Sunday, 31 July 2011
a hunting 'kubu' or 'suku anak dalam' tribesman. by rz contributor handri karya
The 'Orang Rimba' (people of the forest) or the 'wild Kubu' are a much smaller population of people (~3000) who live in the upstream regions of Jambi and South Sumatra. They have a unique, diverse economy, which shifts in and out of two base subsistence strategies: swidden farming and a very nomadic life based on foraging wild yams. This is traditionally combined this with hunting, trapping, fishing, damming and poisoning rivers, and the collection of forest products for trade. For many, part-time rubber tapping and participation in logging has gradually replaced the collection of forest products.
The 'Orang Rimba' life is characterized by small and changing camps, which can be the size of a nuclear family when digging for wild yams, but more commonly is based around an extended family, and can include several extended families whenever swidden farming. Their social relations are very egalitarian, while hierarchies are largely based upon age, gender and knowledge of religion and adat law.
Since the 1970s, many of these peoples have been displaced from their traditional lands by logging companies and palm oil plantations, and for some time have been the target of government settlement projects. Source: wikipedia
Saturday, 30 July 2011
chinese guangxu (emperor's reign 25 February 1875 – 14 November 1908) period-made plate labeled qianlong (emperor's reign 8 October 1735 - 9 February 1796) period
Emperor Qianlong considered himself to be the one to preserve and to restore the cultural heritage of classical China. He was a prolific poet and an avid collector of jades, bronzes, paintings and porcelain, amongst many other things, and he merged some of the greatest private collections of the 17th-century into his imperial collection. Encouraged by the Emperor’s passion for beautiful craftsmanship, the Qianlong period became one of the finest period of art production in Chinese history. Due to the high standards of that period, objects dated from this era generally are of fine quality and sophisticated style. Source: artfact