SIGHTS OF TABANAN
From the Mountains to the Sea
Like all old Balinese
realms, Tabanan has a mountain-to-the-sea axis - an ordering
of the physical landscape that mirrors the ordering of the
cosmos, with major points marked by temples. Each former
Balinese kingdom thus has six major temples, the so-called
sad kahyangan, consecrated to the six most significant features
of the landscape - the forest, the mountains, the sea, the
lakes, the earth and the rice fields. In a similar way,
there are six cardinal temples for the whole of Bali. Two
of these six are to be found in Tabanan: the seaside sanctuary
of Tanah Lot and the ancestral shrine of Pura Luhur high
up on Mt Batukau.
Temple in the sea
About
20 km west of Denpasar on the main highway, one arrives
at the town of Kediri, where a large sign at the main intersection
announces a turn-off to the southwest toward Pura Tanah
Lot - the famous seaside temple to the south. Tanah means
earth and lot means south or sea (usually written lod) thus
something like 'Temple of the Earth the Sea" is intended.
It is actually constructed atop a large, jagged outcropping
of rock just off the coast. It is accessible only during
low tide. The temple itself is quite modest, consisting
of two shrines with tiered roofs (7 and 3), a few small
buildings and two pavilions.
Poisonous, black sea snakes
live between the rocks and in caves along the coast. They
guard the temple, but give the site a reputation of being
"dangerous." Nevertheless many Balinese love to
sit on the beach or on a bluff overlooking the temple in
the la afternoon, watching the tides change and enjoying
the silhouettes of the temple meru against the brilliant
setting sun.
Like so many other temples
in Bali, Tanah Lot is connected with the famous brahman
priest, Danghyang Nirartha, who wandered from Java to Bali
in the 16th century. On one of his journeys he decided to
sleep in the beautiful spot, and then afterwards advised
the Balinese to erect a temple here. As mentioned above,
this is one of the sad kahyangan or six most holy temples
for all of Bali as well as for Tabanan district.
On the way back to the
Kediri intersection, stop in at the village of Pejaten,
famous for its pottery. These range from traditional roofing
tiles, now painted in bright reds and greens, to replicas
of glazed Chinese ceramics. The latter are the result of
an initiative taken by Dutch potters during the 1980s. Already
in the 1970s a Chinese painter from Tabanan, the, late Kay
It, introduced the production of terracotta tiles decorated
with figures of gods, goddesses and wayang heroes in relief
These were mainly used for interior decoration of restaurants
and shops in the tourist areas of South Bali.
Tabanan Town
To
the west on the main highway, one soon enters the medium
sized, bustling town of Tabanan. Though it appears rather
nondescript and has not much of a reputation among tourists,
the arts are actually well represented here. The town already
had skilled woodcarvers at the end of the 19th century,
and there were and still are many good juru basa, or bards
who recite fragments of classic Poems (kakawin) at festive
occasions and during contests of the Bebasan recital clubs.
Bali's most famous dancer,
the late I Ketut Marya (pronounced, and frequently written
as Mario) is also connected with Tabanan. He was born at
the end of the 19th century and died in 1968. Although he
was actually born in Denpasar, he was raised in Tabanan
under Anak Agung Ngurah Made Kaleran of the Puri Kaleran
palace.
Marya performed as one
of the dancers representing the (female) pupils of the witch,
Calonarang, with a music club called the Gong Pangkung,
which was founded in 1900 and became quite famous. The Gong
Pangkung, named after a village quarter in Tabanan, also
possessed a set of tingklik instruments, bamboo replicas
of a gamelan orchestra.
Marya and his three fellow
dancers experimented widely with this orchestra. They traveled
and gave gandrung (transvestite) performances. They also
refined the fast and lively kebyar musical style that had
been invented in north Bali around 1900. Marya developed
a number of new dances for the ensemble. The two most famous
are the Trompong Dance, in which the performer crouches
and plays the trompong (a row of 10 bronze kettledrums)
while dancing, and the Kebyar Duduk (sitting kebyar), in
which he crouches and sinuously flirts with a drummer or
another musician while dancing.
In the late 1920s and
1930s, these dances were already well known to tourists.
Walter Spies made superb photos of them for the book Dance
and Drama in Bali which he produced with Beryl de Zoete
in 1935-36. Marya was also a teacher of many dancers who
would later become famous, in particular I Gusti Ngurah
Raka from Batuan. He was a very strict mentor and only accepted
the very best pupils. Although he taught them the same dances,
he assigned each pupil slightly different movements, to
enable him or her to have something characteristic. To remember
this dancer and teacher who made Tabanan so famous, the
Gedong Marya Theater was erected in Tabanan in 1974.
There is also a museum
in Tabanan. This is the Subak Museum, which contains tools
and implements connected with rice field irrigation and
agriculture in Bali. It lies just outside of the town on
the right-hand side of the main road to Denpasar.
A famous native son
Tabanan also has a modern
temple-like memorial, which can be considered a national
shrine. It is located in the village of Marga, about 15
km northeast of the town, on the spot where lieutenant-colonel
I Gusti Ngurah Rai, commander of the nationalist forces
fighting the Dutch, was killed with his 94 men on November
20th, 1946. They fought till the death, and their behavior
is commonly compared with that of the ruler of Badung
and his family in 1906,
so that the event is also referred to as a Puputan.
The heroic death of Ngurah
Rai is commemorated not only in this temple, but also in
a poem, the Geguritan Margarana, written a short time afterwards
by a fellow nationalist fighter. His name has also been
given to the international airport of Bali. The memorial
itself contains a stone tower or candi in which a replica
of the famous letter containing his refusal to surrender
is carved. Placed in rows outside are 94 pointed stone pedestals
representing his fellow martyrs.
Rich artistic traditions
Several
villages located to the southwest of Tabanan Town are especially
rich in dance and art traditions. The village of Krambitan,
in particular, is noted for its tektekan performances. This
is in fact not a dance, but a procession of men with giant
wooden cow bells with huge clappers around their necks and
bamboo split drums. They traditionally marched around the
village during an epidemic or great drought to chase away
the evil spirits and bring fertility to the area.
There are two palaces
here, belonging to a branch of the Tabanan royal family.
Since 1972, the Puri Anyar has been holding "Palace
Nights" for tourists, with a tektekan group from nearby
Panarukan and a performance of the dramatic calonarang trance
play. One can commission a private performance with dinner
by candlelight within the palace precincts, and both palaces
are also renting rooms to tourists.
In the nearby village
of Tista, just one to the west of Krambitan, special versions
the of legong kraton dance, called leko or adat are performed.
This is a dramatized version of a classic tale (the Ramayana
or Malat ) danced by three young girls - a condong (female
attendant) and the two legong (processes). They change roles
during the performance, but wear the same costumes. The
Tista group was founded in 1989 under the guidance of two
old dancers from the, 1920s
Two km south of Krambitan,
the village of Panarukan has many good sculptors both brahmans
and jaba (sudras) working in wood as well as in soft volcanic
paras stone. The village is also known for its tektekan,
for the painter Ajin Ida Putu Cegeg from Griya Gede, who
was a pioneer in the use modern elements in his works.
Several kms beyond Panarukan,
the road ends at a broad, black sand beach by the village
of Klatingdukuh. This long, deserted strip of paradise is
slated for tourist development within the coming years on
account of its fine sand, pounding surf and stunning views
down the coast in either direction.
Temple on high
At
the end of a steep road north of Meliling past Wongaya Gede,
about halfway up the slopes of towering, 2278 meter-high
Mt Biatukau, perches the Pura Luhur temple all unusual complex
of shrines and a pool set amidst lush, tropical forests.
The main enclosure lies at the northern end of the complex,
with two smaller temples, Pura Dalem and pura Panyaum, to
the south. A man-made lake to the east completes the "cosmic"
design.
This was the state ancestral
temple of the Tabanan court, and each of the shrines represents
a different dynastic ancestor. Di Made, ruler of Gelgel
between about 1665 and 1686, is represented by a shrine
with a 7-tiered roof, and Cokorda Tabanan by one with a
3tiered roof. All of the shrines are very modest, without
much ornamentation, which gives a great feeling of unity
to the complex.
The nearby pond is fed
by the river Aa (pronounced "ehe"). In the center
are two pavilions on a little isle, one for the goddess
of Lake Tamblingan and one for the Lord of Mt Batukau. The
sacred peak thus surrounded by waters can be compared with
the mythical Mt Meru where the gods reside, enjoying themselves
in floating pavilions.
The area around Batukau
is one of great scenic beauty. There is a tiny road leading
from Wongaya Gede across steep rice terraces to the village
of Jatiluwih. On the road south back to Tabanan, stop in
to see the Pura Puseh in Penebel, which possesses an ancient
lingga (phallus, symbol of Siwa) with a yoni pedestal in
a pavilion west of the entrance to the inner court. These
are quite common in Java, but rare in Bali.
Antiquities of Tabanan
Only a few other antiquities
have been discovered in Tabanan. One lies in Perean, west
of the main road to Bedugul. This stone shrine, discovered
here in 1920, consists of a square basement with panels
and a temple body with niches on three sides and an entrance
on the fourth - a mock-door with a kind of lock carved in
stone. Porcelain plates of various sizes were mounted in
the temple body on both sides of these niches and the entrance.
The temple now has a thatched roof with 7 tiers.
There are remains here
also of three small, ancient buildings. The complex is surrounded
by a wall with a split gateway. Inscribed stones discovered
nearby bear the dates AD. 1339 and 1429. East of Perean,
on the other side of the road, are hot water springs, the
so called Yeh Gangga. ("Waters of the Ganges').
More to the north along
this road, in Candi Kuning, a fine spout carved with the
head of an elephant-fish (makara) was discovered. It dates
probably from the 14th-15th century.