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Lombok
*** Shopping-Tip: Lombok
Image:rinjani volcano.jpg thumb|250px|Color infrared view of Lombok Island with Rinjani Volcano from space, May 1992
'''Lombok''' (
1990 pop. 2,403,025) is an
island in
West Nusa Tenggara province,
Indonesia. It is part of the chain of the
Lesser Sunda Islands, with the
Lombok Strait separating it from
Bali to the west and the
Alas Strait between it and
Sumbawa to the east. It is roughly circular, with a "tail" to the southwest, about 70 km across and a total area of about 4,725 km² (1,825 sq mi). The administrative capital and largest city on the island is
Mataram (city) Mataram.
The '''Lombok Strait''' marks the passage of the
Biogeography biogeographical division between the fauna of the
Indomalayan
ecozone and the distinctly different fauna of
Australasia that is known as the
Wallace Line, for
Alfred Russel Wallace, who first remarked upon the distinction between these two major
biomes.
The island's topography is dominated by the centrally-located
stratovolcano Mount Rinjani, which rises to 3,726 m (12,224 ft), making it the third-largest in Indonesia. The most recent eruption of Rinjani was in June-July, 1994. The volcano, and its sacred crater lake, are protected by a National Park established in 1997. The southern part of the island is a fertile plain where
cereal corn,
rice,
coffee,
tobacco, and
cotton are grown.
The island's inhabitants are 85%
Sasak (a people, closely related to the
Balinese, but mostly practising
Islam), 10-15%
Balinese, with the small remainder being
China Chinese,
Arab,
Javanese, and
Sumbawa Sumbawanese.
The
The Netherlands Dutch first visited Lombok in
1674 and settled the eastern part of the island, leaving the western half to be ruled by a Hindu dynasty from Bali. The Sasaks chafed under Balinese rule, and a revolt in
1891 ended in
1894 with the annexation of the entire island to the
Netherlands East Indies.
Lombok has much in common with nearby Bali, but less well-known and less-visited by foreigners. It has been working to increase its visibility to
tourists in recent years, promoting itself as an "unspoiled Bali". The most-developed center of tourism is
Senggigi, spread in a 10-kilometer strip along the coastal road north of Mataram, while backpackers congregate in the
Gili Islands off the west coast. However, in early
2000 thousands fled from religious and ethnic violence that swept over the island, and tensions remain. Some travel websites warn that tourists sometimes provoke anger in this economically depressed region.
External links
* {{wikitravel}}
-
Lombok history, with detailed map
-
Space Shuttle images of volcanic Lombok
-
Lombok Network
Category:Islands of Indonesia
{{Link FA|id}}
da:Lombok
de:Lombok
et:Lombok
fr:Lombok
id:Lombok
ja:ロンボク島
lt:Lombokas
ms:Lombok
nl:Lombok
pl:Lombok
pt:Lombok
fi:Lombok
*** Shopping-Tip: Lombok