquisition of territory from the Sultanates of Brunei and Sulu by a German businessman and adventurer named Baron von Overbeck before it was passed to the British Dent brothers comprising Alfred Dent and Edward Dent 69 87 Further expansion by the British continued into the Borneo interior 88 This led the 26th sultan of Brunei Hashim Jalilul Alam Aqamaddin to appeal the British to halt such efforts and as a result a Treaty of Protection was signed in 1888 rendering Brunei a British protectorate 89 nbsp The Dayak tribe during an Erau ceremony in TenggarongBefore the acquisition by the British the Americans also managed to establish their temporary presence in northwestern Borneo after acquiring a parcel of land from the Sultanate of Brunei A company known as American Trading Company of Borneo was formed by Joseph William Torrey Thomas Bradley Harris and several Chinese investors establishing a colony named Ellena in the Kimanis area 90 The colony failed and was abandoned due to denials of financial backing especially by the US government and to diseases and riots among the workers 91 Before Torrey left he managed to sell the land to the German businessman Overbeck 92 Meanwhile the Germans under William Frederick Schuck were awarded a parcel of land in northeastern Borneo of the Sandakan Bay from the Sultanate of Sulu where he conducted business and exported large quantities of arms opium textiles and tobacco to Sulu before the land was also passed to Overbeck by the sultanate 93 94 nbsp Arab Malay Sultan of Pontianak in 1930Prior to the recognition of Spanish presence in the Philippine archipelago a protocol known as the Madrid Protocol of 1885 was signed between the governments of the United Kingdom Germany and Spain in Madrid to cement Spanish influence and recognise their sovereignty over the Sultanate of Sulu in return for Spain s relinquishing its claim to the former possessions of the sultanate in northern Borneo 95 96 The British administration then established the first railway network in northern Borneo known as the North Borneo Railway 97 98 During this time the British sponsored a large number of Chinese workers to migrate to northern Borneo to work in European plantation and mines 99 and the Dutch followed suit to increase their economic production 100 By 1888 North Borneo Sarawak and Brunei in northern Borneo had become British protectorate 101 The area in southern Borneo was made Dutch protectorate in 1891 77 The Dutch who already claimed the whole Borneo were asked by Britain to delimit their boundaries between the two colonial territories to avoid further conflicts 101 The British and Dutch governments had signed the Anglo Dutch Treaty of 1824 to exchange trading ports in Malay Peninsula and Sumatra that were under their controls and assert spheres of influence This resulted in indirectly establishing British and Dutch controlled areas in the north Malay Peninsula and south Sumatra and Riau Islands respectively 102 In 1895 Marcus Samuel received a concession in the Kutei area of east Borneo and based on oil seepages in the Mahakam River delta Mark Abrahams struck oil in February 1897 This was the discovery of the Sanga Sanga Oil Field a refinery was built in Balikpapan and discovery of the Samboja Oil Field followed in 1909 In 1901 the Pamusian Oil Field was discovered on Tarakan and the Bunyu Oil Field in 1929 Royal Dutch Shell discovered the Miri Oil Field in 1910 and the Seria oil field in 1929 103 104 105 World War II Edit See also Japanese occupation of British Borneo and Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies nbsp Japanese troops march through the streets of Labuan on 14 January 1942 nbsp American support craft moving towards Victoria and Brown beach to assist the landing of the members of Australian 24th Infantry Brigade on the island during Operation Oboe Six 10 June 1945During World War II Japanese forces gained control and occupied most areas of Borneo from 1941 to 1945 In the first stage of the war the British saw the Japanese advance to Borneo as motivated by political and territorial ambitions rather than economic factors 106 The occupation drove many people in the coastal towns to the interior searching for food and escaping the Japanese 107 The Chinese residents in Borneo especially with the Sino Japanese War in Mainland China mostly resisted the Japanese occupation 108 Following the formation of resistance movements in northern Borneo such as the Jesselton Revolt many innocent indigenous and Chinese people were executed by the Japanese for their alleged involvement 109 In Kalimantan the Japanese also killed many Malay intellectuals executing all the Malay sultans of West Kalimantan in the Pontianak incidents together with Chinese people who were already against the Japanese for suspecting them to be threats 110 Sultan Muhammad Ibrahim Shafi ud din II of Sambas was executed in 1944 The sultanate was thereafter suspended and replaced by a Japanese council 111 The Japanese also set up Pusat Tenaga Rakjat PUTERA 112 in the Indonesian archipelago in 1943 although it was abolished the following year when it became too nationalistic 113 Some of the Indonesian nationalist like Sukarno and Hatta who had returned from Dutch exile began to co operate with the Japanese Shortly after his release Sukarno became president of the Central Advisory Council an advisory council for south Borneo Celebes and Lesser Sunda set up in February 1945 113 Since the fall of Singapore the Japanese sent several thousand of British and Australian prisoners of war to camps in Borneo such as Batu Lintang camp From the Sandakan camp site only six of some 2 500 prisoners survived after they were forced to march in an event known as the Sandakan Death March 114 In addition of the total of 17 488 Javanese labourers brought in by the Japanese during the occupation only 1 500 survived mainly due to starvation harsh working conditions and maltreatment 107 The Dayak and other indigenous people played a role in guerrilla warfare against the occupying forces particularly in the Kapit Division They temporarily revived headhunting of Japanese toward the end of the war 115 with Allied Z Special Unit provided assistance to them 116 Australia contributed significantly to the liberation of Borneo 117 The Australian Imperial Force was sent to Borneo to fight off the Japanese 118 Together with other Allies the island was completely liberated in 1945 Recent history Edit nbsp Sukarno visiting Pontianak West Kalimantan in 1963In May 1945 officials in Tokyo suggested that whether northern Borneo should be included in the proposed new country of Indonesia should be separately determined based on the desires of its indigenous people and following the disposition of Malaya 119 Sukarno and Mohammad Yamin meanwhile continuously advocated for a Greater Indonesian republic 120 Towards the end of the war Japan decided to give an early independence to a new proposed country of Indonesia on 17 July 1945 with an Independence Committee meeting scheduled for 19 August 1945 113 However following the surrender of Japan to the Allied forces the meeting was shelved Sukarno and Hatta continued the plan by unilaterally declaring independence although the Dutch tried to retake their colonial possession in Borneo 113 The southern part of the island achieved its independence through the Proclamation of Indonesian Independence on 17 August 1945 The southern part saw guerrilla conflicts followed by Dutch blockade to cut supplies for nationalist within the region 121 While nationalist guerrillas supporting the inclusion of southern Borneo in the new Indonesian republic were active in Ketapang and to lesser extent in Sambas where they rallied with the red white flag which became the flag of Indonesia most of the Chinese residents in southern Borneo expected to be liberated by Chinese Nationalist troops from mainland China and to integrate their districts as an overseas province of China 122 Meanwhile Sarawak and Sabah in northern Borneo became separate British crown colonies in 1946 123 124 nbsp Queen s Own Highlanders 1st Battalion conduct a patrol to search for enemy positions in the jungle of Brunei In 1961 Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman of the independent Federation of Malaya desired to unite Malaya the British colonies of Sarawak North Borneo Singapore and the protectorate of Brunei under the proposed Federation of Malaysia 125 The idea was heavily opposed by the governments in both Indonesia and the Philippines as well from communist sympathisers and nationalists in Borneo 126 127 Sukarno as the president of the new republic perceiving the British trying to maintain their presence in northern Borneo and the Malay Peninsula decided to launch a military infiltration later known as the confrontation from 1962 to 1969 128 As a response to the growing opposition the British deployed their armed forces to guard their colonies against Indonesian and communist revolts 129 which was also participated by Australia and New Zealand 130 131 The Philippines opposed the newly proposed federation claiming the eastern part of North Borneo today the Malaysian state of Sabah as part of its territory as a former possession of the Sultanate of Sulu 132 The Philippine government mostly based their claim on the Sultanate of Sulu s cession agreement with the British North Borneo Company as by now the sultanate had come under the jurisdiction of the Philippine republican administration which therefore should inherit the Sulu former territories The Philippine government also claimed that the heirs of the sultanate had ceded all their territorial rights to the republic 133 nbsp The proposed flag of the North Borneo Federation an attempt to establish a sovereign state by unifying North Borneo Brunei and Sarawak by A M AzahariThe Sultanate of Brunei at the first welcomed the proposal of a new larger federation 134 Meanwhile the Brunei People s Party led by A M Azahari desired to reunify Brunei Sarawak and North Borneo into one federation known as the North Borneo Federation Malay Kesatuan Negara Kalimantan Utara where the sultan of Brunei would be the head of state for the federation though Azahari had his own intention to abolish the Brunei monarchy to make Brunei more democratic and to integrate the territory and other former British colonies in Borneo into Indonesia with the support from the latter government 135 This directly led to the Brunei Revolt which thwarted Azahari s attempt and forced him to escape to Indonesia Brunei withdrew from being part of the new Federation of Malaysia due to some disagreements on other issues while political leaders in Sarawak and North Borneo continued to favour inclusion in a larger federation 136 With the continuous opposition from Indonesia and the Philippines the Cobbold Commission was established to discover the feeling of the native populations in northern Borneo it found the people greatly in favour of federation with various stipulations 137 138 The federation was successfully achieved with the inclusion of northern Borneo through the Malaysia Agreement on 16 September 1963 139 To this day the area in northern Borneo is still subjected to attacks by Moro pirates since the 18th century and militant from groups such as Abu Sayyaf since 2000 in the frequent cross border attacks During the administration of Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos Marcos made some attempts to destabilise the state of Sabah 140 although his plan failed and resulted in the Jabidah massacre and later the insurgency in the southern Philippines 141 142 In August 2019 Indonesian president Joko Widodo announced a plan to move the capital of Indonesia from Jakarta to a newly established location in the East Kalimantan province in Borneo 143 Demographics EditThe demonym for Borneo is Bornean 144 Borneo had 23 053 723 inhabitants in 2020 Censuses 1 2 a population density of 30 8 inhabitants per square kilometre 80 inhabitants per square mile Most of the population lives in coastal cities although the hinterland has small towns and villages along the rivers Territories by population size and timezone Edit Country Population Area km2 Density per km2 Province State Population Area km2 Density per km2 Capital Time zone nbsp Bruneia b 460 345 145 2 of the population 5 765 km2 1 of the land area 72 11 km2 Bandar Seri Begawan UTC 8 nbsp Indonesia Kalimantan a 16 544 696 146 72 of the population 539 238 km2 72 of the land area 30 8 km2 nbsp North Kalimantan 713 622 3 of the population 72 275 km2 9 7 of the land area 9 7 km2 Tanjung Selor UTC 8 nbsp East Kalimantan 3 849 842 16 8 of the population 127 347 km2 17 1 of the land area 29 6 km2 Samarinda UTC 8 nbsp South Kalimantan 3 808 235 16 6 of the population 38 744 km2 5 2 of the land area 105 1 km2 Banjarbaru UTC 8 nbsp Central Kalimantan 2 702 200 11 8 of the population 153 565 km2 20 6 of the land area 17 4 km2 Palangka Raya UTC 7 nbsp West Kalimantan 5 470 797 23 8 of the population 147 307 km2 19 8 of the land area 36 8 km2 Pontianak UTC 7 nbsp Malaysia East Malaysia a 5 967 582 25 9 of the population 198 447 km2 26 of the land area 30 7 km2 nbsp Sabah 3 418 785 14 9 of the population 73 904 km2 9 9 of the land area 46 km2 Kota Kinabalu UTC 8 nbsp Sarawak 2 453 677 10 7 of the population 124 450 km2 16 7 of the land area 22 km2 Kuching UTC 8 nbsp Labuan 95 120 0 4 of the population 92 km2 0 1 of the land area 1 000 km2 Victoria UTC 8Total 22 972 623 743 450 km2 30 9 km2a May includes the offshore islands and its populationsb Due to its size Brunei is further subdivided into 4 districts mukim which is similar to the size of smaller administrative units in Indonesia kecamatan and Malaysia daerah 10 largest cities and towns in Borneo by population Edit nbsp Cities and major towns in Borneo Provincial State capital National capitalRank City Population 147 Country Province State1 Samarinda 727 500 nbsp Indonesia nbsp East Kalimantan2 Banjarmasin 625 481 nbsp Indonesia nbsp South Kalimantan3 Kuching 617 886 nbsp Malaysia nbsp Sarawak4 Balikpapan 557 579 nbsp Indonesia nbsp East Kalimantan5 Pontianak 554 764 nbsp Indonesia nbsp West Kalimantan6 Kota Kinabalu 462 963 nbsp Malaysia nbsp Sabah7 Tawau 412 375 nbsp Malaysia nbsp Sabah8 Sandakan 409 056 nbsp Malaysia nbsp Sabah9 Miri 300 543 nbsp Malaysia nbsp Sarawak10 Bandar Seri Begawan 300 000 nbsp BruneiUrbanisation by region Edit nbsp Kuching the third largest city in Borneo after Samarinda and BanjarmasinCountry Province State Urban Rural Population Urban Rural nbsp Brunei 148 149 78 25 21 75 nbsp Indonesia Kalimantan 150 nbsp East Kalimantan nbsp North Kalimantanc 68 9 31 1 nbsp South Kalimantan 48 4 51 6 nbsp Central Kalimantan 40 2 59 8 nbsp West Kalimantan 36 2 63 8 nbsp Malaysia East Malaysia 151 152 nbsp Sabah 54 7 45 3 nbsp Sarawak 57 43 nbsp Labuan 88 9 11 1 c Data based on the projection in the former territories in East Kalimantan Province prior to the separation of North Kalimantan in 2012 Major ethnicities by region Edit nbsp Young Dayak dancers in their traditional clothes Pampang Cultural Village Samarinda East Kalimantan Indonesia nbsp A group of Bruneian men in Baju Melayu the ethnic Malays of Borneo are primarily inhabited the coastal areas of the islandCountry Province State Major ethnic groupsdIndigenous Non indigenous nbsp Brunei Bisaya Dusun Kedayan Malay Chinese nbsp Indonesia Kalimantan nbsp North Kalimantan Bajau Bulungan Dayak Tidung Bugis Javanese nbsp East Kalimantan Banjarese Berau Dayak Kutai Paser Bugis Javanese nbsp South Kalimantan Banjarese Dayak Bugis Javanese Madurese nbsp Central Kalimantan Banjarese Dayak Malay Javanese Madurese nbsp West Kalimantan Dayak Malay Chinese Javanese Madurese nbsp Malaysia East Malaysia nbsp Sabah Bajau Kadazan Dusun Malay Murut Rungus Suluk Bugis Chinese nbsp Sarawak Bidayuh Iban Malay Melanau Orang Ulu Chinese nbsp Labuan Bajau Kadazan Dusun Kedayan Malay Murut Chinesed Based on alphabetical order Religion Edit Religions based on regions Religion in Brunei 2016 153 Islam 80 9 Christianity 7 1 Buddhism 7 Other 5 Religion in Indonesian Borneo 2022 154 Islam 78 29 Protestantism 9 29 Roman Catholic 9 13 Buddhism 2 03 Hinduism 1 10 Confucianism 0 096 Folk religion 0 07 Religion in Malaysian Borneo 2020 155 Islam 51 9 Christianity 37 4 Buddhism 9 0 Confucianism and others 0 3 Hinduism 0 1 No religion 1 3 Administration EditThe island of Borneo is divided administratively by three countries The independent sultanate of Brunei main part and eastern exclave of Temburong The Indonesian provinces of East South West North and Central Kalimantan in Kalimantan The East Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak as well as the Federal Territory of Labuan on offshore islands nearby nbsp Political divisions of BorneoEconomy Edit nbsp Seria Oil Refinery Brunei DarussalamBorneo s economy depends mainly on agriculture logging and mining oil and gas and ecotourism 156 Brunei s economy is highly dependent on the oil and gas production sector and the country has become one of the largest oil producers in Southeast Asia The Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak are both top exporters of timber 156 Sabah is also known as the agricultural producer of rubber cacao and vegetables and for its fisheries while Sabah Sarawak and Labuan export liquefied natural gas LNG and petroleum The Indonesian provinces of Kalimantan are mostly dependent on mining sectors despite also being involved in logging and oil and gas explorations 156 List of territories by GDP GRP Edit Further information List of Indonesian provinces by GDP List of Indonesian provinces by GRP per capita and List of Malaysian states by GDP Country Province State GDP Nominal GDP GRP per capita nbsp Brunei 148 149 US 14 1 billion US 42 939 nbsp Indonesia Kalimantan 150 nbsp North Kalimantan US 9 34 billion US 12 837 nbsp East Kalimantan US 62 05 billion US 16 075 nbsp South Kalimantan US 16 92 billion US 4 046 nbsp Central Kalimantan US 13 47 billion US 4 913 nbsp West Kalimantan US 17 23 billion US 3 109 nbsp Malaysia East Malaysia 151 152 nbsp Sabah US 22 74 billion US 6 654 nbsp Sarawak US 36 19 billion US 14 653 nbsp Labuan US 1 36 billion US 18 068Human Development Index by territory EditFurther information List of Indonesian provinces by Human Development Index and List of Malaysian states by Human Development Index HDI is a statistic of combined indicators that takes into account life expectancy health education and per capita income Country Province State HDI score Country comparison nbsp Brunei 0 829 2022 nbsp Kuwait 0 831 nbsp Indonesia Kalimantan nbsp North Kalimantan 0 718 2022 nbsp Paraguay 0 717 nbsp East Kalimantan 0 774 2022 nbsp Iran 0 774 nbsp South Kalimantan 0 718 2022 nbsp Paraguay 0 717 nbsp Central Kalimantan 0 716 2022 nbsp Paraguay 0 717 nbsp West Kalimantan 0 686 2022 nbsp Iraq 0 686 nbsp Malaysia East Malaysia nbsp Sabah 0 702 2021 nbsp Vietnam 0 703 nbsp Sarawak 0 737 2021 nbsp Mongolia 0 739 nbsp Labuan 0 777 2021 nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis 0 777 See also Edit nbsp Islands portalHikayat Banjar Kutai basin List of islands of Indonesia List of islands of Malaysia Maphilindo List of bats of BorneoPortals nbsp Indonesia nbsp Malaysia nbsp IslandsNotes EditReferences Edit a b c Sugianto Danang Sensus Penduduk 2020 Selesai Begini Sebaran Masyarakat RI Terbaru finance detik com Retrieved 27 September 2022 a b c Malaysia Federal States Territories Districts Major Cities Urban Aras amp Conurbations Statistics amp Maps on City Population Citypopulation de 2013 05 20 Retrieved on 2013 07 12 a b W P Labuan Sepintas Lalu statistics gov my Archived from the original on 13 November 2014 Retrieved 19 September 2014 Donna Marchetti 2 August 1998 Borneo s Wild Side The New York Times Retrieved 20 June 2017 Christoph Friedrich von Ammon Leonhard Bertholdt 1817 Kritisches Journal der neuesten theologischen Literatur Volume 6 Nabu Press ISBN 9781273327414 Notice historique du royaume Banjarmasin Borneo par M le Baron T Van Capellen lieutenant d artillerie aide de camp de S Exc le gouverneur general des indes neerlandaises Historical record of the Banjarmasin Kingdom Borneo by Baron T Van Capellen lieutenant of artillery aide de camp of His Excellency the Governor General of the Dutch Indies Le Moniteur des Indes Orientales et Occidentales The Monitor of the East and West Indies in French The Hague Netherlands Belinfant Brothers 1847 pp 164 A Discourse Delivered at a Meeting of 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Development Oxford University Press ISBN 978 967 65 3110 0 Department of Economic Planning and Development Population www depd gov bn Retrieved 12 December 2017 Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2021 The 10 Largest Cities In Borneo World Atlas 2019 Retrieved 1 April 2023 a b Share of the urban population in Brunei from 2012 to 2021 World Atlas 2023 Retrieved 15 April 2023 a b Brunei Urban Population 1960 2023 Macrotrends Retrieved 15 April 2023 a b Persentase Penduduk Daerah Perkotaan menurut Provinsi 2010 2035 Badan Pusat Statistik 2020 Retrieved 15 April 2023 a b Key Findings of Population and Housing Census of Malaysia 2020 Urban and Rural Department of Statistics Malaysia Official Portal 2020 Retrieved 15 April 2023 a b Population Distribution and Basic Demographic Characteristic Report 2010 Updated 05 08 2011 Department of Statistics Malaysia Official Portal 2011 Retrieved 15 April 2023 Population by Religion Sex and Census Year Archived from the original on 1 April 2021 Retrieved 11 May 2021 ArcGIS Web Application Key Findings of Population and Housing Census of Malaysia 2020 pdf in Malay and English Department of Statistics Malaysia ISBN 978 967 2000 85 3 a b c Borneo City Info Economy Borneo com Archived from the original on 27 May 2017 Retrieved 28 May 2017 Further reading EditL W W Gudgeon Allan Stewart 1913 British North Borneo by L W W Gudgeon with twelve full page illustrations in colour by Allan Stewart Adam and Charles Black Redmond O Hanlon 1984 Into the Heart of Borneo An Account of a Journey Made in 1983 to the Mountains of Batu Tiban with James Fenton Salamander Press ISBN 978 0 9075 4055 7 Eric Hansen 1988 Stranger in the Forest On Foot Across Borneo Century ISBN 978 0 7126 1158 9 Gordon Barclay Corbet John Edwards Hill 1992 The mammals of the Indomalayan Region a systematic review Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 854693 1 Robert Young Pelton 1995 Fielding s Borneo Fielding Worldwide ISBN 978 1 5695 2026 0 Ghazally Ismail 1996 2001 A Scientific Journey Through Borneo Kota Samarahan Universiti Malaysia Sarawak K M Wong Chew Lun Chan 1997 Mount Kinabalu Borneo s Magic Mountain An Introduction to the Natural History of One of the World s Great Natural Monuments Kota Kinabalu Natural History Publications ISBN 978 983 812 014 2 Dennis Lau 1999 Borneo a photographic journey Travelcom Asia ISBN 978 983 99431 1 5 John Wassner 2001 Espresso with the Headhunters A Journey Through the Jungles of Borneo Summersdale ISBN 978 1 84024 137 2 Less S Hall Greg Richards Mohamad Tajuddin Abdullah 2002 The bats of Niah National Park Sarawak The Sarawak Museum Journal Mohd Azlan J Ibnu Martono Agus P Kartono Mohamad Tajuddin Abdullah 2003 Diversity Relative Abundance and Conservation of Chiropterans in Kayan Mentarang National Park East Kalimantan Indonesia The Sarawak Museum Journal Mohd Tajuddin Abdullah 2003 Biogeography and variation of Cynopterus brachyotis in Southeast Asia PhD thesis ed Brisbane University of Queensland Catherine Karim Andrew Alek Tuen Mohamad Tajuddin Abdullah 2004 Mammals The Sarawak Museum Journal Less S Hall Gordon G Grigg Craig Moritz Besar Ketol Isa Sait Wahab Marni M T Abdullah 2004 Biogeography of fruit bats in Southeast Asia The Sarawak Museum Journal Stephen Holley 2004 A White Headhunter in Borneo Kota Kinabalu Natural History Publications ISBN 978 983 812 081 4 Wild Borneo The Wildlife and Scenery of Sabah Sarawak Brunei and Kalimantan New Holland Publishers 2006 ISBN 978 1 84537 378 8 Mel White November 2008 Borneo s Moment of Truth National Geographic Anton Willem Nieuwenhuis 2009 Quer durch Borneo in Dutch BoD Books on Demand ISBN 978 3 86195 028 8 G W H Davison 2010 A Photographic Guide to Birds of Borneo Sabah Sarawak Brunei and Kalimantan New Holland ISBN 978 1 84773 828 8 John Mathai 2010 Hose s Civet Borneo s mysterious carnivore Nature Watch 18 4 2 8 John Mathai Jason Hon Ngumbang Juat Amanda Peter Melvin Gumal 2010 Small carnivores in a logging concession in the Upper Baram Sarawak Borneo Small Carnivore Conservation 42 1 9 Charles M Francis 2013 A Photographic Guide to Mammals of South East Asia Bloomsbury Publishing Plc ISBN 978 1 84773 531 7 External links Edit nbsp Borneo travel guide from Wikivoyage nbsp Media related to Borneo at Wikimedia Commons Environmental Profile of Borneo Background on Borneo including natural and social history deforestation statistics and conservation news Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Borneo amp oldid 1180247696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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