Official Name: | Bagansiapiapi |
Translit Lang1: | Other |
Translit Lang1 Type1: | Chinese |
Translit Lang1 Info1: | 峇眼亞比 |
Translit Lang1 Type2: | Pinyin |
Translit Lang1 Info2: | Bāyǎn yǎbǐ |
Translit Lang1 Type3: | Peh-oe-ji |
Translit Lang1 Info3: | bā gán a pī |
Translit Lang1 Type4: | Jawi |
Translit Lang1 Info4: | باڬنسياڤياڤي |
Website: | Bagansiapiapi Community website |
Pushpin Map: | Indonesia |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name1: | Riau |
Subdivision Type2: | Regency |
Subdivision Name2: | Rokan Hilir |
Area Footnotes: | .[1] |
Area Total Km2: | 475.26 |
Population As Of: | 30 June 2013 |
Population Footnotes: | [2] |
Population Total: | 73,360 |
Population Density Km2: | 154 |
Population Demonym: | Bagan-kia (峇眼人) |
Established Title: | Established |
Established Date: | 1800s |
Leader Name: | Suyatno |
Timezone: | WIB |
Utc Offset: | +7 |
Timezone Dst: | Not observed |
Ethnicity: | Malay, Chinese, Etc |
Religion: | Islam, Confucius, Buddhist, Protestant, Catholic, Etc |
Language: | Hokkien (mainly), Malay Indonesian, Teochew, Mandarin |
Coordinates: | 2.1667°N 149°W |
Bagansiapiapi or simply known as Bagan is a city in Riau province on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia. The city is the capital of Rokan Hilir Regency in the province and is located on the east coast of Sumatra, on the Rokan River delta across the strait west of Malacca and near Dumai.
The town was originally populated mainly by Chinese immigrants[3] who arrived at the end of 18th and the beginning of 19th century. Initially eighteen Chinese nationals sailed to Bagansiapiapi around 200 years ago and settled on the delta. All were from the family named (Ang;Chinese: 洪) . in other dialects). More followed, searching for a new life and seeking to avoid the economic hardships prevalent in Hokkien (China) at that time.
Every year, the Chinese community celebrates the anniversary of Bagansiapiapi, on the 16th day, of the 5th month of the Lunar year, believing that the initial immigrant group landed at Bagansiapiapi on that day.
Most of the Chinese population are Hokkien, originating from Tang-Ua (TongAn, now part of E-Meng/Xiamen), Kim-Meng (Kinmen, Quemoy, JinMen), and Cin-Kang (JinJiang/Jinjiang). Some Teochew, living mainly in the southern part, and a minority of Khek/Hakka also populated the town. Most of Chinese population communicate using the Tang-Ua dialect of Hokkien.
Bagansiapiapi was one of the largest fish producers in the world during the late 1980s and early 1990s, ranking second in the world. Bagansiapiapi is also famous for swallow nest farming. Indonesia's bird's nests are famous for their quality and are well liked by consumers. This industry has led Bagansiapiapi into a new era of economic growth, involving investment, high activity in building construction and export growth.
In recent years, urbanization has been an issue. Most of the youth leave the town after high school to pursue a better life, or higher education in larger cities. They normally return for the traditional family reunion during the Chinese New Year celebrations.
In the 1980s Bagansiapiapi was one of the largest fish producing towns in Indonesia, and the second highest producer of fish in the world, after Bergen in Norway.[4] [5]
In its development, the fishing industry has made Bagansiapiapi into a modern town. In 1934, Bagansiapiapi already had a drinking water treatment facility, a power plant and a firefighter unit.[6] [7] Due to the town's progress compared to other areas of afdeeling in Bengkalis, Bagansiapiapi was called as Ville Lumiere or (City of Light).The fishing industry started with the first wave of Chinese immigrants, attracted to the area by the availability of abundant fishing. The town's heyday came under the jurisdiction of the Dutch East Indies, around 1930, when the fisheries produced 300,000 tons of fish per year. The annual production has fallen since, being particularly affected by a collapse of fish numbers since the 1970s, by which time over 800 trawlers based in the town were fishing the Shunda Shelf.[8] The trawling ban in Indonesian waters, introduced in 1980, has had a significant effect on the economy of the town.[8]
However, the nickname Bagansiapiapi as a fish town over time are faded. If previously natural factors that make it so known as a fish producer, later it is known that natural factors are also causing the fading gradually because the coast around Bagansiapiapi experience siltation and narrow by the sediment of mud brought water Rokan River. Bagansiapiapi was also famous as the largest traditional shipyard in Indonesia before independence.[9] Bagansiapiapi's made boats are capable of penetrating various types of marine characteristics so that they are also used in Java, Nusa Tenggara, and Maluku. Outside the country, his work attracted fishermen in Sri Lanka, India, even America.
Bagansiapiapi boats production meet demand from the smallest of about three-four tons to 300 tons. Shipyards mushroomed in the era of the 1940s until the mid-1980s. In its heyday, the name of Bagansiapiapi was more famous than Pekanbaru and Riau Province.[10] But now the business is dead and suspended because of the limitations of wood raw materials and a series of Act About Forestry. The law states that the central government has full authority to determine the division of forest areas. As a result, the locally dominated wood-searchers, no longer able to cut timber to sell it to shipyard entrepreneurs.
At the 2013 census, the population of Bagansiapiapi city was 73,360. Majority ethnic group of the city are the Chinese with large minority Malay population, while the Minangkabau and Batak are the remainder.
As for Religion, Buddhism and Chinese religion (including Taoism and Confucianism) are the major religions in the city, while Islam and Christianity are minority religions.
Though Indonesian is the official language, Hokkien is the most spoken language in Bagansiapiapi, due to the large Chinese population. The variety they use belong to the same language as Taiwanese Hokkien, namely a variety called as Bagan Hokkien (Chinese: t=峇眼福建話|poj=bā gán hok-kiàn-oā). Another local language is Malay, spoken by the Malay community.
Barge burning, locally known as Bakar Tongkang or in Hokkien language known as Go Gwek Cap Lak is an annual Bagansiapiapi peoples ritual especially among the ethnic Chinese celebrated every 16th in the fifth month of the Chinese calendar. Each year, the ritual brings in tourists from Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan, and Mainland China to Bagansiapiapi. This annual event is now heavily promoted by the government as a source of Rokan Hilir tourism.[11]
Transportation has been an area of concern for the government, as there is currently no airport. Bagansiapiapi is reached by road, being some 6 hours from Pekanbaru, capital of Riau, and 2.5 hours from Dumai. From North Sumatra and Medan the travel time by road is about 11 hours.
The local government has an ongoing policy of improving the town infrastructure, including the widening of roads and improving street lighting.