North Maluku

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North Maluku
Maluku Utara
Province
Maluku Islands Wikivoyage Banner.jpg
Kalamata benteng.jpg Halmahera Island, North Maluku, Indonesia 4.jpg
Weda Bay Nickel site.jpg
Clockwise, from top left : View of Tidore, beach in Halmahera, Weda Bay, Fort Kalamata
Flag of North Maluku
Flag
Official seal of North Maluku
Seal
Motto: Marimoi Ngone Futuru
(Ternate language: United we are strong)
North Maluku as a part of the Maluku Islands
North Maluku as a part of the Maluku Islands
Coordinates: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Country  Indonesia
Capital Sofifi
Largest city Lambang Kota Ternate.png Ternate
Government
 • Governor Abdul Ghani Kasuba (PKS)
 • Vice Governor Muhammad Natsir Thaib
Area
 • Total 31,982.50 km2 (12,348.51 sq mi)
Population (2014)[1]
 • Total 1,141,561
 • Density 36/km2 (92/sq mi)
Demographics
 • Religion Islam (74.28%), Protestantism (24.9%), Roman Catholicism (0.52%)
 • Languages Indonesian , Ternate
Time zone WIT (UTC+9)
Vehicle registration DG
HDI Steady 0.651 (Medium)
HDI rank 27th (2014)
Website www.malutprov.go.id

North Maluku (Indonesian: Maluku Utara) is a province of Indonesia. It covers the northern part of the Maluku Islands. The provincial capital is Sofifi, on Halmahera, and the largest population center is the island of Ternate.

The Maluku Islands was formerly administered as a single province, however, in 1999 it was split into two provinces, with North Maluku being created out of the northern section of the province of Maluku.

History

In the sixteenth and seventeenth century, the islands of North Maluku were the original "Spice Islands". At the time, the region was the sole source of cloves. The Dutch, Portuguese, Spanish, and local sultanates including Ternate and Tidore fought each other for control of the lucrative trade in these spices. Clove trees have since been transported and replanted all around the world, and the demand for cloves from the original spice islands has ceased, greatly reducing North Maluku's international importance.

The population of North Maluku was 1,038,087 at the 2010 Census[1] making it one of the least-populous provinces in Indonesia; at the latest estimate (January 2014) the population had risen to 1,141,561.

Geography

The islands of North Maluku are mostly of volcanic origin, with the volcanoes of Dukono on Halmahera, Gamalama on Ternate still active and the whole of Tidore consisting of a large stratovolcano. The rainforests of Halmahera, Morotai, the Obi Islands, the Bacan islands and other islands of North Maluku have been described by the World Wildlife Fund as the "Halmahera rain forests" ecoregion and are home to a number of plant and animal species unique to the islands, which are in the Wallacea transition zone, containing a mixture of species of Asian and Australasian origin. The predominant trees of the forest are Anisoptera thurifera, Hopea gregaria, Hopea iriana, Shorea assamica, Shorea montigena, Shorea selanica, and Vatica rassak.

The endemic mammals found here include the Obi mosaic-tailed rat (Melomys obiensis), masked flying fox (Pteropus personatus), and three arboreal marsupials, the ornate (Phalanger ornatus), Rothschild's (P. rothschildi), blue-eyed (P. matabiru) and Gebe (P. alexandrae) cuscuses. There are over two hundred different birds on the islands, twenty-six of which are endemic, a large number for this small island group. The endemics include four birds which are the only species in their genera, including the elusive invisible rail (Habroptila wallacii), the white-streaked friarbird (Melitograis gilolensis), and two birds of paradise, the paradise-crow (Lycocorax pyrrhopterus) and Wallace's standardwing (Semioptera wallacii). The islands are also home to the largest bee in the world, Wallace's giant bee (Megachile pluto).[2]

The islands have an tropical rainforest climate.

Most of the natural forest remains on these mountainous islands, although much of the coastal and lowland areas have been cleared for clove-planting since the sixteenth century, especially on the islands of Ternate and Tidore. Logging has occurred more recently on Halmahera and Morotai.

Administrative divisions

Daftar kabupaten dan kota di Maluku Utara North Maluku Province was subdivided into seven regencies and two autonomous cities, listed below with their areas and their populations at the 2010 Census and at the latest (2014) Estimates. An eighth regency, covering Taliabu Island, was formed in 2013 from the westernmost island in the Sula Islands Residency.

Name Area (km2) Population
2010
Census
Population
2014
Estimate
Capital
Ternate (city) 111.39 185,705 204,215 Ternate
Kepulauan Tidore (city) 1,645.73 90,055 99,031 Soasiu
Central Halmahera Regency
(Halmahera Tengah)
2,653.76 42,815 47,083 Weda
East Halmahera Regency
(Halmahera Timur)
6,571.37 73,109 80,396 Maba
Morotai Island Regency
(Pulau Morotai)
2,476.00 52,697 57,950 Daruba
North Halmahera Regency
(Halmahera Utara)
3,896.90 161,847 177,980 Tobelo
South Halmahera Regency
(Halmahera Selatan)
8,148.90 198,911 218,738 Labuha
Sula Islands Regency
(Kepulauan Sula)
4,774.25 132,524 145,734 Sanana
Taliabu Island Regency
(Pulau Taliabu)
# # # Bobong
West Halmahera Regency
(Halmahera Barat)
1,704.20 100,424 110,434 Jailolo
Total Province 31,982.50 1,038,087 1,141,561
# The figures for the new Taliabu Island Regency (created in 2013) are included in those for Sula Islands Regency.

Sultanates

The northern part of the Maluku Islands is the location of four major sultanates, locally known as Maluku kie raha (Ternate language: "Four Moluccan mountains"). While they no longer hold official or political power, these sultanates still hold enormous cultural respect.

Fortresses

North Maluku has many fortresses:[3][4]

  • Tolukko Fortress, is located 3 kilometers (2 miles) from Central Ternate, built by Portuguese in 1540 and renovated in 1610 by Dutch. The construction consists of sea-rock, sand, stone and egg as the adhesive.
  • Kotanaka Fortress
  • Orange Fortress
  • Kalamata Fortress
  • Dever Lacting Fortress
  • Bernaveld Fortress

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Central Bureau of Statistics: Census 2010, retrieved 17 January 2011 (Indonesian)
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