West Java 15 Musea

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West Java 15 Musea

Banten
* Archaeology Sites Museum Banten Address: Jl. Agung Mosque of Banten, Serang
West Java
* Bandung Asia Afrika Museum
* Bandung Barli Museum
* Bandung Geology Museum
* Bandung Postal Museum
* Bandung Provincial Museum
* Bandung Virajati Museum Jl. Gatot Subroto No. 96 Phone : 443041-3 no info
* Bandung Wangsit Siliwangi (Military Museum)
* Bandung Sri Baduga Museum
* Bogor Soil Museum
* Bogor Struggle Museum no info
* Bogor Zoology Museum
* Bogor Etnobotany Museum
* Cirebon Kanoman Museum
* Cirebon Kesepuhan Museum

Bandung Asia Afrika Museum
The idea of establishing the Museum of the Asian-African Conference had been materialized by Joop Ave, the Executive Chairman of the Committee of the 25th Anniversary of the Asian-African Conference and Director General of Protocol and Consular in the Department of Foreign Affairs in cooperation with Department of Information, Department of Education and Culture, the Provincial Government of West Java, and Padjadjaran University. The technical planning and its execution was carried out by PT Decenta, Bandung.
Bandung Barli Museum

Just 110 unsold works of the late artist Barli Sasmitawinata remain in Bandung's Barli Museum as part of an exhibition held since the painter died earlier this year, aged 85.
Barli Museum,
Jl. Prof. Dr. Ir. Sutami No. 91,
Bandung
Open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., including public holiday

Bandung Geology Museum
Excellent place if you are into geography and geology. The museum houses an excellent collection of fossils, ores and minerals, skeletons of fossilised animals, full dinosaur skeletons, as well as a Mammoth skeleton. The museum also has an excellent replica of the skull of Java Man found in East Java in 1896.
Location: Jl Diponogero 57
Open Mon-Thur: 9am-2pm
Fri: 9am-11am
Sat: 9am-1pm
Admission: Free
Bandung Postal Museum
Interestingly this place is located in a side of Gedung Sate and houses a collection of fine international and Indonesian stamps as well as other postal items.
Location: Jl Diponegoro
Open Mon-Thur: 8am-2pm
Fri: 8am-11am
Sat: 8am-1pm
Closed on Sunday
Admission: Free
Bandung Provincial Museum
This extremely interesting museum houses West Java's cultural history. There is a replica of Batu Tulis (inscribed stone), stone statues, gamelan and angklung instruments.
Location: Jl Lingkar Seletan
Open Tue-Sun: 8am-4pm
Closed Mondays and Public holidays
Admission: Free
Bandung Wangsit Siliwangi (Military Museum)
Displays include paraphernalia from the WW2 independence struggle including weapons, photographs, flags and uniforms. If you are interested in the independence movement in Indonesia then this place you will like.
Location: Jl Lembong 38
Open Mon-Fri: 8am-2pm
Admission: Free
Bandung Sri Baduga Museum
Address: Jl. BKR No. No BKr. 185 Bandung Bandung, 185
Phone : 5210976 Fax : 5223214 Phone: 5210976 Fax: 5223214
One of Bandung's treasures is the Sri Baduga Museum. It houses exhibits of geology archaeology, fine art and technology on three floors and is visited regularly by schoolchildren for educational purposes.

An orange mailbox dating from the Dutch colonial period, located to the left of the entrance, welcomes visitors to the Sri Baduga Museum in Bandung.

Few know exactly what exhibits are kept in the building, located at the BKR-Inhoftank crossroads, a busy spot south of the city.

This is understandable, as the museum, inaugurated on June 5, 1980, by Education and Culture Minister Daud Yoesoef, is generally frequented by elementary-, secondary- and high-school students. Their teachers may ask them to find out more about the history and culture of West Java, the province in which they live.

Run by the provincial administration, the museum has a collection of historical objects that mostly describe life in earlier periods of the region's Sundanese community. According to Rochmaniah, the museum's marketing officer, the exhibits shown comprise natural objects and cultural artifacts.

“The diversity of its collection covers 10 classifications ranging from geology, archeology, fine art and technology,” Rochmaniah, who has worked with the museum for only four years, said recently.

To date, it has collected 5,893 exhibits, looked after by 82 employees. That number is inclined to increase in line with a public desire to hand over historical objects to the treasury to serve as resources for the museum.

It has three floors with an open display room, where the Inscription of Ciaruteun, an eight-ton black rock found in Ciampea, Bogor, is put on show. It is one of the seven inscriptions of the Tarumanegara kingdom built in 450 AD, and attracts a lot of visitors.

The first floor displays various natural objects and items of cultural interest found in West Java. Animals and plants of the Leuweung Sancang tropical forest reserve, Garut, can be seen at the entrance, along with a single-horn rhino (Rhinoceros sundaicus), a surviving ancient species whose population keeps shrinking in Ujung Kulon National Park, in the extreme southwest of Java.

A model portraying the geomorphology of Lake Bandung some 6,000 years ago, which resulted from the blockage of the ancient Citarum River by Mt. Tangkuban Perahu's eruption, provides a glimpse into the history of Bandung and its environs.

The same floor also presents cultural tools used by Sundanese ancestors such as axes in Tasikmalaya and Parigi, Ciamis, and crude knives in Tangerang. Museum personnel estimated that the Mesolithic devices were used for hunting and preparing food.

Animism is indicated by stone graves complete with stone axes and bangles offered to the dead, which were discovered in Mandiracan, Kuningan and Anyer Lor, Serang.

Sundanese traditional community life depicted on the second floor is no less appealing, with molds for cikak and satu cookies from Majalengka and Cirebon respectively, a miniature of the Kampung Naga communal house, Tasikmalaya, classroom furniture of the Dutch period and a replica of the Nagaliman carriage of Cirebon's sultanate.
Another heritage item dating from Dutch colonial times includes a grave dome measuring one meter by 0.5 meter, found in Dayeuhkolot, southern Bandung, before being moved later to the Christian graveyard of Kerkhof, Jl. Padjadjaran.

It belonged to Anna Maria, who died on Dec. 28, 1756, the daughter of Sgt. de Groote, a Dutch soldier stationed in Bandung. There are also village chief stamps of Cibodas, Ciparay and Bandung, of the same period, that were donated by Garut residents.

On the third floor are different kinds of Sundanese musical instruments like flutes, zithers and gamelan, besides wooden and leather puppets, as well as traditional wedding attire. The museum also keeps over 140 ancient manuscripts. Regrettably, owing to the small number of translators and limited financial resources, only 35 texts have been translated into Indonesian.

The diversity of the items is what prompts schoolteachers to take or assign their students to the museum. During the Travel Exchange (Travex) 2005 exhibition held in Bandung in the middle of last year, Sri Baduga was one of the tourist destinations that attracted guests from Singapore and Malaysian.

Rochmaniah said she received about 100,000 visitors per year, mostly students. They usually come Mondays through Fridays, with the general public predominating at weekends,” she added.

Given the extent of its collection, however, the museum provides inadequate information. Amanda, a second-year state junior high school student in Bandung complained about the absence of guides. “If no personnel are available, at least there should be booklets to describe historical facts for us,” she said.

Fachrich, Amanda's friend, pointed to the dirty walls of the building. “The brown stains on the walls make it look sleazy. Museums should be tidy and clean — like those abroad,” he remarked.
Yuli Tri Suwarni

Bogor Soil Museum

Museum Tanah (Soil Museum) that was located in the road of Ir. H. Juanda was faced with the Bogor Botanic Garden kept the land collection and the stones in Indonesia.
This museum was in the central building of the Land Research, was opened every day only in the working hours and was opened for the public.

Bogor Zoology Museum

Bogor has an excellent zoological museum situated near the palace.

Bogor Etnobotany Museum

Jalan Ir H Juanda 22-24
Bogor 16122 Indonesia
+62 251 332 775
Founded in 1982, this museum explores the fascinating relationship between botany and Indonesian ethnic culture. Among the exhibited items are 1,300 artifacts from various regions in the Indonesian archipelago that are all made from botanical materials. The display features household items, toys, aboriginal outfits and armors, as well as farming, fishing and musical equipment. A herbarium and a library complement the museum, which is part of the Botany Division of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences.

Cirebon Kanoman Museum

Keraton Kanoman is one of royal palaces in Cirebon. It was built in 1588 by Sultan Badarudin who separated himself from the main royal palace of Cirebon because he had a different opinion with his brother about Cirebon Royal Palace inheritor.

Keraton Kanoman Cirebon is just like another royal palaces in Java island, the entire buildings are face to the North. Outside the palace there's also a beautiful building called Balai Maguntur. It was constructed by red rock and was adopted from Bali style for the art of the building. The function of Balai Maguntur is for Sultan place when he attending ceremonies like Soldier Ceremony or Gamelan Saketan Ceremony on 8th Maulid, etc. There was also an opinion from society that told about the function of Balai Maguntur is for “balai mangun tutur” which meaning is for Sultan place to take a speech or talk to society about rule of the law and religion.

Keraton Kanoman also has a museum with antique carved doors. This museum has two very important collections, they are war carts Paksi Naga Liman and Jempana. Both of them are similar with carts in Keraton Kasepuhan, but they are older than carts in Keraton Kasepuhan. The museum also has various weapons collections like creeses and harpoons. The weapons are very old and have high value in history so many people tried to stole them for their magic rituals. The museum also has gamelan collections, just like the weapons their are very old, antique, and have a high value of history.

Cirebon Kesepuhan Museum

* Kesepuhan Palace was founded by Sultan Syamsudin in 1479. It is Located at Lemahkuwuk area. There is a grand mosque Sang Cipta Rasa at the north of Kesepuhan Palace front yard that built by Wali Songo in 1407 year's. This mosque famous with its ‘saka tatal'.

* Kanoman Palace was founded in 1516 by Sultan Badruddin. It is located at north direction of Kasepuhan Palace.

* Kecirebonan Palace was founded in 1808 by Sultan Pangeran Raja Kanoman. Keceribonan Palace is Located in the central of Cirebon city, exactly on Pulasaren street. Kesepuhan and Kanoman Palace have a museum which exhibits many heritage things from the old times sultanate.

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