Malay Archipelago Explained

Malay Archipelago
Mapframe-Zoom:2
Location:Maritime Southeast Asia, Melanesia
Area Km2:2,870,000
Area Footnotes:[1]
Total Islands:25,000
Major Islands:Java, Luzon, Borneo, Mindanao, New Guinea, Sulawesi, Sumatra
Country1:Philippines
Country1 Largest City:Quezon City
Country2:Indonesia
Country2 Largest City:Jakarta
Country3:Papua New Guinea
Country3 Largest City:Port Moresby
Country4:Brunei
Country4 Largest City:Bandar Seri Begawan
Country5:East Timor
Country5 Largest City:Dili
Country6:Malaysia
Country6 Largest City:Kota Kinabalu
Population:380,000,000
Population Footnotes:[2]
Ethnic Groups:Predominantly Austronesians, with minorities of Negritoes, Papuans, Melanesians, Overseas Chinese, Arab descendants, and Overseas Indians

The Malay Archipelago is the archipelago between Mainland Southeast Asia and Australia, and is also called Insulindia or the Indo-Australian Archipelago. The name was taken from the 19th-century European concept of a Malay race, later based on the distribution of Austronesian languages. It has also been called the "Malay world," "Nusantara", "East Indies" over time. The name is controversial in Indonesia due to its ethnic connotations and colonial undertones, which can overshadow the country's diverse cultures.

Situated between the Indian and Pacific oceans, the archipelago of over 25,000 islands and islets is the largest archipelago by area and fifth by number of islands in the world. It includes Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia (specifically East Malaysia), Papua New Guinea, and the Philippines.[3] [4] The term is largely synonymous with Maritime Southeast Asia.[5]

Etymology and terminology

The term "Malay Archipelago" was derived from the archaic European concept of a "Malay race" (a culturally-similar non-Oceanian subset of the Austronesian peoples),[6] a racial concept proposed by European explorers based on their observations of the influence of the Srivijaya empire, which was based on the island of Sumatra.[7] However, the Malay Archipelago does not include all islands inhabited by the Malay race such as Madagascar and Taiwan, and includes islands inhabited by Melanesians such as the Maluku Islands and New Guinea.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] [9] He included the Solomon Islands and Malay Peninsula in the region due to physiographic similarities. As Wallace noted,[10] 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 it 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"[11] from the late 16th century and throughout the European colonial era. It is still sometimes referred to as such, but broader usages of the "East Indies" term had included Indochina and the Indian subcontinent. The area is called "Nusantara" in the Indonesian language.[12] The area is also referred to as the "Indonesian Archipelago".[13] [14] The term "Maritime Southeast Asia" is largely synonymous, covering both the islands in Southeast Asia and nearby island-like communities, such as those found on the Malay Peninsula.[15]

Insulindia

Insulindia is a somewhat archaic geographical term[16] [17] [18] for Maritime Southeast Asia, sometimes extending as far as Australasia.[19] More common in Portuguese and Spanish,[20] [21] [22] it is also sometimes used in art history or anthropology to describe the interface zone between the cultures of Oceania and Southeast Asia.[23]

Insulindia is used as a geopolitical term in academic discussions of the former European colonial possessions within Maritime Southeast Asia, especially Dutch East Indies and Portuguese East Indies ("Portuguese Insulindia")[24] much as former French colonial possessions in Southeast Asia are still termed French Indochina.[25] It is also used to describe and locate the Chinese cultural diaspora (the "insulindian Chinese")[26] across the islands of Southeast Asia.[27]

Geography

The land and sea area of the archipelago exceeds 2 million km2. The more than 25,000 islands of the archipelago consist of many smaller archipelagoes.[28]

The major island groupings in the Indonesian Archipelago include the Maluku Islands, New Guinea, and the Sunda Islands. The Sunda Islands comprise two island groups: the Greater Sunda Islands and the Lesser Sunda Islands.

The major island groupings in the Philippine Archipelago include Luzon, Mindanao, and the Visayan Islands.

The seven largest islands are New Guinea, Borneo, Sumatra, Sulawesi and Java in Indonesia; and Luzon and Mindanao in the Philippines.

Geologically, the archipelago is one of the most active volcanic regions in the world. Producing many volcanoes especially in Java, Sumatra and Lesser Sunda Islands region where most volcanoes over 3000m (10,000feet) high are situated. Tectonic uplifts also produce large mountains, including the highest, Mount Kinabalu in Sabah, Malaysia, with a height of 4095.2m (13,435.7feet) and Puncak Jaya on Papua, Indonesia at 4884m (16,024feet). Other high mountains in the archipelago include Puncak Mandala, Indonesia at 4760m (15,620feet) and Puncak Trikora, Indonesia, at 4750m (15,580feet).

The climate throughout the archipelago is tropical, owing to its position on the Equator.

Biogeography

Wallace used the term Malay Archipelago as the title of his influential book documenting his studies in the region. He proposed what would come to be known as 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

Population

Over 380 million people live in the region, with the nine most populated islands being:

  1. Java (141,000,000)
  2. Sumatra (50,180,000)
  3. Luzon (48,520,774)
  4. Mindanao (21,902,000)
  5. Borneo (21,258,000)
  6. Sulawesi (21,258,000)
  7. New Guinea (11,306,940)
  8. Negros (4,414,131)
  9. Panay (4,302,634)

Language and religion

The people living there are predominantly from Austronesian sub-groupings and correspondingly speak western Malayo-Polynesian languages. The main religions in this region are Islam (62%), Christianity (33%), as well as Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism and traditional folk religions.

Culture

Culturally, the region is often seen as part of "Farther India" or Greater India—the Coedes' Indianized states of Southeast Asia refers to it as "Island Southeast Asia".[29]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Moores . Eldridge M. . Fairbridge . Rhodes Whitmore . Eldridge M. Moores . Rhodes Fairbridge . Encyclopedia of European and Asian regional geology . 377. 30 November 2009 . 1997 . Springer . 0-412-74040-0 .
  2. Book: World Population Prospects, Table A.2 . 2006 . 2006 revision . 37–42 . United Nations . Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division .
  3. Encyclopædia Britannica. 2006. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
  4. https://www.britannica.com/place/Malay-Archipelago Encyclopaedia Britannica – Malay Archipelago
  5. "Maritime Southeast Asia ." Worldworx Travel. Accessed 26 May 2009.
  6. Book: Wallace, Alfred Russel . Alfred Russel Wallace . The Malay Archipelago . Macmillan and Co . 1869 . London . 1 .
  7. Reid, Anthony. Understanding Melayu (Malay) as a Source of Diverse Modern Identities. Origins of Malayness, Cambridge University Press, 2001. Retrieved on March 2, 2009.
  8. Web site: Wallace . Alfred Russel . Alfred Russel Wallace . On the Physical Geography of the Malay Archipelago . 1863 . 30 November 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100117084201/http://web2.wku.edu/~smithch/wallace/S078.htm . 17 January 2010.
  9. Book: Wallace, Alfred Russel . Alfred Russel Wallace . The Malay Archipelago . Macmillan and Co . 1869 . London . 2 .
  10. Book: Wallace, Alfred Russel. The Malay Archipelago. 40: The Races of Man in the Malay Archipelago. papuaweb.org. 1869. Alfred Russel Wallace. 2009-08-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20121016195922/http://www.papuaweb.org/dlib/bk/wallace/race.html. 2012-10-16. dead.
    "If we draw a line ... commencing 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."
  11. [Oxford English Dictionary|OED first edition]
  12. Book: Echols . John M. . Shadily . Hassan . Kamus Indonesia Inggris (An Indonesian-English Dictionary) . Jakarta . Gramedia . 1989. 1st . 979-403-756-7.
    Book: Moores . Eldridge M. . Fairbridge . Rhodes Whitmore . Eldridge M. Moores . Rhodes Fairbridge . Encyclopedia of European and Asian regional geology . 377. 30 November 2009 . 1997 . Springer . 0-412-74040-0 .
  13. Friedhelm Göltenboth (2006) Ecology of insular Southeast Asia: the Indonesian Archipelago Elsevier,,
  14. https://books.google.com/books?id=ikSQw_-8gboC&q=malay+archipelago&pg=PA227 Modern Quaternary Research in Southeast Asia, Volume 1
  15. Book: Shaffer , Lynda . Maritime Southeast Asia to 1500. 1996. M.E. Sharpe. xi. 1-56324-144-7.
  16. T. Barbour. Reptiles in the East and West Indies- and Some Digression. The American Naturalist, Vol. 57, No. 649 (Mar. - Apr., 1923), pp. 125-128
  17. Review: The Tongking Delta and the Annamite House. Geographical Review, Vol. 27, No. 3 (Jul., 1937), pp. 519-520
  18. A. Aiyappan. Pottery Braziers of Mohenjo-Daro. Man, Vol. 39, (May, 1939), pp. 71-72
  19. [Donald F. Lach]
  20. Portugal. Embaixada (Indonesia). Sukarno and Portugal. Embaixada de Portugal em Jacarta, 2002 pp. 61-62
  21. António Augusto Mendes Correa. Timor português: contribuïções para o seu estudo antropológico. Volume 1 of Memórias : Série antropológica e etnológica, Portugal Junta de Investigações do Ultramar. Imprensa Nacional de Lisboa, 1944
  22. Jules Sion, Luis Villanueva López-Moreno (tr.). Asia monzónica: India, Indochina, Insulindia. Volume 13 of Geografía Universal. Montaner y Simón, 1948
  23. http://www.quaibranly.fr/en/collections/permanent-collections/oceania/insulindia.html
  24. Insulindia Portuguea. Divisao de Publicacoes e Biblioteca Agencia Geral das Colonias. Clamagirand (-Renard), Brigitte. 1971
  25. Christian Pelras . http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/arch_0044-8613_1978_num_16_1_1414?_Prescripts_Search_tabs1=standard& Indonesian Studies in France: Retrospect, Situation and Prospects. Archipel, 1978, Volume 16, Issue 16, pp. 7-20
  26. Leo Suryadinata. The Ethnic Chinese in the ASEAN states: bibliographical essays. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1989, p. 54
  27. Claudine Salmon. Cultural links between insulindian Chinese and Fujian as reflected in two late 17th-century epigraphs. Archipel, 2007, Issue 73, pp. 167-194
  28. https://web.archive.org/web/20071022221129/http://www.gov.ph/aboutphil/general.asp Philippines : General Information
  29. 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....