Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Name First published Last published Owner Category Nyata: 1971: present: Jawa Pos Group: Women's Bola: 1984: 2018: Kompas Gramedia Group: Sports Nova: 1988: 2022: Kompas Gramedia Group
The Cathedral of Saint Joseph [1] (Indonesian: Katedral Santo Yosef) or simply Pontianak Cathedral is a parish of the Roman Catholic Church in Pontianak, [2] West Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia. [3] It is the mother church and seat of the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Pontianak. It is under the pastoral responsibility of Archbishop Agustinus Agus. [4]
Pontianak Teochew continues to be spoken across generations of the Chinese community in Pontianak, including by younger people. It is used in schools and markets, although there is a gradual shift toward Indonesian, particularly among the youth. Code-mixing between Pontianak Teochew and Indonesian is also a common phenomenon. [8]
The Jami Mosque of Pontianak was built following the founding of Pontianak by its founder, Syarif Abdurrahman Alkadrie. He was the son of al Habib Hussein, a Muslim scholar from Semarang who moved to West Kalimantan in 1733, was received by the Sultan of Matan, Kamaluddin, and then elected to be his Mufti of Religious Matters.
Agustinus Agus (appointed 3 June 2014; installation 28 August 2014; formerly, Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sintang) [1] Map The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pontianak ( Latin : Pontianaken[sis] ) is an archdiocese located in the city of Pontianak in West Kalimantan in Indonesia.
Pontianak Malay (Pontianak Malay: Bahase Melayu Pontianak, Jawi: بهاس ملايو ڤونتيانق) is a Malayic language primarily spoken by the Malay people in ...
The first new missions (1905–1913) were aimed at the coastal Chinese of Pamangkat, Pontianak (location of West Kalimantan's Bishop, as it was the largest town in the region) and Sambas, as well as the deep Dayak interior, where the Catholics hoped to convert without competition from Islam, before working back towards the coast.
Koran Sindo (lit. Sindo Paper) was an Indonesian newspaper published by Media Nusantara Citra (MNC Media) under PT Media Nusantara Informasi. The term "Sindo" is taken from the abbreviation of Seputar Indonesia, the former flagship news program on RCTI that later evolved into Seputar iNews. The paper was known for infographics shown on its ...