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The museum has a notable collection of regional Indonesian artifacts, providing an insight into Kalimantan's indigenous cultures. The central building of the museum has items related to Ngaju ceremonies, and the museum has an array of musical instruments, facemasks, swords, porcelain pots and other ceramics.
The Lotus Pond area. Garuda Wisnu Kencana Cultural Park (Indonesian: Taman Budaya Garuda Wisnu Kencana), or GWK, is a tourist destination and attraction located at Ungasan, Badung on the island of Bali, Indonesia, about 10–15 minutes drive from Ngurah Rai International Airport.
Lamandau River (Indonesian: Sungai Lamandau) is a river of Kalimantan, southern-central Borneo, Indonesia. [1] [2] Downstream after passing the village of Nanga Bulik it becomes the Kotawaringin River. [3] The ancient town of Kotawaringin is located in the valley formed by the river and its tributary along with gold and gemstone mining areas.
The Sangkulirang-Mangkalihat Karst is a karstique area in Sub Kelay, Biatan, Talisayan, Batu Putih, and Biduk-biduk Berau districts of East Kalimantan province on the island of Borneo in Indonesia. It covers an area of 105,000 hectares, including the Mangkalihat Peninsula .
Malay lyrics [6] [7] [8] English translation Poetic English Translation Rasa sayang, hey! Rasa sayang sayang, hey! Hey, lihat nona jauh, Rasa sayang sayang, hey! Buah cempedak di luar pagar,
Zhu fan zhi also states that Java was ruled by a maharaja and included the following "dependencies": Pai-hua-yuan , Ma-tung (Mataram), Ta-pen (Tumapel, now Malang), Hi-ning , Jung-ya-lu (Hujung Galuh, now Surabaya), Tung-ki [i] (Jenggi, West Papua), Ta-kang , Huang-ma-chu (Southwest Papua), Ma-li , Kulun [ii] (Gurun, identified as Gorong or ...
The last image we have of Patrick Cagey is of his first moments as a free man. He has just walked out of a 30-day drug treatment center in Georgetown, Kentucky, dressed in gym clothes and carrying a Nike duffel bag.
In Malaysian, Bruneian and Indonesian folklore, Bunian people or Orang bunian (Indonesian pronunciation: [o.raŋ bu.ni.an]) are supernatural beings said to be invisible to most humans, except those with "spiritual sight".