It
was not silt which led to Gresik's eclipse; plenty of exotic
sailing craft still bob on the polluted waters of its harbor.
The culprit was the mighty colonial port of Surabaya, just
25 km along the coast to the southeast. Ceded to the Dutch
by Mataram in 1743, Surabaya was still smaller than Gresik
in 1800. However, it had been selected as the chief Dutch
entrepot and administrative center for East Java; and the
massive growth of the colonial economy in the 19th century
made Surabaya the busiest port and the biggest city in the
Dutch Indies, outstripping even Batavia and ranking almost
alongside Singapore in international importance. Today, Surabaya
has again been overtaken by Jakarta in size, but at 5.1 million
people it is the second largest in the country and growing
fast. Surabaya's sweet name belies a reality of heat, dirt
and noise, but it is an interesting and gripping place. This
is a living cultural center, both in the formal sense of plays
and performances and in the sense of the fusion and regeneration
of folk cultures.
Surabaya
is cosmopolitan, but without the jarring pseudo-Western glitter
of Jakarta. Give or take an air-conditioned shopping complex
or two, Surabaya's atmosphere is more purely Indonesian, with
a special cast Indonesian flavor. For as Surabaya grew as
an export point for Javanese products, it also became the
hub of the maritime trading network for the eastern archipelago
as a whole. Much of its population is from nearby Madura,
but there are also large numbers of Banjar from Kalimantan,
Bugis and Minahasans from Sulawesi and Ambonese from the Moluccas.
Surabaya's colonial boom was in a sense, a renaissance, for
the port has a long history. In 1620, it was a fortified trading
city over 30 kilometers in circumference, a state in its own
right with lordship over Gresik and Sidayu. However, five
years later Mataram took it by siege, thus ending Surabaya's
luster for more than two centuries. According to tradition,
the conquered king's son took on the life of an ascetic at
the holy grave of Surabaya's founder - yet another wali, Sunan
Ngampel, who was a pupil of Malik Ibrahim of Gresik. His grave
can be seen in Kampong Ngampel, the birth place of the city,
now lost in the old commercial district between the forks
of the Kali Mas >>
Details Click Here!!
|
 |
| Surabaya
Hotel List |
 |
 |
Radisson
plaza
conveniently located in the heart of the city, within
walking distance from the business district, opposite
the Surabaya World Trade Centre, and within the Surabaya
Plaza Shopping complex, . .
from USD$55.00 net per room/night | Reservation
|
|
 |
Ibis
Rajawali Surabaya
During
your next visit to Surabaya, come stay at the Ibis Rajawali.
Our 3-star hotel facilities offer visitors a quality business
hotel with good value for money and international standards
of service.
from USD$45.00 net per room/night |
Reservation
|
|
 |
 |
 |
Hotel
Equator
102 Rooms (48 Superior Suites, 46 Deluxe Suites, 8 Equator
Suites), Language(s) Spoken by Hotel, Indonesia, English
Secretarial Services, Business Centre, Restaurant and
Bar, The Coffee Shop, Bamboo Garden, Gaslight Pub.. .
.
from USD$50.00 net per room/night |
Reservation
|
|
 |
Sheraton
Surabaya
Holiday Inn Bandung provides what Holiday Inn hotels are
famous for worldwide: friendly, dependable service, excellent
facilities and convenient location. Whether your trip
is for
from USD$102.00 net per room/night |
Reservation
|
|
 |
 |
 |
Novotel
Surabaya Hotel
Novotel Surabaya is the right place for business or relaxation,
located in the main business district of Surabaya. A resort
within the city with 138
from USD$55.00 net per room/night |
Reservation
|
|
 |
Majapahit
Mandarin Hotel
The Hotel is located in the heart of Surabaya, Indonesia's
second largest city and the capital of east Java.Built
in 1910, the hotel and its. . .
from USD$85.00 net per room/night
| Reservation
|
|
 |
 |
 |
| |
|