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  2. Bengawan Solo (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengawan_Solo_(song)

    "Bengawan Solo" (lit. "Solo River") is an Indonesian song written by Gesang Martohartono in 1940. The song is a description of the longest river in Java, Solo River.The song became popular in Indonesia during the Second World War and was one of the songs promoted nationally in the newly-independent country after the war.

  3. List of Indonesian national songs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indonesian...

    125 Lagu Wajib Nasional. Titik Media Publisher. ISMN 9790801890009. Kirana, Dilla Chandra (2015). 120 Koleksi Lagu Wajib Nasional INDONESIA. Lembar Langit Indonesia. Sugesti, Murlina (2014). Koleksi Terlengkap Lagu Wajib Nasional. Lembar Langit Indonesia. ISBN 9780901388728. Abassy, Djamaludin (2011). Lagu-Lagu Wajib Nasional. Lembar Langit ...

  4. Moluccans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moluccans

    Moluccans are the Austronesian and Ambonese Malay-speaking ethnic groups indigenous to the Maluku Islands (also called the Moluccas), Eastern Indonesia.The region was historically known as the Spice Islands, [4] and today consists of two Indonesian provinces of Maluku and North Maluku.

  5. List of Hot 100 number-one singles of 2008 (Japan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hot_100_number-one...

    Issue date Song Artist January 21 "Stay Gold" Hikaru Utada: January 28 "Be Free" Greeeen: February 4 "Deai no Kakera" Ketsumeishi: February 11 "Soba ni Iru ne" Thelma Aoyama featuring SoulJa

  6. Ambon bay festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambon_bay_festival

    Ambon Bay Festival (Indonesian: Festival Teluk Ambon) is an annual event held at Ambon Bay and across West Seram Regency, Maluku, Indonesia at the end of September. [1] The festival aims to promote national and international tourism to the Maluku Islands. [2] It has been held since 2006. [3]

  7. Central Maluku languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Maluku_languages

    The Central Maluku languages are a proposed subgroup of the Central–Eastern Malayo-Polynesian branch of the Austronesian language family which comprises around fifty languages spoken principally on the Seram, Buru, Ambon and the Sula Islands, Indonesia. None of the languages have as many as fifty thousand speakers, and several are extinct.

  8. Invasion of Ambon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasion_of_Ambon

    After the defeat of the RMS on Ambon by Indonesian forces in November 1950, the self-declared government withdrew to Seram, where an armed struggle continued on until December 1963. The government in exile moved to the Netherlands in 1966, following resistance leader and president Chris Soumokil 's capture and execution by Indonesian authorities.

  9. Ambonese people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambonese_people

    The Ambonese are from Ambon Island in Maluku, an island group east of Sulawesi and north of Timor in Indonesia. They also live on the southwest of Seram Island; which is part of the Moluccas, Java, Western New Guinea, and other regions of Indonesia. Additionally, there are about 35,000 Ambonese people living in the Netherlands. [3]