Academic literature on the topic 'Malay peninsula, history'

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Journal articles on the topic "Malay peninsula, history"

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Mohmad Shukri, Sharyzee, Mohammad Hussaini Wahab, Rohayah Che Amat, Idris Taib, and Syuhaida Ismail. "The Morphology of Early Towns in Malay Peninsula." International Journal of Engineering & Technology 7, no. 3.9 (July 9, 2018): 77. http://dx.doi.org/10.14419/ijet.v7i3.9.15281.

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Malay Peninsula has a very compelling socio geographical, cultural history and town setting comprises historical sites, fortress and early towns that has formed an evolution of the urban sprawl. The history of the early towns on the Malay Peninsula goes as far back as the beginning of the ancient Malay kingdom of Lembah Bujang and Langkasuka; and maybe far before that period. Early Malay towns in Malay Peninsula (currently known as Peninsular Malaysia) have unique characteristics in terms of architecture urban form and history. The morphology study of towns in Malay Peninsula have found characteristics of urban form and setting dating from 5000 BC maybe earlier to 19th century may be classified into four phases of pre-modern settlements cycles. This research employs qualitative approach that encompasses of literature review of scholarly articles and reports, in-depth interview and structured observation. Based on the historical and physical evidences that are still exist, thirteen (13) early town will be selected as a study area. This paper present the finding of urban morphology and characteristic in a chronicle of urban form and setting in the Malay Peninsula dating from 5000 BC up to the 19th century.
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Gin, Ooi Keat. "‘Bridge’ to ‘Fence’ A Maritime History of the Straits of Malacca." Journal of Maritime Studies and National Integration 6, no. 1 (March 9, 2022): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/jmsni.v5i2.9443.

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Oceans, seas, straits and other bodies of water may pose as dividers between lands, but at the same time, function as bridges interconnecting diverse territories. The latter ascribed a positive attribute in characterizing oceans, seas, straits as linkages between islands, and islands with continents. This study emphasizes the history of the Straits of Malacca and its role to the dynamic of world interconnecting networks. The Straits of Malacca (hereinafter the Straits) in the midst of Southeast Asia is a medium of interaction that enjoins the Malay Peninsula (present day West/Peninsular Malaysia) to other parts of the region spanning across to distant Java and Borneo. The Straits, from time immemorial, has functioned as a natural ‘bridge’ of the Malay World, referring to the Malay Archipelago or Nusantara, that largely comprised the greater expanse of insular Southeast Asia. This ‘bridge’ was even more significant in the period prior to the nineteenth century, being apparent as early as the mid-seventh century CE
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Taha, Adi Haji. "Archaeology in Peninsular Malaysia: Past, Present and Future." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 18, no. 2 (September 1987): 205–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463400020506.

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The Federation of Malaysia was formed in 1963, comprising the Malay Peninsula and the states of Sabah and Sarawak. In Peninsular Malaysia, archaeological activities including the protection of archaeological sites is under the jurisdiction of the Museums Department while the East Malaysian states have their own enactments and programmes covering this aspect of research. For this reason I restrict this paper to the archaeology of Peninsular Malaysia.
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Abdul Hamid, Ahmad Fauzi, and Shaikh Abdullah Hassan Mydin. "Islamic Da‘wah in the Malay Peninsula: Contributions of the Sayyids of Early Times." Teosofi: Jurnal Tasawuf dan Pemikiran Islam 11, no. 1 (June 3, 2021): 46–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.15642/teosofi.2021.11.1.46-70.

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This article traces the stellar accomplishments of the Sayyids, as descendants of the Prophet Muhammad are known in the field of Islamic da‘wah. For the many Sayyids who excelled as torchbearers of Islam in the Malay world, propagating Islam was a lifetime vocation that passed without the stress that we find in the modern world. Their da‘wah efforts encompassed such diverse undertakings as employing business acumen in confronting the challenges of colonialism and Malay court culture, immersing themselves in native communities via intermarriages and adoption of local customs, and carving a niche for themselves in local and international politics as advisors and emissaries. At grassroots level, da‘wah for them was inseparable from daily chores and mundane affairs. That Western colonialism hardly made any impact in directly desacralizing the Malays is a tribute to the success of the Sayyids’ da‘wah efforts, which served as a buffer against the religious implications of colonial encroachment into autochthonous institutions and lifestyle. By looking at some examples of how the Sayyids interacted with local communities in selected regions of the Malay world, this article traces part of this glittering history of da‘wah in the easternmost parts of the Islamic commonwealth. Most importantly, the Malay world’s Islamization was distinguished by lack of violence and emphasis on educational progress more than anything else.
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Chong, Henry Ren Jie. "Introduction: The Chinese in the Malay Peninsula." Translocal Chinese: East Asian Perspectives 16, no. 2 (October 21, 2022): 123–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24522015-16020001.

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Afriadi, Deni. "TEATER BANGSAWAN MUDA, FORMULA PERTUNJUKAN DRAMA MELAYU BANGSAWAN MASA KINI." Jurnal Ilmu Budaya 15, no. 2 (March 2, 2019): 115–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.31849/jib.v15i2.2329.

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Malay “Bangsawan” drama is believed to the embryo of the development of theatre in Riau province. From its history, Bangsawan drama owed to Indian traders who brought wayang Parsi to Malay Peninsula (Malaysia, Sumatera, and to Temasik (Singapore)). Malay “Bangsawan” drama nowdays undergoes changes. The “Bangsawan” drama changes the existed convention which differentities it from the “old Bangsawan” is then called the “new Bangsawan”. This change is beneficial for the continuity of “Malay Bangsawan” drama because a good performance should be able to adapt with the social condition. This writing views how the changes in form and structure occur in Malay “Bangsawan” drama. The changes lead to the term “New (young) Bangsawan Theatre”. Keywords: Malay Bangsawan Drama, New (young) Bangsawan Theatre.
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Kratz, E. Ulrich. "Francis Light’s Place in the Trading System of Both Coasts of the Malay Peninsula." Asian Journal of Social Science 40, no. 1 (2012): 83–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853112x632584.

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Abstract Based on a close reading of Malay textual sources, this paper looks at the nature of the trading system in place in the Western Malay World towards the end of the 18th century and in particular the role Francis Light played within this system. Touching on Braudel’s broad concept of world theatre and world economy and on Van Leur’s seminal work on the periodization of Southeast Asian history post-Melaka, the paper intends to challenge established notions of the exercise of power and the nature of economic relations in the Malay World during the late 18th century.
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Maier, Henk. "The writings of Abdul Rahim Kajai: Malay nostalgia in a crystal." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 41, no. 1 (December 21, 2009): 71–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463409990269.

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Abdul Rahim Kajai (1894–1943), his life and his work, are discussed against the background of socio-cultural developments on the Malay Peninsula in the 1930s. A journalist, writer and author, Kajai played an important role in the emergence of notions of ‘Malayness’ which made Malays feel different from and hostile to the growing numbers of ‘others’ in the colony. In particular, his stories, splendid exercises in fragmentariness, suggest a strong nostalgia for the pastoral way of life, at variance with Kajai's own life in urban areas.
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Victoria, O. Argo, and Fadly Ameer. "Systems and Political Development in Malaysia." Jurnal Akta 5, no. 3 (September 15, 2018): 661. http://dx.doi.org/10.30659/akta.v5i3.3271.

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Malaysia is a country in Southeast Asia with an area of 329 758 km2 and a population in 2007 amounted to 27.17 million. Of the total population in 2007, 60% are ethnic Malay “Bumiputera”, 26% ethnic Chinese, 8% Indians, 5% other ethnic Bumiputera, and 1% other ethnic groups such as Arabic, Sinhalese, Eurasian and Europe.[1] Under the constitution, Malays are Malaysian citizens who practice a traditional Malay, Melayu Language, and Muslim. Approximately 25% of the Malaysian population is Chinese, and 7% is made up of India. Almost 85% of the races Indians in Malaysia are Tamil community. More than half the population of Sarawak and Sabah 66% of the population consists of non-Malay indigenous people. The entry of another race to some extent reduce the percentage of indigenous population in the two states. In addition, Malaysia also has a population that comes out of Europe and the Middle East. Malaysia's population density is not distributed evenly, with 17 million of the 25 million people living in Peninsula Malaysia.Keywords: Malaysia; Politic; Constitutional.[1] Barbara Watson Andaya and Leonard Andaya, 1983, History of Malaysia, Petaling Jaya: Macmillan Publishers, p. 6-7
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Daniels, Timothy P. "Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya." American Journal of Islam and Society 27, no. 3 (July 1, 2010): 109–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v27i3.1312.

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Ross King’s Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya: Negotiating Urban Space inMalaysia provides a provocative interpretation of urban landscapes inKuala Lumpur and Putrajaya, a recently built government administrativecenter. He attempts to explicate meanings of the built urban environment aswell as its history, ideology, and contemporary possibilities.Consisting of a preface, five chapters, and an afterword, the book ishighly illustrated with pictures, sketches, maps, and architectural plans. Inthe preface, King introduces the dilemma of Malaysian nationalism, imagininga multicultural nation with a politically dominant Malay Muslimmajority, through the specter of the fiftieth anniversary of independence.He informs us that its two venues – Kuala Lumpur’s jumbled, multi-communityspaces and Putrajaya’s purely Malay pan-Islamic spaces – indicatesan ambivalent identity: Kuala Lumpur, “historically a Chinese town … istoday the capital of a nation that privileges the Malays” (p. xxiii). He immediatelymoves to selectively deconstruct Malay identity, stating that it is “inthe main a construction of the colonial era” during which people of diverseorigins from insular Southeast Asia migrated to the Peninsula (ibid). Thisoft-repeated assertion, which is a hotly contested topic in Malaysian discourse,indicates a slant toward the widespread Chinese Malaysian perspectivethat Malays are not the country’s true “natives.” King also states thathis focus will be to “read” the messages of architecture in terms of thingsobserved, imagined, forgotten, and potentially reconciled along with somehistorical background ...
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Malay peninsula, history"

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Madon, Mazlan B. Hj. "Tectonic evolution of the Malay and Penyu Basins, offshore Peninsular Malaysia." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1995. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:f00a727d-8769-4ac8-88ab-35d8c662ea61.

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The Malay and Penya Basins, offshore Peninsular Malaysia, were formed during the early Oligocene as a result of regional dextral shear deformation caused by the indentation of India into Eurasia in the early Tertiary. Pre-existing basement inhomogeneities exerted a strong control on basin development. The Penyu Basin developed, initially, as isolated grabens and half-grabens at basement fault intersections, in response to roughly N-S extension. The major structures which include low-angle listric normal faults, pull-apart rhomb grabens and flower structures, suggest that "thin-skinned" crustal extension and strike-slip tectonics have played an important role in basin evolution. Basement faults in the Malay Basin are oblique (E-W trending) to the basin trend (NW-trending). The Basin developed by transtension of NW-trending sinistral shear zone, in which fault-bounded blocks rotate in response to the shear deformation, producing a series of E-trending half-graben depocentres. The Basins were subjected to transpressive inversion during the middle-late Miocene, as a result of rotation of the regional stress field, caused by progressive indentation of India into Eurasia. Subsidence analysis suggests that lithospheric stretching was the dominant process of basin formation. The high heat flows (85-100 mW m⁻²) are consistent with stretching factors, β, of 1.2 to 4.3. In the Malay Basin, uplift of the basin flanks preceeded subsidence during the rifting phase as a result of non-uniform stretching and lateral heat flow from the centre of the Basin. Both basins are undercompensated isostatically and characterised by low negative free-air gravity anomaly in the order of -20 mGal. Undercompensation suggests that the basins were formed, partly, by "thin-skinned" crustal extension which did not involve stretching of the subcrustal lithosphere.
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Mozaffari-Falarti, Maziar. "Kedah : the foundations and durability of Malay kingship." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2009. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/31237/1/Maziar_Falarti_Thesis.pdf.

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Heinsohn, Thomas E. "Secret life of the cuscus and the cassowary : the crypto-anthropogenic factor and zoogeographic interpretation in the Indo-Australian Archipelago and Oceania 1846-2006 (with a guide to introduced terrestrial vertebrates in the region)." Phd thesis, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/151160.

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Books on the topic "Malay peninsula, history"

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Kleingrothe, C. J. Malay Peninsula: Straits Settlements & Federated Malay States. Kuala Lumpur: Jugra Publications, 2009.

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Out east in the Malay Peninsula. Petaling Jaya: Fajar Bakti, 1991.

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History of the Malay Kingdom of Patani. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University, Center for International Studies, 1985.

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Association, Rubber Growers', and RGA (Malaysia) Berhad, eds. The RGA history of the plantation industry in the Malay Peninsula. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.

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Jenkins, Peter. The planter's bungalow: A journey down the Malay Peninsula. Singapore: Editions Didier Millet, 2007.

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1927-, Bastin John Sturgus, Kwa Chong Guan, Hassan Ibrahim, Strange Morten, and National Museum of Singapore, eds. Natural history drawings: The complete William Farquhar collection : Malay Peninsula, 1803-1818. Singapore: Editions Didier Millet, 2010.

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Din, Anwar. Asas kebudayaan dan kesenian Melayu. Bangi: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, 2007.

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der, Putten Jan van, and Kilcline Cody Mary 1961-, eds. Lost times and untold tales from the Malay world. Singapore: NUS Press, 2009.

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Hornaday, William Temple. The experiences of a hunter and naturalist in the Malay Peninsula and Borneo. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1993.

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Ee, Tan Liok. The rhetoric of Bangsa and Minzu: Community and nation in tension, the Malay Peninsula, 1900-1955. Clayton, Vic., Australia: Centre of Southeast Asian Studies Monash University, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "Malay peninsula, history"

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Harun, Hairudin Bin. "Colonialism and Medicine in the Malay Peninsula." In Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures, 1346–50. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7747-7_8517.

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Burenhult, Niclas. "Foraging and the History of Languages in the Malay Peninsula." In The Language of Hunter-Gatherers, 164–97. Cambridge University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781139026208.009.

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"1. The Malay Peninsula: Early History, Melaka and the Colonial Setting." In Tragic Orphans, 1–15. ISEAS Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/9789814620123-004.

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Peacock, A. C. S., and Annabel Teh Gallop. "Introduction Islam, Trade and Politics Across the Indian Ocean." In From Anatolia to Aceh. British Academy, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197265819.003.0001.

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This chapter discusses the emergence and development of the relationship between Southeast Asia and the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey, concentrating on the three principal themes that defined this relationship: Islam, trade relations and politics. While particular attention is given to the Ottoman relationship with Aceh, their involvement with other Muslim polities on the Malay peninsula and archipelagic Southeast Asia is also considered. An overview is given of the state of the art of historiography in the field, as well as its broader relevance to the study of the Indian Ocean world and to the history of colonialism. The chapter also reflects on the Southeast Asian idealisation of Rum, as the Ottoman lands were known.
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"The Impact of Geology, Relief and Climate on the Historic Destiny of the Malay Peninsula." In The Malay Peninsula, 3–22. BRILL, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789047400684_003.

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Gareis, Christopher R. "Teacher Effectiveness in Singapore." In Advances in Educational Marketing, Administration, and Leadership, 192–226. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-7908-4.ch008.

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Singapore is an island city-state located at the southernmost tip of the Malay Peninsula in Southeast Asia. Although one of the smallest countries in the world by landmass, it has an outsized record for educational excellence as evidenced by consistently high rankings on indicators of international comparison. While no single measure is indicative of educational quality, the Singapore education system is unquestionably effective. In this chapter, the quality and effectiveness of teachers are explored, beginning with a brief history of Singaporean education and then an overview of three defining characteristics of the Singapore education system as related to teacher quality. Then, the chapter presents a career-spanning perspective on teaching in Singapore from entry to pre-service preparation to induction, continuous professional learning, and career advancement. Throughout, a prevailing theme is evident: the value placed on teacher quality is an intentional, strategic feature of the Singaporean system, at the core of which is valuing teachers as learners and innovators.
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Conference papers on the topic "Malay peninsula, history"

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Ramli, Zuliskandar. "Local Genius/Knowledge in Science and Technology in the Context of Early Malay Kingdoms in Peninsula Malaysia and Borneo." In 9th Asbam International Conference (Archeology, History, & Culture In The Nature of Malay) (ASBAM 2021). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.220408.032.

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Madon, M. "The Overpressure History of the Malay Basin, Offshore Peninsular Malaysia." In PGCE 2004. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609-pdb.259.6.

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