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Pagaruyung (Minangkabau: Karajaan Pagaruyuang, other name: Pagaruyung Dārul Qarār), also known as Pagarruyung, Pagar Ruyung and Malayapura or Malayupura, [2] was a kingdom that once stood in the island of Sumatra and the seat of the Minangkabau kings of Western Sumatra. [3]
The Pengkalan Kempas Historical Complex (Kompleks Sejarah Pengkalan Kempas) [1] was built on a site known as Keramat Sungai Udang (Prawn River Shrine). [ 2 ] [ 3 ] : 94 It is located on the outskirts of the small town of Pengkalan Kempas , itself 35 kilometres (22 mi) from the nearby city of Port Dickson . [ 4 ]
Sulendraningrat, P.S., Sejarah Cirebon, Jakarta: Balai Pustaka 1985. Sunardjo, E.H. Unang, Selayang pandang sejarah masa kejayaan kerajaan Cirebon. Cirebon: Yayasan Keraton Kasepuhan Cirebon 1996. Sutherland, Heather, 'Notes on Java's regent families', Indonesia 17 1973 and 19 1974. Truhart, Peter, Regents of Nations. Systematic Chronology of ...
The Rembau Museum in Astana Raja, a replica of Raja Melewar's palace shortly after his coronation as Yamtuan Besar in nearby Kampung Penajis. The Minangkabau people were the first migrant community to settle in the area north of the Malacca Sultanate which eventually formed the confederation of Negeri Sembilan circa the 15th century.
It is called payung, Malay/Indonesian "umbrella/parasol", either because it has a tapered teardrop-shape similar to a payung, or – according to an unsourced folklore – once a ruler of a kingdom told his hulubalang to search for a precious stone called mustika kelabang (an agate with centipede-like pattern); the hulubalang, who was equipped ...
"Laskar Santri Pejuang Negeri: Rekam Jejak Laskar Hizbullah dalam Pertempuran 10 November 1945 di Surabaya". Tamaddun. 6 (2). Fakultas Ushuluddin, Adab, dan Dakwah IAIN Syekh Nurjati Cirebon: 1– 30. doi: 10.24235/tamaddun.v6i2.3519. Shiraishi, Aiko (1974). "ジャワ防衛義勇軍の設立". 東南アジア -歴史と文化- (in Japanese ...
The Battle of Semarang (Indonesian: Pertempuran Semarang), in Indonesia also known as Pertempuran Lima Hari (Five Days' Battle) [8] was a clash between Japanese forces of the Sixteenth Army and Indonesian forces consisting of People's Security Agency personnel and pemuda in October 1945 at the city of Semarang, Central Java.
The Japanese occupation of West Sumatra, officially known as Sumatora Nishi Kaigan Shū (Japanese: スマトラ西海岸州, Hepburn: Sumatora Nishikaigan-shū, lit. ' West Coast Province of Sumatra '), [2] [3] started from 1942 until 1945 when the region was controlled by the Empire of Japan.