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Sumba

Sumba
Native name: Pulau Sumba
Sumba Topography.png
Geography
Location South East Asia
Coordinates 9°40′S 120°00′E / 9.667°S 120.000°E / -9.667; 120.000Coordinates: 9°40′S 120°00′E / 9.667°S 120.000°E / -9.667; 120.000
Archipelago Lesser Sunda Islands
Area 11,153 km2 (4,306 sq mi)
Area rank 73rd
Administration
Indonesia
Province East Nusa Tenggara
Largest settlement Waingapu (pop. 10,700)
Demographics
Population 685,186 (2010 Census)
Pop. density 61.4 /km2 (159 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups Sumba people, Austronesian and Melanesians ancestry

Sumba (Indonesian: Pulau Sumba) is an island in eastern Indonesia, is one of the Lesser Sunda Islands, and is in the province of East Nusa Tenggara. Sumba has an area of 11,153 square kilometres (4,306 square miles), and the population was 656,259 at the 2010 Census. 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.

Historically, this island exported sandalwood and was known as Sandalwood Island.

Before colonization by western Europeans in the 1500s, Sumba was inhabited by Melanesian and Austronesian people. In 1522, through the Portuguese, 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. Jesuits opened a mission in Laura, West Sumba in 1866.

Despite contact with western cultures, 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, and has raised significant interest from scholars. At Anakalang, for instance, quadrangular adzes have been unearthed. Another long-lasting tradition is the sometimes lethal game of pasola, in which teams of often several hundred horse-riders fight with spears.


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