:''This article is about the Indonesian island. For the village in the Faroe Islands, see
Sumba, Faroe Islands.''
'Sumba' is an island in
Indonesia, and is one of the
Lesser Sunda Islands. It has an area of 11,153 km², and the population has been estimated as between 350,000 and 425,000. There is a dry season from May to November and a rainy season from December to April. Historically, this island exported
sandalwood.
To the northwest of Sumba is
Sumbawa, to the northeast, across the
Sumba Strait (Selat Sumba), is
Flores, to the east, across the
Savu Sea, is
Timor, and to the south, across part of the
Indian Ocean, is
Australia. It is in the province of
East Nusa Tenggara. The largest town on the island is
Waingapu, with a population of about 10,700.
Before colonization, Sumba was inhabited by several small ethnolinguistic groups, some of which may have had
tributary relations to the
Majapahit Empire. In 1522 the first ships from Europe arrived, and by 1866 Sumba belonged to the
Dutch East Indies, although the island did not come under real
Dutch administration until the twentieth century.
The Sumbanese people speak a variety of closely related
Austronesian languages, and have a mixture of
Malay and
Melanesian ancestry. Twenty-five to thirty percent of the population practises the animist
Marapu religion. The remainder are
Christian, a majority being Dutch
Calvinist, but a substantial minority being
Roman Catholic. A small number of
Sunni Muslims can be found along the coastal areas.
Despite the influx of western religions, Sumba is one of the few places in the world in which
megalithic burials, are used as a 'living tradition' to inter prominent individuals when they die. Burial in megaliths is a practice that was used in many parts of the world during the
Neolithic and
Bronze Ages, but has survived to this day in Sumba.
External links
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waingapu.com
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Anahumba portal
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Sumba deciduous forests (World Wildlife Fund)
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Sumba Foundation
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Textiles of Sumba
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Detailed map