Bangka Island

Not to be confused with Bangka Island, North Sulawesi.
Bangka
بڠک
邦加島

Topography of Bangka island
Geography
Location South East Asia
Coordinates 2°15′S 106°00′E / 2.250°S 106.000°E / -2.250; 106.000Coordinates: 2°15′S 106°00′E / 2.250°S 106.000°E / -2.250; 106.000
Area 11,623.54 km2 (4,487.87 sq mi)
Area rank 68th
Highest elevation 699 m (2,293 ft)
Highest point Mount Maras
Country
Province Bangka-Belitung Islands
Largest settlement Pangkal Pinang (pop. 134082)
Demographics
Population 960,692 (as of 2010 Census)
Density 82.65 /km2 (214.06 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups Malay Indonesians and Chinese, mostly Hakkas

Bangka (or sometimes Banka) is an island lying east of Sumatra, administratively part of Sumatra, Indonesia, with a population of about 1 million. It is the main part of Bangka-Belitung Province. The provincial capital, Pangkal Pinang, lies on the island. The island is administratively divided into 4 regencies and a chartered city.

Geography

Bangka is an island province together with Belitung Island. Bangka lies just east of Sumatra, separated by the Bangka Strait; to the north lies the South China Sea, to the east, across the Gaspar Strait, is the island of Belitung, and to the south is the Java Sea. The size is about 12,000 km². Most of the geographical faces of the island consists of lower plains, swamps, small hills, beautiful beaches, white pepper fields and tin mines.

The largest town is Pangkal Pinang which also serves as the capital of Bangka-Belitung Province. Sungai Liat is the second largest city in Bangka island. Mentok (formerly called Muntok) is the principal port in the west. The other important town are Toboali in the southern region, Koba an important tin mining town, also located on the southern part of the island, and Belinyu a town famous for its seafood products. There are 4 sea ports in Bangka; Mentok on the far west, Belinyu on the far north, Sadai on the far south, and Pangkal Balam are the closest one to Pangkal Pinang. It is intended, that a nuclear power station be built there. [1]

The population was 626,955 in 1990,[2] and 960,692 in the 2010 census; the area is 4,487.87 sq mi (11,623½  km²).

Economy

Since c. 1710, Bangka has been one of the world's principal tin-producing centers. Tin production is an Indonesian government monopoly, and there is a tin smelter at Muntok.[2] White pepper is also produced on the island.

Demographics

The majority of the inhabitants are Malays and Chinese, mostly Hakkas. The population is split between those work on the tin mines, palm oil plantations, rubber plantations, fisherman and those who work on pepper farms.

History

Photograph of tin workers on Bangka.

The sultan of Palembang ceded Bangka to Britain in 1812, but in 1814 Britain exchanged it with the Dutch for Cochin in India.

In 1930 Bangka had a population of 205,363.[3] Japan occupied the island from February 1942 to August 1945 during World War II. The Japanese military perpetrated the Bangka Island massacre against Australian nurses and British and Australian servicemen and civilians.

Bangka became part of independent Indonesia in 1949. The island, together with neighboring Belitung, was formerly part of South Sumatra (Sumatera Selatan) province, but in 2000 the two islands became the new province of Bangka-Belitung.

Bangka is also home to a number of communist Indonesians who have been under house arrest since the 1960s anti-Communist purge and are not permitted to leave the island.

Item of note

Bangka is reputedly the setting for Joseph Conrad's book Lord Jim.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bangka.

See also

References

  1. "Indonesian Government Eyeing Bangka Island for 2 Nuclear Power Plants". Jakarta Globe. 2010. Retrieved 2013-11-03.
  2. 1 2 "Bangka." Columbia Gazetteer of the World Online. 2013. Columbia University Press. 01 Nov. 2013.
  3. Columbia-Lippincott Gazetter
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