JAVA

jäˈvə, island (1990 pop. 107,525,520), c.51,000 sq mi (132,090 sq km), Indonesia, S of Borneo, from which it is separated by the Java Sea, and SE of Sumatra across Sunda Strait. Although Java is the fifth largest island of Indonesia, constituting only one seventh of the country's total area, it contains two thirds of the country's population; it is one of the most densely populated regions in the world. For centuries it has been the cultural, political, and economic center of the area. In Java are the republic's capital and largest city, Jakarta, and the second and third largest cities, Surabaya and Bandung. Tanjungpriok is the chief port, and Yogyakarta and Surakarta are cultural centers.

Land and People

A chain of volcanic mountains, most densely forested with teak, palms, and other woods, traverses the length of the island from east to west; Mt. Semeru rises to 12,060 ft (3,676 m). There are almost two million acres of planted teak forests; although Java contains only about 3% of the country's forest land, it accounts for much of its timber production. The climate is warm and humid, the volcanic soil exceptionally fertile. There are elaborate irrigation systems supplied by the island's numerous short, turbulent rivers. Found mostly in the interior are such animals as tigers, rhinoceroses, and crocodiles; birds of brilliant plumage are numerous.

Java was a home of early humans (see human evolution); on it were found (1891) the fossilized remains of the so-called Java man, Pithecanthropus erectus. The typically Malayan inhabitants of the island comprise the Javanese (the most numerous), Sudanese, and Madurese. Numerous Chinese and Arabs live in the cities. Like Bali, Java is known for its highly developed arts. There is a rich literature, and the wayang, or shadow play, employing puppets and musical accompaniment, is an important dramatic form. Java has many state and private institutions of higher learning; most are in Jakarta, but Bandung, Bogor, Yogyakarta, and Surabaya all have several universities.

Economy

Most of Indonesia's sugarcane and kapok are grown in Java. Rubber, tea, coffee, tobacco, cacao, and cinchona are produced in highland plantations. Rice is the chief small-farm crop. Cattle are raised in the east. In the northeast are important oil fields; tin, gold, silver, copper, coal, manganese, phosphate, and sulfur are mined. Most of the country's manufacturing establishments are in Java. Industry is centered chiefly in Jakarta and Surabaya, but Bandung is a noted textile center.

History

Early in the Christian era Indians began colonizing Java, and by the 7th cent. "Indianized" kingdoms were dominant in both Java and Sumatra. The Sailendra dynasty (760–860 in Java) unified the Sumatran and Javan kingdoms and built in Java the magnificent Buddhist temple Borobudur. From the 10th to the 15th cent., E Java was the center of Hindu-Javanese culture. The high point of Javanese history was the rise of the powerful Hindu-Javanese state of Majapahit (founded 1293), which extended its rule over much of Indonesia and the Malay Peninsula. Islam, which had been introduced in the 13th cent., peacefully spread its influence, and the new Muslim state of Mataram emerged in the 16th cent.

Following the Portuguese, the Dutch arrived in 1596, and in 1619 the Dutch East India Company established its chief post in Batavia (now Jakarta), thence gradually absorbing the native states into which the once-powerful Javanese empire had disintegrated. Between 1811 and 1815, Java was briefly under British rule headed by Sir Thomas S. Raffles, who instituted certain reforms. The Dutch ignored these when they returned to power, resorting to a system of enforced labor, which, along with harsh methods of exploitation, led to a native uprising (1825–30) under Prince Diponegoro; the Dutch subsequently adopted a more humane approach.

In the early phase of World War II, Java was left open to Japanese invasion by the disastrous Allied defeat in the battle of the Java Sea in Feb., 1942; Java was occupied by the Japanese until the end of the war. After the war the island was the scene of much fighting between Dutch and Indonesian forces, with the Indonesians declaring independence in 1945. In 1946 the Dutch occupied many of the key cities, and Yogyakarta was the provisional capital of the Republic of Indonesia from 1949 to 1950. Java now constitutes three provinces of Indonesia—West, Central, and East Java—as well as the autonomous districts of Yogyakarta and Jakarta. Overcrowding on Java led to the government's policy of "transmigration," in which farmers were relocated to less populated Indonesian islands.

Bibliography

See C. Geertz, The Religion of Java (1960); C. Day, The Dutch in Java (1904, repr. 1966); B. R. Anderson, Java in a Time of Revolution (1972); R. M. Koentjaraningrat, Javanese Culture (1989).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Java  - 5625 results

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ON THE SUBJECT OF "JAVA" Page from an illuminated Kraton Surakarta...Manuscript Project. ON THE SUBJECT OF "JAVA" John Pemberton CORNELL UNIVERSITY...Pemberton, John. On the subject of "Java" / John Pemberton. p. cm. Includes bibliographical...
...FUTURE History as Prophecy in Colonial Java Nancy Florida Duke University...Introduction: On the Possibilities of Reading in Java 1 Chapter 1. The Writing of...Question of Visibility: Writing History in Java 279 Chapter 5. The Demak Mosque...
...M S . urines DATA STRUCTURES WITH JAVA Second Edition E . v Covers Computer...Use with ??1??? courses: ?f u?dam?ntals of JAVA 2f Compuler Science I and II ? In1roduclion 10 JAVA F4Data S1ruclures -4JAVA I ? Programming with...
...Narratives, Social Conventions, and Power in Java 20. Cecil H. Brown: Lexical Acculturation...Narratives, Social Conventions, and Power in Java LAINE BERMAN New York Oxford Oxford...narratives, social conventions, and power in Java / Laine Berman. p. cm. -- Oxford studies...
...NATIVE POLICIES OF SIR STAMFORD RAFFLES IN JAVA AND SUMATRA Oxford University Press, Amen...NATIVE POLICIES OF SIR STAMFORD RAFFLES IN JAVA AND SUMATRA An Economic Interpretation...pursued towards the native peoples in Java and Sumatra. The book owes much to the...
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journal articles on: Java  - 1112 results

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Divorce in West Java. by Gavin W. Jones , Yahya Asari...world of Southeast Asia. At this time, Java and the Malaysian states of Kelantan and...divorce in the world (Jones, 1980). In Java, West Java had slightly higher rates than...
Conditions on sugar estates in colonial Java: comparisons with Deli. by Wim F...attention has been paid to the plantations of Java, where a peasant workforce otherwise engaged...from far-off regions (first China, later Java) and this had important consequences for...
...Trilogy: Passages of Power and Time in Java. by Nancy I. Cooper Fiction...Paruk hamlets ronggeng) trilogy set in Java comprises much more than intriguing characters...located in the western part of Central Java province. (8) Banyumas is also the setting...
Homo Narrans in East Java: Regional Myths and Local Concerns. by Robert...which are often thought to be widely known in Java. The data was gathered in the following communities in East Java: Puger, a fishing village on the south coast; Ambulu...
...Beholder: Discourses of a Peasant Riot in Java. by RADIN FERNANDO Small...large scale were a common phenomenon in Java after 1830. These rural protests disappeared...the colonial discourses of a riot in East Java in early 1907. The nationalist historical...
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magazine articles on: Java  - 597 results

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The Java Theory: The Internet Might Someday Replace...argument involves the programming language Java, which was developed by Sun Microsystems...at the end of last year. The idea behind Java, to oversimplify, is that it could make a...
TIME AND TIME AGAIN IN JAVA by M.C. Ricklefs Revolutions...regularity of clockwork on the island of Java. M.C. Ricklefs investigates. JAVANESE...society. The presence and influence in Java of Hindu and Buddhist mysticism, including...
Java Theory: The Internet Might Someday Replace the Personal Computer...important. THIS argument involves the programming language Java, which was developed by Sun Microsystems and which suddenly became famous at the end of last year. The idea behind Java, to oversimplify, is that it could make a computer work like...
Java without the Jive: coffee substitutes by Thalia DeWolf...but even decaf kept me up after our rants. I really wanted java but without the jive. I needed that hot bitter sweet milky...almost triple it for a great taste. Instant. Teeccino (java flavor) offers bitter, mild caramel flavor in a grind that...
A Kiss in Java. by Patrick Smith Indonesian...in Stalin-scale stone--stone planted in Java, from which oneness would perforce have...Majapahit empire, the courtly, cultured, Java-centric state that lasted until the fifteenth...
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newspaper articles on: Java  - 1240 results

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Java to Earn Operators $15.5B by 2008. LONDON Despite the proliferation of Java handsets worldwide and the increasing number of vendor models containing the platform, the number of actual Java users is significantly lower. There are some very stark...
Java to Earn Operators $15.5B by 2008. LONDON Despite the proliferation of Java handsets worldwide and the increasing number of vendor models containing the platform, the number of actual Java users is significantly lower. There are some very stark...
Java to Earn Operators $15.5B by 2008. LONDON Despite the proliferation of Java handsets worldwide and the increasing number of vendor models containing the platform, the number of actual Java users is significantly lower. There are some very stark...
Java to Earn Operators $15.5B by 2008. LONDON Despite the proliferation of Java handsets worldwide and the increasing number of vendor models containing the platform, the number of actual Java users is significantly lower. There are some very stark...
Java to Earn Operators $15.5B by 2008. LONDON Despite the proliferation of Java handsets worldwide and the increasing number of vendor models containing the platform, the number of actual Java users is significantly lower. There are some very stark...
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encyclopedia articles on: Java  - 79 results

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JAVA ja v , island (1990 pop. 107,525,520), c.51,000 sq mi (132,090 sq km), Indonesia, S of Borneo, from which it is separated by the Java Sea, and SE of Sumatra across Sunda Strait. Although Java is the fifth largest island of Indonesia, constituting only one seventh of the countrys total...
JAVA MAN see Homo erectus . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...capital and largest city is Jakarta , on Java. Land and People Consisting of the...Greater Sunda Islands , which include Java , Sumatra , central and S Borneo...islands, culturally and economically, are Java, Bali, and Sumatra. All the larger islands...
SEMARANG s ma rang, city (1990 pop. 1,249,230), capital of Central Java prov., N Java, Indonesia, on the Java Sea and at the mouth of the Semarang River. An important port, it is one of the major commercial centers...
...survival of the pre-Islamic music of Java. It was taken to Bali by Hindu Javanese...soft, tranquil music heard currently in Java. Few gamelans, the orchestras of tuned percussion instruments, play in Java today but they flourish, their archaic...
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