PLACE
I WANT TO VISIT IN INDONESIA
Yogyakarta
is the
famous place in java, Indonesia. Jogja is somewhere still thick with cultural, jogja
including cities often peddling artwork anywhere so that many placein jogja
become tourism because of the culture like the temple , street, hill, and many
more. It is renowned as a center of education
(Kota Pelajar), classical Javanese fine art and
culture such as batik,
ballet, drama, music, poetry, and puppet shows. Yogyakarta was the Indonesian
capital during the Indonesian National Revolution
from 1945 to 1949, with Gedung Agung as the president's office. One of
the districts in Yogyakarta, Kotagede, was the capital of the Mataram
Sultanate between 1575 and 1640. The city is named after the Indian
city of Ayodhya
from the Ramayana
epic. Yogya means
"suitable, fit, proper", and karta,
"prosperous, flourishing" (i.e., "a city that is fit to
prosper").[2]
Its population was 388,627 inhabitants at the 2010 census and its built-up (or metro) area was home to, 4,010,436
inhabitants spread on two cities (Yogyakarta
and Magelang) and 65 districts spread on Sleman, Klaten, Bantul, Kulon
Progo and Magelang regencies. While urbanization sprawls, Yogyakarta-Magelang
and Surakarta are being agglomerated in a few years. The Dutch
name of the city is Djokjakarta.
Many interesting place in jogja but the memorable pla i have ever visit are :
Many interesting place in jogja but the memorable pla i have ever visit are :
1.
MALIOBORO STREET
is
a major shopping street in Yogyakarta, Indonesia;
the name is also used more generally for the neighborhood around the street. It
lies north-south axis in the line between Yogyakarta Kraton and Mount Merapi.
This is in itself is significant to many of the local population, the
north–south orientation between the palace and the volcano being of importance.
The street is the centre of
Yogyakarta's largest tourist district surrounded with many hotels, restaurants,
and shops nearby. Sidewalks on both sides of the street are crowded with small
stalls selling a variety of goods. In the evening several open-air street side
restaurants, called lesehan, operate along the street.
This is the street of the artists. Street musicians, painters, and other
artists exhibit their creations on this road. Less obvious to the tourist, but
more for the local population, side streets, lanes and structures that lead on
to Malioboro are as important as the street itself.
Jalan Malioboro at night
The street was for many years
two-way, but by the 1980s had become one way only, from the railway line (where
it starts) to the south - to Beringharjo markets, where it ends. The largest,
oldest Dutch era hotel, Hotel Garuda, is located on
the street's northern end, on the eastern side adjacent to the railway line. It
has the former Dutch era Prime Minister's complex, the kepatihan, on the eastern side.
For many years in the 1980s and
later, a cigarette advertisement was placed on the first building south of the
railway line - or effectively the last building on Malioboro, which advertised Marlboro cigarettes, no doubt appealing to
locals and foreigners who would see a pun with name of the street with a
foreign product being advertised.
It does not reach the walls or
grounds of the Yogyakarta palace, as
Malioboro ceases in name adjacent to the very large market Beringharjo (on the
eastern side as well). From this point the street changes name to Jalan Ahmad
Yani (Ahmad Yani Street) and has the former Governors residence on the western
side, and the old Dutch Fort Vredeburg on the eastern side.
2. PATUK , GUNUNG KIDUL
is one of the districts in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Government center in District Wonosari.
With an area of about one-third of the area of its parent, the district had a relatively low density of population than other districts.
The district borders the district of Klaten and Sukoharjo regency in the north, Wonogiri regency in the east, the southern Indian Ocean, and the districts of Bantul and Sleman districts in the west. Gunung Kidul Regency has 18 districts.
Most of the district of hills and mountains of limestone, which is part of Sewu Mountains. Gunung known as arid regions and droughts in the dry season, but kept the unique historical peculiarities, besides the potential of tourism, culture, and culinary.
With an area of about one-third of the area of its parent, the district had a relatively low density of population than other districts.
The district borders the district of Klaten and Sukoharjo regency in the north, Wonogiri regency in the east, the southern Indian Ocean, and the districts of Bantul and Sleman districts in the west. Gunung Kidul Regency has 18 districts.
Most of the district of hills and mountains of limestone, which is part of Sewu Mountains. Gunung known as arid regions and droughts in the dry season, but kept the unique historical peculiarities, besides the potential of tourism, culture, and culinary.
THE
HISTORY
Mataram Kingdom (8th – 10th century CE)
According to Canggal inscription dated 732, the area
traditionally known as "Mataram" became the capital of the Medang
Kingdom, identified as Mdang
i Bhumi Mataram established by King Sanjaya.
Mataram became the center of a refined and sophisticated Javanese
Hindu-Buddhist culture, for about three centuries its heartland in Kewu Plain
(southern slope of Mount Merapi) around Prambanan
witnessed the construction of numerous candi including Borobudur
and Prambanan.
Around the year 929, the centre of
the kingdom was shifted to East Java by Mpu Sindok,
who established the Isyana Dynasty. The exact cause of the move is
still uncertain; however, a severe eruption of Mount Merapi volcano or a power
struggle probably caused the move. Historians suggest that, some time during
the reign of King Wawa of Mataram (924–929), Merapi volcano erupted and
devastated the kingdom's capital in Mataram.
Majapahit Empire (1293–1527)
During the Majapahit
era, the area surrounding modern Yogyakarta was identified again as
"Mataram" and recognized as one of the twelve Majapahit provinces in
Java ruled by a Duke titled 'Bhre Mataram'. During the reign of Hayam Wuruk
(1350 to 1389), the title of Bhre Mataram was held by king's nephew and son
in-law Wikramawardhana.
Mataram Sultanate (1575–1620)
Kotagede, former capital of the
Mataram Sultanate.
Kotagede
(now a district of Yogyakarta) was established as the capital of the Mataram
Sultanate. During the reign of Sultan Agung Hanyokrokusumo (1613-1645),
the Sultanate Mataram reached its zenith as the greatest kingdom in Java, and
expanded its influence to Central Java, East Java and half of West Java. After
two changes of capital, (Palace of Pleret and Place of Kerta, both located in Bantul
Regency), the capital of Mataram Sultanate moved to Kartasura.
Aftermath of the Gianti Treaty (1745–1945)
The Yogyakarta sultanate palace's main
pavilion
The Taman Sari Water Castle
During the reign of Pakubuwono II,
a civil war broke out in Mataram Sultanate. The civil war was fought between Prince Mangkubumi
and his elder brother, Sunan Pakubuwono II. It started when Sunan Pakubuwono II
agreed to cooperate with the VOC, ceded some Mataram territory to the
Dutch, and submitted to the foreign power. His younger brother, Prince
Mangkubumi stood against the agreement due to concerns that his
people would become slaves under Dutch rule. Prince Mangkubumi defeated the
Pakubuwono forces and declared sovereignty in the Kingdom of Yogjakarta
occupying the southern parts of the former Mataram Sultanate.
The Yogyakarta Sultanate was established as a
result of the Treaty of Giyanti (Perjanjian Gianti) by Prince Mangkubumi, who later ascended the
throne as Sultan Hamengkubuwono I. Officially, the
creation of Yogyakarta Sultanate is dated at 7 October 1756 as a result of
civil war among the princes of The Mataram Sultanate. This civil war marked the
end of the Mataram Sultanate and resulted in the birth of the Yogyakarta Sultanate and the Surakarta Sunanate.
During the British occupation of
Java, rumors of plans by the Javanese court to stage a rebellion caused
uneasiness among the colonial authorities. On 20 June 1812, Stamford
Raffles led a 1,200-strong British force to attack the royal city.
The Javanese were surprised by the attack and were easily subdued. In one day
the city of Yogyakarta fell, with the city destroyed and its palace looted. The
event completely stripped the sultanate of its remaining power and influence.[3]
The sack also left the court humiliated and fueled a rebellion which would be
known as Java War.
Republic
of Indonesia era (1945–present)
In 1942 the Japanese Empire invaded
Dutch East Indies and ruled Java until they were defeated in 1945. Sukarno
proclaimed the independence of the Indonesian Republic on August 1945. Sultan Hamengkubuwono
IX promptly sent a letter to Sukarno, expressing his support for the
newly born nation of Indonesia and acknowledging the Yogyakarta Sultanate as
part of the Indonesian Republic. The Sunanate of Surakarta did the same, and
both of the Javanese kingdoms were awarded special status as "Special
Regions" within the Indonesian Republic. However, because of a leftist
anti-royalist uprising in Surakarta, the Sunanate of Surakarta lost its special
administrative status in 1946 and was absorbed into Central Java
Province.
Yogyakarta's support was essential
in the Indonesian struggle for independence during the Indonesian National Revolution
(1945-1949). The city of Yogyakarta became the capital of the Indonesian
Republic from 1946 to 1948, after the fall of Jakarta to the Dutch. Later the
Dutch also invaded Yogyakarta, causing the Republic's capital to be transferred
once again, to Bukittinggi in West Sumatra on 19 December
1948. Because of its significant contribution to the survival of the Indonesian
Republic, Yogyakarta was given the status of Special Administrative Region,
making Yogyakarta the only region headed by a monarchy in Indonesia.
Geography
The area of the city of Yogyakarta
is 32.5 square kilometres (12.5 square miles). While the city spreads in all
directions from the kraton (the Sultan's palace), the core
of the modern city is to the north, centered around Dutch
colonial-era buildings and the commercial district. Jalan
Malioboro, with rows of pavement vendors and nearby market and
malls, is the primary shopping street for tourists in the city, while Jalan
Solo, further north, is a shopping district more frequented by locals. At the
southern end of Malioboro, on the east side is the large local market of
Beringharjo, not far from Fort Vredeburg, a restored Dutch fort.
At Yogyakarta's centre is the Kraton, or Sultan's palace.
Surrounding the kraton is a densely populated residential neighbourhood that
occupies land that was formerly the Sultan's sole domain. Evidence of this
former use remains in the form of old walls and the ruined Taman Sari, built in 1758 as a pleasure
garden. No longer used by the sultan, the garden has been largely abandoned.
For a time, it was used for housing by palace employees and descendants.
Reconstruction efforts began in 2004, and an effort to renew the neighbourhood
around the kraton has begun. The site is a developing tourist attraction.[citation needed]
Nearby to the city of Yogyakarta is Mount Merapi.
The northern outskirts of the city run up to the southern slopes of the
mountain in Sleman Regency (Indonesian language–Kabupaten). Gunung Merapi (literally "mountain of
fire" in Indonesian/Javanese), is an active stratovolcano
located on the border between Central Java and Yogyakarta, Indonesia. It is the
most active volcano in Indonesia and has erupted regularly since 1548. The
South Of Merapi is Kaliurang Kaliurang
Park. The volcano last erupted in November 2010.








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