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Maluku (province)

Maluku is a province of Indonesia. It comprises the central and southern regions of the Maluku Islands. The main city and capital of Maluku province is Ambon on the small Ambon Island. The land area is 46,150.92 km2, and the total population of this province at the 2010 census was 1,533,506 people, rising to 1,848,923 at the 2020 census.[3] The official estimate as at mid 2022 was 1,881,727.[4] Maluku is located in Eastern Indonesia. It is directly adjacent to North Maluku, Southwest Papua, and West Papua in the north, Central Sulawesi, and Southeast Sulawesi in the west, Banda Sea, East Timor and East Nusa Tenggara in the south and Arafura Sea, Central Papua and South Papua in the east.

Maluku
Moluccas
Province of Maluku
Motto(s): 
Siwalima (Ambonese)
Belong Together
Location of Maluku in Indonesia
OpenStreetMap
Coordinates: 3°42′18″S 128°10′12″E / 3.70500°S 128.17000°E / -3.70500; 128.17000Coordinates: 3°42′18″S 128°10′12″E / 3.70500°S 128.17000°E / -3.70500; 128.17000
Capital
and largest city
Ambon
Government
 • BodyMaluku Provincial Government
 • GovernorMurad Ismail
 • Vice GovernorBarnabas Orno [id]
Area
 • Total46,150.92 km2 (17,818.97 sq mi)
 • Rank15th in Indonesia
Highest elevation3,027 m (9,931 ft)
Population
 • Total1,881,727
 • Density41/km2 (110/sq mi)
Demographics
 • Ethnic groupsSignificantly mixed ethnicity; Alfur, Ambonese, Chinese, Bugis, Butonese, Javanese, other Indonesians
 • Religion (2021)Islam (52.85%)
Christianity (46.3%)
- Protestant (39.4%)
- Catholic (6.9%)
Hinduism (0.32%)
Buddhism (0.02%)
Folk religion (0.55%)[2]
 • LanguagesIndonesian (official), Ambonese Malay (lingua franca), other languages
Time zoneUTC+09 (Indonesia Eastern Time)
ISO 3166 codeID-MA
HDI 0.702 (High)
HDI rank26th in Indonesia (2022)
Websitemalukuprov.go.id

Maluku has two main religions, namely Islam which at the 2020 census was adhered to by 52.85% of the population of the province and Christianity which is embraced by 46.3% (39.4% Protestantism and 7.0% Catholicism).[2]

All the Maluku Islands were part of a single province from 1950 until 1999. In 1999, the northern part of Maluku (then comprising the Maluku Utara Regency, the Halmahera Tengah Regency and the City of Ternate) were split off to form a separate province of North Maluku (Maluku Utara).

Etymology

Historically, the term Maluku referred to the four royal centers in North Maluku, namely Ternate, Tidore, Bacan and Jailolo. A type of confederation consisting of the four kingdoms, which most likely emerged in the 14th century, was called Moloku Kie Raha or "The Four Mountains of Maluku".[5] Although the four kingdoms subsequently expanded and covered the entire North Maluku region (as now defined) and parts of Sulawesi and New Guinea, the area of expansion was originally not included in the term Maluku. This only referred to the four main clove-producing islands to the west of Halmahera: Ternate, Tidore. Moti and Makian. Bacan further to the south, and Jailolo on Halmahera, were also commonly included in Maluku Proper, the four kingdoms forming a ritual quadripartition with connotations to local cosmology.[6]

The etymology of the word Maluku is not very clear, and it has been a matter of debate for many experts.[7] The first recorded word that can be identified with Maluku comes from Nagarakretagama, an Old Javanese eulogy of 1365. Canto 14 stanza 5 mentioned Maloko, which Pigeaud identified with Ternate or Moluccas.[8]: 17 [9]: 34  A theory holds that the name Maluku comes from the concept of "Maluku Kie Raha". "Raha" means four, while "kie" here means mountain, referring to 4 mountains of Ternate, Tidore, Bacan, and Jailolo (Halmahera), which have their own kolano (title for local kings). Therefore, the Maluku can come from: "Moloku" here meaning to grasp or hold. In this context, the meaning of "Moloku Kie Raha" is "the confederation of four mountains". However, the root word "loku" comes from local Malay creole word for a unit, therefore not from an indigenous language. The other possibility is that the word "Maloko" is a combination of "Ma", meaning "support" and "Loko" referring to the area. The phrase "Maloko Kie Raha" means "the place/world which has four mountains".[10]

History

Pre-colonial era

The region was first settled by Melanesians at least 40,000 years ago, collectively now known as the Alifuru tribes.These people are the indigenous inhabitants of Maluku, along with the later Austronesian migration.

At the beginning of the 14th century the Majapahit Kingdom ruled maritime Southeast Asia. At that time, traders from Java monopolized the spice trade in Maluku.

During the Ming dynasty, spices from Maluku were introduced in various works of art and history. In a painting by W.P. Groeneveldt, titled Gunung Dupa, Maluku, is described as a green mountainous region filled with cloves – an oasis in the middle of the southeastern sea. Marco Polo also described the clove trade in Maluku during his visit to Sumatra.

 
Beheading of Moluccan 'mutineers' in Fort Victoria on Ambon in 1653.
 
Dutch ships in Maluku during the colonial era

Colonial era

The first Europeans to arrive in Maluku were the Portuguese, in 1512. At that time two Portuguese fleets, under the leadership of António de Abreu and Francisco Serrão, landed in the Banda Islands and the Penyu Islands. After they established relations with local residents and kings, such as the Sultanate of Ternate on the island of Ternate, the Portuguese were given permission to build fortifications in Pikaoli, as well as the old Hitu State, and Mamala on Ambon Island. The Portuguese gained a monopoly while at the same time carrying out the spread of Catholicism.

One of the famous missionaries was Francis Xavier. Arriving in Ambon on February 14, 1546, then traveling to Ternate, arriving in 1547, visiting islands in the Maluku Islands to spread Catholicism.

The relationship between the Portuguese and Ternatean broke down in 1570, resulting in a war with Sultan Babullah that lasted for 5 years (1570–1575), causing the Portuguese to be expelled from Ternate and were driven to Tidore and Ambon.

The resistance of the Moluccas to the Portuguese was used by the Dutch to gain a foothold in Maluku. In 1605, the Dutch managed to force the Portuguese to surrender their defenses in Ambon to Steven van der Hagen and at Tidore to the Sebastiansz Cornelisz. Similarly, the British fortress in Kambelo, Seram Island, was destroyed by the Dutch. Giving the Dutch control of most of the Maluku region.

The Dutch position in Maluku grew stronger with the establishment of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) in 1602, and since then the Netherlands has become the sole ruler in Maluku. Under the leadership of Jan Pieterszoon Coen, Chief of Operations of the VOC, the clove trade in Maluku was under VOC control for almost 350 years. For this purpose, the VOC did not hesitate to expel the Portuguese, Spanish and the British. Tens of thousands of Moluccans were victims of VOC brutality.

During the Napoleonic Wars, British forces captured Maluku as the Netherlands were under French occupation. After the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1814, the British returned Maluku to the Dutch. The Dutch returned in 1817.

The return of the Dutch in 1817 evoked strong resistance from the Moluccans. This was due to political, economic and social relations conditions that had been bad for two centuries. Moluccan people of the Ambon Islands rose up and took up arms under the leadership of Thomas Matulessy who was given the title Kapitan Pattimura, a former major sergeant of the British army.

On May 15, 1817, an attack was launched against Fort Duurstede on Saparua island, resulting in the death of Resident Johannes Rudolph van den Berg and his family.[11][12][13] Pattimura was assisted by Philip Latumahina, Anthony Ribok, and Said Orders.

The news of this Pattimura's victory aroused the spirit of popular resistance throughout Maluku. Paulus Tiahahu and his daughter Martha Christina Tiahahu[13] fought the Dutch on Nusa Laut, and Kapitan Ulupaha in Ambon.

But this resistance was crushed by the Dutch, being heavily outnumbered. On December 16, 1817, Pattimura and his colleagues were sentenced to death on the gallows, at Fort Niew Victoria, Ambon, while Martha Christina Tiahahu[13] died on the boat during her voyage to Java and her body was released into the Banda Sea.

 
Indonesian military forces evacuate refugees of the Ambon religious riots.

Modern era

During the outbreak of the Pacific War on December 7, 1941, as part of World War II the region was occupied by the Japanese. Governor General A.W.L. Tjarda van Starkenborgh via radio stated that the Dutch East Indies government was in a state of war with the Empire of Japan. The Imperial Japanese Army did not encounter much resistance in Maluku. Japanese forces entered from the north through the island of Morotai and from the east through the island of Misool. In a short time the entire Maluku Islands was occupied by Japan. In World War II, Australian forces had fought against the Japanese in Tawiri. And, to commemorate it, an Australian monument was built in Tawiri (not far from Pattimura Airport). Allied forces surrendered to the Japanese in Ambon after the bloody Battle of Ambon, The battle was followed by the summary execution of more than 300 Allied PoWs in the Laha massacre.

On August 15, 1945, Japan capitulated to the Allied forces. Two days later, the Proclamation of Independence of Indonesia was declared. Maluku was declared as one of the provinces of the Republic of Indonesia. However, the formation and position of Maluku was forced to take place in Jakarta, as after the Japanese surrender, the Netherlands Indies Civil Administration (NICA) immediately re-entered Maluku to assume control. The Dutch controlled Maluku until 1949, when in accordance to the Dutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference, the Dutch recognize sovereignty of Indonesia. The Dutch soon left Maluku. Due to a deep distrust of the Indonesian leadership, which was predominantly Javanese Muslim, in 1951 an independent Republic of the South Moluccas (Indonesian: RMS, Republik Maluku Selatan) was proclaimed at Ambon. The RMS had strong support among the former Moluccans colonial soldiers. Indonesian forces invaded Maluku to crush the separatists. The main stronghold of the RMS on Ambon was defeated by Indonesian forces in November 1950, while a smaller scale guerilla struggle continued on Seram Island until 1962. The defeat on Ambon however resulted in the flight of the self-declared RMS government from the islands, and the formation of a government in exile in the Netherlands. The following year some 12,000 Moluccan soldiers accompanied by their families went to the Netherlands.

In April and May 1958 during the Permesta rebellion in North Sulawesi, the USA supported and supplied the rebels. Pilots from a Taiwan-based CIA front organisation, Civil Air Transport, flying CIA B-26 Invader aircraft, repeatedly raided targets on Ambon. From April 27 until 18 May there were CIA air raids on Ambon city. On May 8, 1958, CIA pilot Allen Pope raided the Indonesian Air Force base at Liang in the northeast of the island, damaging the runway and destroying a Consolidated PBY Catalina.[14] The Indonesian Air Force had only one serviceable fighter aircraft on Ambon Island, a North American P-51 Mustang at Liang. Pope's last air raid was on 18 May, when an Indonesian pilot at Liang, Captain Ignatius Dewanto, was scrambled to the P-51.[15] Pope had attacked Ambon city before Dewanto could catch him, but Dewanto intercepted him just as Pope was attacking a pair of troop ships in an Indonesian fleet west of Ambon Island.[16] The B-26 was brought down by fire from both Dewanto and anti-aircraft gunners on board the ship.[17] Pope and his Indonesian radio operator bailed and were captured,[18] which immediately exposed the level of CIA support for the Permesta rebellion. Embarrassed, the Eisenhower administration quickly ended CIA support for Permesta and withdrew its agents and remaining aircraft from the conflict.[19]

The Maluku sectarian conflict broke out across Maluku in January 1999. The subsequent 18 months were characterized by fighting between largely local groups of Muslims and Christians, the destruction of thousands of houses, the displacement of approximately 500,000 people, the loss of thousands of lives, and the segregation of Muslims and Christians.[20] Inter-communal fighting broke out between Christian and Muslim communities in January 1999, cascading into what could be described as all out warfare and atrocities against the civilian population committed by both sides.[21] The main belligerents were therefore religious militia from both faiths,[22] including the well organised Islamist Laskar Jihad,[23] and Indonesian government military forces.[24] The conflict had a significant effect upon the 2.1 million people of greater Maluku. Leading up to the Malino agreement, the International Crisis Group estimated that 700,000 people had been displaced by the four years of fighting in the Moluccas which is thought to have claimed a minimum of 5,000 lives.[25] This constituted the largest movement of refugees since the federation of the Indonesian state and the majority of the 1.4 million Internal refugees reported in February 2002 by the World Food Programme.[26] The duration of the conflict is generally dated from the start of the Reformasi era in early 1999 to the signing of the Malino II Accord on February 13, 2002.

Geography

Maluku is bordered by North Maluku in the north, West Papua in the East, Southeast Sulawesi and Central Sulawesi in the West, and the nation of Timor-Leste and Australia in the south. While the total area consists of 527,191 km2 of sea area, and 54,185 km2 of land area, or in other words around 90% of Maluku is sea area. As an archipelago province, Maluku has 559 islands, which include some relatively large islands: Seram (18,625 km2), Buru (9,000 km2) Yamdena (5,085 km2) and Wetar (3,624 km2). With the dominant condition of regional waters, Maluku is very open to interacting with other provinces and surrounding countries.

Maluku islands have a tropical monsoon climate, this climate is greatly influenced by the presence of vast marine waters and takes place in tune with the climatic season there. The average temperature based on Meteorological stations in Ambon, Tual and Saumlaki are C 26.80, 27.70 C and 27.40 C. Minimum temperatures are 24.00, 24.70 C and 23.80 C, respectively, while the temperature Tual, the average humidity reaches 85.4% when recording Saumlaki Meteorological Station shows the average humidity is 80.2%.

The topography of the average condition of the Ambon region is rather flat, starting from the coast to residential areas. The mainland morphology of Ambon also varies from flat, bumpy, bumpy, hilly and mountainous with soft steep slopes to slightly dominant. The flat area has a slope of 0–3%, corrugated slope 3–8%, corrugated area 8–15%, hilly area 15–30% slope elevation and mountainous area greater than 30%. As for the Central Maluku Regency, West Seram and East Seram, the topography is generally hilly. 0–2%, tilt / wavy 3–15% rather steep 15–40% and very steep 40%.

Topography in the Southeast Maluku Regency is divided into plains, hills and mountains with flat slopes (0–3%), flat / bumpy (0–3%), bumpy (8–15%), rather steep (15–30%) and very steep (> 50%). The height of the sea surface area is divided into three classes, namely in the low altitude area (000–100 m elevation), middle (100–500 m), and high altitude (> 500 m).

The topography of Buru Regency is mostly hilly and mountainous with a slope of 15–40% and 40%, the remaining height is from ordinary varieties. The highest mountain peak is located in the Kapalamada region north west of Buru with an altitude of 2736 meters above sea level (ASL), after Lake Rana with a height of more than 1000 meters above sea level, Lake Rana is estimated at around 700–750 meters above sea level. Using a landscape approach, Buru district is classified above, the coastal hills of the plains and mountains include varieties of highlands and slopes.

List of major islands in Maluku

 
Maluku as the south part of the Maluku Islands

Administrative divisions

Following the splitting off of the northern parts of the regency in 1999 to form the new North Maluku Province (Maluku Utara), the residual province of Maluku was composed of two regencies (Central Maluku and Southeast Maluku) and the City of Ambon, but on 4 October 1999 two new regencies were created with the separation of Buru Regency from Central Maluku, and of Southeast Maluku West Regency from Southeast Maluku. Three additional regencies were created on 18 December 2003 (under Law 40/2003) - East Seram Regency and West Seram Regency, both from parts of Central Maluku, and Aru Islands Regency from part of Southeast Maluku (which was thus left to comprise just the Kai Islands. On 17 July 2007 the City of Tual was separated from Southeast Maluku, and on 24 June 2008 two further regencies were created - South Buru Regency from part of Buru, and Southwest Maluku Regency from part of Southeast Maluku West. The residual part of Southeast Maluku West Regency was subsequently renamed the Tanimbar Islands Regency on 23 January 2019.

Thus the province of Maluku is currently divided into nine regencies (kabupaten) and the two cities (kota) of Ambon and Tual, which form the tenth and eleventh regency-level administrative divisions. The regencies and cities, with their administrative capitals, are listed below with their areas and their populations at the 2010 census and at the 2020 census,[27] together with the official estimates for mid 2022.[28] The toble also includes the numbers of districts (kecamata) and villages (urban kelurahan and rural desa) in each city or regency.

City or
Regency
Capital Area
(km2)
Pop'n [1]
2010
census
Pop'n [29]
2020
census
Pop'n [30]
mid-2022
estimate
Number
of
districts[31]
Number
of
villages[31]
HDI[32]
2014 estimates
Ambon City (Kota Ambon) 236.66 331,254 347,288 348,225 5 50 0.790 (High)
Tual City (Kota Tual)
(in the Kei Islands)
235.38 58,082 88,280 93,145 5 30 0.649 (Medium)
Aru Islands
(Kepulauan Aru)
Dobo 8,097.01 84,138 102,237 103,860 10 119 0.599 (Low)
Buru Regency Namlea 4,915.57 108,445 135,238 137,990 10 82 0.651 (Medium)
Central Maluku Regency
(Maluku Tengah)
Masohi 8,253.92 361,698 423,094 427,050 18 192 0.686 (Medium)
East Seram Regency
(Seram Bagian Timur)
Bula or
Dataran Hunimoa
5,725.45 99,065 137,972 143,438 15 198 0.595 (Low)
South Buru Regency
(Buru Selatan)
Namrole[33] 3,678.70 53,671 75,410 78,515 6 79 0.607 (Medium)
Southeast Maluku Regency
(Maluku Tenggara)
Langgur, in the
Kei Islands
1,016.64 96,442 121,511 124,199 11 191 0.627 (Medium)
Southwest Maluku Regency
(Maluku Barat Daya)
Tiakur, in the
Leti Islands[34]
4,551.68 70,714 81,928 82,560 17 118 0.580 (Low)
Tanimbar Islands Regency
(Kepulauan Tanimbar)
Saumlaki, in the
Tanimbar Islands
4,430.25 105,341 123,572 124,787 10 82 0.598 (Low)
West Seram Regency
(Seram Bagian Barat)
Piru or
Dataran Hunipopu
5,009.66 164,656 212,393 217,958 11 92 0.623 (Medium)

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1971 1,089,565—    
1980 1,411,006+29.5%
1990 1,857,790+31.7%
1995 2,086,516+12.3%
2000 1,205,539−42.2%
2010 1,533,506+27.2%
2015 1,683,856+9.8%
2020 1,848,923+9.8%
2021 1,862,626+0.7%
2022 1,881,727+1.0%
Source: Badan Pusat Statistik 2023. The sharp drop between 1995 and 2000 is due to the separation out in 1999 of the new province of North Maluku.

Ethnicity

They generally have dark skin, curly hair, large and strong bones, and a more athletic body profile compared to other groups in Indonesia, because they are a group of islanders where sea activities such as sailing and swimming are the main activities for men.

Since ancient times, many of them already had mixed blood with other ethnic groups, namely with Europeans (generally the Netherlands, Portugal) and Spain, then the Arabs were very common considering this area had been controlled by foreign nations for 2,300 years and gave birth to new descendants, which is no longer a pure Melanesian race but still inherits and lives with the Melanesian-Alifuru style.

Because of this mixture of culture and race with Europeans and Arabs, Maluku is the only Indonesian territory that is classified as an area that has the largest multiracial population other than East Nusa Tenggara. Many Moluccans still retained foreign surnames from foreign countries such as the Netherlands (Van Afflen, Van Room, De Wanna, De Kock, Kniesmeijer, Gaspersz, Ramschie, Payer, Ziljstra, Van der Weden, etc.), Portugal (Da Costa, De Fretes, Que, Carliano, De Souza, De Carvalho, Pareira, Courbois, Frandescolli, etc.), Spain (Oliviera, Diaz, De Jesus, Silvera, Rodriguez, Montefalcon, Mendoza, De Lopez, etc.) and Arabic directly from Hadramaut (Al-Kaff, Al Chatib, Bachmid, Bakhwereez, Bahasoan, Al-Qadri, Alaydrus, Assegaff, etc.)

Today, the people of Maluku are not only found in Indonesia but are spread in various countries in the world. Most of those who migrate abroad are due to various reasons, of which the most classic was the large-scale movement of the Moluccans to Europe in the 1950s and settled there until now. Another reason is to get a better, more knowledgeable life, marrying and marrying other nations, who later settle down and have generations of new Moluccas in the other hemisphere. These Maluku expatriates can be found in quite large communities and are concentrated in several countries such as the Netherlands (which is considered the second homeland by the Moluccas other than the land of Maluku itself), Suriname, and Australia. The Maluku community in other regions of Indonesia can be found in Medan, Palembang, Bandung, Greater Jakarta, Central Java, Yogyakarta, East Java, Makassar, Kupang, Manado, East Kalimantan, Sorong, and Jayapura.

Language

The languages used in Maluku, especially in Ambon, has been influenced by foreign languages, often by explorers who have visited and even occupied and colonized Maluku in the past. The nations were the Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic and Dutch.

The Ambonese language, as the lingua franca in Maluku, has been understood by almost all residents of Maluku Province and generally, little by little, is understood by other East Indonesian people such as those in Ternate, Manado, Kupang, etc. because Ambonese is related to other languages in the provinces of North Sulawesi, North Maluku, Papua, West Papua, and East Nusa Tenggara.

Indonesian, as the official language and language of unity in the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia (NKRI), is used in official and formal public activities such as in government offices and in schools and in places such as museums, airports and ports.

Maluku is the largest archipelago in all of Indonesia, although this area is 90% water and only 10% land. Maluku Province and North Maluku Province together compose the Maluku Islands. The large number of islands that are separated by long distances from each other also results in the increasingly diverse languages used in this province. Some of the most common languages spoken in Maluku - apart from Ambonese and Indonesian - are:

Religion

Religion in Maluku (2021)[2]

  Islam (52.85%)
  Protestantism (39.39%)
  Roman Catholic (6.87%)
  Hinduism (0.32%)
  Buddhism (0.01%)
  Folk religion (0.55%)

Most of the people of Maluku adheres to either Islam, (52.85% of the population) or Christianity (46.3% of the population); the latter are divided between followers of (Protestantism (39.39%) and Catholicism (6.87%). There are also adherents of folk religion, Hinduism and Buddhism. The spread of Islam was carried out by the Sultanates of Iha, Saulau, Hitu, and Hatuhaha and Arab traders who visited Maluku. While the spread of Christianity was carried out by missionaries from Portugal, Spain and the Netherlands.

Places of worship in Maluku Province in 2013 were recorded as follows:

  • 2,345 churches
  • 2,000 mosques
  • 10 temples
  • 5 Vihara

The Protestant Church of Maluku (Gereja Protestan Maluku or simply GPM) is the largest synod organization and church organization in Maluku, which has church congregations in almost the entire Sarane country throughout Maluku.

Economy

Macroeconomically, Maluku's economic conditions tend to improve every year. One indicator is, among others, an increase in the value of GDP. In 2003 Maluku's GRDP reached 3.7 trillion rupiah and then increased to 4.05 trillion in 2004. Economic growth in 2004 reached 4.05 percent and increased to 5.06 percent in 2005.

The geographical condition of Maluku Province when viewed from the strategic side of business investment opportunities can be predicted that natural resources in the fisheries and marine sector can be used as prima donna businesses in Maluku, in addition to other sectors such as livestock and plantation subsector, trade sector and tourism sector as well as the service sector entirely has a high selling value and business potential.

Currently the economy of Maluku is dominated by agriculture, forestry and fisheries that contribute to about 25.00 percent of the total.[35][36] Government service sector, defence and compulsory Social Security contribute to roughly 21 percent. The business field and retail trade; cars and motorcycles repair & services at 12.59 percent; construction sector contributes 7.41 percent.[35] Maluku's economy in 2014 has shown positive improvement as compared to 2013. The GDP growth rate in 2014 reached 6.70 percent, while in 2013 amounted to 5.26 percent. The highest economic growth is in the field of electricity and gas supply business which grew by 31.11 percent. The business service is another sector that experienced positive growth in 2014.[35] Other economic activities also recorded positive growth, including mining and quarrying (21.47 percent); education services business field (9.52 percent); transportation and warehousing business sector (8.77 percent); processing industry (8.42 percent); information and communication (7.62 per cent); financial services business (7.61 percent); construction (7.31 percent); real estate (7.10 percent).[35]

In 2017, a Japanese oil company, Inpex Corporation acquired Abadi Field, a crude oil and natural gas field located in the Arafura Sea, near Tanimbar Islands. In 2017 the company to start the Pre FEED phase and hold a joint workshop with SKK Migas to prepare an offshore development plan for project of Block Masela.[37]

Culture

Music

The famous musical instruments are Tifa (a type of drum) and Totobuang, played together in an ensemble called a Tifa totobuang. Each musical instrument from Tifa to Totobuang has different functions and supports each other to give birth to a very distinctive color of music. But this music is dominated by Tifa musical instruments. It consists of Tifa, Tifa Jekir, Tifa Dasar, Tifa Potong, Tifa Jekir Potong and Tifa Bas, plus a large Gong and Toto Buang which is a series of small gongs placed on a table with several holes as a buffer. There is also a wind instrument namely Bia Skin (Shellfish).

In the culture of Maluku, there are also stringed instruments namely Ukulele and that can also be found in the Hawaiian culture in the United States. This can be seen when Maluku music from the past until now still has a characteristic in which there is the use of Hawaiian musical instruments both in pop songs and in accompanying traditional dances such as Katreji.

Other musical instruments is the Sawat. Sawat is a blend of Maluku culture and Middle Eastern culture. In a few centuries ago, the Arabs came to spread Islam in Maluku, then there was a mixture of cultures including music. It is evident in several Sawat musical instruments, such as Tambourines and Flutes that characterize Arabian music instruments.

Outside of the variety of musical instruments, Moluccan people are famous for being good at singing. Since long ago they have often sung in accompanying traditional dances. There are many famous Moluccan singers in both Indonesia and the Netherlands, such as Broery Pesulima, Daniel Sahuleka, Ruth Sahanaya, Eric Papilaya, Glen Fredly, etc.

 
Cakalele, a traditional Moluccan dance

Dance

The famous dance from the Moluccas is the Cakalele which describes the might of the Moluccas. This dance is usually performed by adult men while holding Parang and Salawaku (Shield).

There are also other dances like Saureka-Reka that use the sago palm fronds. The dances performed by six women really need accuracy and speed while accompanied by a very interesting musical rhythm.

The dance which is a depiction of youth association is Katreji. Katreji dance is played in pairs between women and men with varied energetic and interesting movements. This dance is almost the same as European dances in general because Katreji is also an acculturation of European (Portuguese and Dutch) culture with Maluku culture. This is more evident in every signal in changing floor patterns and movements which still use Portuguese and Dutch as a process of bilingualism. This dance is accompanied by a violin instrument, bamboo flute, ukulele, karakas, guitar, tifa, and bass guitar with a more prominent western (European) musical pattern. This dance is still performed by the people of Maluku until now.

In addition to Katreji, the famous European influence is Polonaise, which is usually carried out by Moluccans at the time of marriage by each party member in pairs, forming a circle formation and carrying out light movements that can be followed by everyone, both young and old.

In addition, there is also a Crazy Bamboo Dance. Crazy bamboo dance is a special dance that is magical, originating from Suli Village. The uniqueness of this dance is that the dancers are burdened by bamboo which can move uncontrollably and this dance can be followed by anyone.

Tourism

Some of the famous tourist attractions in Maluku include:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Badan Pusat Statistik Provinsi Maluku, HASIL SENSUS PENDUDUK 2010 Agregat Data per Kabupaten/Kota Provinsi Maluku July 21, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (in Indonesian) Census results (retrieved February 2, 2011)
  2. ^ a b c "Persentase Pemeluk Agama Menurut Kabupaten/Kota di Provinsi Maluku 2019". www.maluku.kemenag.go.id. Retrieved September 24, 2020.
  3. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2021.
  4. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2023.
  5. ^ C.F. van Fraassen 1987 Ternate, de Molukken en de Indonesische Archipel. Leiden: Rijksmuseum te Leiden, Vol. I, p. 18.
  6. ^ C.F. van Fraassen 1987, Vol. I, p. 18.
  7. ^ Leonard Andaya 1993 The world of Maluku. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, p. 47.
  8. ^ Pigeaud, Theodoor Gautier Thomas (1960c). Java in the 14th Century: A Study in Cultural History, Volume III: Translations (3rd revised ed.). The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. ISBN 978-94-011-8772-5.
  9. ^ Pigeaud, Theodoor Gautier Thomas (1962). Java in the 14th Century: A Study in Cultural History, Volume IV: Commentaries and Recapitulations (3rd revised ed.). The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. ISBN 978-94-017-7133-7.
  10. ^ Amal, Muhammad A. (2016). Kepulauan Rempah-rempah. Jakarta: Gramedia. ISBN 978-6024241667.
  11. ^ Peter van Zonneveld (1995)Pattimura en het kind van Saparua. De Molukken-opstand van 1817 in de Indisch-Nederlandse literatuur, Indische Letteren, 10:41–54.
  12. ^ Ajisaka & Damayanti 2010, p. 9
  13. ^ a b c Kusumaputra, Adhi (November 9, 2009). "Pattimura, Pahlawan asal Maluku yang Dihukum Mati Belanda" [Pattimura, the Hero from Maluku who was Executed by the Dutch]. Kompas (in Indonesian). from the original on July 25, 2013. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  14. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 122.
  15. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 136.
  16. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 138.
  17. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 139.
  18. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, pp. 139, 141.
  19. ^ Conboy & Morrison 1999, p. 143.
  20. ^ "Troubled history of the Moluccas". BBC News. June 26, 2000. Retrieved May 17, 2007.
  21. ^ Hedman 2008, p. 50
  22. ^ Sidel 2007, p. 181
  23. ^ Sidel 2007, p. 184
  24. ^ Bertrand 2004, p. 133
  25. ^ Spyer, Patricia (October 2002). "Fire without Smoke and Other Phantoms of Ambon's Violence: Media Effects, Agency, and the Work of Imagination" (PDF). Indonesia. Southeast Asia Program Publications at Cornell University. 74 (74): 21–36. doi:10.2307/3351523. hdl:1813/54277. JSTOR 3351523.
  26. ^ Hedman 2008, p. 208
  27. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2021.
  28. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2023.
  29. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2019,
  30. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2023
  31. ^ a b as at 2020.
  32. ^ Indeks-Pembangunan-Manusia-2014
  33. ^ UNDANG-UNDANG REPUBLIK INDONESIA NOMOR 32 TAHUN 2008 TENTANG PEMBENTUKAN KABUPATEN BURU SELATAN DI PROVINSI MALUKU April 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine (in Indonesian) (Law of the Indonesian Republic number 32 of the year 2008 on the establishment of Kabupaten Buru Selatan in the Province Maluku)
  34. ^ UNDANG-UNDANG REPUBLIK INDONESIA NOMOR 31 TAHUN 2008 TENTANG PEMBENTUKAN KABUPATEN MALUKU BARAT DAYA DI PROVINSI MALUKU July 21, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (in Indonesian) (Law of the Indonesian Republic number 31 of the year 2008 on the establishment of Kabupaten Maluku Barat Daya in the Province Maluku)
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  36. ^ "BPS Provinsi Maluku". Maluku.bps.go.id. Retrieved May 1, 2016.
  37. ^ "Inpex Asked to Accelerate Development of Masela Block". Lelemuku.com. Retrieved November 14, 2017.
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Bibliography

  • Ajisaka, Arya; Damayanti, Dewi (2010). Mengenal Pahlawan Indonesia [Knowing Indonesian Heroes] (in Indonesian) (Revised ed.). Jakarta: Kawan Pustaka. ISBN 978-979-757-430-7.
  • Bertrand, Jacques (2004). Nationalism and ethnic conflict in Indonesia. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52441-4.
  • Conboy, Kenneth; Morrison, James (1999). Feet to the Fire CIA Covert Operations in Indonesia, 1957–1958. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-193-9.
  • Hedman, Eva-Lotta E. (2008). Conflict, violence, and displacement in indonesia. Cornell South East Asia Program Publications. pp. 29–231. ISBN 978-0-87727-775-0.
  • Sidel, John Thayer (2007). Riots, pogroms, jihad: religious violence in Indonesia. NUS Press. ISBN 978-9971-69-357-2.

maluku, province, this, article, about, province, indonesia, neighboring, province, north, maluku, other, uses, maluku, disambiguation, maluku, province, indonesia, comprises, central, southern, regions, maluku, islands, main, city, capital, maluku, province, . This article is about the province of Indonesia For the neighboring province see North Maluku For other uses see Maluku disambiguation Maluku is a province of Indonesia It comprises the central and southern regions of the Maluku Islands The main city and capital of Maluku province is Ambon on the small Ambon Island The land area is 46 150 92 km2 and the total population of this province at the 2010 census was 1 533 506 people rising to 1 848 923 at the 2020 census 3 The official estimate as at mid 2022 was 1 881 727 4 Maluku is located in Eastern Indonesia It is directly adjacent to North Maluku Southwest Papua and West Papua in the north Central Sulawesi and Southeast Sulawesi in the west Banda Sea East Timor and East Nusa Tenggara in the south and Arafura Sea Central Papua and South Papua in the east Maluku MoluccasProvinceProvince of MalukuCoat of armsMotto s Siwalima Ambonese Belong TogetherLocation of Maluku in IndonesiaOpenStreetMapCoordinates 3 42 18 S 128 10 12 E 3 70500 S 128 17000 E 3 70500 128 17000 Coordinates 3 42 18 S 128 10 12 E 3 70500 S 128 17000 E 3 70500 128 17000Capitaland largest cityAmbonGovernment BodyMaluku Provincial Government GovernorMurad Ismail Vice GovernorBarnabas Orno id Area Total46 150 92 km2 17 818 97 sq mi Rank15th in IndonesiaHighest elevation Mount Binaiya 3 027 m 9 931 ft Population 1 Total1 881 727 Density41 km2 110 sq mi Demographics Ethnic groupsSignificantly mixed ethnicity Alfur Ambonese Chinese Bugis Butonese Javanese other Indonesians Religion 2021 Islam 52 85 Christianity 46 3 Protestant 39 4 Catholic 6 9 Hinduism 0 32 Buddhism 0 02 Folk religion 0 55 2 LanguagesIndonesian official Ambonese Malay lingua franca other languagesTime zoneUTC 09 Indonesia Eastern Time ISO 3166 codeID MAHDI0 702 High HDI rank26th in Indonesia 2022 Websitemalukuprov go idMaluku has two main religions namely Islam which at the 2020 census was adhered to by 52 85 of the population of the province and Christianity which is embraced by 46 3 39 4 Protestantism and 7 0 Catholicism 2 All the Maluku Islands were part of a single province from 1950 until 1999 In 1999 the northern part of Maluku then comprising the Maluku Utara Regency the Halmahera Tengah Regency and the City of Ternate were split off to form a separate province of North Maluku Maluku Utara Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre colonial era 2 2 Colonial era 2 3 Modern era 3 Geography 3 1 List of major islands in Maluku 4 Administrative divisions 5 Demographics 5 1 Ethnicity 5 2 Language 5 3 Religion 6 Economy 7 Culture 7 1 Music 7 2 Dance 8 Tourism 9 See also 10 References 11 BibliographyEtymology EditHistorically the term Maluku referred to the four royal centers in North Maluku namely Ternate Tidore Bacan and Jailolo A type of confederation consisting of the four kingdoms which most likely emerged in the 14th century was called Moloku Kie Raha or The Four Mountains of Maluku 5 Although the four kingdoms subsequently expanded and covered the entire North Maluku region as now defined and parts of Sulawesi and New Guinea the area of expansion was originally not included in the term Maluku This only referred to the four main clove producing islands to the west of Halmahera Ternate Tidore Moti and Makian Bacan further to the south and Jailolo on Halmahera were also commonly included in Maluku Proper the four kingdoms forming a ritual quadripartition with connotations to local cosmology 6 The etymology of the word Maluku is not very clear and it has been a matter of debate for many experts 7 The first recorded word that can be identified with Maluku comes from Nagarakretagama an Old Javanese eulogy of 1365 Canto 14 stanza 5 mentioned Maloko which Pigeaud identified with Ternate or Moluccas 8 17 9 34 A theory holds that the name Maluku comes from the concept of Maluku Kie Raha Raha means four while kie here means mountain referring to 4 mountains of Ternate Tidore Bacan and Jailolo Halmahera which have their own kolano title for local kings Therefore the Maluku can come from Moloku here meaning to grasp or hold In this context the meaning of Moloku Kie Raha is the confederation of four mountains However the root word loku comes from local Malay creole word for a unit therefore not from an indigenous language The other possibility is that the word Maloko is a combination of Ma meaning support and Loko referring to the area The phrase Maloko Kie Raha means the place world which has four mountains 10 History EditPre colonial era Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The region was first settled by Melanesians at least 40 000 years ago collectively now known as the Alifuru tribes These people are the indigenous inhabitants of Maluku along with the later Austronesian migration At the beginning of the 14th century the Majapahit Kingdom ruled maritime Southeast Asia At that time traders from Java monopolized the spice trade in Maluku During the Ming dynasty spices from Maluku were introduced in various works of art and history In a painting by W P Groeneveldt titled Gunung Dupa Maluku is described as a green mountainous region filled with cloves an oasis in the middle of the southeastern sea Marco Polo also described the clove trade in Maluku during his visit to Sumatra Beheading of Moluccan mutineers in Fort Victoria on Ambon in 1653 Dutch ships in Maluku during the colonial era Colonial era Edit The first Europeans to arrive in Maluku were the Portuguese in 1512 At that time two Portuguese fleets under the leadership of Antonio de Abreu and Francisco Serrao landed in the Banda Islands and the Penyu Islands After they established relations with local residents and kings such as the Sultanate of Ternate on the island of Ternate the Portuguese were given permission to build fortifications in Pikaoli as well as the old Hitu State and Mamala on Ambon Island The Portuguese gained a monopoly while at the same time carrying out the spread of Catholicism One of the famous missionaries was Francis Xavier Arriving in Ambon on February 14 1546 then traveling to Ternate arriving in 1547 visiting islands in the Maluku Islands to spread Catholicism The relationship between the Portuguese and Ternatean broke down in 1570 resulting in a war with Sultan Babullah that lasted for 5 years 1570 1575 causing the Portuguese to be expelled from Ternate and were driven to Tidore and Ambon The resistance of the Moluccas to the Portuguese was used by the Dutch to gain a foothold in Maluku In 1605 the Dutch managed to force the Portuguese to surrender their defenses in Ambon to Steven van der Hagen and at Tidore to the Sebastiansz Cornelisz Similarly the British fortress in Kambelo Seram Island was destroyed by the Dutch Giving the Dutch control of most of the Maluku region The Dutch position in Maluku grew stronger with the establishment of the Dutch East India Company VOC in 1602 and since then the Netherlands has become the sole ruler in Maluku Under the leadership of Jan Pieterszoon Coen Chief of Operations of the VOC the clove trade in Maluku was under VOC control for almost 350 years For this purpose the VOC did not hesitate to expel the Portuguese Spanish and the British Tens of thousands of Moluccans were victims of VOC brutality During the Napoleonic Wars British forces captured Maluku as the Netherlands were under French occupation After the Anglo Dutch Treaty of 1814 the British returned Maluku to the Dutch The Dutch returned in 1817 The return of the Dutch in 1817 evoked strong resistance from the Moluccans This was due to political economic and social relations conditions that had been bad for two centuries Moluccan people of the Ambon Islands rose up and took up arms under the leadership of Thomas Matulessy who was given the title Kapitan Pattimura a former major sergeant of the British army On May 15 1817 an attack was launched against Fort Duurstede on Saparua island resulting in the death of Resident Johannes Rudolph van den Berg and his family 11 12 13 Pattimura was assisted by Philip Latumahina Anthony Ribok and Said Orders The news of this Pattimura s victory aroused the spirit of popular resistance throughout Maluku Paulus Tiahahu and his daughter Martha Christina Tiahahu 13 fought the Dutch on Nusa Laut and Kapitan Ulupaha in Ambon But this resistance was crushed by the Dutch being heavily outnumbered On December 16 1817 Pattimura and his colleagues were sentenced to death on the gallows at Fort Niew Victoria Ambon while Martha Christina Tiahahu 13 died on the boat during her voyage to Java and her body was released into the Banda Sea Indonesian military forces evacuate refugees of the Ambon religious riots Modern era Edit During the outbreak of the Pacific War on December 7 1941 as part of World War II the region was occupied by the Japanese Governor General A W L Tjarda van Starkenborgh via radio stated that the Dutch East Indies government was in a state of war with the Empire of Japan The Imperial Japanese Army did not encounter much resistance in Maluku Japanese forces entered from the north through the island of Morotai and from the east through the island of Misool In a short time the entire Maluku Islands was occupied by Japan In World War II Australian forces had fought against the Japanese in Tawiri And to commemorate it an Australian monument was built in Tawiri not far from Pattimura Airport Allied forces surrendered to the Japanese in Ambon after the bloody Battle of Ambon The battle was followed by the summary execution of more than 300 Allied PoWs in the Laha massacre On August 15 1945 Japan capitulated to the Allied forces Two days later the Proclamation of Independence of Indonesia was declared Maluku was declared as one of the provinces of the Republic of Indonesia However the formation and position of Maluku was forced to take place in Jakarta as after the Japanese surrender the Netherlands Indies Civil Administration NICA immediately re entered Maluku to assume control The Dutch controlled Maluku until 1949 when in accordance to the Dutch Indonesian Round Table Conference the Dutch recognize sovereignty of Indonesia The Dutch soon left Maluku Due to a deep distrust of the Indonesian leadership which was predominantly Javanese Muslim in 1951 an independent Republic of the South Moluccas Indonesian RMS Republik Maluku Selatan was proclaimed at Ambon The RMS had strong support among the former Moluccans colonial soldiers Indonesian forces invaded Maluku to crush the separatists The main stronghold of the RMS on Ambon was defeated by Indonesian forces in November 1950 while a smaller scale guerilla struggle continued on Seram Island until 1962 The defeat on Ambon however resulted in the flight of the self declared RMS government from the islands and the formation of a government in exile in the Netherlands The following year some 12 000 Moluccan soldiers accompanied by their families went to the Netherlands In April and May 1958 during the Permesta rebellion in North Sulawesi the USA supported and supplied the rebels Pilots from a Taiwan based CIA front organisation Civil Air Transport flying CIA B 26 Invader aircraft repeatedly raided targets on Ambon From April 27 until 18 May there were CIA air raids on Ambon city On May 8 1958 CIA pilot Allen Pope raided the Indonesian Air Force base at Liang in the northeast of the island damaging the runway and destroying a Consolidated PBY Catalina 14 The Indonesian Air Force had only one serviceable fighter aircraft on Ambon Island a North American P 51 Mustang at Liang Pope s last air raid was on 18 May when an Indonesian pilot at Liang Captain Ignatius Dewanto was scrambled to the P 51 15 Pope had attacked Ambon city before Dewanto could catch him but Dewanto intercepted him just as Pope was attacking a pair of troop ships in an Indonesian fleet west of Ambon Island 16 The B 26 was brought down by fire from both Dewanto and anti aircraft gunners on board the ship 17 Pope and his Indonesian radio operator bailed and were captured 18 which immediately exposed the level of CIA support for the Permesta rebellion Embarrassed the Eisenhower administration quickly ended CIA support for Permesta and withdrew its agents and remaining aircraft from the conflict 19 The Maluku sectarian conflict broke out across Maluku in January 1999 The subsequent 18 months were characterized by fighting between largely local groups of Muslims and Christians the destruction of thousands of houses the displacement of approximately 500 000 people the loss of thousands of lives and the segregation of Muslims and Christians 20 Inter communal fighting broke out between Christian and Muslim communities in January 1999 cascading into what could be described as all out warfare and atrocities against the civilian population committed by both sides 21 The main belligerents were therefore religious militia from both faiths 22 including the well organised Islamist Laskar Jihad 23 and Indonesian government military forces 24 The conflict had a significant effect upon the 2 1 million people of greater Maluku Leading up to the Malino agreement the International Crisis Group estimated that 700 000 people had been displaced by the four years of fighting in the Moluccas which is thought to have claimed a minimum of 5 000 lives 25 This constituted the largest movement of refugees since the federation of the Indonesian state and the majority of the 1 4 million Internal refugees reported in February 2002 by the World Food Programme 26 The duration of the conflict is generally dated from the start of the Reformasi era in early 1999 to the signing of the Malino II Accord on February 13 2002 Geography EditMaluku is bordered by North Maluku in the north West Papua in the East Southeast Sulawesi and Central Sulawesi in the West and the nation of Timor Leste and Australia in the south While the total area consists of 527 191 km2 of sea area and 54 185 km2 of land area or in other words around 90 of Maluku is sea area As an archipelago province Maluku has 559 islands which include some relatively large islands Seram 18 625 km2 Buru 9 000 km2 Yamdena 5 085 km2 and Wetar 3 624 km2 With the dominant condition of regional waters Maluku is very open to interacting with other provinces and surrounding countries Maluku islands have a tropical monsoon climate this climate is greatly influenced by the presence of vast marine waters and takes place in tune with the climatic season there The average temperature based on Meteorological stations in Ambon Tual and Saumlaki are C 26 80 27 70 C and 27 40 C Minimum temperatures are 24 00 24 70 C and 23 80 C respectively while the temperature Tual the average humidity reaches 85 4 when recording Saumlaki Meteorological Station shows the average humidity is 80 2 The topography of the average condition of the Ambon region is rather flat starting from the coast to residential areas The mainland morphology of Ambon also varies from flat bumpy bumpy hilly and mountainous with soft steep slopes to slightly dominant The flat area has a slope of 0 3 corrugated slope 3 8 corrugated area 8 15 hilly area 15 30 slope elevation and mountainous area greater than 30 As for the Central Maluku Regency West Seram and East Seram the topography is generally hilly 0 2 tilt wavy 3 15 rather steep 15 40 and very steep 40 Topography in the Southeast Maluku Regency is divided into plains hills and mountains with flat slopes 0 3 flat bumpy 0 3 bumpy 8 15 rather steep 15 30 and very steep gt 50 The height of the sea surface area is divided into three classes namely in the low altitude area 000 100 m elevation middle 100 500 m and high altitude gt 500 m The topography of Buru Regency is mostly hilly and mountainous with a slope of 15 40 and 40 the remaining height is from ordinary varieties The highest mountain peak is located in the Kapalamada region north west of Buru with an altitude of 2736 meters above sea level ASL after Lake Rana with a height of more than 1000 meters above sea level Lake Rana is estimated at around 700 750 meters above sea level Using a landscape approach Buru district is classified above the coastal hills of the plains and mountains include varieties of highlands and slopes List of major islands in Maluku Edit Maluku as the south part of the Maluku Islands Ambon Island Aru Islands Kepulauan Aru Babar Islands Banda Islands Kepulauan Banda Buru Damer Island Kepulauan Damar citation needed Kai Islands Kepulauan Kai Gorong archipelago Pulau pulau Gorong Lease Islands Kepulauan Lease includes Saparua Nusa Laut and Haruku Islands Leti Islands Kepulauan Leti includes Leti Moa and Lakor Seram Sermata Islands Kepulauan Sermata Southwestern Islands Barat Daya Islands includes Wetar Island Kisar Island and Romang Island Tanimbar Islands Kepulauan Tanimbar Watubela archipelago Kepulauan Watubela WetarAdministrative divisions EditFollowing the splitting off of the northern parts of the regency in 1999 to form the new North Maluku Province Maluku Utara the residual province of Maluku was composed of two regencies Central Maluku and Southeast Maluku and the City of Ambon but on 4 October 1999 two new regencies were created with the separation of Buru Regency from Central Maluku and of Southeast Maluku West Regency from Southeast Maluku Three additional regencies were created on 18 December 2003 under Law 40 2003 East Seram Regency and West Seram Regency both from parts of Central Maluku and Aru Islands Regency from part of Southeast Maluku which was thus left to comprise just the Kai Islands On 17 July 2007 the City of Tual was separated from Southeast Maluku and on 24 June 2008 two further regencies were created South Buru Regency from part of Buru and Southwest Maluku Regency from part of Southeast Maluku West The residual part of Southeast Maluku West Regency was subsequently renamed the Tanimbar Islands Regency on 23 January 2019 Thus the province of Maluku is currently divided into nine regencies kabupaten and the two cities kota of Ambon and Tual which form the tenth and eleventh regency level administrative divisions The regencies and cities with their administrative capitals are listed below with their areas and their populations at the 2010 census and at the 2020 census 27 together with the official estimates for mid 2022 28 The toble also includes the numbers of districts kecamata and villages urban kelurahan and rural desa in each city or regency City or Regency Capital Area km2 Pop n 1 2010 census Pop n 29 2020 census Pop n 30 mid 2022 estimate Numberof districts 31 Numberof villages 31 HDI 32 2014 estimatesAmbon City Kota Ambon 236 66 331 254 347 288 348 225 5 50 0 790 High Tual City Kota Tual in the Kei Islands 235 38 58 082 88 280 93 145 5 30 0 649 Medium Aru Islands Kepulauan Aru Dobo 8 097 01 84 138 102 237 103 860 10 119 0 599 Low Buru Regency Namlea 4 915 57 108 445 135 238 137 990 10 82 0 651 Medium Central Maluku Regency Maluku Tengah Masohi 8 253 92 361 698 423 094 427 050 18 192 0 686 Medium East Seram Regency Seram Bagian Timur Bula or Dataran Hunimoa 5 725 45 99 065 137 972 143 438 15 198 0 595 Low South Buru Regency Buru Selatan Namrole 33 3 678 70 53 671 75 410 78 515 6 79 0 607 Medium Southeast Maluku Regency Maluku Tenggara Langgur in the Kei Islands 1 016 64 96 442 121 511 124 199 11 191 0 627 Medium Southwest Maluku Regency Maluku Barat Daya Tiakur in the Leti Islands 34 4 551 68 70 714 81 928 82 560 17 118 0 580 Low Tanimbar Islands Regency Kepulauan Tanimbar Saumlaki in the Tanimbar Islands 4 430 25 105 341 123 572 124 787 10 82 0 598 Low West Seram Regency Seram Bagian Barat Piru or Dataran Hunipopu 5 009 66 164 656 212 393 217 958 11 92 0 623 Medium Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 19711 089 565 19801 411 006 29 5 19901 857 790 31 7 19952 086 516 12 3 20001 205 539 42 2 20101 533 506 27 2 20151 683 856 9 8 20201 848 923 9 8 20211 862 626 0 7 20221 881 727 1 0 Source Badan Pusat Statistik 2023 The sharp drop between 1995 and 2000 is due to the separation out in 1999 of the new province of North Maluku Ethnicity Edit They generally have dark skin curly hair large and strong bones and a more athletic body profile compared to other groups in Indonesia because they are a group of islanders where sea activities such as sailing and swimming are the main activities for men Since ancient times many of them already had mixed blood with other ethnic groups namely with Europeans generally the Netherlands Portugal and Spain then the Arabs were very common considering this area had been controlled by foreign nations for 2 300 years and gave birth to new descendants which is no longer a pure Melanesian race but still inherits and lives with the Melanesian Alifuru style Because of this mixture of culture and race with Europeans and Arabs Maluku is the only Indonesian territory that is classified as an area that has the largest multiracial population other than East Nusa Tenggara Many Moluccans still retained foreign surnames from foreign countries such as the Netherlands Van Afflen Van Room De Wanna De Kock Kniesmeijer Gaspersz Ramschie Payer Ziljstra Van der Weden etc Portugal Da Costa De Fretes Que Carliano De Souza De Carvalho Pareira Courbois Frandescolli etc Spain Oliviera Diaz De Jesus Silvera Rodriguez Montefalcon Mendoza De Lopez etc and Arabic directly from Hadramaut Al Kaff Al Chatib Bachmid Bakhwereez Bahasoan Al Qadri Alaydrus Assegaff etc Today the people of Maluku are not only found in Indonesia but are spread in various countries in the world Most of those who migrate abroad are due to various reasons of which the most classic was the large scale movement of the Moluccans to Europe in the 1950s and settled there until now Another reason is to get a better more knowledgeable life marrying and marrying other nations who later settle down and have generations of new Moluccas in the other hemisphere These Maluku expatriates can be found in quite large communities and are concentrated in several countries such as the Netherlands which is considered the second homeland by the Moluccas other than the land of Maluku itself Suriname and Australia The Maluku community in other regions of Indonesia can be found in Medan Palembang Bandung Greater Jakarta Central Java Yogyakarta East Java Makassar Kupang Manado East Kalimantan Sorong and Jayapura Language Edit The languages used in Maluku especially in Ambon has been influenced by foreign languages often by explorers who have visited and even occupied and colonized Maluku in the past The nations were the Spanish Portuguese Arabic and Dutch The Ambonese language as the lingua franca in Maluku has been understood by almost all residents of Maluku Province and generally little by little is understood by other East Indonesian people such as those in Ternate Manado Kupang etc because Ambonese is related to other languages in the provinces of North Sulawesi North Maluku Papua West Papua and East Nusa Tenggara Indonesian as the official language and language of unity in the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia NKRI is used in official and formal public activities such as in government offices and in schools and in places such as museums airports and ports Maluku is the largest archipelago in all of Indonesia although this area is 90 water and only 10 land Maluku Province and North Maluku Province together compose the Maluku Islands The large number of islands that are separated by long distances from each other also results in the increasingly diverse languages used in this province Some of the most common languages spoken in Maluku apart from Ambonese and Indonesian are Wemale language used by residents of Piru Seruawan Kamarian and Rumberu in the West Seram Regency Alune language is used in three water streams namely Tala Mala and Malewa in the West Seram Regency area Nuaulu language spoken by the Nuaulu tribe in the south of Seram Island is between Elpaputi Bay and Teluk Teluti Atiahu language used by three ethnic groups which also included the Nuaulu family namely Atiahu Werinama and Batuasa in the East Seram Regency Seti language is spoken by the Seti people in North Seram and East Teluti and also as a trade language in Eastern Seram Tarangan language spoken in the Aru Island region Religion Edit Religion in Maluku 2021 2 Islam 52 85 Protestantism 39 39 Roman Catholic 6 87 Hinduism 0 32 Buddhism 0 01 Folk religion 0 55 Most of the people of Maluku adheres to either Islam 52 85 of the population or Christianity 46 3 of the population the latter are divided between followers of Protestantism 39 39 and Catholicism 6 87 There are also adherents of folk religion Hinduism and Buddhism The spread of Islam was carried out by the Sultanates of Iha Saulau Hitu and Hatuhaha and Arab traders who visited Maluku While the spread of Christianity was carried out by missionaries from Portugal Spain and the Netherlands Places of worship in Maluku Province in 2013 were recorded as follows 2 345 churches 2 000 mosques 10 temples 5 ViharaThe Protestant Church of Maluku Gereja Protestan Maluku or simply GPM is the largest synod organization and church organization in Maluku which has church congregations in almost the entire Sarane country throughout Maluku Economy EditMacroeconomically Maluku s economic conditions tend to improve every year One indicator is among others an increase in the value of GDP In 2003 Maluku s GRDP reached 3 7 trillion rupiah and then increased to 4 05 trillion in 2004 Economic growth in 2004 reached 4 05 percent and increased to 5 06 percent in 2005 The geographical condition of Maluku Province when viewed from the strategic side of business investment opportunities can be predicted that natural resources in the fisheries and marine sector can be used as prima donna businesses in Maluku in addition to other sectors such as livestock and plantation subsector trade sector and tourism sector as well as the service sector entirely has a high selling value and business potential Currently the economy of Maluku is dominated by agriculture forestry and fisheries that contribute to about 25 00 percent of the total 35 36 Government service sector defence and compulsory Social Security contribute to roughly 21 percent The business field and retail trade cars and motorcycles repair amp services at 12 59 percent construction sector contributes 7 41 percent 35 Maluku s economy in 2014 has shown positive improvement as compared to 2013 The GDP growth rate in 2014 reached 6 70 percent while in 2013 amounted to 5 26 percent The highest economic growth is in the field of electricity and gas supply business which grew by 31 11 percent The business service is another sector that experienced positive growth in 2014 35 Other economic activities also recorded positive growth including mining and quarrying 21 47 percent education services business field 9 52 percent transportation and warehousing business sector 8 77 percent processing industry 8 42 percent information and communication 7 62 per cent financial services business 7 61 percent construction 7 31 percent real estate 7 10 percent 35 In 2017 a Japanese oil company Inpex Corporation acquired Abadi Field a crude oil and natural gas field located in the Arafura Sea near Tanimbar Islands In 2017 the company to start the Pre FEED phase and hold a joint workshop with SKK Migas to prepare an offshore development plan for project of Block Masela 37 Culture EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Music Edit The famous musical instruments are Tifa a type of drum and Totobuang played together in an ensemble called a Tifa totobuang Each musical instrument from Tifa to Totobuang has different functions and supports each other to give birth to a very distinctive color of music But this music is dominated by Tifa musical instruments It consists of Tifa Tifa Jekir Tifa Dasar Tifa Potong Tifa Jekir Potong and Tifa Bas plus a large Gong and Toto Buang which is a series of small gongs placed on a table with several holes as a buffer There is also a wind instrument namely Bia Skin Shellfish In the culture of Maluku there are also stringed instruments namely Ukulele and that can also be found in the Hawaiian culture in the United States This can be seen when Maluku music from the past until now still has a characteristic in which there is the use of Hawaiian musical instruments both in pop songs and in accompanying traditional dances such as Katreji Other musical instruments is the Sawat Sawat is a blend of Maluku culture and Middle Eastern culture In a few centuries ago the Arabs came to spread Islam in Maluku then there was a mixture of cultures including music It is evident in several Sawat musical instruments such as Tambourines and Flutes that characterize Arabian music instruments Outside of the variety of musical instruments Moluccan people are famous for being good at singing Since long ago they have often sung in accompanying traditional dances There are many famous Moluccan singers in both Indonesia and the Netherlands such as Broery Pesulima Daniel Sahuleka Ruth Sahanaya Eric Papilaya Glen Fredly etc Cakalele a traditional Moluccan dance Dance Edit The famous dance from the Moluccas is the Cakalele which describes the might of the Moluccas This dance is usually performed by adult men while holding Parang and Salawaku Shield There are also other dances like Saureka Reka that use the sago palm fronds The dances performed by six women really need accuracy and speed while accompanied by a very interesting musical rhythm The dance which is a depiction of youth association is Katreji Katreji dance is played in pairs between women and men with varied energetic and interesting movements This dance is almost the same as European dances in general because Katreji is also an acculturation of European Portuguese and Dutch culture with Maluku culture This is more evident in every signal in changing floor patterns and movements which still use Portuguese and Dutch as a process of bilingualism This dance is accompanied by a violin instrument bamboo flute ukulele karakas guitar tifa and bass guitar with a more prominent western European musical pattern This dance is still performed by the people of Maluku until now In addition to Katreji the famous European influence is Polonaise which is usually carried out by Moluccans at the time of marriage by each party member in pairs forming a circle formation and carrying out light movements that can be followed by everyone both young and old In addition there is also a Crazy Bamboo Dance Crazy bamboo dance is a special dance that is magical originating from Suli Village The uniqueness of this dance is that the dancers are burdened by bamboo which can move uncontrollably and this dance can be followed by anyone Tourism EditSome of the famous tourist attractions in Maluku include Manusela National Park 38 Pasir Panjang Beach 39 Natsepa Beach Ambon 40 City Gate Ambon 41 See also EditDistricts of Maluku List of islands of Indonesia List of Maluku governors List of rivers of Maluku province BaileoReferences Edit a b Badan Pusat Statistik Provinsi Maluku HASIL SENSUS PENDUDUK 2010 Agregat Data per Kabupaten Kota Provinsi Maluku Archived July 21 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Indonesian Census results retrieved February 2 2011 a b c Persentase Pemeluk Agama Menurut Kabupaten Kota di Provinsi Maluku 2019 www maluku kemenag go id Retrieved September 24 2020 Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2021 Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2023 C F van Fraassen 1987 Ternate de Molukken en de Indonesische Archipel Leiden Rijksmuseum te Leiden Vol I p 18 C F van Fraassen 1987 Vol I p 18 Leonard Andaya 1993 The world of Maluku Honolulu University of Hawai i Press p 47 Pigeaud Theodoor Gautier Thomas 1960c Java in the 14th Century A Study in Cultural History Volume III Translations 3rd revised ed The Hague Martinus Nijhoff ISBN 978 94 011 8772 5 Pigeaud Theodoor Gautier Thomas 1962 Java in the 14th Century A Study in Cultural History Volume IV Commentaries and Recapitulations 3rd revised ed The Hague Martinus Nijhoff ISBN 978 94 017 7133 7 Amal Muhammad A 2016 Kepulauan Rempah rempah Jakarta Gramedia ISBN 978 6024241667 Peter van Zonneveld 1995 Pattimura en het kind van Saparua De Molukken opstand van 1817 in de Indisch Nederlandse literatuur Indische Letteren 10 41 54 Ajisaka amp Damayanti 2010 p 9 a b c Kusumaputra Adhi November 9 2009 Pattimura Pahlawan asal Maluku yang Dihukum Mati Belanda Pattimura the Hero from Maluku who was Executed by the Dutch Kompas in Indonesian Archived from the original on July 25 2013 Retrieved January 15 2012 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 122 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 136 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 138 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 139 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 pp 139 141 Conboy amp Morrison 1999 p 143 Troubled history of the Moluccas BBC News June 26 2000 Retrieved May 17 2007 Hedman 2008 p 50 Sidel 2007 p 181 Sidel 2007 p 184 Bertrand 2004 p 133 Spyer Patricia October 2002 Fire without Smoke and Other Phantoms of Ambon s Violence Media Effects Agency and the Work of Imagination PDF Indonesia Southeast Asia Program Publications at Cornell University 74 74 21 36 doi 10 2307 3351523 hdl 1813 54277 JSTOR 3351523 Hedman 2008 p 208 Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2021 Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2023 Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2019 Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2023 a b as at 2020 Indeks Pembangunan Manusia 2014 UNDANG UNDANG REPUBLIK INDONESIA NOMOR 32 TAHUN 2008 TENTANG PEMBENTUKAN KABUPATEN BURU SELATAN DI PROVINSI MALUKU Archived April 9 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Indonesian Law of the Indonesian Republic number 32 of the year 2008 on the establishment of Kabupaten Buru Selatan in the Province Maluku UNDANG UNDANG REPUBLIK INDONESIA NOMOR 31 TAHUN 2008 TENTANG PEMBENTUKAN KABUPATEN MALUKU BARAT DAYA DI PROVINSI MALUKU Archived July 21 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Indonesian Law of the Indonesian Republic number 31 of the year 2008 on the establishment of Kabupaten Maluku Barat Daya in the Province Maluku a b c d Anonymous 2015 Maluku in Figures Indonesia Statistic Office Maluku Province BPS Provinsi Maluku Maluku bps go id Retrieved May 1 2016 Inpex Asked to Accelerate Development of Masela Block Lelemuku com Retrieved November 14 2017 Asdhiana I Made ed June 11 2013 Taman Nasional Manusela Surga di Dalam Laut KOMPAS com Kompas Cyber Media Retrieved November 23 2018 Budinovariansyah Pantai Pasir Panjang Pasirnya Sehalus Tepung detikTravel detikTravel Community detikcom Retrieved November 23 2018 Natsepa Island Ambon Moluccas Maluku Tourism indonesia tourism com Retrieved November 23 2018 Phosphone Belum Resmi Datangi Ambon Tanpa Pintu Kota Ambon Situs Budaya Indonesia IndonesiaKaya Indonesia Kaya Retrieved November 23 2018 Bibliography Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maluku Ajisaka Arya Damayanti Dewi 2010 Mengenal Pahlawan Indonesia Knowing Indonesian Heroes in Indonesian Revised ed Jakarta Kawan Pustaka ISBN 978 979 757 430 7 Bertrand Jacques 2004 Nationalism and ethnic conflict in Indonesia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52441 4 Conboy Kenneth Morrison James 1999 Feet to the Fire CIA Covert Operations in Indonesia 1957 1958 Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 193 9 Hedman Eva Lotta E 2008 Conflict violence and displacement in indonesia Cornell South East Asia Program Publications pp 29 231 ISBN 978 0 87727 775 0 Sidel John Thayer 2007 Riots pogroms jihad religious violence in Indonesia NUS Press ISBN 978 9971 69 357 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maluku province amp oldid 1145699139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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