Bali Hotels and Travel Guide
Bali's History
Bali's history and fortunes have often been determined by the larger
islands surrounding it. Its ties with neighbouring Lombok, Java
and Sumbawa have often been turbulent and bloody.
But Bali has remained a place of mystery and intense beauty, not
only in its surroundings, but also in the romance, bravery and tragedy
of its past.
Since the beginning of time
Bali has been inhabited for a long time. Sembiran, a village in
northern Bali, was believed to have been home to the people of the
Ice Age, proven by the discovery of stone axes and adzes.
Further discoveries of more sophisticated stone tools, agricultural
techniques and basic pottery at Cekik in Bali's far west, point
to the people of the Neolithic era. At Cekik, there is evidence
of a settlement together with burial sites of around a hundred people
thought to be from the Neolithic through to the Bronze Age.
The massive drums of the Bronze Age, together with their stone
moulds have been discovered throughout the Indonesian archipelago,
including the most famous and largest drum in Southeast Asia, the
Moon of Pejeng, nearly two metres wide, now housed in a temple in
east Ubud. In East Java and Bali, there has also been a concentration
of carved stone sarcophagi which you can see in the Bali Museum
in Denpasar and the Museum Purbakala in Pejeng.
Of early traders and olden kingdoms
Bali was busy with trade from as early as 200 BC. The prasasti,
or metal inscriptions, Bali's earliest written records from the
ninth century AD, show a significant Buddhist and Hindu influence;
especially in the statues, bronzes and rock-cut caves around Gunung
Kawi and Goa Gajah.
Balinese society was pretty sophisticated by about 900 AD Their
marriage portrait of the Balinese King Udayana to East Java's Princess
Mahendratta is captured in a stone carving in the Pura Korah Tegipan
in the Batur area. Their son, Erlangga, born around 991 AD, later
succeeded to the throne of the Javanese kingdom and brought Java
and Bali together until his death in 1049.
In 1284, Bali was conquered by Kertanegara, the ruler of the Singasari;
until the turn of the century, saw Bali under its own rule under
the hands of King Bedaulu of Pejeng, east of Ubud.
Mighty Majapahut and golden Bali
1343 AD, is an important date in Bali's history. It was then that
the whole island was conquered by East Java under the mighty Hindu
Majapahit kingdom. This resulted in massive changes in Balinese
society, including the introduction of the caste system.
Balinese who did not embrace the changes fled to the isolated and
remote mountainous areas hill areas. Their descendants are known
today as the Bali Aga or Bali Mula, meaning the "original Balinese"
They still live separately in villages like Tenganan near Candi
Dasa and Trunyan on the shores of Lake Batur, and maintain their
ancient laws and traditional ways.
When Majapahit in East Java fell in 1515, the many small Islamic
kingdoms in the island merged into the Islamic Mataram empire, Majapahit's
most dedicated Hindu priests, craftsmen, soldiers, nobles and artists
fled east to Bali, and flooded the island with Javanese culture
and Hindu practices. Considering the huge influence and power of
Islam at the time, it is worth pondering why and how Bali still
remained strongly Hindu and Buddhist.
Batu Renggong, also known as Dewa Agung, meaning great god, became
king in 1550, and this title became hereditary through the succeeding
generations of the kingdom of Gelgel, and later Klungkung, until
the twentieth century. Bali reached the pinnacle of its Golden Era
under the reign of the Batu Renggong, the great god ruler. Bali's
decline started when Batu Renggong's grandson, Di Made Bekung, lost
Blambangan, Lombok and Sumbawa. DI Made Bekung's chief minister,
Gusti Agung Maruti, eventually rebelled and reigned from 1650 till
1686, when he in turn was killed by DI Made Bekung's son, Dewa Agung
Jambe, who then moved the court to Klungkung, and named his new
palace the Semarapura, Abode of the God of Love.
Of foreign tricks and trade
Bali was unknown to Europeans until the end of the fifteenth century
when explorers from Portugal, Spain and England encountered the
island while searching for the lucrative spice islands. Bali was
marked on their maps as Balle, Ilha Bale or Java Minor, but rarely
visited.
Later in the nineteenth century, conflicts in Europe brought massive
repercussions in Bali. In 1840, the Dutch envoy, with the very skillful
and devious negotiator, Huskus Koopman, began a series of visits
to persuade the Balinese to agree to Dutch sovereignty. He managed
to make treaties with the regencies of Badung, Klungkung, Buleleng,
Karangasem and Tabanan agreeing to a Dutch trade monopoly, while
the rajas failed to realize that they had also virtually agreed
to give the Dutch sovereignty over their lands and reefs.
Most regencies ratified the treaties, but Buleleng and Karangasem
stood firm. The brother of the rajas of Buleleng and Karangasem,
Gusti Ketut Jelantik, finally voiced the brave sentiments that,
"Not by a mere scrap of paper shall any man become the master
of another's lands. Rather let the kris decide. The kris, a traditional
curved knife, used in battle, did decide when on May 20, 1849, after
years of domination and hardship, the Balinese of Karangasem all
committed puputan, or ritual suicide. So the stage was set for the
Balinese who preferred to die than live cheated and subservient
to Dutch power.
Colonial rule and Dutch rules
The puputan caused quite a stir in Europe and the United States
and the Dutch were pressured to moderate their policies in Bali
and Indonesia. But having gained control of the island, the Dutch
continued with the Ethical Policy of governing, a philosophy and
approach, which they claimed upheld Balinese values.
Businesses were not encouraged out to Bali, but KPM, a steamship
line started promoting tourism on Bali. The island's first few visitors
stepped ashore in the 1920s, and by the 1930s Bali was welcoming
around a hundred visitors every month.
Bali's visitors were mostly artists, musicians, anthropologists
and writers; many made the enchanting island their home like the
famous and infamous Walter Spies, the wonderful K'tut Tantri and
the quirky yet talented Louise and Bob Koke.
Independence
Throughout the 19th and 20th century relations with the Dutch were
still turbulent resulting in the loss of many lives. In 1949, under
continuing world pressure, the UN Security Council ordered the Dutch
to withdraw their armed forces and negotiate, instead of dominate.
In 1950, the Republic of Indonesia was formed, with Sukarno as
president. While Bali is part of Indonesia, there are significant
religious, historic and cultural differences with Java and the other
main islands. Present day Bali remains independent with a strong
Hindu / Buddhist in a country dominated by Islam, retaining a certain
amount of autonomy from Jakarta.
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