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Raden Adjeng Kartini, also known as Raden Ayu Kartini (21 April 1879 – 17 September 1904), [a] was a prominent Indonesian activist who advocated for women's rights and female education. She was born into an aristocratic Javanese family in the Dutch East Indies (present-day Indonesia). After attending a Dutch-language primary school, she ...
Raden Ajeng (Adjeng) Kartini or, more accurately, Raden Ayu (Ajoe) Kartini, (April 21, 1879–September 13, 1904), was a prominent Javanese and an Indonesian national heroine. Kartini is known as a pioneer in the area of women's rights for native Indonesians.
Letters of a Javanese Princess (Dutch: Door duisternis tot licht: Gedachten over en voor het Javaansche volk; 'Through darkness to light: Thoughts about and for the Javanese people') is a posthumous book of letters by the Dutch East Indies women's rights activist and intellectual Kartini.
Kartini School in Jakarta Opening of the Kartini School in Buitzenborg () May 1915 Kartini School building in Buitenzorg (opened 1918) Class Kartini school in Malang. Kartini Schools, named for the Javanese women's rights advocate Raden Ajeng Kartini (Lady Kartini), were opened to educate indigenous girls in the Dutch East Indies in the wake of the Dutch Ethical Policy.
Even the second vice-president of Indonesia (1973-1978) — who was also the sultan of Yogyakarta — was known officially by his regnal name, Hamengkubuwono IX. This list is created to help readers from a non-Javanese background distinguish the noble titles from the personal names of individuals commonly known only by their noble titles.
Raden Ajeng Srimulat, Keroncong singer and comedian popular in the 1940s-1960s; Sudirman Arshad, a popular Malaysian singer in the 1980s; Urip Achmad Ariyanto, singer; Via Vallen, dangdut koplo singer; Vidi Aldiano, singer; W.R Supratman, composer of "Indonesia Raya", the national anthem of Indonesia; Yuni Shara, pop singer
Kurnianingrat confessed in her later years that she had "learned to appreciate Kartini much more" through Zainuddin's writings. [49] In an unpublished article written in 1980, she compared her own upbringing with Kartini's: [3] I was born in an environment similar to that of Kartini, pioneer of women's emancipation in Indonesia, but forty years ...
Born as Gusti Raden Mas Dorodjatun, in Sompilan, Ngasem, Yogyakarta, Hamengkubuwono IX was the ninth son of Prince Gusti Pangeran Puruboyo —later titled Hamengkubuwono VIII— with his consort, Raden Ajeng Kustilah. [1] [2] When he was four, he was sent away to live with the Mulder family, a Dutch family which lived in the Gondokusuman area.