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Medan

Medan (Indonesian pronunciation: [meˈdan] (listen); English: /mədɑːn/) is the capital and largest city of the Indonesian province of North Sumatra,[7] as well as a regional hub and financial centre of Sumatra. According to the National Development Planning Agency, Medan is one of the four main central cities of Indonesia, alongside Jakarta, Surabaya, and Makassar.[8][9] As of the 2020 Census, Medan has a population of 2,435,252 within its city limits,[10][11] and over 3.4 million in its built-up urban area, making it the fourth largest urban area in Indonesia.[12] The Medan metropolitan area—which includes neighbouring Binjai, Deli Serdang Regency, and a part of Karo Regency—is the largest metropolitan area outside of Java, with 4,744,323 residents counted in the 2020 Census.[13] Medan is a multicultural metropolis and a busy trading city bordered by the Strait of Malacca, making it one of the major economic cities in Indonesia. A gateway to the western part of Indonesia, Medan is supported by the Port of Belawan and Kualanamu International Airport. Both which are connected to the city centre via toll roads and railways.

Medan
City of Medan
Kota Medan
From top, left to right:
Nickname: 
Parijs van Sumatra (Dutch)[1][2]
Motto(s): 
Bekerja sama dan sama-sama bekerja
(Working together and everybody work)
Location within North Sumatra
Interactive map of Medan
Medan
Location in Sumatra and Indonesia
Medan
Medan (Indonesia)
Coordinates: 03°35′22″N 98°40′26″E / 3.58944°N 98.67389°E / 3.58944; 98.67389Coordinates: 03°35′22″N 98°40′26″E / 3.58944°N 98.67389°E / 3.58944; 98.67389
Country Indonesia
Province North Sumatra
Founded1 July 1590
Government
 • MayorBobby Nasution
 • Vice MayorAulia Rachman [id]
 • Chairman of City's Council of RepresentativesHasyim Huang Kien-Lim (PDI-P)
 • Vice Chairmen of City's Council of RepresentativesIhwan Ritonga (Gerindra), Rajuddin Sagala (Prosperous Justice Party) and HT Bahrumsyah (National Mandate Party)
Area
 • City265.10 km2 (102.36 sq mi)
 • Urban
478 km2 (185 sq mi)
 • Metro
2,831.97 km2 (1,093.43 sq mi)
Elevation
2.5–37.5 m (8–123 ft)
Population
 (2020 Census)
 • City2,435,252 (4th)
 • Density9,186/km2 (23,790/sq mi)
 • Urban3,632,000 (4th)
 • Urban density7,598/km2 (19,680/sq mi)
 • Metro4,744,323 (5th)
 • Metro density1,675/km2 (4,340/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Medanese
Medanite
Demographics[5]
 • Ethnic groupsBatak, Javanese, Chinese, Malay, Indian
 • ReligionIslam
Christianity
Buddhism
Hinduism
Confucianism
Time zoneUTC+7 (IWST)
Area code(+62) 61
Vehicle registrationBK
Nominal GDP[5]2019
 - TotalRp 241.5 trillion (4th)
US$17.1 billion
US$56.1 billion (PPP)
 - Per capitaRp 105,908 thousand (13th)
US$7,490
US$24,620 (PPP)
 - Growth 6.0%
HDI (2019) 0.809 (21st) – very high[6]
Websitepemkomedan.go.id

The city was founded by Guru Patimpus, a Karonese man who named the area of swampy land at the confluence of Deli River and Babura river Kampung Medan Putri. It later became a part of the Deli Sultanate, established in 1632. In the late 19th century, colonial Dutch seeking new plantation areas chose Medan and Deli as the most recent plantation hubs with Deli Company. They set up tobacco plantations, transforming Medan into a trade hub within several years and earning Medan the nickname Het Land Dollar, meaning "the land of the money". The city was well known due to the importance of tobacco as an export to Europe and the West. The rapid development of Medan came with the Deli Railway, which was established for shipping tobacco, rubber, tea, timber, palm oil, and sugar from Medan to the Port of Belawan, then exported around the world. Medan was the capital of the State of East Sumatra before it became the provincial capital of North Sumatra. Medan was dubbed Parijs van Sumatra due to the city's resemblance to Paris.[citation needed]

Medan is a financial, trading, and economic centre for North Sumatra province and the whole of Sumatra Island. For many foreign investors, Medan is rich in culture and history and presents itself as a dynamic economic hub of the world. As the robust capital of North Sumatra, Medan offers a large pool of human capital and talent, lower operational costs, a strategic location close to Singapore and Malaysia, and diverse natural resources. The city is known as a trading hub for palm oil export. North Sumatra has approximately 4 million acres of palm oil plantations. Medan is one of the developed markets in trading. About 60% of the economy in North Sumatra is backed by trading, agriculture, and processing industries.[14]

Etymology

According to the diary of a Portuguese merchant in the early 16th century, the name of Medan was derived from the Tamil word Maidhan, also known as Maidhāṉam (Tamil: மைதானம்), that means Ground, adopted from the Malay language. One of the Karo-Indonesia dictionaries written by Darwin Prinst SH, published in 2002, stated that Medan could also be defined as "recover" or "be better".

History

Aru Kingdom

The area in and around Medan city, Deli and Langkat Regency was the location of the ancient Kingdom of Aru (Haru). The Karo people established the kingdom and flourished between the 13th and 16th centuries.[15] Several archaeological sites around Medan are connected to the Kingdom of Aru, including Kota Rentang in the Hamparan Perak area, Deli Serdang Regency,[16] the Kota Cina archaeological site in Medan Marelan,[17] and Benteng Putri Hijau, a fort ruin in Deli Tua, Namorambe, Deli Serdang Regency.[18]

Founding of Medan

 
Guru Patimpus statue in Medan, the founder of the city

Medan started as a village called Kampung Medan (Medan Village). Kampung Medan was founded by Guru Patimpus Sembiring Pelawi, a Karonese man from the Karo Land. Before he became a Muslim, he was a Pemena follower. Following the history of trombo and Hamparan Perak (XII Kuta), Guru Patimpus studied Islam from Datuk Kota Bangun. At the time, Guru Patimpus and his people wanted to meet Datuk. Not only did they want to meet him, but they also wanted to compete with him for "power". Whenever Guru Patimpus went to Kota Bangun, he always passed Pulo Brayan. In Pulo Brayan, Guru Patimpus fell in love with the Princess of Pulo Brayan. Eventually, he married the princess and had two sons, Kolok and Kecik. The married couple then turned the forest area in the confluence between the Deli River and Babura River into a small village, naming it Kampung Medan (lit. Medan Village). The day has been marked as the date of Medan's anniversary, 1 July 1590.[citation needed]

Guru Patimpus sent his children to study and read the Qur'an to Datuk Kota Bangun and then sent them to Aceh to deepen their knowledge of Islam.

In the early days, the natives called the area the Land of Deli (Indonesian: Tanah Deli), starting from the Ular River to the Wampu River in Langkat. At the same time, the Deli Sultanate in power did not cover the area between the two rivers.

Early Kampung Medan was a fortress composed of two layers of round-shaped walls at a confluence between two rivers of Deli and Babura. The Administrator's house was located across the river from Kampung Medan. Kampung Medan is in the modern-day location of the Wisma Benteng building, and the Administrator house is in present-day PTP IX Deli Tobacco.

Deli Sultanate

In 1612, the Acehnese Sultan Iskandar Muda defeated the Aru Kingdom. The Acehnese appointed Hisyamsudin (later changing his name to Tuanku Gocah Pahlawan), with Laksamana Kuda Bintan as their representative in the kingdom. In 1632 Aceh established the Deli Sultanate, and Gocah Pahlawan became the first king. As the Deputy of the Sultan of Aceh and by utilizing the large size of the Aceh Sultanate, Gocah Pahlawan expanded his territory, covering the modern-day Percut Sei Tuan and Medan Deli district. He founded the villages of Gunung Barus, Sampali, Kota Bangun, Pulo Brayan, Kota Jawa, Kota Rengas and Sigara-gara. He died in 1669 and was succeeded by his son Tuangku Panglima Perunggit who moved the kingdom's centre to Labuhan Deli, which then proclaimed the independence of the Deli Sultanate from the Aceh Sultanate in 1669.

During the reign of the third king, Tuanku Panglima Paderap, the kingdom was moved to Pulo Brayan due to floods. The fourth king, Tuanku Panglima Pasutan, organized the empire into four tribes, each led by a Datuk (a Malay title for high-ranking persons). During the time of the fifth king, Tuanku Panglima Gandar Wahib, the Datuks increased their power.

 
Sultan Amaluddin, the sixth sultan leaving the Great Mosque on his coronation day, in February 1925
 
Crowd in front of the Maimun Palace, the Sultan of Deli's palace, 1925

The sixth ruler was Sultan Amaluddin Mengedar Alam. During his years, the Siak Sultanate became a more substantial influence in Deli than the Acehnese Sultanate, and the ruler was given the title: Sultan. The seventh ruler was Sultan Osman Perkasa Alam. During his leadership, the Deli Sultanate became autonomous.

The eighth ruler, Sultan Mahmud Al Rasyid Perkasa Alam, started relations with the Dutch. The next ruler was Sultan Ma'mun Al Rashid Perkasa Alamyah, who ruled from 1873 to 1924 when the tobacco trade expanded. He moved the kingdom's capital to Medan and finished the construction of the Maimun Palace in 1888. He also built the grand mosque of Al Ma'shun, commonly known as the Great Mosque of Medan, in 1907. He became known as the builder of early Medan in cooperation with the Dutch and Tjong Yong Hian and Tjong A Fie, two Chinese businessmen brothers and Kapitans who built a large plantation business in Deli. They brought Medan-Deli new developments, including business centres such as banks, offices, plantations, housing, a railroad and a port. The tenth Sultan, Amaluddin Al Sani Perkasa Alamsyah, expanded harbours, with commerce increasing during his reign. At the declaration of Indonesian Independence, the Sultan recognized the republic's sovereignty and was, in return, given an essential function as administrator of Deli-Malay traditions and culture.

The Sultanate of Deli still exists today, although administrative powers have been replaced with elected Mayors. The current sultan is Sultan Mahmud Lamanjiji Perkasa Alam, the 14th sultan, rulung since 2005. At age eight, he became the youngest Sultan of Deli.

Dutch East Indies era

 
Sultan Ma'mun, ninth Sultan of Deli Sultanate, during his reign, Medan was openly cooperated with colonial
 
Tjong A Fie, one of Kapitan in Medan, philanthropist and contributor to Medan early development
 
Jacob Nienhuys,
founder of tobacco producer, Deli Company, who bring major development of Medan
 
An aerial view of Port of Belawan, 1920s

The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 meant more intensified traffic between Europe and the Far East. The Dutch started the shipping company Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland which quickly expanded to 43 steamships in 1877. The British, however, had already had 3,000 ships. A journey from Europe to Indonesia took approximately 40 days, and the trip was reduced to 23 days and 20 hours to Batavia (Jakarta). The ships also became more extensive and more comfortable.

This increased to cruise ships carrying predominantly white Europeans coming to the Dutch East Indies as tourists for a tour of the region, including Medan, the largest tobacco plantation in the Dutch East Indies at the time. To accommodate the tourists, it was deemed necessary to have European-class hotels. Therefore, in 1898, a Dutch businessman named Aeint Herman de Boer built Hotel de Boer in the northwest of the Esplanade (now Lapangan Merdeka Medan).

 
Kesawan Road, circa 1900

Exports depended on British shipping in 1890 when Sabang became a bunker harbour. Belawan got its port in 1923. The shipping company Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij (KPM) was established to ship valuable Deli Company tobacco, which was sent to Batavia. This cargo was almost as valuable, and stringent rules regulated its handling. It was strictly forbidden to stow anything on top of the tobacco, and coolies were not allowed to walk on it when they worked in the hatches.[citation needed]

Cleaning of roads in Medan was, until 1912, done by prisoners. After that, free coolies got the job. In 1917 the authorities started to use horse-drawn carts equipped with brooms for cleaning. In 1928 horse-drawn carts were replaced by motorized vehicles. The first newspaper was the Deli Courant, established in 1885, although it was not a daily publication. In 1898, Joseph Hallermann, a German, established the daily De Sumatra Post, which survived until 1939.

There were planters in Medan from many countries: Britain, the Netherlands, America, France, Germany, Poland, and Switzerland. Many of them became very rich and led affluent lifestyles. Medan became known as the Paris of Sumatra (lit. Parijs van Sumatra (Dutch)). Until today, the area in downtown Medan is called Polonia, a name given by a Polish aristocrat who once owned a plantation there. One area of Medan is still called Helvetia (the old name of Switzerland). A plantation owner from Switzerland gave this name.

Tobacco plantations

Medan developed rapidly in the 1860s when Dutch authorities began to release new land for tobacco plantations. Jacob Nienhuys, Van der Falk, and Elliot, Dutch tobacco merchants, pioneered the opening of the tobacco plantation in Deli. Nienhuys' previous tobacco business in Java moved to Deli after an invitation by an Arab from Surabaya named Said Abdullah Bilsagih, brother-in-law of the Deli Sultan Mahmud Perkasa Alam. Initially, Nienhuys cultivated tobacco on 4,000 hectares of land in Tanjong Spassi, near Labuhan, owned by the Sultan of Deli. In March 1864, Nienhuys sent samples of his tobacco crop to Rotterdam, Netherlands, to test its quality. The tobacco leaves were considered high quality for cigar materials. Hence Deli's name rose as a producer of the best cigar wrappers for Europeans.

 
Coat of arms of Medan during colonial era, adopted in 1886, showing tobacco plant as the charge
 
Coolies working in the seedbeds on a tobacco plantation in Medan, c. 1900s

The Sultan of Deli and the Dutch 1865 signed the tobacco treaty. After two years, Nienhuys, Jannsen, P.W. Clemen, and Cremer founded De Deli Maatschappij abbreviated Deli Mij in Labuhan. In 1869, Nienhuys moved the head office of Deli Mij to Kampung Medan. The new office was built on the confluence of the Deli and Babura rivers. With the transfer of the office, Medan quickly became the centre of government activity and trade, as well as an area with the most dominant development in western Indonesia. The rapid growth of the economy transformed Deli into a significant trading centre nicknamed the land dollar, the land of the dollar. Then, they opened up new plantations in the Martubung and Sunggal areas in 1869 and in Sungai Beras and Klumpang in 1875, bringing the total to 22 plantation companies in 1874. Given the activities of the tobacco trade, Kampung Medan became increasingly crowded and developed into what is now known as Medan-Deli.

The development of Medan-Deli as a trading centre was followed by it becoming a centre of government. In 1879, the Capital Assistant of Deli Residents moved from Labuhan to Medan. On 1 March 1887, the capital of the Resident of East Sumatra also moved from Bengkalis to Medan Deli Sultanate Palace, which was initially located in Kampung Bahari (Labuhan), and Pulo Brayan also moved with the completion of Maimoon Palace on 18 May 1891. Thus the Capital of Deli officially moved to Medan.

Growth of Medan-Deli

 
Crossroad of Canton and Hakka street in Medan's Chinatown, 1930
 
An aerial view of Medan, 1920. Visible from the photo are the railway station, the Esplanade (now Merdeka Walk), City Hall, the Javasche Bank (now Bank Indonesia), post office, Hotel de Boer and office of the Deli Maatschappij

In 1915, the Residency of East Sumatra enhanced its status to Gubernermen. In 1918 the city of Medan officially became Gemeente (Municipal) with Mayor Baron Daniël Mackay. Based on the "Acte van Schenking" (Grant Deed) No. 97 Notary J.M. de-Hondt Junior, dated 30 November 1918, the Sultan of Deli handed over the land of Medan-Deli to the Gemeente, thus officially becoming the region under the direct rule of the Dutch East Indies. In the early days of this township, Medan still consisted of four villages, Kampung Kesawan, Kampung Sungai Rengas, Kampung Petisah Hulu and Kampung Petisah Hilir.

In 1918, there were 43,826 residents of Medan, made up of 409 Europeans, 35,009 Native Indonesians, 8,269 Chinese and 139 East foreigners such as Indians.

Since then, the Medan has developed more rapidly. Various facilities were built. Some of these include the Office of Experiment Stations named AVROS in Kampung Baru, now RISPA, the railway of Pangkalan Brandan – Besitang, Tirtanadi Water Tower, American Consulate, and Teacher school on Jl. H.M. Yamin now, Mingguan Soematra, Pool Association Medan, Central Market (Grote Markt), St. Elizabeth Hospital, Eye Hospital and Kebun Bunga Sports field.

Japanese occupation and post independence era

 
British Indian soldiers land in East Sumatra to help the Dutch end the Japanese occupation in Medan.
 
A biscuit factory in Medan in the late 1950s

In 1942, the Japanese invaded the Dutch East Indies, arriving in Sumatra by February. Sumatra was placed under the command of the 25th Army, based in Singapore.[19] The Japanese landed in Tanjung Tiram, Asahan and entered Medan by bicycles they bought from the people around them by bartering.

The transfer from Dutch to Japanese control was very chaotic, and the natives took this opportunity to take revenge against the Dutch. This situation was immediately brought under control by the Japanese Army by deploying the Kempetai. The Japanese changed the municipal government to Medan Sico (Municipal Government). Civil servants at the Medan municipal level were named Hoyasakhi. Following the surrender of Japan in 1945, Sumatra came under the authority of the South East Asia Command headed by British Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten. On 17 August, Sukarno proclaimed Indonesia's independence in Jakarta and appointed Muhammad Hasan as governor of Sumatra. However, news of the proclamation was only announced by Hasan in Medan on 30 September. After allied troops landed in October, clashes with armed Republicans led to the Battle of Medan.[20][21]

In December 1947, the Dutch established the State of East Sumatra with Medan as its capital in the area they controlled following Operation Product against the republicans. This became part of the United States of Indonesia but was dissolved into the unitary republic of Indonesia in 1950.[22]

The city development remained stagnant until the 1970s, when significant developments, especially palm oil and rubber plantations, made Medan the busiest city outside Java. The transmigration program brought Javanese and Batak people to settle in the town as many people from Java and the rural province sought jobs.

From 4 to 8 May 1998, riots occurred in Medan due to the 1997 Asian financial crisis. They began when demonstrations around many campuses for nearly two months, with clashes between students and security forces, resulting in the death of a student. The next day, the mobs became bigger, targeting and attacking the business and trading sector, leading to a racial riot. Many shops and vehicles were burned and looted on several roads around the city, mostly owned by Chinese residents. As a result, a curfew was imposed for more than two weeks until peace returned.[23]

On 5 September 2005, Mandala Airlines Flight 091 crashed a minute after takeoff from the old Polonia International Airport from Medan to Jakarta. The aircraft stalled and crashed into a heavily populated residential area along Djamin Ginting road in Padang Bulan. Of the 117 passengers and crews on board, only 17 survived, and an additional 49 civilians on the ground were killed.[24] This flight accident led to the move to the newly built airport in Deli Serdang, which was completed in 2012, named Kualanamu International Airport. The move to the new airport relaxed height restriction laws in the city.

Geography

Medan is in the northeastern part of Sumatra island, in North Sumatra province. Medan is a semi-enclave within Deli Serdang Regency, as Medan is bordered by Deli Serdang in the south, east, and west, while Medan borders with the Strait of Malacca in the north.

Medan lies on the Deli River and Babura River banks, which feed into a naturally sheltered harbour and then into the Straits of Malacca. It has helped the city grow in significance as a trading port.[25] Its elevation varies between 2.5 and 37.5 m (8 ft 2 in and 123 ft 0 in) above sea level. Medan is close to the Barisan Mountains, located in the southern part of the city and close to volcanoes such as Sibayak Mountain and Sinabung Mountain 50 to 70 km (31 to 43 mi) from the city.

Climate

Under the Köppen climate classification, Medan features a tropical rainforest climate (Af) with no real dry season.[26] However, Medan has noticeably wetter and drier months, with its driest month (January) on average seeing about one-third of its wettest month (October)—temperatures in the city average approximately 27 °C (81 °F) throughout the year. Annual precipitation in the Medan is around 2,200 mm (87 in).

Climate data for Medan (Polonia), elevation: 27 m or 89 ft, 1977-1994
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 35
(95)
36.1
(97.0)
36.1
(97.0)
37.2
(99.0)
36.1
(97.0)
37.2
(99.0)
37.2
(99.0)
37.2
(99.0)
36.1
(97.0)
35
(95)
35
(95)
34.4
(93.9)
37.2
(99.0)
Average high °C (°F) 31.6
(88.9)
32
(90)
32.7
(90.9)
32.9
(91.2)
33.4
(92.1)
33.3
(91.9)
32.9
(91.2)
33.3
(91.9)
31.9
(89.4)
31.7
(89.1)
31
(88)
30.9
(87.6)
32.3
(90.1)
Daily mean °C (°F) 25.5
(77.9)
26.1
(79.0)
26.6
(79.9)
27.2
(81.0)
27.2
(81.0)
26.9
(80.4)
26.9
(80.4)
26.9
(80.4)
26.6
(79.9)
26.1
(79.0)
26.1
(79.0)
25.8
(78.4)
26.5
(79.7)
Average low °C (°F) 22.2
(72.0)
22.6
(72.7)
23.2
(73.8)
23.5
(74.3)
23.3
(73.9)
23.6
(74.5)
23.5
(74.3)
22.8
(73.0)
22.2
(72.0)
22.6
(72.7)
23
(73)
22.5
(72.5)
22.9
(73.2)
Record low °C (°F) 18.3
(64.9)
18.3
(64.9)
18.3
(64.9)
19.4
(66.9)
18.3
(64.9)
17.2
(63.0)
16.1
(61.0)
18.3
(64.9)
18.8
(65.8)
17.7
(63.9)
15.5
(59.9)
18.3
(64.9)
15.5
(59.9)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 92
(3.6)
115
(4.5)
97
(3.8)
157
(6.2)
178
(7.0)
141
(5.6)
167
(6.6)
185
(7.3)
263
(10.4)
387
(15.2)
253
(10.0)
228
(9.0)
2,263
(89.2)
Average rainy days 14 19 13 18 22 15 13 17 24 22 20 19 216
Mean monthly sunshine hours 129.6 141.0 153.1 131.2 134.8 157.9 153.9 143.9 123.1 116.3 104.8 98.1 1,587.7
Source 1: World Meteorological Organization[27] and Worldwide Bioclimatic Classification System (daily mean and record temperature)[28]
Source 2: WeatherOnline (sun, 2010–2019)[29]

Located in the central part of Deli Serdang Regency, Medan is surrounded by satellite cities and towns such as Binjai, Lubuk Pakam, Tanjung Morawa, Tembung, Percut Sei Tuan, and Labuhan Deli, which help the city become a new urban area in Indonesia which known as 'Mebidang' (Medan, Binjai, Deli Serdang).

Governance

 
The old and former Medan City Hall building

Mayor

Medan was governed by Abdillah, from 2000–2008. However, Indonesian Corruption Eradication Commission officials caught Abdillah and his vice mayor in 2008. Syamsul Arifin, the Governor of North Sumatra Province, appointed Affifudin Lubis as the acting mayor. In 2009, Affifudin Lubis resigned, and the Governor appointed Rahudman Harahap as a replacement. Because Rahudman wanted to be a candidate in the 2010 mayoral election, he, too, resigned from office. Left with no choice, Syamsul Arifin himself became the acting mayor. In the 2010 mayoral election, Rahudman Harahap won the election. However, Rahudman was then arrested due to corruption, resulting in his deputy Dzulmi Eldin officially becoming the acting mayor.[30] In February 2016, Dzulmi won the election and became the mayor for five years (2016–2021).[31] Currently, Medan is led by Bobby Nasution as a mayor and Aulia Rachman as a vice mayor.[32]

Administrative divisions

 
District divisions of Medan

Medan is divided into 21 districts Indonesian: kecamatan, tabulated below with their areas and populations at the 2010 Census,[33][34][35][36] and the 2020 Census.[11] The table also includes the number of administrative villages (urban kelurahan) in each district and their postal codes.

Name Area
in km2
Population
Census
2010[36]
Population
Census
2020[36]
No.
of
vill.
Postal
codes
Medan Tuntungan 20.68 80,942 97,249 9 20134-20141
Medan Johor 14.58 123,851 151,756 6 20142-20146
Medan Amplas 11.19 113,143 129,726 7 20147-20149,
20219 & 20229
Medan Denai 9.05 141,395 169,643 6 20226-20228
Medan Area 5.52 96,544 117,029 12 20211-20217
Medan Kota 5.27 72,580 84,666 12 20211-20219
Medan Maimun 2.98 39,581 49,231 6 20151-20159
Medan Polonia 9.01 52,794 59,915 5 20152-20157
Medan Baru 5.84 39,516 36,522 6 20153-20156
Medan Selayang 12.81 98,317 103,176 6 20131-20133
Medan Sunggal 15.44 112,744 129,063 6 20121-20128
Medan Helvetia 13.16 144,257 164,910 7 20123-20126
Medan Petisah 6.82 61,749 71,844 7 20112-20119
Medan Barat 5.33 70,771 88,602 6 20111-20117
Medan Timur 7.76 108,633 116,985 11 20231-20239
Medan Perjuangan 4.09 93,328 103,813 9 20232-20237
Medan Tembung 7.99 133,579 146,534 7 20221-20225
Medan Deli 20.84 166,793 189,321 6 20241-20244
Medan Labuhan 36.67 111,173 133,765 6 20251-20254,
20524 & 20525
Medan Marelan 23.82 140,414 182,515 5 20250-20256
Medan Kota Belawan 26.25 95,506 108,987 6 20411-20415
Totals 265.10 2,097,610 2,435,252 151

The city is centralised around Medan Petisah, Medan Baru, Medan Polonia, Medan Maimun, Medan Kota, and Medan Barat (West Medan), which act as the city centres. Medan Labuhan is one of the largest districts by area (together with Medan Belawan and Medan Marelan) and lies in the northern part of the city. Medan Tuntungan serves as the gateway to Karo Regency, Medan Helvetia to Binjai City and Langkat, and Medan Amplas to Tebing Tinggi and Pematang Siantar.

The 21 districts are subdivided into 151 neighbourhoods or urban villages (kelurahan).

Demographics

The city is Indonesia's fourth most populous after Jakarta, Surabaya and Bandung, and Indonesia's largest city outside Java island. The population within the city's borders has risen from 568,000 in 1968[37] fourfold to 2.1 million in 2010 and rose again to 2,435,252 at the 2020 Census. Much of the population lies outside its city limits, especially in Deli Serdang Regency. The official Metropolitan area (Wilayah Metropolitan Medan) was inhabited by 4,220,439 people in 2010 but had risen to 4,744,323 in 2020.

Administrative
division
Area
in km2
Population
Census
2010
Population
Census
2020
Pop'n
density
(/km2)
Ref
Medan (City) 265.10 2,097,610 2,435,252 9,186 [38]
Binjai (City) 90.23 246,154 279,302 3,095 [38]
Deli Serdang Regency 2,241.68 1,790,431 1,931,441 862 [38]
Karo Regency (part) 234.96 86,244 98,328 418 [38]
Greater Medan 2,831.97 4,220,439 4,744,323 1,675 [38]

The four districts of Karo Regency within the metropolitan area are Merdaka, Berastagi, Dolat Rayat and Barusjahe.

Ethnicities and languages

Batak (including Mandailing and Karo people) and Javanese are the major ethnic groups in Medan, along with Chinese, Minangkabau and Malay populations and smaller groups of Acehnese, Indians, Nias, and Sundanese people. Medan also has foreign residents from India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Thailand, China, Taiwan, the Middle East and other Asian countries.[39]

 
Women representatives of Minang, Batak-Karo, Malay, Chinese, Javanese and Indian are giving a floral tribute to the pilots of the first commercial flight from Holland to Batavia via Medan in front of the townhall in Medan, 1924
Ethnicities of Medan[39]
Ethnic group Percentage
Batak
34.39%
Javanese
33.03%
Chinese
10.65%
Minangkabau
8.60%
Malays
6.59%
Acehnese
2.78%
Others
3.96%
 
An Indian, local Malay, and Batak seller in Kesawan Chinatown area, taken around the 1940s

The city has diverse communities, reflected by its history. The Bataks are one of the major ethnic groups in Medan, with three Batak subethnicities residing in the town, including the Toba, Karo and Mandailing Bataks. The Karo people are the natives of Medan. Meanwhile, the Dutch employed the Toba people as workers in oil palm plantations. Lastly, the Mandailing people came in masses after independence to find better jobs. The Bataks reside throughout the city, while the Karo people reside around southern areas such as Padang Bulan, Medan Johor and Tuntungan. Toba Batak people reside in Marindal and Amplas; many live in nearby city centres, such as the Medan Perjuangan district, while the Mandailing people mainly reside in Medan Tembung. Bataknese languages are diversified; the primary Batak language in Medan are Batak and Karo.

In addition, there is a large ethnic Javanese community, primarily composed of descendants of people transported from Java in the last 19th century to be employed as contract workers at various plantations in North Sumatra. They are usually called Pujakesuma (Indonesian: Putra Jawa Kelahiran Sumatera, English: Sumatra-born Javanese). Various Javanese toponymies can mark their presence in Medan in Medan, such as Tanjungsari, Sarirejo, Sidodadi, Sidorejo, etc. (mainly in East Medan and Medan Tembung area); most of them speak Javanese with its local variation. The Malays are also natives of Medan, already living in outskirt areas such as Belawan and Labuhan since the Aru era as fishermen. They came to the city after Deli Sultanate's new palace was established in the 18th century. Over time, the Malays spread throughout the city, with the most significant concentration of people living in Medan Maimun, Kota Matsum, Labuhan and Belawan, many of them speaking Malay.

A prominent component of the city population is many Chinese who migrated from southern China to Deli in the 16th century, with mass migration occurring in the last 19th and early 20th century for those seeking employment as planters and coolies. Medan is home to the largest Chinese community on Sumatra island; they are active in business and trading activities, contributing significantly to the city's economy. Unlike the Java-born Chinese, most Chinese people in Medan speak fluent Hokkien, a dialect originating from Fujian, a province in the southern part of China. They also made their variation of Hokkien, which is called Medan Hokkien, with borrowed many local words. Many also speak Mandarin, Teochew, and Cantonese, depending on the language of their ancestors. The Chinese reside throughout the city, but most live around the city centre. The city also hosts a sizable community of Indian Indonesian, mostly Tamil descendants, commonly known as Madrasis or Tamilan. A well-known Tamil neighbourhood is Kampung Madras, which is located in the city centre and is heralded as one of the busiest parts of the city.

Minangkabaus are merchants, peddlers, artisans, and white-collar workers such as doctors, lawyers, and journalists. Minangkabau restaurants, known as Padang Restaurants, are scattered throughout the city. The Minang people came to Medan in the mid-19th century. From the 1960s to the 1980s, the number of Minangkabau people migrating to Medan surged and formed 8.6% of the population in the city. Most of the Minangkabaus living around Medan Denai and Medan Maimun area speak Minangkabau.[40] Acehnese are other minority ethnicities in Medan. Many Aceh people mostly came after the conflict in Aceh in the late 1970s when they sought sanctuary. Today, they are known for working as merchants such as grocery store operators and can be found in Mie Aceh restaurants around Setia Budi and Ring Road/Sunggal areas. Most Aceh people speak Acehnese, and Gayonese also exists among them.

Even though many languages exist in Medan, most of them communicate with each other with their slang, called Bahasa Medan or Dialek Medan (Medanese slang), made from Bahasa Indonesia with various words taken from its respective ethnics, mainly from the Malay language, the sounds of Medanese slang are pretty loud and harsh that sometimes offends their listeners.

Religion

Religion of Medan – 2019 Census[41]
Religion Percent
Islam
65.78%
Protestant
20.14%
Buddhism
8.65%
Catholic
4.63%
Hinduism
0.79%
Others
0.01%

Most of Medan's inhabitants are Muslim, comprising approximately 66 per cent of the total population. There is a large significant Christian population of around 25 per cent, including Catholic, with various denominations including the Batak Christian Protestant Church, Methodist and Lutheran. Buddhists follow about 9 per cent, and smaller numbers of Hindus, Confucianism, and Sikhism also exist in the city. Medan hosts diversified houses of worship, including a mosque, church, cathedral, Buddhist temple (vihara/wat), Hindu temple (koil/pura), Taoist temple, and a gurdwara.

Islam is followed by the Malay, Minangkabau, Javanese, Mandailing-Angkola and Achehnese people, while the Bataknese majority follows Christianity. There are also Bataknese following the traditional religion, such as Pemena and Parmalim. Buddhism is a significant religion for the Chinese, while a small community follows Confucianism and Christianity. Meanwhile, Hinduism ais mostly followed by the Indians.

Economy

 
The Bank Indonesia building in Medan. The tall building behind is the Grand City Hall Hotel.

Medan is one of the largest metropolitan cities in Indonesia and has become the centre of growth in the province of North Sumatra. The city is an important commercial and economic hub of Indonesia. Locals and many foreigners have set up their businesses to take advantage of its dynamism and boost its economy. Medan's economy was mainly based on tobacco, rubber, tea, palm and coffee culture and production. However, growing manufacturing sectors such as automotive, machinery production, tiles, paper and pulp, etc., also currently contribute to the city's economy.

 
bird view of Belawan Container Terminal

With the enactment of Government Regulation No 28/2008, this metropolitan area has been recognized as one of the Indonesian National Strategic Regions (Indonesian: Kawasan Strategis Nasional or KSN). Since then, Medan City has continued to support a large portion of regional trade and logistic flow across the municipalities within this particular KSN and most of the western part of Indonesia (RTR Metropolitan Mebidangro, 2012). Currently, Medan is the centre point for crop trading for different commodities produced in the region, such as rubber, palm oil, cinnamon, tobacco, tea, and coffee, a significant portion of which have been exported to Europe, North America, and the Middle East. In the global context, Medan's geographical advantages have also played essential parts within a triangle alliance with Malaysia and Thailand (Indonesia–Malaysia–Thailand Growth Triangle or IMT-GT) that enables mutual partnerships in tourism, commerce, culture, health, and education among the three countries.[42]

Medan is one of the most industrialized cities in Sumatra, consisting of many small, medium and large-scale enterprises. Because of its location and proximity to Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, it functions strategically as the main gateway for trading goods and financial services on domestic, regional and international levels in the western region of Indonesia. Many multinational companies maintain offices in the city, namely Asian Agri,[43] London Sumatra,[44] Musim Mas,[45] Philips Lighting, Toba Pulp Lestari, Marriott, Wilmar, ABB Group and DBS Bank, etc.

Medan is one of Indonesia's most promising property markets outside Java, and several high-value developments have transformed its property market – and skyline. Many of the country's big property developers are building condominiums, hotels, office towers and shopping malls in the city. Medan is also known as the "City of Million Shophouses", as most of the population work in the trade sector, opening shops near their houses. In recent years, the city has undergone rapid development, which made the residential property prices in Medan trend upward.[46] Lamudi, a worldwide real estate portal, recognized Medan as one of six cities in Asia to feature and preserve several colonial architectural sites while accompanying its growth as a metropolitan city.[47]

Medan is one of the largest metropolitan cities in Indonesia and has become the centre of change in the province of North Sumatra. The city is an important commercial and economic hub of Indonesia. Locals and many foreigners have set up their businesses to take advantage of its dynamism and boost its economy. Medan's economy was mainly based on tobacco, rubber, tea, palm and coffee culture and production. However, growing manufacturing sectors such as automotive, machinery production, tiles, paper and pulp, etc., also currently contribute to the city's economy.

 
Downtown Medan in January 2019

Culture

Many different ethnic groups inhabit Medan. Malay people are the natives of the Medan area and have deep roots in Medan. They began ruling there during the Deli Sultanate until now. The empire has many lands and properties of heritage in Medan, such as a palace, a mosque, and a park. The Dutch contributed significantly to city development, including many historical buildings made by Dutch and Peranakan architecture along Jalan Kesawan and Pemuda during the Dutch East Indies era. The arrival of Minangkabaus, Bataks, Javanese, Chinese and Indian people brought more colours to the culture of Medan, especially cuisine.

In addition to food culture, the migrants also brought the story-writing culture, which was known as Roman Medan in the 1930s-1940s. Romance novels by Medan writers usually tell the story of the life of the people in Deli (Medan and its surroundings). Several romance novel writers grew up in Medan, including Hamka, Joesoef Souyb, Tamar Djaja, Matu Mona, and A. Damhoeri.[48]

Museum

 
The North Sumatra Museum

The North Sumatra Museum has located approximately 4 km (2.5 mi) south of the city's centre in Jalan HM. Joni 15 Medan. The Minister of Education and Culture, Dr Daoed Joesoef, opened the museum in April 1982. It is mainly centred around North Sumatran ethnic groups and artefacts.

The Bukit Barisan Museum is a military museum opened by Brigade General Leo Lopulisa on 21 June 1971. The museum is located at 8 Jalan H. Zainul Arifin. It houses several historic weapons, including weapons used in the struggle for independence and the revolt in North Sumatra in 1958. Motives/paintings of the rebellion against the Netherlands were presented.[49]

The Rahmat International Wildlife Museum & Gallery, or the Rahmat Gallery, opened in 1999 and is considered the city's outstanding taxidermy collection. It is located on Jalan Letjen S. Parman No.309.[50]

Cuisine

 
Soto Medan
 
Several Bika Ambon
 
Food stall seller in Jalan Selatpanjang, Medan

Because of its multiculturality, Medan has various cuisines ranging from local, western, eastern and southern Asian, and middle eastern cuisine. The city also hosts a lot of cafes, restaurants, food centres and street vendors with varying price points.

Nelayan, a famous restaurant in Medan, serves halal-Chinese seafood and dim sum. Garuda and Uda Sayang are the most popular Minangkabau restaurant in Medan, which helps nasi padang and gulai. Meanwhile, Sate Afrizal Amir is one of the best sate padang in Medan. Cahaya Baru is an Indian restaurant on Kampung Madras with chapati and tandoori as its most recommended food. The most visited Batak restaurant are OnDo Batak grill and Tesalonika known best for their babi panggang (grilled pork) and saksang.

This city is known as "the culinary heaven of Indonesia", as Medan is prominent for its street hawkers offering a variety of cheap local delicacies. Medan has several well-known culinary spots, such as Jalan Selat Panjang and Jalan Semarang for Chinese food, Jalan Pagaruyung for Indian and Malay food and Jalan Padang Bulan for Batak food.

Merdeka Walk is Indonesia's first tensile structure (alfresco outdoor concept), filled with various cafés and restaurants. Durian is a popular fruit in Indonesia and nowhere more so than Medan. With its distinctive taste and smell, this thorny fruit is available all over the city. Ucok Durian along Jalan Iskandar Muda is the most known durian stall in the town.

Soto Medan is a savoury stew made with various types of meat (including innards) that are fried beforehand and coconut milk. It is usually served with rice and a piece of potato croquette (perkedel).

Bika Ambon is a famous local dessert. Made from tapioca flour, eggs, sugar, yeast and coconut milk. Bika Ambon is generally sold in pandan flavours, although other flavours such as banana, durian, cheese, and chocolate are also available. Bika Ambon Zulaikha is the most known bika ambon seller and has several branches in the city.

Babi Panggang Karo, often called BPK, is grilled pork with its blood curd used as a dipping sauce. It is usually served with plain rice and sambal andaliman, a spicy condiment made from local Sichuan peppers. The Chinese equivalent of grilled pork is called Cha Sio (叉烧)

Tau Kua He Ci (豆干虾炸), also known as Lap Choi (腊菜), is the local Chinese version of Rojak (often pronounced ru-jak) but made with fried prawn, vegetables and tofu with chilli sauce. Its other name is also calledTeng-Teng (丁丁) is a candy made with peanuts.

Dried fruits and many unique cuisines can be found in Pasar Rame, which operates daily from morning to afternoon, just beside Thamrin Plaza.[51]

Bolu Meranti is Medan's most famous homemade Swiss roll, which local tourists frequently buy as a souvenir. The Medanese dried anchovies are also one of Medan's "must" souvenirs, which can be purchased from Pusat Pasar (Central Market).

Tourism

 
Tirtanadi Water Tower, one of the main icon of Medan, built in 1908

Landmarks

 
The peranakan Tjong A Fie Mansion

Many old buildings in Medan still retain their Dutch architecture. These include the old City Hall, the Medan Post Office, Inna Dharma Deli Hotel, Titi Gantung (a bridge over the railway), The London Sumatra building, the Tjong A Fie Mansion, AVROS, Warenhuis, and The Tirtanadi Water Tower, mainly located around the old town Kesawan.

There are several historical places such as Maimoon Palace, built in 1887–1891, where the Sultan of Deli still lives (the Sultan no longer holds any official power), The Great Mosque of Medan, built-in 1906 in the Moroccan style by the Dutch architect A.J. Dingemans.[52] Both Maimoon Palace and The Great Mosque are close—the Mosque is located at Jalan Sisingamangaraja, and The Palace is located at Jalan Brigjen Katamso.

Gunung Timur Temple, locally known as Tông-Yuk-Kuàng in Hokkien, is the city's oldest Taoism temple on Jalan Hang Tuah. Medan has a Buddhist temple named Maha Vihara Maitreya and a Buddhist centre nearby called Maha Karuna Buddhist Centre (MKBC). This temple complex is one of Indonesia's most prominent non-historical Buddhist temples, both situated around the Cemara Asri housing complex. Medan Cathedral is the oldest church in the city, it was built by the Dutch and Indian community nearby, and the church was named Indische Kerk back then, located in the old town along Jalan Pemuda. Sri Mariamman Temple is the first Hindu temple in Medan, built around 1881 by The Tamil people in the city; located on Jalan Zainul Arifin, The city's Little India or more known as Kampung Madras, the temple has unique south Indian architecture with hundred Hindu deity statues around the building.

In 2005, a Catholic church named Graha Maria Annai Velangkanni was built in an Indo-Mogul style, devoted to Mary; the particular Saint knows its origin with an apparition in 17th century Tamil Nadu, India. The temple has two stories and a small tower of seven novels. It is situated on Jalan Sakura III, besides the outer ring road on Jalan TB Simatupang.[citation needed]

Shopping centre

Medan is one of the major shopping centres of Indonesia, along with Jakarta, Bandung and Surabaya.

 
DeliPark Mall

Medan also has several modern shopping malls:

  • Cambridge City Square
  • Centre Point
  • DeliPark Mall
  • Focal Point
  • Lippo Plaza Mall
  • Manhattan Times Square
  • Medan Mall
 
Sun Plaza front view
  • Plaza Medan Fair
  • Ringroad City Walks
  • Sun Plaza
  • Thamrin Plaza

Theme parks

There are some theme parks in or outside the city, and most are water parks.

  • HillPark GreenHill City[53] – the latest theme park an hour from Medan on the way to Berastagi.
  • Pantai Cermin Themepark – the first and only water theme park in North Sumatra, located in Cermin Beach, Serdang Bedagai. A Malaysian Investor and the Local Government organize the theme park.
  • Wonder Water World – the latest water park in Medan, located in Central Business District Polonia.
  • Hairos Water Park – another water park near the city, located on Jalan Djamin Ginting Km.14, Deli Serdang.

Transportation

Medan is connected by road, air, rail and sea.

Airport

The new Kualanamu International Airport (KNO) was opened on 25 July 2013. The new airport is the second largest after Soekarno-Hatta International Airport, with a 224,298 m2 (2,414,324 sq ft) passenger terminal and will eventually have a capacity of 50 million passengers (2030). It is Indonesia's first airport with direct rail links to the city. The airport is the hub for Garuda Indonesia, Indonesia AirAsia, Lion Air, Susi Air and Wings Air.[54] The new airport is a replacement for the Polonia Airport. Unlike the old Polonia Airport in the city's heart, this new airport is approximately 39 km (24 mi) from downtown. The airport has direct domestic flights to many major cities in Sumatra and Java—international flights to Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, etc. An airport train known as Kualanamu Airport, Rail Link Services, connects the airport to the city centre. The train runs from Medan Main Station beside the Merdeka Square at Jalan Balai Kota from 4:00 a.m. to 08:00 p.m. and from the airport from 5:25 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. It is the fastest way to reach the airport from the city, taking 30 minutes. Alternate modes of transport from the airport into the city may take longer (30 to 47 minutes).

Seaport

 
The new Bandar Deli port in Belawan

The Port of Belawan (Pelabuhan Belawan) is the principal seaport in Medan. Located on the northeast coast of Sumatra, Belawan is 12 mi (19 km) north of Medan city and serves as a port, the terminus of a railway that crosses the channel south of the island by a bridge.[55]

The port was initially built in 1890 to provide a location where tobacco could be transferred directly between rail lines from the interior and deep-draft ships. The harbour expanded in 1907 by constructing a new section for Chinese and indigenous traders, reserving the existing port for European shipping. In the early twentieth century, the port's business expanded with the growth of significant rubber and palm oil plantations in northern Sumatra. In the 1920s, several major berthing facilities were built. In 1938, the port was the largest in the Dutch East Indies regarding cargo value. Cargo volumes dropped substantially after Indonesian independence and reached pre-independence levels again in the mid-1960s. A major restructuring in 1985 saw the construction of a container terminal; it almost immediately captured about one-fifth of Indonesia's containerized exports. Major products exported include rubber, palm oil, tea, and coffee.[56]

There are two port terminals, one for passenger and ferry services to Penang and Langkawi and some Indonesian cities such as Batam, Jakarta and Surabaya. Another airport, Belawan International Container Terminal (BICT), is used for export and import services. BICT is one of the largest shipping industry ports in Indonesia.

Road and highway

 
The Amplas toll plaza

Medan is connected by the Trans-Sumatran Highway, the main road across Sumatra, and the Belawan-Medan-Tanjung Morawa Toll Road, also known as the Belmera Toll Road, connecting Belawan, Medan and Tanjung Morawa. Toll roads have been linked to the city to the airport, Binjai, and Tebing Tinggi.

Railway

 
Sri Lelawangsa commuter rail departing from Medan station
 
Railink Airport train in Medan station

Railway lines connect Medan to Binjai and Tanjungpura to the northwest, the port of Belawan to the north, and Tebing Tinggi and Pematang Siantar to the southeast and also Rantau Prapat, among other cities. The largest train station in Medan is Medan Station. There are also smaller stations in Medan, such as Medan Pasar, Pulu Brayan, Titi Papan, Labuhan, and Belawan. Titi Papan and Pulu Brayan only serve as the stop for freight trains carrying oil palm and petroleum. An express train also connects to other North Sumatra cities such as Tebing Tinggi, Pematang Siantar, Tanjungbalai, and Rantau Prapat. An elevated railway is already constructed and operates over several rail lines around Medan to avoid level crossings and reduce traffic congestion.[57]

Long-distance trains from the Medan Station are:

The Kualanamu Airport Railink Services train is an airport express train connecting from Medan Station (City Railway Station – CRS) to Kualanamu International Airport Station (Airport Railink Station – ARS), operated 18 hours (from 5 am to 11 pm) with 30-minute distances. An elevated railway is constructed and working to make this airport rail service 15-minute distances. The CRS provides city check-in services for selected airlines.

Public transport

One of the endangered features of Medan is the motorized rickshaws known as a becak motor (bentor) or becak mesin, although bicycle rickshaws are also available. Becaks are found almost everywhere. Unlike the Javanese rickshaws, the driver sits on the right side of the vehicle and can take its passenger anywhere in the city. The fare to ride a becak is relatively cheap and is usually negotiated beforehand. Ride-sharing services Gojek and Grab are available and widely used for public transportation.

There is also more public transport like taxis, but the locals use minibuses known as sudako or angkutan kota (angkot). Angkots can be found easily on medium-to-high congested roads. Angkots follow their route numbers, usually printed or painted on the vehicle. The routes are not explicitly listed or written but are typically spread on a word-of-mouth basis by the locals.

TransMebidang and Trans Metro Deli are two bus rapid transit system in Medan and its nearby urban areas that has several active corridors:

  • Trans Mebidang
Corridor Origin–Destination
1 Medan – Binjai
2 Medan – Lubuk Pakam
 
The Trans Metro Deli Bus
  • Trans Metro Deli
Corridor Origin–Destination
1 Pinang Baris - Lapangan Merdeka
2 Amplas - Lapangan Merdeka
3 Belawan - Lapangan Merdeka
4 Medan Tuntungan – Lapangan Merdeka
5 Tembung - Lapangan Merdeka

Media

Medan serves several radio and TV channels and is also home to newspapers in local and foreign languages such as Indonesian, English, Chinese, Batak, Malay and others.

Television channels

Medan has many television stations; there are public and private national networks and local channels. Local stations, including the public TVRI Sumatera Utara (a regional station serving North Sumatra, which is headquartered in the city) and; as well as a local variation of

  • CNN Indonesia
  • TVRI Medan
  • Indosiar
  • MNCTV
  • Trans TV
  • ANtv
  • GTV
  • RCTI
  • SCTV
  • tvOne
  • Magna TV HD
  • Metro TV
  • Trans7
  • NET. – 43 UHF
  • iNews – 45 UHF
  • DAAI TV – 49 UHF
  • RTV 53 UHF
  • MYTV – 55 UHF
  • Kompas TV – 59 UHF
  • CTV Network - 61 UHF

Radio

RRI Medan is the only public radio in Medan. Several local languages are also served on the radio, such as Kardopa Radio (in the Batak language), CityRadio FM and A-Radio FM (in the Chinese language) and Symphony FM (in the Malay language). Medan also has several popular radio networks and stations like Prambors FM, MNC Trijaya FM, I-Radio, KISS FM, VISI FM, Delta FM and others.

Publications

Several national and local newspapers are available in the city, with Mimbar Umum as the oldest. Major newspapers based in Medan include Waspada, Analisa, Jurnal Medan, Berita Sore, Harian Global, Harian Medan Bisnis, Posmetro Medan, Sinar Indonesia Baru, and Tribun Medan. There is also some national Mandarin newspaper such as Harian Indonesia (印尼星洲日报), Guo Ji Ri Bao (国际日报) and Shangbao (印尼商报). English newspapers like The Jakarta Post are also distributed in the city.

Aplaus Magazine is one of the magazines from the city, published monthly and focuses on food, travel, and inspiration. The magazine is the pioneer of a local magazine that discusses urban lifestyle. First published in 2005, Aplaus Magazine is managed by Analisa daily.

Sport

Football is one of the most popular sports in Medan, with five local clubs: Persatuan Sepakbola Medan dan Sekitarnya (known as PSMS Medan), Medan Jaya, Medan Chiefs, Bintang PSMS and Medan United; and a basketball club named Angsapura Sania. Another locally popular sport is Wushu, with significant growth in recent years as one of the favourite sports in Medan. It has its training centre in Jalan Plaju in the heart of town. Medan has recently seen much success in Wushu nationally and internationally.

Medan has a multi-purpose stadium named Teladan Stadium. This stadium is used primarily for football matches and as a home stadium for PSMS Medan.

Healthcare

 
St. Elisabeth Hospital
 
Murni Teguh Hospital

Medan has more than 30 registered hospitals. Three of them are public and the rest are private:

  • Pirngadi General Hospital
  • Adam Malik General Hospital
  • Haji General Hospital
  • St. Elisabeth Hospital
  • Martha Friska Hospital
  • Columbia Asia Hospital
  • Permata Bunda Hospital
  • Murni Teguh Hospital
  • Advent Hospital
  • Siloam-Dhirga Surya Hospital
  • Imelda Hospital
  • Vina Estetica Hospital
  • Stella Maris Hospital
  • Putri Hijau Military Hospital
  • Mitra Sejati General Hospital
  • Bunda Thamrin Hospital
  • Royal Prima Hospital
  • Methodist Hospital
  • Sumatra Eye Center

Education

 
The State University of Medan, a postgraduate campus

As the largest city outside Java island, Medan provides more than 827 registered elementary schools, 337 middle Schools and 288 high schools, including state-owned, private, religious, and international schools. Medan also has 72 registered universities,[58] academies, polytechnics, and colleges such as:

Elementary, Middle, and High Schools

Several knowns schools in Medan such as:

Medan was previously the site of the Medan Japanese International School or Medan Japanese School (メダン日本人学校, Indonesian: Sekolah Internasional Jepang, Medan), an overseas school for Japanese children.[60] It was affiliated with the Japanese Consulate General in Medan, and occupied a 481.88 m2 (5,186.9 sq ft) building on a 1,880 m2 (20,200 sq ft) property.[60] It originated as a supplementary school in the consulate's library that opened in April 1972 (Showa 49). A committee to establish a new day school was created in 1978 (Showa 54), and in January 1979 (Showa 55) the school remodeled an existing building for this purpose. The school opened in April 1979.[61] It closed in March 1998.[62]

Universities and Colleges

International relations

Consulates

Medan host several consulates and general consulates from foreign countries,[65] such as:

Twin towns – sister cities

Medan is twinned with:[81]

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External links

  •   Media related to Medan at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Medan travel guide from Wikivoyage
  •   Medan at Wikinews
  •   The dictionary definition of Medan at Wiktionary
  •   Geographic data related to Medan at OpenStreetMap
  • (in Indonesian)
  • (in Indonesian)

medan, this, article, about, city, indonesia, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, august, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, indonesian, pronunciation, . This article is about the city in Indonesia For other uses see Medan disambiguation This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Medan Indonesian pronunciation meˈdan listen English m e d ɑː n is the capital and largest city of the Indonesian province of North Sumatra 7 as well as a regional hub and financial centre of Sumatra According to the National Development Planning Agency Medan is one of the four main central cities of Indonesia alongside Jakarta Surabaya and Makassar 8 9 As of the 2020 Census Medan has a population of 2 435 252 within its city limits 10 11 and over 3 4 million in its built up urban area making it the fourth largest urban area in Indonesia 12 The Medan metropolitan area which includes neighbouring Binjai Deli Serdang Regency and a part of Karo Regency is the largest metropolitan area outside of Java with 4 744 323 residents counted in the 2020 Census 13 Medan is a multicultural metropolis and a busy trading city bordered by the Strait of Malacca making it one of the major economic cities in Indonesia A gateway to the western part of Indonesia Medan is supported by the Port of Belawan and Kualanamu International Airport Both which are connected to the city centre via toll roads and railways MedanCityCity of MedanKota MedanFrom top left to right Medan Central Business DistrictGreat Mosque of MedanMaimun PalaceSun PlazaTjong A Fie MansionMedan Old City Hall BuildingTirtanadi Water TowerSri Mariamman Templeand London Sumatra building in KesawanFlagCoat of armsNickname Parijs van Sumatra Dutch 1 2 Motto s Bekerja sama dan sama sama bekerja Working together and everybody work Location within North SumatraInteractive map of MedanMedanLocation in Sumatra and IndonesiaShow map of SumatraMedanMedan Indonesia Show map of IndonesiaCoordinates 03 35 22 N 98 40 26 E 3 58944 N 98 67389 E 3 58944 98 67389 Coordinates 03 35 22 N 98 40 26 E 3 58944 N 98 67389 E 3 58944 98 67389Country IndonesiaProvince North SumatraFounded1 July 1590Government MayorBobby Nasution Vice MayorAulia Rachman id Chairman of City s Council of RepresentativesHasyim Huang Kien Lim PDI P Vice Chairmen of City s Council of RepresentativesIhwan Ritonga Gerindra Rajuddin Sagala Prosperous Justice Party and HT Bahrumsyah National Mandate Party Area City265 10 km2 102 36 sq mi Urban478 km2 185 sq mi Metro2 831 97 km2 1 093 43 sq mi Elevation2 5 37 5 m 8 123 ft Population 2020 Census City2 435 252 4th Density9 186 km2 23 790 sq mi Urban 3 3 632 000 4th Urban density7 598 km2 19 680 sq mi Metro 4 4 744 323 5th Metro density1 675 km2 4 340 sq mi Demonym s MedaneseMedaniteDemographics 5 Ethnic groupsBatak Javanese Chinese Malay Indian ReligionIslam Christianity Buddhism Hinduism ConfucianismTime zoneUTC 7 IWST Area code 62 61Vehicle registrationBKNominal GDP 5 2019 TotalRp 241 5 trillion 4th US 17 1 billion US 56 1 billion PPP Per capitaRp 105 908 thousand 13th US 7 490US 24 620 PPP Growth6 0 HDI 2019 0 809 21st very high 6 Websitepemkomedan wbr go wbr idThe city was founded by Guru Patimpus a Karonese man who named the area of swampy land at the confluence of Deli River and Babura river Kampung Medan Putri It later became a part of the Deli Sultanate established in 1632 In the late 19th century colonial Dutch seeking new plantation areas chose Medan and Deli as the most recent plantation hubs with Deli Company They set up tobacco plantations transforming Medan into a trade hub within several years and earning Medan the nickname Het Land Dollar meaning the land of the money The city was well known due to the importance of tobacco as an export to Europe and the West The rapid development of Medan came with the Deli Railway which was established for shipping tobacco rubber tea timber palm oil and sugar from Medan to the Port of Belawan then exported around the world Medan was the capital of the State of East Sumatra before it became the provincial capital of North Sumatra Medan was dubbed Parijs van Sumatra due to the city s resemblance to Paris citation needed Medan is a financial trading and economic centre for North Sumatra province and the whole of Sumatra Island For many foreign investors Medan is rich in culture and history and presents itself as a dynamic economic hub of the world As the robust capital of North Sumatra Medan offers a large pool of human capital and talent lower operational costs a strategic location close to Singapore and Malaysia and diverse natural resources The city is known as a trading hub for palm oil export North Sumatra has approximately 4 million acres of palm oil plantations Medan is one of the developed markets in trading About 60 of the economy in North Sumatra is backed by trading agriculture and processing industries 14 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Aru Kingdom 2 2 Founding of Medan 2 3 Deli Sultanate 2 4 Dutch East Indies era 2 4 1 Tobacco plantations 2 4 2 Growth of Medan Deli 2 5 Japanese occupation and post independence era 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 4 Governance 4 1 Mayor 4 2 Administrative divisions 5 Demographics 5 1 Ethnicities and languages 5 2 Religion 6 Economy 7 Culture 7 1 Museum 7 2 Cuisine 8 Tourism 8 1 Landmarks 8 2 Shopping centre 8 3 Theme parks 9 Transportation 9 1 Airport 9 2 Seaport 9 3 Road and highway 9 4 Railway 9 5 Public transport 10 Media 10 1 Television channels 10 2 Radio 10 3 Publications 11 Sport 12 Healthcare 13 Education 13 1 Elementary Middle and High Schools 13 2 Universities and Colleges 14 International relations 14 1 Consulates 14 2 Twin towns sister cities 15 References 16 External linksEtymology EditAccording to the diary of a Portuguese merchant in the early 16th century the name of Medan was derived from the Tamil word Maidhan also known as Maidhaṉam Tamil ம த னம that means Ground adopted from the Malay language One of the Karo Indonesia dictionaries written by Darwin Prinst SH published in 2002 stated that Medan could also be defined as recover or be better History EditAru Kingdom Edit Main article Aru Kingdom The area in and around Medan city Deli and Langkat Regency was the location of the ancient Kingdom of Aru Haru The Karo people established the kingdom and flourished between the 13th and 16th centuries 15 Several archaeological sites around Medan are connected to the Kingdom of Aru including Kota Rentang in the Hamparan Perak area Deli Serdang Regency 16 the Kota Cina archaeological site in Medan Marelan 17 and Benteng Putri Hijau a fort ruin in Deli Tua Namorambe Deli Serdang Regency 18 Founding of Medan Edit Guru Patimpus statue in Medan the founder of the city Medan started as a village called Kampung Medan Medan Village Kampung Medan was founded by Guru Patimpus Sembiring Pelawi a Karonese man from the Karo Land Before he became a Muslim he was a Pemena follower Following the history of trombo and Hamparan Perak XII Kuta Guru Patimpus studied Islam from Datuk Kota Bangun At the time Guru Patimpus and his people wanted to meet Datuk Not only did they want to meet him but they also wanted to compete with him for power Whenever Guru Patimpus went to Kota Bangun he always passed Pulo Brayan In Pulo Brayan Guru Patimpus fell in love with the Princess of Pulo Brayan Eventually he married the princess and had two sons Kolok and Kecik The married couple then turned the forest area in the confluence between the Deli River and Babura River into a small village naming it Kampung Medan lit Medan Village The day has been marked as the date of Medan s anniversary 1 July 1590 citation needed Guru Patimpus sent his children to study and read the Qur an to Datuk Kota Bangun and then sent them to Aceh to deepen their knowledge of Islam In the early days the natives called the area the Land of Deli Indonesian Tanah Deli starting from the Ular River to the Wampu River in Langkat At the same time the Deli Sultanate in power did not cover the area between the two rivers Early Kampung Medan was a fortress composed of two layers of round shaped walls at a confluence between two rivers of Deli and Babura The Administrator s house was located across the river from Kampung Medan Kampung Medan is in the modern day location of the Wisma Benteng building and the Administrator house is in present day PTP IX Deli Tobacco Deli Sultanate Edit Main article Deli Sultanate In 1612 the Acehnese Sultan Iskandar Muda defeated the Aru Kingdom The Acehnese appointed Hisyamsudin later changing his name to Tuanku Gocah Pahlawan with Laksamana Kuda Bintan as their representative in the kingdom In 1632 Aceh established the Deli Sultanate and Gocah Pahlawan became the first king As the Deputy of the Sultan of Aceh and by utilizing the large size of the Aceh Sultanate Gocah Pahlawan expanded his territory covering the modern day Percut Sei Tuan and Medan Deli district He founded the villages of Gunung Barus Sampali Kota Bangun Pulo Brayan Kota Jawa Kota Rengas and Sigara gara He died in 1669 and was succeeded by his son Tuangku Panglima Perunggit who moved the kingdom s centre to Labuhan Deli which then proclaimed the independence of the Deli Sultanate from the Aceh Sultanate in 1669 During the reign of the third king Tuanku Panglima Paderap the kingdom was moved to Pulo Brayan due to floods The fourth king Tuanku Panglima Pasutan organized the empire into four tribes each led by a Datuk a Malay title for high ranking persons During the time of the fifth king Tuanku Panglima Gandar Wahib the Datuks increased their power Sultan Amaluddin the sixth sultan leaving the Great Mosque on his coronation day in February 1925 Crowd in front of the Maimun Palace the Sultan of Deli s palace 1925 The sixth ruler was Sultan Amaluddin Mengedar Alam During his years the Siak Sultanate became a more substantial influence in Deli than the Acehnese Sultanate and the ruler was given the title Sultan The seventh ruler was Sultan Osman Perkasa Alam During his leadership the Deli Sultanate became autonomous The eighth ruler Sultan Mahmud Al Rasyid Perkasa Alam started relations with the Dutch The next ruler was Sultan Ma mun Al Rashid Perkasa Alamyah who ruled from 1873 to 1924 when the tobacco trade expanded He moved the kingdom s capital to Medan and finished the construction of the Maimun Palace in 1888 He also built the grand mosque of Al Ma shun commonly known as the Great Mosque of Medan in 1907 He became known as the builder of early Medan in cooperation with the Dutch and Tjong Yong Hian and Tjong A Fie two Chinese businessmen brothers and Kapitans who built a large plantation business in Deli They brought Medan Deli new developments including business centres such as banks offices plantations housing a railroad and a port The tenth Sultan Amaluddin Al Sani Perkasa Alamsyah expanded harbours with commerce increasing during his reign At the declaration of Indonesian Independence the Sultan recognized the republic s sovereignty and was in return given an essential function as administrator of Deli Malay traditions and culture The Sultanate of Deli still exists today although administrative powers have been replaced with elected Mayors The current sultan is Sultan Mahmud Lamanjiji Perkasa Alam the 14th sultan rulung since 2005 At age eight he became the youngest Sultan of Deli Dutch East Indies era Edit Sultan Ma mun ninth Sultan of Deli Sultanate during his reign Medan was openly cooperated with colonial Tjong A Fie one of Kapitan in Medan philanthropist and contributor to Medan early development Jacob Nienhuys founder of tobacco producer Deli Company who bring major development of Medan An aerial view of Port of Belawan 1920s The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 meant more intensified traffic between Europe and the Far East The Dutch started the shipping company Stoomvaart Maatschappij Nederland which quickly expanded to 43 steamships in 1877 The British however had already had 3 000 ships A journey from Europe to Indonesia took approximately 40 days and the trip was reduced to 23 days and 20 hours to Batavia Jakarta The ships also became more extensive and more comfortable This increased to cruise ships carrying predominantly white Europeans coming to the Dutch East Indies as tourists for a tour of the region including Medan the largest tobacco plantation in the Dutch East Indies at the time To accommodate the tourists it was deemed necessary to have European class hotels Therefore in 1898 a Dutch businessman named Aeint Herman de Boer built Hotel de Boer in the northwest of the Esplanade now Lapangan Merdeka Medan Kesawan Road circa 1900 Exports depended on British shipping in 1890 when Sabang became a bunker harbour Belawan got its port in 1923 The shipping company Koninklijke Paketvaart Maatschappij KPM was established to ship valuable Deli Company tobacco which was sent to Batavia This cargo was almost as valuable and stringent rules regulated its handling It was strictly forbidden to stow anything on top of the tobacco and coolies were not allowed to walk on it when they worked in the hatches citation needed Cleaning of roads in Medan was until 1912 done by prisoners After that free coolies got the job In 1917 the authorities started to use horse drawn carts equipped with brooms for cleaning In 1928 horse drawn carts were replaced by motorized vehicles The first newspaper was the Deli Courant established in 1885 although it was not a daily publication In 1898 Joseph Hallermann a German established the daily De Sumatra Post which survived until 1939 There were planters in Medan from many countries Britain the Netherlands America France Germany Poland and Switzerland Many of them became very rich and led affluent lifestyles Medan became known as the Paris of Sumatra lit Parijs van Sumatra Dutch Until today the area in downtown Medan is called Polonia a name given by a Polish aristocrat who once owned a plantation there One area of Medan is still called Helvetia the old name of Switzerland A plantation owner from Switzerland gave this name Tobacco plantations Edit Medan developed rapidly in the 1860s when Dutch authorities began to release new land for tobacco plantations Jacob Nienhuys Van der Falk and Elliot Dutch tobacco merchants pioneered the opening of the tobacco plantation in Deli Nienhuys previous tobacco business in Java moved to Deli after an invitation by an Arab from Surabaya named Said Abdullah Bilsagih brother in law of the Deli Sultan Mahmud Perkasa Alam Initially Nienhuys cultivated tobacco on 4 000 hectares of land in Tanjong Spassi near Labuhan owned by the Sultan of Deli In March 1864 Nienhuys sent samples of his tobacco crop to Rotterdam Netherlands to test its quality The tobacco leaves were considered high quality for cigar materials Hence Deli s name rose as a producer of the best cigar wrappers for Europeans Coat of arms of Medan during colonial era adopted in 1886 showing tobacco plant as the charge Coolies working in the seedbeds on a tobacco plantation in Medan c 1900s The Sultan of Deli and the Dutch 1865 signed the tobacco treaty After two years Nienhuys Jannsen P W Clemen and Cremer founded De Deli Maatschappij abbreviated Deli Mij in Labuhan In 1869 Nienhuys moved the head office of Deli Mij to Kampung Medan The new office was built on the confluence of the Deli and Babura rivers With the transfer of the office Medan quickly became the centre of government activity and trade as well as an area with the most dominant development in western Indonesia The rapid growth of the economy transformed Deli into a significant trading centre nicknamed the land dollar the land of the dollar Then they opened up new plantations in the Martubung and Sunggal areas in 1869 and in Sungai Beras and Klumpang in 1875 bringing the total to 22 plantation companies in 1874 Given the activities of the tobacco trade Kampung Medan became increasingly crowded and developed into what is now known as Medan Deli The development of Medan Deli as a trading centre was followed by it becoming a centre of government In 1879 the Capital Assistant of Deli Residents moved from Labuhan to Medan On 1 March 1887 the capital of the Resident of East Sumatra also moved from Bengkalis to Medan Deli Sultanate Palace which was initially located in Kampung Bahari Labuhan and Pulo Brayan also moved with the completion of Maimoon Palace on 18 May 1891 Thus the Capital of Deli officially moved to Medan Growth of Medan Deli Edit Crossroad of Canton and Hakka street in Medan s Chinatown 1930 An aerial view of Medan 1920 Visible from the photo are the railway station the Esplanade now Merdeka Walk City Hall the Javasche Bank now Bank Indonesia post office Hotel de Boer and office of the Deli Maatschappij In 1915 the Residency of East Sumatra enhanced its status to Gubernermen In 1918 the city of Medan officially became Gemeente Municipal with Mayor Baron Daniel Mackay Based on the Acte van Schenking Grant Deed No 97 Notary J M de Hondt Junior dated 30 November 1918 the Sultan of Deli handed over the land of Medan Deli to the Gemeente thus officially becoming the region under the direct rule of the Dutch East Indies In the early days of this township Medan still consisted of four villages Kampung Kesawan Kampung Sungai Rengas Kampung Petisah Hulu and Kampung Petisah Hilir In 1918 there were 43 826 residents of Medan made up of 409 Europeans 35 009 Native Indonesians 8 269 Chinese and 139 East foreigners such as Indians Since then the Medan has developed more rapidly Various facilities were built Some of these include the Office of Experiment Stations named AVROS in Kampung Baru now RISPA the railway of Pangkalan Brandan Besitang Tirtanadi Water Tower American Consulate and Teacher school on Jl H M Yamin now Mingguan Soematra Pool Association Medan Central Market Grote Markt St Elizabeth Hospital Eye Hospital and Kebun Bunga Sports field Japanese occupation and post independence era Edit British Indian soldiers land in East Sumatra to help the Dutch end the Japanese occupation in Medan A biscuit factory in Medan in the late 1950s In 1942 the Japanese invaded the Dutch East Indies arriving in Sumatra by February Sumatra was placed under the command of the 25th Army based in Singapore 19 The Japanese landed in Tanjung Tiram Asahan and entered Medan by bicycles they bought from the people around them by bartering The transfer from Dutch to Japanese control was very chaotic and the natives took this opportunity to take revenge against the Dutch This situation was immediately brought under control by the Japanese Army by deploying the Kempetai The Japanese changed the municipal government to Medan Sico Municipal Government Civil servants at the Medan municipal level were named Hoyasakhi Following the surrender of Japan in 1945 Sumatra came under the authority of the South East Asia Command headed by British Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten On 17 August Sukarno proclaimed Indonesia s independence in Jakarta and appointed Muhammad Hasan as governor of Sumatra However news of the proclamation was only announced by Hasan in Medan on 30 September After allied troops landed in October clashes with armed Republicans led to the Battle of Medan 20 21 In December 1947 the Dutch established the State of East Sumatra with Medan as its capital in the area they controlled following Operation Product against the republicans This became part of the United States of Indonesia but was dissolved into the unitary republic of Indonesia in 1950 22 The city development remained stagnant until the 1970s when significant developments especially palm oil and rubber plantations made Medan the busiest city outside Java The transmigration program brought Javanese and Batak people to settle in the town as many people from Java and the rural province sought jobs From 4 to 8 May 1998 riots occurred in Medan due to the 1997 Asian financial crisis They began when demonstrations around many campuses for nearly two months with clashes between students and security forces resulting in the death of a student The next day the mobs became bigger targeting and attacking the business and trading sector leading to a racial riot Many shops and vehicles were burned and looted on several roads around the city mostly owned by Chinese residents As a result a curfew was imposed for more than two weeks until peace returned 23 On 5 September 2005 Mandala Airlines Flight 091 crashed a minute after takeoff from the old Polonia International Airport from Medan to Jakarta The aircraft stalled and crashed into a heavily populated residential area along Djamin Ginting road in Padang Bulan Of the 117 passengers and crews on board only 17 survived and an additional 49 civilians on the ground were killed 24 This flight accident led to the move to the newly built airport in Deli Serdang which was completed in 2012 named Kualanamu International Airport The move to the new airport relaxed height restriction laws in the city Geography EditMedan is in the northeastern part of Sumatra island in North Sumatra province Medan is a semi enclave within Deli Serdang Regency as Medan is bordered by Deli Serdang in the south east and west while Medan borders with the Strait of Malacca in the north Medan lies on the Deli River and Babura River banks which feed into a naturally sheltered harbour and then into the Straits of Malacca It has helped the city grow in significance as a trading port 25 Its elevation varies between 2 5 and 37 5 m 8 ft 2 in and 123 ft 0 in above sea level Medan is close to the Barisan Mountains located in the southern part of the city and close to volcanoes such as Sibayak Mountain and Sinabung Mountain 50 to 70 km 31 to 43 mi from the city Climate Edit Under the Koppen climate classification Medan features a tropical rainforest climate Af with no real dry season 26 However Medan has noticeably wetter and drier months with its driest month January on average seeing about one third of its wettest month October temperatures in the city average approximately 27 C 81 F throughout the year Annual precipitation in the Medan is around 2 200 mm 87 in Climate data for Medan Polonia elevation 27 m or 89 ft 1977 1994Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 35 95 36 1 97 0 36 1 97 0 37 2 99 0 36 1 97 0 37 2 99 0 37 2 99 0 37 2 99 0 36 1 97 0 35 95 35 95 34 4 93 9 37 2 99 0 Average high C F 31 6 88 9 32 90 32 7 90 9 32 9 91 2 33 4 92 1 33 3 91 9 32 9 91 2 33 3 91 9 31 9 89 4 31 7 89 1 31 88 30 9 87 6 32 3 90 1 Daily mean C F 25 5 77 9 26 1 79 0 26 6 79 9 27 2 81 0 27 2 81 0 26 9 80 4 26 9 80 4 26 9 80 4 26 6 79 9 26 1 79 0 26 1 79 0 25 8 78 4 26 5 79 7 Average low C F 22 2 72 0 22 6 72 7 23 2 73 8 23 5 74 3 23 3 73 9 23 6 74 5 23 5 74 3 22 8 73 0 22 2 72 0 22 6 72 7 23 73 22 5 72 5 22 9 73 2 Record low C F 18 3 64 9 18 3 64 9 18 3 64 9 19 4 66 9 18 3 64 9 17 2 63 0 16 1 61 0 18 3 64 9 18 8 65 8 17 7 63 9 15 5 59 9 18 3 64 9 15 5 59 9 Average rainfall mm inches 92 3 6 115 4 5 97 3 8 157 6 2 178 7 0 141 5 6 167 6 6 185 7 3 263 10 4 387 15 2 253 10 0 228 9 0 2 263 89 2 Average rainy days 14 19 13 18 22 15 13 17 24 22 20 19 216Mean monthly sunshine hours 129 6 141 0 153 1 131 2 134 8 157 9 153 9 143 9 123 1 116 3 104 8 98 1 1 587 7Source 1 World Meteorological Organization 27 and Worldwide Bioclimatic Classification System daily mean and record temperature 28 Source 2 WeatherOnline sun 2010 2019 29 Located in the central part of Deli Serdang Regency Medan is surrounded by satellite cities and towns such as Binjai Lubuk Pakam Tanjung Morawa Tembung Percut Sei Tuan and Labuhan Deli which help the city become a new urban area in Indonesia which known as Mebidang Medan Binjai Deli Serdang Governance Edit The old and former Medan City Hall building Mayor Edit Medan was governed by Abdillah from 2000 2008 However Indonesian Corruption Eradication Commission officials caught Abdillah and his vice mayor in 2008 Syamsul Arifin the Governor of North Sumatra Province appointed Affifudin Lubis as the acting mayor In 2009 Affifudin Lubis resigned and the Governor appointed Rahudman Harahap as a replacement Because Rahudman wanted to be a candidate in the 2010 mayoral election he too resigned from office Left with no choice Syamsul Arifin himself became the acting mayor In the 2010 mayoral election Rahudman Harahap won the election However Rahudman was then arrested due to corruption resulting in his deputy Dzulmi Eldin officially becoming the acting mayor 30 In February 2016 Dzulmi won the election and became the mayor for five years 2016 2021 31 Currently Medan is led by Bobby Nasution as a mayor and Aulia Rachman as a vice mayor 32 Administrative divisions Edit District divisions of Medan Medan is divided into 21 districts Indonesian kecamatan tabulated below with their areas and populations at the 2010 Census 33 34 35 36 and the 2020 Census 11 The table also includes the number of administrative villages urban kelurahan in each district and their postal codes Name Area in km2 PopulationCensus2010 36 PopulationCensus2020 36 No ofvill PostalcodesMedan Tuntungan 20 68 80 942 97 249 9 20134 20141Medan Johor 14 58 123 851 151 756 6 20142 20146Medan Amplas 11 19 113 143 129 726 7 20147 20149 20219 amp 20229Medan Denai 9 05 141 395 169 643 6 20226 20228Medan Area 5 52 96 544 117 029 12 20211 20217Medan Kota 5 27 72 580 84 666 12 20211 20219Medan Maimun 2 98 39 581 49 231 6 20151 20159Medan Polonia 9 01 52 794 59 915 5 20152 20157Medan Baru 5 84 39 516 36 522 6 20153 20156Medan Selayang 12 81 98 317 103 176 6 20131 20133Medan Sunggal 15 44 112 744 129 063 6 20121 20128Medan Helvetia 13 16 144 257 164 910 7 20123 20126Medan Petisah 6 82 61 749 71 844 7 20112 20119Medan Barat 5 33 70 771 88 602 6 20111 20117Medan Timur 7 76 108 633 116 985 11 20231 20239Medan Perjuangan 4 09 93 328 103 813 9 20232 20237Medan Tembung 7 99 133 579 146 534 7 20221 20225Medan Deli 20 84 166 793 189 321 6 20241 20244Medan Labuhan 36 67 111 173 133 765 6 20251 20254 20524 amp 20525Medan Marelan 23 82 140 414 182 515 5 20250 20256Medan Kota Belawan 26 25 95 506 108 987 6 20411 20415Totals 265 10 2 097 610 2 435 252 151The city is centralised around Medan Petisah Medan Baru Medan Polonia Medan Maimun Medan Kota and Medan Barat West Medan which act as the city centres Medan Labuhan is one of the largest districts by area together with Medan Belawan and Medan Marelan and lies in the northern part of the city Medan Tuntungan serves as the gateway to Karo Regency Medan Helvetia to Binjai City and Langkat and Medan Amplas to Tebing Tinggi and Pematang Siantar The 21 districts are subdivided into 151 neighbourhoods or urban villages kelurahan Demographics EditThe city is Indonesia s fourth most populous after Jakarta Surabaya and Bandung and Indonesia s largest city outside Java island The population within the city s borders has risen from 568 000 in 1968 37 fourfold to 2 1 million in 2010 and rose again to 2 435 252 at the 2020 Census Much of the population lies outside its city limits especially in Deli Serdang Regency The official Metropolitan area Wilayah Metropolitan Medan was inhabited by 4 220 439 people in 2010 but had risen to 4 744 323 in 2020 Administrativedivision Area in km2 PopulationCensus2010 PopulationCensus2020 Pop ndensity km2 RefMedan City 265 10 2 097 610 2 435 252 9 186 38 Binjai City 90 23 246 154 279 302 3 095 38 Deli Serdang Regency 2 241 68 1 790 431 1 931 441 862 38 Karo Regency part 234 96 86 244 98 328 418 38 Greater Medan 2 831 97 4 220 439 4 744 323 1 675 38 The four districts of Karo Regency within the metropolitan area are Merdaka Berastagi Dolat Rayat and Barusjahe Ethnicities and languages Edit Batak including Mandailing and Karo people and Javanese are the major ethnic groups in Medan along with Chinese Minangkabau and Malay populations and smaller groups of Acehnese Indians Nias and Sundanese people Medan also has foreign residents from India Sri Lanka Bangladesh Thailand China Taiwan the Middle East and other Asian countries 39 Women representatives of Minang Batak Karo Malay Chinese Javanese and Indian are giving a floral tribute to the pilots of the first commercial flight from Holland to Batavia via Medan in front of the townhall in Medan 1924 Ethnicities of Medan 39 Ethnic group PercentageBatak 34 39 Javanese 33 03 Chinese 10 65 Minangkabau 8 60 Malays 6 59 Acehnese 2 78 Others 3 96 An Indian local Malay and Batak seller in Kesawan Chinatown area taken around the 1940s The city has diverse communities reflected by its history The Bataks are one of the major ethnic groups in Medan with three Batak subethnicities residing in the town including the Toba Karo and Mandailing Bataks The Karo people are the natives of Medan Meanwhile the Dutch employed the Toba people as workers in oil palm plantations Lastly the Mandailing people came in masses after independence to find better jobs The Bataks reside throughout the city while the Karo people reside around southern areas such as Padang Bulan Medan Johor and Tuntungan Toba Batak people reside in Marindal and Amplas many live in nearby city centres such as the Medan Perjuangan district while the Mandailing people mainly reside in Medan Tembung Bataknese languages are diversified the primary Batak language in Medan are Batak and Karo In addition there is a large ethnic Javanese community primarily composed of descendants of people transported from Java in the last 19th century to be employed as contract workers at various plantations in North Sumatra They are usually called Pujakesuma Indonesian Putra Jawa Kelahiran Sumatera English Sumatra born Javanese Various Javanese toponymies can mark their presence in Medan in Medan such as Tanjungsari Sarirejo Sidodadi Sidorejo etc mainly in East Medan and Medan Tembung area most of them speak Javanese with its local variation The Malays are also natives of Medan already living in outskirt areas such as Belawan and Labuhan since the Aru era as fishermen They came to the city after Deli Sultanate s new palace was established in the 18th century Over time the Malays spread throughout the city with the most significant concentration of people living in Medan Maimun Kota Matsum Labuhan and Belawan many of them speaking Malay A prominent component of the city population is many Chinese who migrated from southern China to Deli in the 16th century with mass migration occurring in the last 19th and early 20th century for those seeking employment as planters and coolies Medan is home to the largest Chinese community on Sumatra island they are active in business and trading activities contributing significantly to the city s economy Unlike the Java born Chinese most Chinese people in Medan speak fluent Hokkien a dialect originating from Fujian a province in the southern part of China They also made their variation of Hokkien which is called Medan Hokkien with borrowed many local words Many also speak Mandarin Teochew and Cantonese depending on the language of their ancestors The Chinese reside throughout the city but most live around the city centre The city also hosts a sizable community of Indian Indonesian mostly Tamil descendants commonly known as Madrasis or Tamilan A well known Tamil neighbourhood is Kampung Madras which is located in the city centre and is heralded as one of the busiest parts of the city Minangkabaus are merchants peddlers artisans and white collar workers such as doctors lawyers and journalists Minangkabau restaurants known as Padang Restaurants are scattered throughout the city The Minang people came to Medan in the mid 19th century From the 1960s to the 1980s the number of Minangkabau people migrating to Medan surged and formed 8 6 of the population in the city Most of the Minangkabaus living around Medan Denai and Medan Maimun area speak Minangkabau 40 Acehnese are other minority ethnicities in Medan Many Aceh people mostly came after the conflict in Aceh in the late 1970s when they sought sanctuary Today they are known for working as merchants such as grocery store operators and can be found in Mie Aceh restaurants around Setia Budi and Ring Road Sunggal areas Most Aceh people speak Acehnese and Gayonese also exists among them Even though many languages exist in Medan most of them communicate with each other with their slang called Bahasa Medan or Dialek Medan Medanese slang made from Bahasa Indonesia with various words taken from its respective ethnics mainly from the Malay language the sounds of Medanese slang are pretty loud and harsh that sometimes offends their listeners Religion Edit Religion of Medan 2019 Census 41 Religion PercentIslam 65 78 Protestant 20 14 Buddhism 8 65 Catholic 4 63 Hinduism 0 79 Others 0 01 Most of Medan s inhabitants are Muslim comprising approximately 66 per cent of the total population There is a large significant Christian population of around 25 per cent including Catholic with various denominations including the Batak Christian Protestant Church Methodist and Lutheran Buddhists follow about 9 per cent and smaller numbers of Hindus Confucianism and Sikhism also exist in the city Medan hosts diversified houses of worship including a mosque church cathedral Buddhist temple vihara wat Hindu temple koil pura Taoist temple and a gurdwara Islam is followed by the Malay Minangkabau Javanese Mandailing Angkola and Achehnese people while the Bataknese majority follows Christianity There are also Bataknese following the traditional religion such as Pemena and Parmalim Buddhism is a significant religion for the Chinese while a small community follows Confucianism and Christianity Meanwhile Hinduism ais mostly followed by the Indians Al Osmani Mosque the oldest mosque in the city Immanuel Church one of oldest protestant church in the city Maha Vihara Maitreya Buddhist temple one of non historical largest Buddhist temple in Indonesia Sri Mariamman Temple main Hindu temple in Medan Gunung Timur Temple the oldest taoist temple in Sumatra island Graha Maria Annai Velangkanni catholic church designed with Dravidian architectureEconomy Edit The Bank Indonesia building in Medan The tall building behind is the Grand City Hall Hotel Medan is one of the largest metropolitan cities in Indonesia and has become the centre of growth in the province of North Sumatra The city is an important commercial and economic hub of Indonesia Locals and many foreigners have set up their businesses to take advantage of its dynamism and boost its economy Medan s economy was mainly based on tobacco rubber tea palm and coffee culture and production However growing manufacturing sectors such as automotive machinery production tiles paper and pulp etc also currently contribute to the city s economy bird view of Belawan Container Terminal With the enactment of Government Regulation No 28 2008 this metropolitan area has been recognized as one of the Indonesian National Strategic Regions Indonesian Kawasan Strategis Nasional or KSN Since then Medan City has continued to support a large portion of regional trade and logistic flow across the municipalities within this particular KSN and most of the western part of Indonesia RTR Metropolitan Mebidangro 2012 Currently Medan is the centre point for crop trading for different commodities produced in the region such as rubber palm oil cinnamon tobacco tea and coffee a significant portion of which have been exported to Europe North America and the Middle East In the global context Medan s geographical advantages have also played essential parts within a triangle alliance with Malaysia and Thailand Indonesia Malaysia Thailand Growth Triangle or IMT GT that enables mutual partnerships in tourism commerce culture health and education among the three countries 42 Medan is one of the most industrialized cities in Sumatra consisting of many small medium and large scale enterprises Because of its location and proximity to Singapore and Kuala Lumpur it functions strategically as the main gateway for trading goods and financial services on domestic regional and international levels in the western region of Indonesia Many multinational companies maintain offices in the city namely Asian Agri 43 London Sumatra 44 Musim Mas 45 Philips Lighting Toba Pulp Lestari Marriott Wilmar ABB Group and DBS Bank etc Medan is one of Indonesia s most promising property markets outside Java and several high value developments have transformed its property market and skyline Many of the country s big property developers are building condominiums hotels office towers and shopping malls in the city Medan is also known as the City of Million Shophouses as most of the population work in the trade sector opening shops near their houses In recent years the city has undergone rapid development which made the residential property prices in Medan trend upward 46 Lamudi a worldwide real estate portal recognized Medan as one of six cities in Asia to feature and preserve several colonial architectural sites while accompanying its growth as a metropolitan city 47 Medan is one of the largest metropolitan cities in Indonesia and has become the centre of change in the province of North Sumatra The city is an important commercial and economic hub of Indonesia Locals and many foreigners have set up their businesses to take advantage of its dynamism and boost its economy Medan s economy was mainly based on tobacco rubber tea palm and coffee culture and production However growing manufacturing sectors such as automotive machinery production tiles paper and pulp etc also currently contribute to the city s economy Downtown Medan in January 2019Culture EditMany different ethnic groups inhabit Medan Malay people are the natives of the Medan area and have deep roots in Medan They began ruling there during the Deli Sultanate until now The empire has many lands and properties of heritage in Medan such as a palace a mosque and a park The Dutch contributed significantly to city development including many historical buildings made by Dutch and Peranakan architecture along Jalan Kesawan and Pemuda during the Dutch East Indies era The arrival of Minangkabaus Bataks Javanese Chinese and Indian people brought more colours to the culture of Medan especially cuisine In addition to food culture the migrants also brought the story writing culture which was known as Roman Medan in the 1930s 1940s Romance novels by Medan writers usually tell the story of the life of the people in Deli Medan and its surroundings Several romance novel writers grew up in Medan including Hamka Joesoef Souyb Tamar Djaja Matu Mona and A Damhoeri 48 Museum Edit The North Sumatra Museum The North Sumatra Museum has located approximately 4 km 2 5 mi south of the city s centre in Jalan HM Joni 15 Medan The Minister of Education and Culture Dr Daoed Joesoef opened the museum in April 1982 It is mainly centred around North Sumatran ethnic groups and artefacts The Bukit Barisan Museum is a military museum opened by Brigade General Leo Lopulisa on 21 June 1971 The museum is located at 8 Jalan H Zainul Arifin It houses several historic weapons including weapons used in the struggle for independence and the revolt in North Sumatra in 1958 Motives paintings of the rebellion against the Netherlands were presented 49 The Rahmat International Wildlife Museum amp Gallery or the Rahmat Gallery opened in 1999 and is considered the city s outstanding taxidermy collection It is located on Jalan Letjen S Parman No 309 50 Cuisine Edit Soto Medan Several Bika Ambon Food stall seller in Jalan Selatpanjang Medan Because of its multiculturality Medan has various cuisines ranging from local western eastern and southern Asian and middle eastern cuisine The city also hosts a lot of cafes restaurants food centres and street vendors with varying price points Nelayan a famous restaurant in Medan serves halal Chinese seafood and dim sum Garuda and Uda Sayang are the most popular Minangkabau restaurant in Medan which helps nasi padang and gulai Meanwhile Sate Afrizal Amir is one of the best sate padang in Medan Cahaya Baru is an Indian restaurant on Kampung Madras with chapati and tandoori as its most recommended food The most visited Batak restaurant are OnDo Batak grill and Tesalonika known best for their babi panggang grilled pork and saksang This city is known as the culinary heaven of Indonesia as Medan is prominent for its street hawkers offering a variety of cheap local delicacies Medan has several well known culinary spots such as Jalan Selat Panjang and Jalan Semarang for Chinese food Jalan Pagaruyung for Indian and Malay food and Jalan Padang Bulan for Batak food Merdeka Walk is Indonesia s first tensile structure alfresco outdoor concept filled with various cafes and restaurants Durian is a popular fruit in Indonesia and nowhere more so than Medan With its distinctive taste and smell this thorny fruit is available all over the city Ucok Durian along Jalan Iskandar Muda is the most known durian stall in the town Soto Medan is a savoury stew made with various types of meat including innards that are fried beforehand and coconut milk It is usually served with rice and a piece of potato croquette perkedel Bika Ambon is a famous local dessert Made from tapioca flour eggs sugar yeast and coconut milk Bika Ambon is generally sold in pandan flavours although other flavours such as banana durian cheese and chocolate are also available Bika Ambon Zulaikha is the most known bika ambon seller and has several branches in the city Babi Panggang Karo often called BPK is grilled pork with its blood curd used as a dipping sauce It is usually served with plain rice and sambal andaliman a spicy condiment made from local Sichuan peppers The Chinese equivalent of grilled pork is called Cha Sio 叉烧 Tau Kua He Ci 豆干虾炸 also known as Lap Choi 腊菜 is the local Chinese version of Rojak often pronounced ru jak but made with fried prawn vegetables and tofu with chilli sauce Its other name is also calledTeng Teng 丁丁 is a candy made with peanuts Dried fruits and many unique cuisines can be found in Pasar Rame which operates daily from morning to afternoon just beside Thamrin Plaza 51 Bolu Meranti is Medan s most famous homemade Swiss roll which local tourists frequently buy as a souvenir The Medanese dried anchovies are also one of Medan s must souvenirs which can be purchased from Pusat Pasar Central Market Tourism Edit Tirtanadi Water Tower one of the main icon of Medan built in 1908 Landmarks Edit Main article List of colonial buildings in Medan See also List of tallest buildings in Medan The peranakan Tjong A Fie Mansion Many old buildings in Medan still retain their Dutch architecture These include the old City Hall the Medan Post Office Inna Dharma Deli Hotel Titi Gantung a bridge over the railway The London Sumatra building the Tjong A Fie Mansion AVROS Warenhuis and The Tirtanadi Water Tower mainly located around the old town Kesawan There are several historical places such as Maimoon Palace built in 1887 1891 where the Sultan of Deli still lives the Sultan no longer holds any official power The Great Mosque of Medan built in 1906 in the Moroccan style by the Dutch architect A J Dingemans 52 Both Maimoon Palace and The Great Mosque are close the Mosque is located at Jalan Sisingamangaraja and The Palace is located at Jalan Brigjen Katamso Gunung Timur Temple locally known as Tong Yuk Kuang in Hokkien is the city s oldest Taoism temple on Jalan Hang Tuah Medan has a Buddhist temple named Maha Vihara Maitreya and a Buddhist centre nearby called Maha Karuna Buddhist Centre MKBC This temple complex is one of Indonesia s most prominent non historical Buddhist temples both situated around the Cemara Asri housing complex Medan Cathedral is the oldest church in the city it was built by the Dutch and Indian community nearby and the church was named Indische Kerk back then located in the old town along Jalan Pemuda Sri Mariamman Temple is the first Hindu temple in Medan built around 1881 by The Tamil people in the city located on Jalan Zainul Arifin The city s Little India or more known as Kampung Madras the temple has unique south Indian architecture with hundred Hindu deity statues around the building In 2005 a Catholic church named Graha Maria Annai Velangkanni was built in an Indo Mogul style devoted to Mary the particular Saint knows its origin with an apparition in 17th century Tamil Nadu India The temple has two stories and a small tower of seven novels It is situated on Jalan Sakura III besides the outer ring road on Jalan TB Simatupang citation needed Shopping centre EditMedan is one of the major shopping centres of Indonesia along with Jakarta Bandung and Surabaya DeliPark Mall Medan also has several modern shopping malls Cambridge City Square Centre Point DeliPark Mall Focal Point Lippo Plaza Mall Manhattan Times SquareMedan Mall Sun Plaza front view Plaza Medan FairRingroad City Walks Sun Plaza Thamrin PlazaTheme parks Edit There are some theme parks in or outside the city and most are water parks HillPark GreenHill City 53 the latest theme park an hour from Medan on the way to Berastagi Pantai Cermin Themepark the first and only water theme park in North Sumatra located in Cermin Beach Serdang Bedagai A Malaysian Investor and the Local Government organize the theme park Wonder Water World the latest water park in Medan located in Central Business District Polonia Hairos Water Park another water park near the city located on Jalan Djamin Ginting Km 14 Deli Serdang Transportation EditMedan is connected by road air rail and sea Airport Edit Main article Kualanamu International Airport Kualanamu International Airport The new Kualanamu International Airport KNO was opened on 25 July 2013 The new airport is the second largest after Soekarno Hatta International Airport with a 224 298 m2 2 414 324 sq ft passenger terminal and will eventually have a capacity of 50 million passengers 2030 It is Indonesia s first airport with direct rail links to the city The airport is the hub for Garuda Indonesia Indonesia AirAsia Lion Air Susi Air and Wings Air 54 The new airport is a replacement for the Polonia Airport Unlike the old Polonia Airport in the city s heart this new airport is approximately 39 km 24 mi from downtown The airport has direct domestic flights to many major cities in Sumatra and Java international flights to Malaysia Singapore Thailand Saudi Arabia Sri Lanka etc An airport train known as Kualanamu Airport Rail Link Services connects the airport to the city centre The train runs from Medan Main Station beside the Merdeka Square at Jalan Balai Kota from 4 00 a m to 08 00 p m and from the airport from 5 25 a m to 9 30 p m It is the fastest way to reach the airport from the city taking 30 minutes Alternate modes of transport from the airport into the city may take longer 30 to 47 minutes Seaport Edit Main article Belawan The new Bandar Deli port in Belawan The Port of Belawan Pelabuhan Belawan is the principal seaport in Medan Located on the northeast coast of Sumatra Belawan is 12 mi 19 km north of Medan city and serves as a port the terminus of a railway that crosses the channel south of the island by a bridge 55 The port was initially built in 1890 to provide a location where tobacco could be transferred directly between rail lines from the interior and deep draft ships The harbour expanded in 1907 by constructing a new section for Chinese and indigenous traders reserving the existing port for European shipping In the early twentieth century the port s business expanded with the growth of significant rubber and palm oil plantations in northern Sumatra In the 1920s several major berthing facilities were built In 1938 the port was the largest in the Dutch East Indies regarding cargo value Cargo volumes dropped substantially after Indonesian independence and reached pre independence levels again in the mid 1960s A major restructuring in 1985 saw the construction of a container terminal it almost immediately captured about one fifth of Indonesia s containerized exports Major products exported include rubber palm oil tea and coffee 56 There are two port terminals one for passenger and ferry services to Penang and Langkawi and some Indonesian cities such as Batam Jakarta and Surabaya Another airport Belawan International Container Terminal BICT is used for export and import services BICT is one of the largest shipping industry ports in Indonesia Road and highway Edit The Amplas toll plaza Medan is connected by the Trans Sumatran Highway the main road across Sumatra and the Belawan Medan Tanjung Morawa Toll Road also known as the Belmera Toll Road connecting Belawan Medan and Tanjung Morawa Toll roads have been linked to the city to the airport Binjai and Tebing Tinggi Railway Edit See also Medan Station Sri Lelawangsa commuter rail departing from Medan station Railink Airport train in Medan station Railway lines connect Medan to Binjai and Tanjungpura to the northwest the port of Belawan to the north and Tebing Tinggi and Pematang Siantar to the southeast and also Rantau Prapat among other cities The largest train station in Medan is Medan Station There are also smaller stations in Medan such as Medan Pasar Pulu Brayan Titi Papan Labuhan and Belawan Titi Papan and Pulu Brayan only serve as the stop for freight trains carrying oil palm and petroleum An express train also connects to other North Sumatra cities such as Tebing Tinggi Pematang Siantar Tanjungbalai and Rantau Prapat An elevated railway is already constructed and operates over several rail lines around Medan to avoid level crossings and reduce traffic congestion 57 Long distance trains from the Medan Station are Sri Bilah to Rantau Prapat Lancang Kuning to Tanjungbalai Putri Deli to Tanjungbalai Siantar Express to Pematang Siantar Sri Lelawangsa commuter rail connects Medan Station to Binjai The Kualanamu Airport Railink Services train is an airport express train connecting from Medan Station City Railway Station CRS to Kualanamu International Airport Station Airport Railink Station ARS operated 18 hours from 5 am to 11 pm with 30 minute distances An elevated railway is constructed and working to make this airport rail service 15 minute distances The CRS provides city check in services for selected airlines Public transport Edit One of the endangered features of Medan is the motorized rickshaws known as a becak motor bentor or becak mesin although bicycle rickshaws are also available Becaks are found almost everywhere Unlike the Javanese rickshaws the driver sits on the right side of the vehicle and can take its passenger anywhere in the city The fare to ride a becak is relatively cheap and is usually negotiated beforehand Ride sharing services Gojek and Grab are available and widely used for public transportation There is also more public transport like taxis but the locals use minibuses known as sudako or angkutan kota angkot Angkots can be found easily on medium to high congested roads Angkots follow their route numbers usually printed or painted on the vehicle The routes are not explicitly listed or written but are typically spread on a word of mouth basis by the locals TransMebidang and Trans Metro Deli are two bus rapid transit system in Medan and its nearby urban areas that has several active corridors Trans MebidangCorridor Origin Destination1 Medan Binjai2 Medan Lubuk Pakam The Trans Metro Deli Bus Trans Metro DeliCorridor Origin Destination1 Pinang Baris Lapangan Merdeka2 Amplas Lapangan Merdeka3 Belawan Lapangan Merdeka4 Medan Tuntungan Lapangan Merdeka5 Tembung Lapangan MerdekaMedia Edit Medan Post Office Medan serves several radio and TV channels and is also home to newspapers in local and foreign languages such as Indonesian English Chinese Batak Malay and others Television channels Edit Medan has many television stations there are public and private national networks and local channels Local stations including the public TVRI Sumatera Utara a regional station serving North Sumatra which is headquartered in the city and as well as a local variation of CNN Indonesia TVRI Medan Indosiar MNCTV Trans TV ANtv GTV RCTI SCTV tvOne Magna TV HD Metro TV Trans7 NET 43 UHF iNews 45 UHF DAAI TV 49 UHF RTV 53 UHF MYTV 55 UHF Kompas TV 59 UHF CTV Network 61 UHFRadio Edit RRI Medan is the only public radio in Medan Several local languages are also served on the radio such as Kardopa Radio in the Batak language CityRadio FM and A Radio FM in the Chinese language and Symphony FM in the Malay language Medan also has several popular radio networks and stations like Prambors FM MNC Trijaya FM I Radio KISS FM VISI FM Delta FM and others Publications Edit Several national and local newspapers are available in the city with Mimbar Umum as the oldest Major newspapers based in Medan include Waspada Analisa Jurnal Medan Berita Sore Harian Global Harian Medan Bisnis Posmetro Medan Sinar Indonesia Baru and Tribun Medan There is also some national Mandarin newspaper such as Harian Indonesia 印尼星洲日报 Guo Ji Ri Bao 国际日报 and Shangbao 印尼商报 English newspapers like The Jakarta Post are also distributed in the city Aplaus Magazine is one of the magazines from the city published monthly and focuses on food travel and inspiration The magazine is the pioneer of a local magazine that discusses urban lifestyle First published in 2005 Aplaus Magazine is managed by Analisa daily Sport EditFootball is one of the most popular sports in Medan with five local clubs Persatuan Sepakbola Medan dan Sekitarnya known as PSMS Medan Medan Jaya Medan Chiefs Bintang PSMS and Medan United and a basketball club named Angsapura Sania Another locally popular sport is Wushu with significant growth in recent years as one of the favourite sports in Medan It has its training centre in Jalan Plaju in the heart of town Medan has recently seen much success in Wushu nationally and internationally Medan has a multi purpose stadium named Teladan Stadium This stadium is used primarily for football matches and as a home stadium for PSMS Medan Healthcare Edit St Elisabeth Hospital Murni Teguh Hospital Medan has more than 30 registered hospitals Three of them are public and the rest are private Pirngadi General Hospital Adam Malik General Hospital Haji General Hospital St Elisabeth Hospital Martha Friska Hospital Columbia Asia Hospital Permata Bunda Hospital Murni Teguh Hospital Advent Hospital Siloam Dhirga Surya Hospital Imelda Hospital Vina Estetica Hospital Stella Maris Hospital Putri Hijau Military Hospital Mitra Sejati General Hospital Bunda Thamrin Hospital Royal Prima Hospital Methodist Hospital Sumatra Eye CenterEducation Edit The State University of Medan a postgraduate campus As the largest city outside Java island Medan provides more than 827 registered elementary schools 337 middle Schools and 288 high schools including state owned private religious and international schools Medan also has 72 registered universities 58 academies polytechnics and colleges such as Elementary Middle and High Schools Edit Several knowns schools in Medan such as Chandra Kumala School Cinta Budaya School Chong Wen 中文学校 Medan Independent School Methodist High School 2 3 Medan Nanyang Zhi Hui School 南洋之晖学校 Perguruan Santo Thomas Medan Prime One School Singapore Intercultural Schools Medan SMA Negeri 1 Medan State owned High School SMA Negeri 2 Medan State owned High School SMA Negeri 3 Medan State owned High School SMA Negeri 4 Medan State owned High School SMP Negeri 18 Medan State owned Middle School Sutomo School 1 2 蘇東中學 59 Telkom Vocational School Medan Yayasan Pendidikan Shafiatul Amaliyah Yayasan Pendidikan Harapan Medan was previously the site of the Medan Japanese International School or Medan Japanese School メダン日本人学校 Indonesian Sekolah Internasional Jepang Medan an overseas school for Japanese children 60 It was affiliated with the Japanese Consulate General in Medan and occupied a 481 88 m2 5 186 9 sq ft building on a 1 880 m2 20 200 sq ft property 60 It originated as a supplementary school in the consulate s library that opened in April 1972 Showa 49 A committee to establish a new day school was created in 1978 Showa 54 and in January 1979 Showa 55 the school remodeled an existing building for this purpose The school opened in April 1979 61 It closed in March 1998 62 Universities and Colleges Edit Dharmawangsa University HKBP Nommensen University IT amp B Campus Medan State Polytechnic Medan Tourism Academy Mikroskil University Muhammadiyah University of North Sumatra Pelita Harapan University Prima University State University of Medan 63 STBA PIA 亚洲 国际友好学院 STIE Eka Prasetya Universitas Methodist Indonesia University of North Sumatra 64 University of Pembangunan Panca Budi Technology Institute of MedanInternational relations EditConsulates Edit Medan host several consulates and general consulates from foreign countries 65 such as Australia 66 Belgium 67 China 68 Denmark 69 Germany 70 India 71 Japan 72 Malaysia 73 Netherlands 74 Norway 75 Poland 76 Singapore 77 Thailand 78 Turkey 79 United States 80 Twin towns sister cities Edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Indonesia Medan is twinned with 81 Georgetown Penang Island Malaysia 10 October 1984 82 Ichikawa Chiba Prefecture Japan 4 November 1989 83 Gwangju South Jeolla Province South Korea 24 September 1997 84 Chengdu Sichuan Province China 17 December 2002 85 Milwaukee Wisconsin United States 30 October 2014 86 References Edit Medan Het Parijs van Sumatra Medan Paris di Sumatra Teknomuda in Indonesian 2 September 2017 Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 4 July 2020 Medan Sang Parijs van Sumatera BatakPedia in Indonesian 7 January 2020 Archived from the original on 4 July 2020 Retrieved 4 July 2020 Demographia World Urban Areas 16th Annual Edition PDF February 2020 Archived PDF from the original on 3 May 2018 Retrieved 24 June 2020 PU net perkotaan bpiw pu go id Archived from the original on 3 August 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2020 a b Badan Pusat Statistik Sumatra Utara 2020 Produk Domestik Regional Bruto Kabupaten kota di Sumatra Utara 2015 2019 Medan Badan Pusat Statistik Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2020 Badan Pusat Statistik bps go id Archived from the original on 5 February 2021 Retrieved 3 February 2021 Kumar Pankaj Mishra Binaya Kumar Avtar Ram Chakraborty Shamik 2021 Quantifying future water environment using numerical simulations a scenario based approach for sustainable groundwater management plan in Medan Indonesia Global Groundwater Elsevier pp 585 596 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 818172 0 00043 8 ISBN 9780128181720 S2CID 230551984 Medan is the capital city of North Sumatra province 26 Z Irian Jaya bappenas go id Word DOC in Indonesian Archived from the original on 5 July 2019 Retrieved 16 May 2019 Geografi ISBN 9789797596194 Archived from the original on 5 August 2020 Retrieved 19 August 2019 Jumlah Penduduk menurut Jenis Kelamin dan Kabupaten Kota Sumatra Utara 2011 2016 Badan Pusat Statistik Provinsi Sumatra Utara in Indonesian 3 October 2017 Archived from the original on 18 May 2019 Retrieved 8 April 2018 a b Badan Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2021 Demographia World Urban Areas 14th Annual Edition PDF April 2019 Archived PDF from the original on 7 February 2020 Retrieved 9 February 2020 PU net Archived from the original on 18 May 2019 Retrieved 18 May 2019 Medan Business Top Sectors Economies Business Setup 23 July 2021 Retrieved 12 July 2022 Dominik Bonatz John Miksic J David Neidel eds 2009 From Distant Tales Archaeology and Ethnohistory in the Highlands of Sumatra Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 0784 5 Archived from the original on 28 December 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Juraidi 23 August 2008 Menelusuri Jejak Kerajaan Aru Kompas com in Indonesian Archived from the original on 17 September 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2017 Museum Kota Cina Situs Awal Perdagangan Penting di Pantai Timur Sumatera Abad XI SeMedan com in Indonesian 3 January 2016 Archived from the original on 14 July 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2017 Repelita Wahyu Oetomo 8 June 2014 Benteng Putri Hijau Berdasarkan Data Sejarah dan Arkeologi in Indonesian Archived from the original on 28 January 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2017 Vickers Adrian 2013 A History of Modern Indonesia 2nd ed Cambridge University Press pp 86 90 ISBN 978 1 107 01947 8 Reid Anthony 2014 The Blood of the People Revolution amp the End of Traditional Rule in Northern Sumatra Singapore NUS Press ISBN 978 9971 69 637 5 Said H Mohammed April 1973 What was the Social Revolution of 1946 in East Sumatra PDF Indonesia Cornell University Indonesia Southeast Asia Program Publications 15 15 153 doi 10 2307 3350795 hdl 1813 53556 JSTOR 3350795 Archived PDF from the original on 30 October 2018 Retrieved 9 October 2019 Kahin George McTurnan 1970 Nationalism and Revolution in Indonesia Cornell University Press pp 225 461 463 ISBN 0 8014 9108 8 Archived from the original on 12 May 2016 Retrieved 9 October 2019 Shenon Philip 24 April 1994 Rioters Attack Ethnic Chinese In Indonesia The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 22 February 2023 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 737 230 PK RIM Medan Polonia Airport MES aviation safety net Aviation Safety Network Usman Pelly Sejarah Kota Madya Medan 1950 1979 Departemen Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan R I Proyek Inventarisasi dan Dokumentasi Sejarah Nasional Direktorat Sejarah dan Nilai Tradisional 1985 Medan Indonesia Koppen Climate Classification Weatherbase Weatherbase Archived from the original on 26 September 2015 Retrieved 4 July 2015 World Weather Information Service Medan World Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 19 June 2015 Retrieved 18 June 2015 Worldwide Bioclimatic Classification System INDONESIA POLONIA www globalbioclimatics org Archived from the original on 15 January 2019 Retrieved 20 February 2019 Total Hours of Sunshine Medan Climate Robot Indonesia www weatheronline co uk Archived from the original on 3 August 2020 Retrieved 15 April 2020 KPK Arrests Mandailing Natal Mayor for Alleged Bribery Archived from the original on 1 March 2014 Eldin Akhyar confirm their victory of Medan city election Archived from the original on 28 June 2017 Gubsu Lantik Wali Kota Medan dan Wakil Wali Kota Medan Periode 2021 2024 pemkomedan go id Retrieved 22 November 2022 Info Data Kota Medan Archived from the original on 10 May 2014 Home Archived from the original on 28 February 2014 Kondisi Geografis Medan Archived from the original on 4 March 2014 a b c Biro Pusat Statistik Jakarta 2011 Ensiklopedi Umum Penerbitan Jajasan Kanisius 1973 a b c d e Badan Pusat Statistik Provinsi Sumatera Utara sumut bps go id Archived from the original on 9 December 2016 Retrieved 25 November 2016 a b Leo Suryadinata Evi Nurvidya Arifin Aris Ananta Indonesia s Population ethnicity and religion in a changing political landscape Institute of Southeast Asian Studies 2003 Usman Pelly Urbanisasi dan Adaptasi Peranan Misi Budaya Minangkabau dan Mandailing LP3ES 1994 Sensus Penduduk 2019 Penduduk Menurut Wilayah dan Agama yang Dianut Kota Medan Badan Pusat Statistik in Indonesian Badan Pusat Statistik 2019 Archived from the original on 17 April 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 https www rdi or id storage files publication 84 pdf Medan City Development and Governance under the Decentralisation Era Kantor Asian Agri Asian Agri Official Website 20 April 2020 Retrieved 30 August 2022 London Sumatra About Company LONSUM Official Website 18 February 2020 Retrieved 30 August 2022 Hubungi Kami Musim Mas Musim Mas Official Website 1 January 2022 Retrieved 30 August 2022 Analysis 2015 Transport infrastructure a key part of Medan s development plans Archived from the original on 10 January 2017 Retrieved 9 January 2017 Feriawan Hidayat 29 March 2015 Enam Kota Asia Paling Trendi untuk Menetap Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 29 March 2015 Koko Hendri Lubis Roman Medan Sebuah Kota Membangun Harapan PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama Jakarta 2018 North Sumatra Museum Indonesia Tourism Archived from the original on 10 January 2015 Retrieved 19 November 2014 Gunawan Apriadi 30 March 2011 A glimpse of wildlife in Medan museum The Jakarta Post Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 8 September 2015 Medan Entry Point to North Sumatra Indonesia travel Archived from the original on 26 October 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2014 Medan Urban development by planters and entrepreneurs PDF Archived PDF from the original on 27 July 2011 Retrieved 2 January 2010 HillPark Theme Park GreenHill Sibolangit Review Medanku 10 June 2008 Archived from the original on 12 August 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2014 All systems go for Medan TTGmice Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2012 Belawan britannica Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2014 Port of Medan Belawan seaport homestad Archived from the original on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 19 November 2014 Siregar Wahyudi Aulia 13 July 2017 Semester II 2019 Jalur Layang Kereta Api di Medan Beroperasi Okezone Economy Okezone in Indonesian Archived from the original on 7 December 2018 Retrieved 6 December 2018 Top Universities in North Sumatra UniRank 10 January 2022 Retrieved 30 August 2022 3 Best High Schools for recommendation in Medan Kabar Lampung 10 February 2022 Retrieved 30 August 2022 a b 学校の概要 School Outline Medan Japanese School 15 May 2001 Retrieved on 13 January 2019 施設概要 敷地面積 1 880m2 校舎延べ面積 481 88m2 メダン日本人学校の歴史 History of the Medan Japanese School Medan Japanese School 21 April 2001 Retrieved on 13 January 2019 昭和49年度 4月 補習授業校開 在メダン総領事館図書館内 Home Medan Japanese School 10 April 2001 Retrieved on 13 January 2019 1998年3月 メダン日本人学校は休校となります State University of Medan Top Universities 16 July 2015 Retrieved 30 August 2022 Universitas Sumatera Utara Top Universities 16 July 2015 Retrieved 30 August 2022 Kedutaan Besar dan Konsulat Asing Retrieved 30 August 2022 Australian Consulate Medan Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Retrieved 30 August 2022 Honorary Consulate of Belgium in Medan Federal Public Service Foreign Affairs Retrieved 30 August 2022 Consulate General of the People s Republic of China in Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People s Republic of China Retrieved 30 August 2022 The Danish consulates in Indonesia Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Denmark Retrieved 30 August 2022 Konsul Kehormatan Republik Federal Jerman di Medan Sumatera Utara Ministry for Foreign Affairs East Germany Retrieved 30 August 2022 Consulate General of India Medan Ministry of External Affairs India Retrieved 30 August 2022 Konsulat Jenderal Jepang di Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Japan Retrieved 30 August 2022 Consulate General of Malaysia Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Malaysia Retrieved 30 August 2022 Netherlands Honorary Consulate in Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Netherlands Retrieved 30 August 2022 Norwegian consulate in Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Norway Retrieved 30 August 2022 Poland Honorary Consulate in Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Poland Retrieved 30 August 2022 Consulate General of the Republic of Singapore in Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Singapore Retrieved 30 August 2022 Royal Thai Honorary Consulate in Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Thailand Retrieved 30 August 2022 Turkish Honorary Consulate in Medan Ministry of Foreign Affairs Turkey Retrieved 30 August 2022 Konsulat AS di Medan United States Department of State Retrieved 30 August 2022 Medan Menjalin Hubungan Kota Kembar Keempat Archived from the original on 23 April 2007 Retrieved 10 September 2013 Hans Michelmann 28 January 2009 Foreign Relations in Federal Countries McGill Queen s Press MQUP pp 198 ISBN 978 0 7735 7618 6 A Sight seeing Guide to Ichikawa City s International Exchanges PDF city ichikawa lg jp Ichikawa November 2018 Retrieved 8 April 2020 Sister Cities gwangju go kr Gwangju Retrieved 13 April 2020 Chengdu Sister and partner cities Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 19 June 2018 City will host Indonesian sister city signing ceremony Thursday online magazine press release onMilwaukee com 28 October 2014 Archived from the original on 4 November 2014 Retrieved 16 November 2014 External links Edit Indonesia portal Media related to Medan at Wikimedia Commons Medan travel guide from Wikivoyage Medan at Wikinews The dictionary definition of Medan at Wiktionary Geographic data related to Medan at OpenStreetMap Official Government website in Indonesian Medanesia Medan Forum in Indonesian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Medan amp oldid 1147774248, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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