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Lamin house is the identifier of the Dayak people who live at East Kalimantan. [1] its 300 meters long, and 15 meters wide, as well as 3 meters high. [1] Few families live in lamin houses because this house can accommodate approximately 100 people. [1] In 1967, Indonesia Government inaugurated the lamin house at East Kalimantan. [2]
The earliest Austronesian structures were communal timber longhouses on stilts, with steeply sloping roofs and heavy gables, as seen in, for example, the Batak rumah adat and the Torajan Tongkonan. [4] Variations of the communal longhouse principle are found among the Dayak people of Borneo, as well as the Mentawai people. [4]
Examples of rumah adat include: . Rumoh Aceh, is the largest and tallest type of traditional houses of Acehnese people. It has a wooden gabled roof, decorated with wood carvings of floral or geometric patterns on the exterior.
Adat begawai (festival rule) Adat idup di rumah panjai (Order of life in the longhouse rule) Adat betenun, main lama, kajat ngau taboh (Weaving, past times, dance and music rule) Adat beburong, bemimpi ngau becenaga ati babi (Bird and animal omen, dream and pig liver rule) Adat belelang tauka bejalai (Journey or Sojourn rule)
The independent state of Nansarunai, established by the Ma'anyan prior to the 12th century, flourished in southern Kalimantan. [4] The kingdom suffered two major attacks from the Majapahit forces that caused the decline and fall of the kingdom by the year 1389; the attacks are known as Nansarunai Usak Jawa (meaning "the destruction of the Nansarunai by the Javanese") in the oral accounts of ...
Many of the inhabitants of the Southeast Asian island of Borneo (now Indonesian Kalimantan, East Malaysia and Brunei Darussalam), the Dayak, live traditionally in buildings known as Lamin House or longhouses: rumah betang in Indonesia (specifically the western parts of Borneo) and rumah panjang in Malay. Common to most of these is that they are ...
Linguistically, the Salako belong to another language family tree which is of the Malayic Dayak family (the same family as the Iban). [11] The Lara, although said to be more related to the Bidayuh (Jagoi-Singai), speak a language almost not mutually intelligible at all with the Bidayuh but belonged to the same language family tree which is the ...
A photo of a Dayak Kenyah woman from the Apo Kayan region (upper Bulungan Regency), central Borneo (now North Kalimantan), Indonesia taken by Anton Willem Nieuwenhuis during the Commission's Trip to central Borneo, circa 1898–1900. Photo of Jean Demmeni . The Apo Kayan people group are divided into 3 sub-ethic Dayak people, namely:-