SUMATRA

soomäˈtrə, island (1990 pop. 36,471,731), c.183,000 sq mi (473,970 sq km), Indonesia, in the Indian Ocean along the equator, S and W of the Malay Peninsula (from which it is separated by the Strait of Malacca) and NW of Java (across the narrow Sunda Strait). The westernmost and second largest island of Indonesia, Sumatra is c.1,110 mi (1,790 km) long and c.270 mi (435 km) wide and is fringed with smaller islands off its western and eastern coasts. The Bukit Barisan, a volcanic mountain range, traverses its length, reaching 12,467 ft (3,800 m) at Mt. Kerinci. Rising in the Barisan range are several large rivers, including the Hari, Indragiri, and Musi; some rivers are being developed for hydroelectric power. In the north is the great salt lake Toba. Because of the hot, moist climate and heavy rainfall, the vegetation is luxuriant, and much of the eastern half of the island is swampland. The interior is covered largely by impenetrable rain forests. Among the native animals are elephants, clouded leopards, tapirs, tigers, Malayan bears, and snakes.

Economy

Sumatra has great natural wealth; about 70% of the country's income is produced there. The island has some of Indonesia's richest oil fields, its finest coalfields, and deposits of gold and silver. Its offshore islands are known for their tin and bauxite. Most of the country's rubber is grown in Sumatra; pepper, coffee, tea, sugarcane, and oil palms are also grown on plantations. The Deli region around Medan is famous for its tobacco. Rice, corn, and root crops are raised for local consumption. Timber cut includes camphor and ebony.

People

Sumatra comprises eight provinces of Indonesia. It is a sparsely settled island, with principal centers at Medan and Palembang; also important are Jambi, Padang, and Bandar Laumpung. There are state universities in Jambi, Medan, Padang, Pakanbaru, and Palembang. The four largest ethnic groups are the Acehnese, Batak, Minangkabau, and coastal Malays. In the interior highlands are found the Gayo-Alas and the Rejang-Lebong groups. Islam is the predominant religion, though there are many Christians among the Batak and the Gayo-Alas. Chinese, Arabs, and Indians live on the coasts, and some 15 different languages are spoken on the island.

History

Sumatra had early contact with Indian civilization, and by the 7th cent. a.d. the powerful Hindu-Sumatran kingdom of Sri Vijaya (with its capital in or near Palembang) flourished under the house of Sailendra. The kingdom extended its control over a large part of Indonesia and also over the Malay Peninsula. By the 14th cent., Sumatran supremacy had waned, and the island fell under the Javanese kingdom of Majapahit. The Arabs, who may have arrived as early as the 10th cent., established the sultanate of Achin (now Aceh), which reached its height in the 17th cent. and controlled most of the island.

The first European to visit Sumatra was Marco Polo, who was there briefly c.1292. Following the Portuguese, who came in 1509, the Dutch arrived in 1596 and gradually gained control of all the native states including Achin. The British had brief control over parts of the island in the late 18th and early 19th cent. The Achinese (Acehnese) launched a rebellion in 1873 and were not subdued by the Dutch until 1904. In World War II, Japanese troops landed (Feb., 1942) in Sumatra and occupied it throughout the war.

After Indonesian independence was granted (1949), all of Sumatra was included in the new republic. Since then there has been much indigenous agitation and repeated demands for local autonomy. The Acehnese have waged occasional guerrilla warfare against the government, and in 1958 a full-scale rebellion was launched by dissident army officers. It spread to other islands before being quelled by the government. Sentiment for autonomy or independence remains strong among the Acehnese. Guerrilla attacks and demonstrations in Aceh increased in 1999 and 2000 after the end of Indonesian authority in East Timor. Indonesian legislation in 2001 granted Aceh limited local autonomy, including the right to implement Islamic law, but sentiment in favor of independence remained strong and fighting escalated. A peace pact with the rebels (Dec., 2002) only paused the conflict for a few months.

Bibliography

See F. M. Schnitger, Forgotten Kingdoms in Sumatra (1989).

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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: Sumatra  - 2653 results

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ISLAM AND STATE IN SUMATRA ISLAMIC HISTORY AND CIVILIZATION...WIELANDT VOLUME 48 ISLAM AND STATE IN SUMATRA A Study of Seventeenth-Century Aceh...Amirul, 1962- Islam and state in Sumatra : a study of seventeenth-century Aceh...
...BROTHERS TO LIVE AS BROTHERS Southeast Sumatra in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries...Watson. To live as brothers : southeast Sumatra in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries...Approaching the History of Southeast Sumatra 38...
...OF SIR STAMFORD RAFFLES IN JAVA AND SUMATRA Oxford University Press, Amen House...OF SIR STAMFORD RAFFLES IN JAVA AND SUMATRA An Economic Interpretation BY...towards the native peoples in Java and Sumatra. The book owes much to the wise and patient...
...and Society Among the Samosir Batak of Sumatra D. George Sherman with the assistance...Agriculture of the University of North Sumatra USU , the Medan Teachers Institute...Introduction The area of northern Sumatra, Indonesia, called Samosir is a large...
...in the NETHERLANDS INDIES FIGURE 1. -- CAMP OF THE DUTCH CENTRAL SUMATRA EXPEDITION OF 1877/79 NEAR THE SUMMIT OF MOUNT KERINTJI IN CENTRAL SUMATRA from VETHS "Midden Sumatra I, 1881" . SCIENCE and SCIENTISTS in the NETHERLANDS INDIES...
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journal articles on: Sumatra  - 520 results

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...Upstreams and downstreams in early modern Sumatra. by Barbara Watson Andaya...upland-lowland relationships occurs in Sumatra, one of the worlds largest islands and...Taprobana Insular (or "further Ceylon" as Sumatra was termed by Europeans) was known primarily...
...colonial municipal council in Padang (Sumatra) as political arena. by Freek...a municipality till the occupation of Sumatra by Japanese forces. The central question...modernism or Chinese nationalism in West Sumatra. The first decade of the municipality...
The dominion of North Sumatra. A history of the sultanates of Samudera-Pasai...Portuguese with the sultanates of northern Sumatra, i.e., Samudera-Pasai and Aceh. The...his study on the northern states of Sumatra. Chapter 2 is divided into five principal...
...Frontier: Acehnese and Other Histories of Sumatra. by R.E. Elson An Indonesian Frontier: Acehnese and Other Histories of Sumatra. By Anthony Reid (Singapore: Singapore...to the history and politics of north Sumatra, perhaps the most revolutionary book ever...
Hard Bargaining in Sumatra: Western Travelers and Toba Bataks in...Glenn Reeves Hard Bargaining in Sumatra: Western Travelers and Toba Bataks in...of lake Toba in the province of North Sumatra, home to the Batak, one of Indonesias...
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magazine articles on: Sumatra  - 216 results

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Myanmar Visited: Sumatra Revisited. by Robert E. Huke...note: Burma was renamed Myanmar in 1989; Sumatra is an island province of Indonesia, a...19-day study tour in Myanmar and central Sumatra during late October and early November...
...extraordinary park in Indonesia harbors the rare Sumatran rhino When Ron Tilson, an expert on Sumatran tigers, came to Indonesias Way Kambas National...documented, by accident, was a population of the Sumatran rhino, one of the rarest animals on Earth...
...moving inland from the eastern shores of Sumatra a hundred kilometers away, a wine-dark...a metaphorical one, sweeping over the Sumatran countryside. It is visible in the methodical...by the traditional role of the pawang, Sumatras stunning biological diversity has been...
...Frequencies compilations such as Radio Sumatra: The Indonesian FM Experience, Choubi...relationship. Records like Folk and Pop Songs of Sumatra: Volume 1 and Bush Taxi Mali: Field Recordings...notes for the fascinatingly diverse Radio Sumatra, Bishop writes that "many of the station...
...long Indonesian archipelago. Hidden in Sumatras vast volcanic landscapes their traditional...of four houses from four regions of Sumatra. BATAK: House of Opu Duma Sitorus Manurung, Lumban Binanga, North Sumatra Most Batak are ostensibly Christian...
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newspaper articles on: Sumatra  - 657 results

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...Killed as Second Quake Strikes Indonesia; SUMATRA. Byline: Rashid Razaq A MAJOR rescue...earthquake, which originated in the sea off Sumatra island, appeared to have been borne by...all its crisis centres in Jakarta, West Sumatra and North Sumatra provinces and said it...
...Powerful Earthquake Hampers Rescue Efforts; SUMATRA. Byline: Rashid Razaq A SECOND earthquake...coastal city of Padang on the island of Sumatra. Rescue workers struggled in heavy rain...affected the transport of rubber in West Sumatra province, the fifth-largest producing...
...Thousands Feared Dead as Earthquake Hits Sumatra. THOUSANDS of people were feared killed...massive earthquake that flattened homes in Sumatra yesterday. Indonesia initially put the...a sprawling low-lying city in Western Sumatra province of around 900,000 that geologists...
...Earthquake Victims; Firefighters Flying off to Sumatra after Disaster Strikes. Byline: Lisa...humanitarian assistance to the people of Sumatra. Shaun, a station commander, and Cliff...equipment is flying from Gatwick for the Sumatran city of Padang, where hundreds of buildings...
Quake Strikes off Sumatra. A STRONG earthquake struck off Indonesias Sumatra island yesterday, causing people to flee their...29pm local time (1229 BST) about 230 miles off Sumatras west coast, the Antara news agency said. The...
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encyclopedia articles on: Sumatra  - 59 results

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SUMATRA sooma tr , island (1990 pop. 36,471,731), c.183,000...The westernmost and second largest island of Indonesia, Sumatra is c.1,110 mi (1,790 km) long and c.270 mi (435 km) wide...tapirs, tigers, Malayan bears, and snakes. Economy Sumatra has great natural wealth; about 70% of the countrys income...
...madan , city (1990 pop. 1,730,052), capital of North Sumatra prov., NE Sumatra, Indonesia, on the Deli River, c.15 mi (25 km) from...citys port (Belawan) is situated. The largest city in Sumatra and the fourth largest in Indonesia, Medan is the...
...Sunda Islands , which include Java , Sumatra , central and S Borneo (Kalimantan...and economically, are Java, Bali, and Sumatra. All the larger islands have a central...that of Australia. Elephants are found in Sumatra and Borneo, tigers as far south as Java...
...palembang , city (1990 pop. 1,144,047), capital of South Sumatra province, on SE Sumatra, Indonesia. The islands largest city, it is a deepwater...River and the trade and shipping center for the S Sumatra oil fields. Rubber, coffee, and coal are also exported...
...875,634), 21,387 sq mi (55,392 sq km), N Sumatra, Indonesia, formerly known as Atjeh or...Banda Aceh. The northernmost province of Sumatra, Aceh has rich petroleum and natural gas...National Park is in SE Aceh. A kingdom in N Sumatra is recorded by the 6th-cent. a.d. Chinese...
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