The capital of the Bali Province  is Denpasar. Penida Island and  Lembongan Island are included in  this province. About three  million people reside in the  small island of Bali. Bali is  also called "The Island of the  Gods" and "The Island of  Thousands Temples." Bali has  many beautiful beaches, such as  Sanur, Kuta, Nusa Dua, and  Lovina. Bali is also very famous  with its traditional dances,  gamelan music, crafts,  paintings, woodcarvings, and  ceremonies, especially the  temple and cremation ceremonies  (Ngaben). Every single  Hindu-Balinese, from birth to  death, undergoes various  rituals. It is a mandatory  custom for the Balinese  children, especially girls, to  learn dancing since they are  very young. Bali is an  Indonesian island located at  8°25′23″S, 115°14′55″E  Coordinates:8°25′23″S,  115°14′55″E, the western most of  the Lesser Sunda Islands, lying  between Java to the west and  Lombok to the east. It is one of  the country's 33 provinces with  the provincial capital at  Denpasar towards
the south of the island. The  island is home to the vast  majority of Indonesia's small  Hindu minority. It is also the  largest tourist destination in  the country and is renowned for  its highly developed arts,  including  dance, sculpture, painting, leather, metalworking  and music.
History
Bali has been inhabited since  early prehistoric times firstly  by descendants of a prehistoric  race who migrated through  mainland Asia to the Indonesian  archipelago, thought to have  first settled in Bali around  3000 BC. Stone tools dating from  this time have been found near  the village of Cekik in the  island's west. Balinese culture  was strongly influenced by  Indian, and particularly  Sanskrit, culture, in a process  beginning around the 1st century  AD. The name Bali dwipa has been  discovered from various  inscriptions, including the  Blanjong charter issued by Sri  Kesari Warmadewa in 913 AD and  mentioning Wali dwipa. It was  during this time that the  complex irrigation system subak  was developed to grow rice. Some  religious and cultural  traditions still in existence  today can be traced back to this  period. The Hindu Majapahit  Empire (1293–1520 AD) on eastern  Java founded a Balinese colony  in 1343.When the empire  declined, there was an exodus of  intellectuals, artists, priests  and musicians from Java to Bali  in the 15th century.
The First European contact with  Bali is thought to have been  when Dutch explorer Cornelis de  Houtman arrived in 1597,though a  Portuguese ship had foundered  off the Bukit Peninsula as early  as 1585.Dutch rule over Bali  came later, was more  aggressively fought for, and was  never as well established as in  other parts of Indonesia such as  Java and Maluku.
In the 1840s,a presence in Bali  was established, first in the  island's north, by playing  various distrustful Balinese  realms against each other. The  Dutch mounted large naval and  ground assaults first against  the Sanur region and then  Denpasar.The Balinese were  hopelessly overwhelmed in number  and armament, but rather than  face the humiliation of  surrender, they mounted a final  defensive but suicidal assault,  or puputan.Despite Dutch demands  for surrender, an estimated  4,000 Balinese marched to their  death against the invaders.  Afterwards the Dutch governors  were able to exercise little  influence over the island and  local control over religion and  culture generally remained  intact.
Japan occupied Bali during World  War II during which time a  Balinese military officer, I  Gusti Ngurah Rai, formed a  Balinese 'freedom army'.  Following Japan's Pacific  surrender in August 1945,the  Dutch promptly returned to  Indonesia, including Bali,  immediately to reinstate their  pre-war colonial administration.  This was resisted by the  Balinese rebels now using  Japanese weapons.
On 20 November 1946,the Battle  of Marga was fought in Tabanan  in central Bali. Colonel I Gusti  Ngurah Rai,29 years old, finally  rallied his forces in east Bali  at Marga Rana, where they made a  suicide attack on the heavily  armed Dutch. The Balinese  battalion was entirely wiped  out, breaking the last thread of  Balinese military resistance. In  1946 the Dutch constituted Bali  as one of the 13 administrative  districts of the  newly-proclaimed Republic of  East Indonesia, a rival state to  the Republic of Indonesia which  was proclaimed and headed by  Sukarno and Hatta. Bali was  included in the "Republic of the  United States of Indonesia" when  the Netherlands recognized  Indonesian independence on Dec.  29, 1949. In 1950 Bali  officially renounced the Dutch  union and legally became a  province within the Republic of  Indonesia. The 1963 eruption of  Mount Agung killed thousands,  created economic havoc and  forced many displaced Balinese  to be transmigrated to other  parts of Indonesia.
In 1965, after a failed coup  d'etat in Jakarta against the  national government of  Indonesia, Bali, along with  other regions of Indonesia most  notably Java, was the scene of  widespread killings of (often  falsely-accused) members and  sympathizers of the Communist  Party of Indonesia (PKI) by  right-wing General Suharto-sponsored  militias. Possibly more than  100,000 Balinese were killed  although the exact numbers are  unknown to date and the events  remain legally undisclosed. Many  unmarked but well known mass  graves of victims are located  around the island. On October  12, 2002, a car bomb attack in  the tourist resort of Kuta  killed 202 people, largely  foreign tourists and injured a  further 209. Further bombings  occurred three years later in  Kuta and nearby Jimbaran Bay.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
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