Ancient Man and His First Civilizations
The Kingdoms of Indonesia
The Semang
The Semang tribes live (or used to live) in the mountainous interior of peninsular Malaysia where they have lived in close association with a variety of Veddoid and tribal Malay groups. They are, however, physically and culturally much more closely related to the Andamanese Negrito than to their long-term Veddoid neighbours. Although they do not seem to have mixed much, their contact was still close enough for them to acquire cultural traits that differentiate them somewhat from the Andamanese. In view of the long separation from each other, it is remarkable how well they have kept their common "Negrito heritage". Among Negrito, the Andamanese remain unique for having preserved their original languages. The Semang have adopted the language of the Mon-Khmer wave of migrants surrounding them perhaps since before 7,000 years ago. Some vocabulary suspected of going back to their original language has been recovered. The Mon-Khmer-speakers were themselves pushed aside by Malay newcomers who today dominate the peninsula south of the Thai border. Oddly enough, the Semang and some Veddoid tribal groups have retained their Mon-Khmer languages until recently despite the social and cultural pressures to adopt Malay. |
Please note: There were many kingdoms in Malaya and
the Indonesian archipelago, we are here only going to mention the ones
that built great Temples or other such structures. The information that
we have is very meager, so please bear with us.
The first of the Indonesian kingdoms that we know
anything about, is Srivijaya - which lasted to about 1400 A.D. It was an
ancient Malay kingdom on the island of Sumatra. At around 500 A.D, a
new Srivijayan center began to develop around the present-day town of
Palembang.
However it is from Chinese records, that we gather
much of what we know. And it is from these Chinese records, dated to
about 600 A.D, that we learn that there are two Sumatran kingdoms, one
based in Palembang and another based in Jambi. They also mention three
other kingdoms on the neighboring island of Java.
It seems that the kingdom of Srivijaya was a coastal
trading center and a maritime power. But it did not extend its
influence, much beyond the coastal areas of the various islands. People
of the in-land areas of these islands, were pretty-much unaffected by
the Srivijaya. However for those in the coastal areas and river valleys,
force was the dominant element in the Srivijaya Empire's relations with
them.
As a stronghold of "Vajrayana" Buddhism, Srivijaya
attracted pilgrims and scholars from other parts of Asia. Included in
These was the Chinese monk Yijing, who in 671 and again in 695 A.D, made
lengthy visits to Sumatra on his way to study at Nalanda in India. In
775 A.D, the last Srivijaya king retreated to east Java, in the face of
the rising power of the central Javanese "Shailendra" kingdom, they were
followers of Mahayana and Tantric forms of Buddhism.
Shailendra (“Lord of the Mountain”), was a dynasty
that flourished in Java from about 750 to 850 A.D. - After the fall of
the Funan kingdom in Cambodia. This kingdom was marked by a great
cultural renaissance associated with the introduction of Mahayana
Buddhism. Java attained its highest level of artistic expression in the
many temples and monuments built during this time. It was during the
reign of one of its kings that the famous stupa of Borobudur was built.
At Prambanan, on the Island of Sumatra. It is said
that it was a king named "Dhaksa" of the Mendang-Mataram kingdom, who in
the 10th century A.D. built the largest Siva temple in Indonesia the
"Lara Jonggrang" meaning Slender Maiden. This name was affectionately
given to a large statue of the Hindu goddess Durga (wife of Shiva),
which stands in the temple.
Local legend has it, that this statue is actually Javanese princess
Loro Jonggrang, who was turned to stone by a spurned suitor. The
Prambang complex originally contained 232 temples, many of which have
already crumbled.
The Lara Jonggrang was built on a square, surrounded
by four walls with four large gates. The temples are subdivided into
higher and lower terraces. On the higher terrace are major temples of
Siva, Vishnu, and Brahma with three smaller temples dedicated to their
animal vehicles. The temples of the gods are decorated with relief’s
depicting the story of the Ramayana, one of the great Hindu epics. On
the lower terrace are four sets of smaller temples, surrounded by a wall
with four gates.
There is also the Majapahit kingdom in eastern Java,
which ruled much of the southern Malay Peninsula, as well as Borneo,
Sumatra, Bali, and the Philippines from about 1293 A.D, to around 1500
A.D. Its greatest ruler was Hayam Wuruk.
The golden era of Majapahit was however short-lived;
the Empire began to decline after the death of its prime minister "Gajah
Mada" in 1364 A.D. And it was further weakened after the death of its
king, Hayam Wuruk in 1389 A.D. Added to that, was a war over succession
that started in 1401 A.D, and went on for four years. Majapahit also had
the added headache, of trying to control the rising power of the
Sultanate of Malay.
Finally in the 15th century A.D, the end of Majapahit
came with the spread of Islam, and the rise of the Islamic states along
the northern coast of Java.
However a large number of courtiers, artisans,
priests, and members of the royal family moved east to the island of
Bali at the end of the Majapahit kingdom. Here they remained isolated,
until the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when Dutch colonials
mounted a military expedition, and took control of the islands.