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Klungkung Palace

The Klungkung Palace, officially Puri Agung Semarapura, is a historical building complex situated in Semarapura, the capital of the Klungkung Regency (kabupaten) on Bali, Indonesia.

Bale Kambang of Klungkung Palace

The palace (puri) was erected at the end of the 17th century, but largely destroyed during the Dutch colonial conquest in 1908. Today the basic remains of the palace are the court of justice, the Kertha Gosa Pavilion, and the main gate that bears the date Saka 1622 (AD 1700). Within the old palace compound is also a floating pavilion, the Bale Kembang. The descendants of the rajas that once ruled Klungkung today live in Puri Agung, a residence to the west of the old palace, which was built after 1929.[1]

History edit

The origins of the palace - Context edit

The kingdom of Gelgel (ca. 15th century – mid 17th century) was the first unified power in Bali. The Babad Dalem, a chronicle[a] of the kingdom of Klungkung, records its kings' dynasty by the name of Kapaisan, a genealogy that is traced back to the Javanese kingdom of Majapahit (1293-16th century).[3]

Dalem Di Made, considered to be the last king of Gelgel,[4] reigned from the time of death of his father king Dalem Seganing (ca. 1623). During his reign, some aristocrats in the realm gained power to the king's detriment, factions became stronger. The chief minister of the king and member of the powerful patih (vice-regent) family of Gelgel, Gusti Anung Maruti, eventually took power from the king - the date of this event being unsure. Prisoner in his own Gelgel palace, according to some sources the king managed to escape to Guliang in southern Bangli. Gusti Anung Maruti is mentioned in Dutch sources as a regent dominant in South Bali; he is also mentioned as ruling in Gelgel in 1665-1667 and again in 1686.[5]
On the other hand, other sources suggest that Di Made was succeeded by Dewa Pacekan; upon which internal feuds broke out. Dewa Cawu - Di Made’s brother - was crowned as nominal king in 1651, in a context of civil wars raging through the island; and the king who died in Guliang was Dewa Cawu. At any rate, it seems that by the late 1630s Gusti or Anglurah Agung had already become a dominant political force at the royal court, and that the tenancy of the throne shifted between 1639 and 1643.[6].</ref> The Dutch in Batavia received correspondence from the Gelgel court in 1656, announcing that Maruti was the new ruler of Bali.[4]

In 1686 Dewa Agung Jambe I (Dalem Di Made's son),[7] assisted by nobles from Badung, Karangasem and Tabanan, defeated Gusti Anung Maruti and gained possession of Gelgel.[4] Within a few years he then set up a new court 3 km north of Gelgel and named his capital Puri Semarapura: "The Abode of the Gods".[7][8]

Thus the Klungkung kingdom was the heir of the old Gelgel kingdom. Although he did not have the prerogatives of his Gelgel forebears, the new palace maintained a degree of prestige and precedence on the politically fragmented island.[9]

 
The assembly hall (Kerta Gosa) at the palace, 1930's

Early history edit

The descendants of the first king, Dewa Agung Jambe (r. 1686-c. 1722), ruled under varying fortunes for more than two centuries. They were always known by the title Dewa Agung. Dewa Agung Gede alias Surawirya (r. c. 1722-1736) allied with the influential king of Mengwi and performed an expedition to Java together with him.[10] After he died in 1736, internal fighting broke out between his two sons Dewa Agung Gede (Jr.) and Dewa Agung Made. The former called in help from the Karangasem kingdom but was defeated.[11] The victor Dewa Agung Made was succeeded by a mentally ill son, Dewa Agung Sakti (r. before 1769-end of 18th century). His wife fled to Karangasem where her son Dewa Agung Putra I was brought up. At about the end of the 18th century, his Karangasem helpers established him on the throne of Klungkung. Dewa Agung Putra I appears to have been a strong leader but fell in a minor war in Bangli in 1809. He left a son, Dewa Agung Putra II (r. 1814-1850), and a daughter and co-regent, Dewa Agung Istri Kanya.[12]

 
A meeting between the Rajas of Klungkung (right) and Karangasem (left), the image created before 1864.

The Dutch interference edit

Together with the other Balinese rajas, Dewa Agung Putra II signed a contract with the Dutch colonial authorities in 1843, but the varying interpretations of the contract soon caused friction. This was the background to the three Dutch military expeditions in 1846, 1848, and 1849. The last of these expeditions invaded Klungkung territory. The enterprising queen Dewa Agung Istri Kanya fought the Dutch to a standstill, and this was followed by a general reconciliation between the Balinese rajas and the Dutch authorities.[13] In the following decades, the kingdom was led by a grandson of Dewa Agung Sakti, Dewa Agung Putra III (r. 1851-1903). He was an activist leader who intervened in the affairs of the other south Balinese kingdoms, which were still only nominally attached to the Dutch East Indies. In 1885 he imprisoned the Raja of Gianyar, and in 1891 he was heavily responsible for the destruction of the Mengwi kingdom. After 1900 Dutch presence made itself increasingly felt in south Bali. In this situation, Dewa Agung Putra III died and was succeeded by his son Dewa Agung Jambe II (r. 1903-1908 ). He took a defiant attitude against the encroaching colonialism.[14]

The fall of Klungkung edit

 
South gate to the palace

The alleged plundering of the stranded ship Sri Kumala in 1904, led to a renewed Dutch military foray in 1906. The colonial troops captured Badung after a suicidal attack on the invaders, a so-called puputan ("finishing"). Two years later, in a similar manner, an incident in nearby Gelgel triggered a punitive colonial expedition to Klungkung (see Dutch intervention in Bali (1908)). The local Balinese elite chose to make a last stand against the Dutch. Dewa Agung Jambe II, the members of his dynasty and their retainers sallied forth from the palace and engaged in a puputan. The fight, which took place on 18 April 1908, proceeded until the death of the last of the combatants, which included women and children. Those not killed by Dutch bullets were finished off by other members of the royal group. [15]

After the puputan, the surviving members of the royal family were exiled, and the palace was largely razed to the ground. In 1929 the family was allowed to return and settled in the newly built Puri Agung.

Today, the history of Klungkung, and the puputan, are commemorated in a museum close to the remains of the palace. To the north of the palace, a monument has been erected to the memory of the puputan incident.

Description edit

The Babad Dalem mentions Puri Semarapura – and other palaces – as a replica of the Gelgel palace.[3]

The palace was built in square form, being roughly 150 meters on each side with the main gate to the north. It was divided into several blocks with various ritual and practical functions. The complex displayed a deep symbolism according to a fixed structural pattern.[9]

The Kerta Gosa edit

The city was known at that time for its arts, painting, dance, and music. At the end of the 18th century, the Kerta Gosa Pavilion, also spelled Kertha Gosa or Kertha Ghosa, the Hall of Justice, was erected in the northeastern corner of the palace compound. It typified the Klungkung style of architecture and painting. Because the Kerta Gosa was the court of the high king of Bali, cases on the island that could not be resolved were transferred to this site. Three Brahmana priests presided over the court. The convicts (as well as visitors today) were able to view the ceiling which depicted different punishments in the afterlife, and the results of karma, while they were awaiting sentencing. The ceiling paintings of the Kerta Gosa are one of the outstanding examples of Kamasan Wayang style.[16] The paintings were probably originally done in the middle of the nineteenth century, and renewed in 1918, 1933, and 1963, with individual panels repaired in the 1980s and 1990s. Leading artists of Kamasan village such as Kaki Rambut, Pan Seken, Mangku Mura, and Nyoman Mandra have been responsible for the repaintings in the twentieth century. The main paintings depict the story of Bima in heaven and hell, but other stories depicted are the Tantri, the Garuda story, and scenes predicting the portents of earthquakes (Palindon).

Bale Kambang edit

Bale Kambang, another pavilion with no wall, is in the same courtyard and adjacent to the Kerta Gosa. Its name means Floating Pavilion : it is surrounded by a moat that gives this impression. Its ceiling also hosts paintings,[17] equally complex and arranged on six levels. They illustrate three popular Balinese tales, dominated by those of the Sutasoma.[18] The lowest level of paintings depicts Balinese astrological charts - the Palalintangan -; the second level is about the Men Brayut folktale of ideal family. The four higher levels are of the Sutasoma.[19]

Its destination is uncertain. I. Puccy says that it was used as the royal guards' headquarters and as an antechamber for the king's visitors. For G. Kam, is was used by the royals for pleasure, relaxing and entertaining. As of 2015, Kam's view has gained consensus;[18] but D. Pham thinks that the latter does not give a complete representation of the building's significance.[20] He underlines the dimension of meditation,[2] supported by the top two levels of paintings that expound the pacification of obstacles, resistance of temptation by the nymphs, and self-realization as Mahavairocana.[21]

This pavilion's architecture symbolizes Meru, the center of the universe, surrounded by the moat for the cosmic ocean and source of life Anavatapa. Mount Meru is then seen as the symbolic center of the realm. But it is also a link to the spiritual power of the lineage : me, or meme, means "mother", "eartly existence" ; and ru means "teacher and "father", the humanly realm.[22] The combination of the two syllables means the founders of the ancestral lineage.[23]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ It is important to take into account that Balinese "chronicles", or babad, are not "historical" in the occidental understanding of the word. To start with, their writers were literary brahmana, ksatria or wesia very close to the Hindu-Javanese civilization, which they saw as the basis of Bali-ness, and their writings are dominated with Indic and Javanese models of kingship, rituals and ethics. Besides this (or as a side-effect of this), they were mostly concerned with genealogies, which means that many members of ruling families may be cited but other historical protagonists were not even mentioned, however important these may have been to history. They also had a strong bias toward enhancing said ruling family: lost wars and other disparaging happenings may be silenced, reduced to incidents or explained in mythological terms.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Vickers, Adrian (1990). "Sights of Klungkung; Bali's most illustrious kingdom". In Oey, Eric (ed.). Bali, Island of the Gods. Singapore: Periplus. pp. 166–167.
  2. ^ a b Pham 2015, p. 3-4.
  3. ^ a b Pham 2015, p. 6.
  4. ^ a b c Pham 2015, p. 8.
  5. ^ Hägerdal, Hans (2006). "Candrasangkala: The Balinese art of dating events". lnu.diva-portal.org. Department of Humanities, University of Växjö, Sweden. p. 31. Retrieved 2024-05-05.
  6. ^ Hägerdal 2006, p. 26.
  7. ^ a b Pham 2015, p. 9.
  8. ^ Angela Hobart et al.,The People of Bali. Oxford: Blackwell 2001, pp. 42-44. Vickers 1989, p. 56-58.
  9. ^ a b C. Geertz (1980). Negara: The Theatre State in Nineteenth-Century Bali. Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 110-113. This book provides a layout map of the Klungkung Palace as it was in c. 1905, just before the Dutch conquest (p. 110).
  10. ^ Creese, H. (1991). "Sri Surawirya, Dewa Agung of Klungkung (r. c. 1722-1736); The historical context for dating the kakawin Parthayana". tot de Taal-, Land-en Volkenkunde. 147 (4): 402–419. Retrieved 2024-05-05.
  11. ^ I Wayan Warna et al. (1986), Babad Dalem; Teks dan terjemahan. Denpasar: Dinas Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Propinsi Daerah Tingkat I Bali, pp. 115-7.
  12. ^ Vickers, Adrian (1989). Bali, A Paradise Created. Singapore: Periplus. p. 66. OCLC 728479921.
  13. ^ Hanna, Willard A. (2004). Bali chronicles. Singapore: Periplus. pp. 82–83, 94–99..
  14. ^ Hanna 2004, p. 139-143.
  15. ^ Margaret J. Wiener (1995),Visible and invisible realms; Power, magic and colonial conquest in Bali. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. online presentation
  16. ^ Idanna Pucci, Bhima Swarga; The Balinese Journey of the Soul. Boston etc.: Bulfinch Press, pp. 14-8.
  17. ^ Pham 2015, p. 1.
  18. ^ a b Pham 2015, p. 2.
  19. ^ Pham 2015, p. 16.
  20. ^ Pham 2015, p. 3.
  21. ^ Pham 2015, p. 83.
  22. ^ Pham 2015, p. 77.
  23. ^ Pham 2015, p. 78.

Further reading edit

  • Pham, Daniel M. D. (2015). Power, ecstasy, and enlightenment: the rôle of the Bale Kambang in 17th century Balinese kingship (master in Art history). university of Hawai, Manoa.
  • R. Pringle (2004), A short history of Bali; Indonesia's Hindu realm. Crows Nest: Allen & Unwin.
  • H, Schulte Nordholt (1996), The spell of power; A history of Balinese Politics, 1650-1940. Leiden: KITLV Press.
  • Ida Bagus Sidemen et al. (1983), Sejarah Klungkung. Klungkung: Pemerintah Kabupaten Daerah Tingkat II Klungkung.

External links edit

8°32′8″S 115°24′12″E / 8.53556°S 115.40333°E / -8.53556; 115.40333

klungkung, palace, officially, puri, agung, semarapura, historical, building, complex, situated, semarapura, capital, klungkung, regency, kabupaten, bali, indonesia, bale, kambang, palace, puri, erected, 17th, century, largely, destroyed, during, dutch, coloni. The Klungkung Palace officially Puri Agung Semarapura is a historical building complex situated in Semarapura the capital of the Klungkung Regency kabupaten on Bali Indonesia Bale Kambang of Klungkung Palace The palace puri was erected at the end of the 17th century but largely destroyed during the Dutch colonial conquest in 1908 Today the basic remains of the palace are the court of justice the Kertha Gosa Pavilion and the main gate that bears the date Saka 1622 AD 1700 Within the old palace compound is also a floating pavilion the Bale Kembang The descendants of the rajas that once ruled Klungkung today live in Puri Agung a residence to the west of the old palace which was built after 1929 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 The origins of the palace Context 1 2 Early history 1 3 The Dutch interference 1 4 The fall of Klungkung 2 Description 2 1 The Kerta Gosa 2 2 Bale Kambang 3 See also 4 Notes and references 4 1 Notes 4 2 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editThe origins of the palace Context edit The kingdom of Gelgel ca 15th century mid 17th century was the first unified power in Bali The Babad Dalem a chronicle a of the kingdom of Klungkung records its kings dynasty by the name of Kapaisan a genealogy that is traced back to the Javanese kingdom of Majapahit 1293 16th century 3 Dalem Di Made considered to be the last king of Gelgel 4 reigned from the time of death of his father king Dalem Seganing ca 1623 During his reign some aristocrats in the realm gained power to the king s detriment factions became stronger The chief minister of the king and member of the powerful patih vice regent family of Gelgel Gusti Anung Maruti eventually took power from the king the date of this event being unsure Prisoner in his own Gelgel palace according to some sources the king managed to escape to Guliang in southern Bangli Gusti Anung Maruti is mentioned in Dutch sources as a regent dominant in South Bali he is also mentioned as ruling in Gelgel in 1665 1667 and again in 1686 5 On the other hand other sources suggest that Di Made was succeeded by Dewa Pacekan upon which internal feuds broke out Dewa Cawu Di Made s brother was crowned as nominal king in 1651 in a context of civil wars raging through the island and the king who died in Guliang was Dewa Cawu At any rate it seems that by the late 1630s Gusti or Anglurah Agung had already become a dominant political force at the royal court and that the tenancy of the throne shifted between 1639 and 1643 6 lt ref gt The Dutch in Batavia received correspondence from the Gelgel court in 1656 announcing that Maruti was the new ruler of Bali 4 In 1686 Dewa Agung Jambe I Dalem Di Made s son 7 assisted by nobles from Badung Karangasem and Tabanan defeated Gusti Anung Maruti and gained possession of Gelgel 4 Within a few years he then set up a new court 3 km north of Gelgel and named his capital Puri Semarapura The Abode of the Gods 7 8 Thus the Klungkung kingdom was the heir of the old Gelgel kingdom Although he did not have the prerogatives of his Gelgel forebears the new palace maintained a degree of prestige and precedence on the politically fragmented island 9 nbsp The assembly hall Kerta Gosa at the palace 1930 s Early history edit The descendants of the first king Dewa Agung Jambe r 1686 c 1722 ruled under varying fortunes for more than two centuries They were always known by the title Dewa Agung Dewa Agung Gede alias Surawirya r c 1722 1736 allied with the influential king of Mengwi and performed an expedition to Java together with him 10 After he died in 1736 internal fighting broke out between his two sons Dewa Agung Gede Jr and Dewa Agung Made The former called in help from the Karangasem kingdom but was defeated 11 The victor Dewa Agung Made was succeeded by a mentally ill son Dewa Agung Sakti r before 1769 end of 18th century His wife fled to Karangasem where her son Dewa Agung Putra I was brought up At about the end of the 18th century his Karangasem helpers established him on the throne of Klungkung Dewa Agung Putra I appears to have been a strong leader but fell in a minor war in Bangli in 1809 He left a son Dewa Agung Putra II r 1814 1850 and a daughter and co regent Dewa Agung Istri Kanya 12 nbsp A meeting between the Rajas of Klungkung right and Karangasem left the image created before 1864 The Dutch interference edit Together with the other Balinese rajas Dewa Agung Putra II signed a contract with the Dutch colonial authorities in 1843 but the varying interpretations of the contract soon caused friction This was the background to the three Dutch military expeditions in 1846 1848 and 1849 The last of these expeditions invaded Klungkung territory The enterprising queen Dewa Agung Istri Kanya fought the Dutch to a standstill and this was followed by a general reconciliation between the Balinese rajas and the Dutch authorities 13 In the following decades the kingdom was led by a grandson of Dewa Agung Sakti Dewa Agung Putra III r 1851 1903 He was an activist leader who intervened in the affairs of the other south Balinese kingdoms which were still only nominally attached to the Dutch East Indies In 1885 he imprisoned the Raja of Gianyar and in 1891 he was heavily responsible for the destruction of the Mengwi kingdom After 1900 Dutch presence made itself increasingly felt in south Bali In this situation Dewa Agung Putra III died and was succeeded by his son Dewa Agung Jambe II r 1903 1908 He took a defiant attitude against the encroaching colonialism 14 The fall of Klungkung edit nbsp South gate to the palace The alleged plundering of the stranded ship Sri Kumala in 1904 led to a renewed Dutch military foray in 1906 The colonial troops captured Badung after a suicidal attack on the invaders a so called puputan finishing Two years later in a similar manner an incident in nearby Gelgel triggered a punitive colonial expedition to Klungkung see Dutch intervention in Bali 1908 The local Balinese elite chose to make a last stand against the Dutch Dewa Agung Jambe II the members of his dynasty and their retainers sallied forth from the palace and engaged in a puputan The fight which took place on 18 April 1908 proceeded until the death of the last of the combatants which included women and children Those not killed by Dutch bullets were finished off by other members of the royal group 15 After the puputan the surviving members of the royal family were exiled and the palace was largely razed to the ground In 1929 the family was allowed to return and settled in the newly built Puri Agung Today the history of Klungkung and the puputan are commemorated in a museum close to the remains of the palace To the north of the palace a monument has been erected to the memory of the puputan incident Description editThe Babad Dalem mentions Puri Semarapura and other palaces as a replica of the Gelgel palace 3 The palace was built in square form being roughly 150 meters on each side with the main gate to the north It was divided into several blocks with various ritual and practical functions The complex displayed a deep symbolism according to a fixed structural pattern 9 The Kerta Gosa edit The city was known at that time for its arts painting dance and music At the end of the 18th century the Kerta Gosa Pavilion also spelled Kertha Gosa or Kertha Ghosa the Hall of Justice was erected in the northeastern corner of the palace compound It typified the Klungkung style of architecture and painting Because the Kerta Gosa was the court of the high king of Bali cases on the island that could not be resolved were transferred to this site Three Brahmana priests presided over the court The convicts as well as visitors today were able to view the ceiling which depicted different punishments in the afterlife and the results of karma while they were awaiting sentencing The ceiling paintings of the Kerta Gosa are one of the outstanding examples of Kamasan Wayang style 16 The paintings were probably originally done in the middle of the nineteenth century and renewed in 1918 1933 and 1963 with individual panels repaired in the 1980s and 1990s Leading artists of Kamasan village such as Kaki Rambut Pan Seken Mangku Mura and Nyoman Mandra have been responsible for the repaintings in the twentieth century The main paintings depict the story of Bima in heaven and hell but other stories depicted are the Tantri the Garuda story and scenes predicting the portents of earthquakes Palindon Kerta Gosa nbsp Bale Kambang edit Bale Kambang another pavilion with no wall is in the same courtyard and adjacent to the Kerta Gosa Its name means Floating Pavilion it is surrounded by a moat that gives this impression Its ceiling also hosts paintings 17 equally complex and arranged on six levels They illustrate three popular Balinese tales dominated by those of the Sutasoma 18 The lowest level of paintings depicts Balinese astrological charts the Palalintangan the second level is about the Men Brayut folktale of ideal family The four higher levels are of the Sutasoma 19 Its destination is uncertain I Puccy says that it was used as the royal guards headquarters and as an antechamber for the king s visitors For G Kam is was used by the royals for pleasure relaxing and entertaining As of 2015 Kam s view has gained consensus 18 but D Pham thinks that the latter does not give a complete representation of the building s significance 20 He underlines the dimension of meditation 2 supported by the top two levels of paintings that expound the pacification of obstacles resistance of temptation by the nymphs and self realization as Mahavairocana 21 This pavilion s architecture symbolizes Meru the center of the universe surrounded by the moat for the cosmic ocean and source of life Anavatapa Mount Meru is then seen as the symbolic center of the realm But it is also a link to the spiritual power of the lineage me or meme means mother eartly existence and ru means teacher and father the humanly realm 22 The combination of the two syllables means the founders of the ancestral lineage 23 Bale Kambang nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp See also editUbud Palace History of Bali List of palaces List of monarchs of Bali List of palaces in IndonesiaNotes and references editNotes edit It is important to take into account that Balinese chronicles or babad are not historical in the occidental understanding of the word To start with their writers were literary brahmana ksatria or wesia very close to the Hindu Javanese civilization which they saw as the basis of Bali ness and their writings are dominated with Indic and Javanese models of kingship rituals and ethics Besides this or as a side effect of this they were mostly concerned with genealogies which means that many members of ruling families may be cited but other historical protagonists were not even mentioned however important these may have been to history They also had a strong bias toward enhancing said ruling family lost wars and other disparaging happenings may be silenced reduced to incidents or explained in mythological terms 2 References edit Vickers Adrian 1990 Sights of Klungkung Bali s most illustrious kingdom In Oey Eric ed Bali Island of the Gods Singapore Periplus pp 166 167 a b Pham 2015 p 3 4 a b Pham 2015 p 6 a b c Pham 2015 p 8 Hagerdal Hans 2006 Candrasangkala The Balinese art of dating events lnu diva portal org Department of Humanities University of Vaxjo Sweden p 31 Retrieved 2024 05 05 Hagerdal 2006 p 26 a b Pham 2015 p 9 Angela Hobart et al The People of Bali Oxford Blackwell 2001 pp 42 44 Vickers 1989 p 56 58 a b C Geertz 1980 Negara The Theatre State in Nineteenth Century Bali Princeton Princeton University Press pp 110 113 This book provides a layout map of the Klungkung Palace as it was in c 1905 just before the Dutch conquest p 110 Creese H 1991 Sri Surawirya Dewa Agung of Klungkung r c 1722 1736 The historical context for dating the kakawin Parthayana tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde 147 4 402 419 Retrieved 2024 05 05 I Wayan Warna et al 1986 Babad Dalem Teks dan terjemahan Denpasar Dinas Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Propinsi Daerah Tingkat I Bali pp 115 7 Vickers Adrian 1989 Bali A Paradise Created Singapore Periplus p 66 OCLC 728479921 Hanna Willard A 2004 Bali chronicles Singapore Periplus pp 82 83 94 99 Hanna 2004 p 139 143 Margaret J Wiener 1995 Visible and invisible realms Power magic and colonial conquest in Bali Chicago University of Chicago Press online presentation Idanna Pucci Bhima Swarga The Balinese Journey of the Soul Boston etc Bulfinch Press pp 14 8 Pham 2015 p 1 a b Pham 2015 p 2 Pham 2015 p 16 Pham 2015 p 3 Pham 2015 p 83 Pham 2015 p 77 Pham 2015 p 78 Further reading editPham Daniel M D 2015 Power ecstasy and enlightenment the role of the Bale Kambang in 17th century Balinese kingship master in Art history university of Hawai Manoa R Pringle 2004 A short history of Bali Indonesia s Hindu realm Crows Nest Allen amp Unwin H Schulte Nordholt 1996 The spell of power A history of Balinese Politics 1650 1940 Leiden KITLV Press Ida Bagus Sidemen et al 1983 Sejarah Klungkung Klungkung Pemerintah Kabupaten Daerah Tingkat II Klungkung External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Klungkung Palace Klungkung Royal Palace Archived 2015 01 28 at the Wayback Machine 8 32 8 S 115 24 12 E 8 53556 S 115 40333 E 8 53556 115 40333 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Klungkung Palace amp oldid 1223200243, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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