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Alfred Russell Wallace
Animism
Archipelago
Asia
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Australia (continent)
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Bali
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Malay Archipelago
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This article is about the large island group. For the book, see The Malay Archipelago.
Malay Archipelago
World map highlighting Malay Archipelago. New Guinea—not part of the Malay Archipelago by some definitions—is also included.
Geography
Location
Southeast Asia, Oceania
Total islands
25,000 - 30,000
Major islands
Borneo, Java, Luzon, Mindanao, New Guinea, Sulawesi, Sumatra
Area
2,000,000 km2 (8.0E+5 sq mi)
Highest point
1
Country
Brunei
East Timor
Indonesia
Malaysia
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Singapore
Demographics
Population
350 million.2
Ethnic groups
Austronesian peoples, Malay, Overseas Chinese
The Malay Archipelago refers to the archipelago between mainland Southeastern Asia and Australia. The name was derived from the anachronistic concept of a Malay race.3
It has also been called the Indo-Australian Archipelago, East Indies, Indonesian Archipelago, and other names over time. The term is largely synonymous with the term Maritime Southeast Asia. Situated between the Indian and Pacific Oceans, the group of over 25,000 islands is the largest archipelago by area, and third by number of islands in the world. It includes Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Brunei, East Malaysia and East Timor.4 The island of New Guinea or islands of Papua New Guinea is not always included in definitions of the Malay Archipelago.45
Contents
1 Etymology and terminology
2 Geography
2.1 Size
2.2 Biogeography
3 Demography
4 See also
5 Notes
6 External links
Etymology and terminology
Federal Constitution 'silent' on tribal claim to country
The following article was published in Malaysiakini yesterday. I am sure many of you who are not subscribed to Malaysiakini have not read it yet so I decided to steal it and publish it here so that you can read it -- and of course, comment. Joe Fernandez, Malaysiakini
The Malay Archipelago - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Illustration of a Rhacophorus nigropalmatus from The Malay Archipelago ... Its full title was The Malay Archipelago: The land of the orang-utan, and the bird of ...
The common name was derived from the concept of a Malay race,6 which included the peoples of modern-day Indonesia, Malaysia, most of East Timor and the Philippines. The racial concept was proposed by European explorers based on their observations of the influence of the ethnic Malay empire (Indonesia), Srivijaya.7
The 19th century naturalist Alfred Wallace used the term "Malay Archipelago" as the title of his influential book documenting his studies in the region. Wallace also referred to the area as the "Indian Archipelago" and the "Indo-Australian" Archipelago.8 He included within the region the Solomon Islands and the Malay Peninsula due to physiographic similarities.8 As Wallace noted,9 there are arguments for excluding Papua New Guinea for cultural and geographical reasons: Papua New Guinea is culturally quite different from the other countries in the region, and the island of New Guinea itself is geologically not part of the continent of Asia, as the islands of the Sunda Shelf are (see Australia).
The archipelago was called the "East Indies"10 in the European colonial era and is still sometimes referred to as such,4 but broader usages of the "East Indies" term had included Indochina and the Indian subcontinent. Indonesians use the term "Nusantara" for the "Malay archipelago".11 The area is also referred to as the Indonesian archipelago.1213
Geography
Federal Constitution 'silent' on tribal claim to country
The following article was published in Malaysiakini yesterday. I am sure many of you who are not subscribed to Malaysiakini have not read it yet so I decided to steal it and publish it here so that you can read it -- and of course, comment. Joe Fernandez, Malaysiakini Former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad has now decided that the non-Malays must accept that Malaysia “belongs” to the Malays ...
and engraved by John Rapkin published by The London Printing Publishing Company about 1856 The original is a steel engraved map with original outline hand colouring Click here for detail showing part of the map at full resolution Singapore area 600 dpi Click the small image to the left for a larger low resolution
http://stock-images.antiqueprints.com/stock/asia-maps.html
Malay Archipelago: Definition from Answers.com
Malay Archipelago An island group of southeast Asia between Australia and the Asian mainland and separating the Indian and Pacific oceans
The land and sea area of the archipelago exceeds 2 million km2.1 The over 25,000 islands of the archipelago comprises many smaller archipelagoes.14
The major groupings are:
Indonesia
Sunda Islands
Greater Sunda Islands
Lesser Sunda Islands
Maluku Islands
Philippine Archipelago
The six largest islands are New Guinea, Sumatra, Borneo, Sulawesi, Java, Luzon.
Geologically the archipelago is one of the most active volcanic regions in the world. Tectonic uplifts have produced large mountains, including the highest in Mount Kinabalu in Sabah with a height of 4,095.2 m and Puncak Jaya in Papua at 4,884 m (16,024 ft). The climate throughout the archipelago, owing to its position on the equator, is tropical.
Size
Malay Archipelago (or Indonesian Archipelago) is often referred to as the largest archipelago in the world, but this is meant by area and not by number of islands. This title aptly represents its 25,000 - 30,000 or so islands which span 5,400 kilometres (3,400 mi) eastward from Sabang in northern Sumatra to Merauke in Irian Jaya. If you superimpose a map of Indonesia over one of Eurasia, you will find that it stretches from Eastern France to Western China; compared to the United States, it covers the area from Eastern California to Bermuda. If includes New Guinea, it was even span 6,400 kilometres (4,000 mi), it stretches from Eastern Spain to Western China; compared to the USA, it covers the area from Eastern California to Western Iceland.
Biogeography
Wallace's line between Australian and Southeast Asian fauna. The deep water of the Lombok Strait between the islands of Bali and Lombok formed a water barrier even when lower sea levels linked the now-separated islands and landmasses on either side.
Siti Nurhaliza proposed as cultural ambassador
Friday, January 28th, 2011 19:24:00 BANDUNG: Malaysian pop diva Datuk Siti Nurhaliza Tarudin has been proposed as the Cultural Ambassador of the Malay Community in efforts to strengthen ties between countries in the archipelago. The proposal was brought up by the Association of Malaysian and Indonesian Journalists (ISWAMI) based on the community's overwhelming acceptance towards Siti Nurhaliza's ...
Malay Archipelago - definition of Malay Archipelago by the ...
Malay Archipelago. An island group of southeast Asia between Australia and the Asian mainland and separating the Indian and Pacific oceans. ...
Wallace used the term “Malay Archipelago” as the title of his influential book documenting his studies in the region. He proposed the "Wallace Line", a boundary that separated the flora and fauna of Asia and Australia. The ice age boundary was formed by the deep water straits between Borneo and Sulawesi; and through the Lombok Strait between Bali and Lombok. This is now considered the western border of the Wallacea transition zone between the zoogeographical regions of Asia and Australia. The zone has a mixture of species of Asian and Australian origin, and its own endemic species.
Demography
Over 350 million people live in the region, with the most populated island being Java. The people living there are predominantly from Austronesian subgroupings and correspondingly speak western Malayo-Polynesian languages. This region of Southeast Asia shares more social and cultural ties with other Austronesian peoples in the Pacific than with the peoples of Mainland Southeast Asia. The main religions in this region are Islam, Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism and traditional Animism.
Mahathir’s intriguing rhetoric of Malaysia-belongs-to-Malays
Dr Dzulkelfy Ahmad You have asked me to write on a difficult subject and answer a thorny question especially coming close to a general election and after the defeat in Tenang.
Malay Archipelago - LoveToKnow 1911
MALAY ARCHIPELAGO' (variously called Malaysia, the Indian Archipelago, ... The islands of the archipelago nearly all present bold and picturesque profiles against ...
The cultural identity of the region is seen as part of 'Farther India' or Greater India as seen in Coedes 'Indianized states of Southeast Asia' refers to it as 'Island Southeast Asia' 15 while other authorities see it is as partly (or in the case of Singapore heavily) Sinicised, and yet the further other ones suggest its own identity within Austronesia or Oceania. 16
See also
Indonesian Archipelago (disambiguation)
Insulindia
Malay Peninsula
Malesia
Notes
^ a b Moores, Eldridge M.; Fairbridge, Rhodes Whitmore (1997). Encyclopedia of European and Asian regional geology. Springer. p. 377. ISBN 0412740400. http://books.google.com/?id=aYRup5mRcGsC&pg=PA377&dq=%22malay+archipelago%22+2+million+km%C2%B2#v=onepage&q=. Retrieved 30 November 2009.
^ Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division (2006) (PDF). World Population Prospects, Table A.2. 2006 revision. United Nations. pp. 37–42. http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/wpp2006/WPP2006_Highlights_rev.pdf. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
^ Wallace, Alfred Russel (1869). The Malay Archipelago. London: Macmillan and Co. p. 1.
^ a b c "Malay Archipelago." Encyclopedia Britannica. 2006. Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.
^ "Maritime Southeast Asia." Worldworx Travel. Accessed 26 May 2009.
^ Wallace, Alfred Russel (1869). The Malay Archipelago. London: Macmillan and Co. p. 1.
^ Reid, Anthony. Understanding melayu (Malay) as a source of diverse modern identities. Origins of Malayness 2001 Cambridge University Press. Retrieved on March 2, 2009.
^ a b Wallace, Alfred Russell (1863). "On the Physical Geography of the Malay Archipelago". http://web2.wku.edu/~smithch/wallace/S078.htm. Retrieved 30 November 2009. ; Wallace, Alfred Russel (1869). The Malay Archipelago. London: Macmillan and Co. p. 2.
^ http://www.papuaweb.org/dlib/bk/wallace/race.html "If we draw a line ... commencing to the east of the Philippine Islands, thence along the western coast of Gilolo, through the island of Bouru, and curving round the west end of Mores, then bending back by Sandalwood Island to take in Rotti, we shall divide the Archipelago into two portions, the races of which have strongly marked distinctive peculiarities. This line will separate the Malayan and all the Asiatic races, from the Papuans and all that inhabit the Pacific; and though along the line of junction intermigration and commixture have taken place, yet the division is on the whole almost as well defined and strongly contrasted, as is the corresponding zoological division of the Archipelago, into an Indo-Malayan and Austro-Malayan region."
^ OED first edition A geographical term, including Hindostan, Further India, and the islands beyond with first found usage 1598
^ Echols, John M.; Shadily, Hassan (1989 (1st edition)). Kamus Indonesia Inggris (An Indonesian-English Dictionary) (6th ed.). Jakarta: Gramedia. ISBN 979-403-756-7. ; Moores, Eldridge M.; Fairbridge, Rhodes Whitmore (1997). Encyclopedia of European and Asian regional geology. Springer. p. 377. ISBN 0412740400. http://books.google.com/?id=aYRup5mRcGsC&pg=PA377&dq=%22malay+archipelago%22+2+million+km%C2%B2#v=onepage&q=. Retrieved 30 November 2009.
^ Friedhelm Göltenboth (2006) Ecology of insular Southeast Asia: the Indonesian Archipelago Elsevier, ISBN 0444527397, ISBN 9780444527394
^ Modern Quaternary Research in Southeast Asia, Volume 1
^ Philippines : General Information. Government of the Philippines. Retrieved 2009-11-06; International Monetary Fund (April 2006). Estimate "World Economic Outlook Database". Press release. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2006/01/data/dbcoutm.cfm?SD=2005&ED=2005&R1=1&R2=1&CS=3&SS=2&OS=C&DD=0&OUT=1&C=536&S=PPPWGT-PPPPC&RequestTimeout=120&CMP=0&x=45&y=5 Estimate. Retrieved 2006-10-05. ; "Indonesia Regions". Indonesia Business Directory. http://www.indonext.com/Regions/. Retrieved 2007-04-24.
^ Coedes, G. (1968) The Indianized states of Southeast Asia Edited by Walter F. Vella. Translated by Susan Brown Cowing.Canberra : Australian National University Press. Introduction... The geographic area here called Farther India consists of Indonesia, or island Southeast Asia....
^ see the cultural macro-regions of the world table below
External links
Wallace, Alfred Russel. The Malay Archipelago, Volume I, Volume II.
v · d · eCountries of the Malay Archipelago
Mahathir’s intriguing rhetoric of Malaysia-belongs-to-Malays
Dr Dzulkelfy Ahmad You have asked me to write on a difficult subject and answer a thorny question especially coming close to a general election and after the defeat in Tenang. It’s alright with Tun Mahathir and for that matter even with PM Najib.They could say the darnest things and yet could later turn and twist to escape unscratched and invariably scot-free. Not with us, lesser mortals, we ...
Malay Archipelago facts - Freebase
Facts and figures about Malay Archipelago, taken from Freebase, the world's database.
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These are among the many items that can be found at the JB Bazaar.
TRINKETS and ornaments are the most common accessories since ancient times.
Malay Archipelago — History.com Articles, Video, Pictures and ...
largest group of islands in the world, consisting of the more than 13,000 islands of Indonesia and the some 7,000 islands of the Philippines.
Brunei · East Timor · Indonesia · Malaysia · Philippines · Singapore · Papua New Guinea
Tracing Wallace
[Please note that the first Sunday broadcast of Hindsight is currently featuring the series Playing the 20th Century ] Nineteenth century English naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace was a close confidant of Charles Darwin and a pallbearer at his funeral. During his journey through the Malay Archipelago, Wallace independently proposed his own theories of natural selection, and is said by many to ...
Malay Archipelago (islands, southeast Asia) -- Britannica ...
Malay Archipelago (islands, southeast Asia), largest group of islands in the world, consisting of the more than 13,000 islands of Indonesia and the some 7,000 islands ...
Brunei · East Timor · Indonesia · Malaysia · Philippines · Singapore · Papua New Guinea
Siti Nurhaliza proposed as Cultural Ambassador
BANDUNG: Datuk Siti Nurhaliza Tarudin has been proposed as the Cultural Ambassador of the Malay Community in efforts to strengthen ties between countries in the archipelago.
Malay Archipelago definition of Malay Archipelago in the Free ...
Information about Malay Archipelago in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. the malay archipelago ...
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Climbing an awesome mountain of stairs
THERE are many interesting places in this country that are not well known even to our own citizens. However, a VIP visit such as that by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak on Jan 29 to open the Maliau Basin Studies Centre put a spotlight on such an awesome place.
What does Malay Archipelago mean? definition, meaning and ...
Definition of Malay Archipelago in the AudioEnglish.net Dictionary. Meaning of Malay Archipelago. What does Malay Archipelago mean? ...
Brunei · East Timor · Indonesia · Malaysia · Philippines · Singapore · Papua New Guinea
Siti Nurhaliza for cultural ambassador?
BANDUNG: Malaysian pop diva Datuk Siti Nurhaliza Tarudin has been proposed as the Cultural Ambassador of the Malay Community in efforts to strengthen ties between countries in the archipelago.



















