Gianyar is the very heart
of Bali - a modern and prosperous center of the arts with
a history dating back a thousand years. Most of the cultural
activities relating to tourism on the island - from painting
and woodcarving to dance and music - are focused here, as
is a broad range of agricultural activities.
Gianyar is the second
most densely populated district of Bali (after Badung), with
the majority of its 340,000 people relying upon tourism for
their income. Nevertheless, the region is quite diverse, economically
as well as geographically. The old harbors of Ketewel and
Kramas down on the coast are still fishing villages, while
up in the mountainous plateau above Ubud, vanilla, coffee
and cloves are grown. The rich volcanic soils in between are
fed by two of Bali's major rivers - the Ayung and the Petanu
- and from these soils grows some of Bali's best rice.
The major tourist area
of Gianyar consists of a string of villages along the main
road up from Batubulan to Ubud, with each village being famous
for a different artistic form. Bali's most famous dancers
and best-known painters come from this region. Bali's most
famous antiquities have also been found in this area, including
the 2,000-year-old "Moon of Pejeng" bronze drum,
the Goa Gajah hermitage at Bedulu with its elaborate relief's,
and many other remains dating from before the 11th century.
These all testify to the strength and continuity of the traditions
upon which Bali's modern arts are founded.
Lying at the center of
the area in which most Balinese antiquities have been found,
the village of Bedulu was the site of an ancient capital of
Bali before the Javanese Majapahit kingdom conquered the island
in 1343. After the decline of Bedulu, other parts of Gianyar
have been important court centers.
When Majapahit established
a line of kings in Bali in the 14th century, their first capital
was at Samprangan - now a sleepy village just outside of present-day
Gianyar
Town. Later, in the 18th
century, the village of Sukawati established itself as a separate
court center and members of the Sukawati royal family settled
between the Ayung and Petanu rivers, with branches in Peliatan
and Tegallalang up in the mountains.
At the end of the 18th
century, the Sukawati dynasty was forced to surrender its
control of the area to a new family based in Gianyar to the
east. As a result, most of the important districts and villages
of Gianyar have members of both the old Sukawati line of Cokordas
and the new Gianyar line of Dewas or Anak Agungs, and the
history of the 19th century revolved around competition between
the two lineages.
In 1884 the royal family
of Negara, from the Sukawati line, overthrew the kings of
Gianyar and plunged the region into turmoil. The conflict
was finally resolved only ten years later, when a prince from
Ubud, also of the Sukawati line, took the side of the Gianyar
family and suppressed the rebels. There are still other important
aristocratic families in Gianyar, however - foremost of which
are the Gustis of Blahbatuh, whose palace was a major 19th-century
power.
In more recent times,
Ubud and Gianyar have been the twin centers of the region.
Ubud now has the reputation of being Bali's cultural center,
thanks especially to a group of expatriate western artists
who made their homes here in the 1930s, but Gianyar has provided
most of the political and administrative leadership. Bali's
most important politician on the national stage, Anak Agung
Gede Agung, diplomat and former foreign minister of Indonesia,
is from the Gianyar royal family, and has retired to the palace
of Gianyar to serve in the now-ceremonial role of king.