Pura Dalem Segara Madhu
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Pura Dalem Segara Madhu also known as Pura Dalem Jagaraga is a northern Balinese temple, Balinese Hindu temple or pura located in the village of Jagaraga, Buleleng in northern Bali. It is about 11 km east of Singaraja. The village of Jagaraga is known historically as the place where the Dutch colonial government witnesses ''puputan'' or Balinese mass-suicide following their Dutch intervention in Bali (1849), military attack on the kingdom of Bali in 1849. Pura Dalem Segara Madhu is known for its intensive wall decoration typical of northern Balinese architecture and for its unique western-influenced reliefs featuring early 20th-century airplanes and automobiles.


History

The establishment of Pura Dalem Segara Madhu was estimated to be in the 12th century according to Raja Sri Aji Jayaraga. During the Dutch intervention in Bali (1849), Dutch intervention of Bali in 1849, the entire palace and temple complex were destroyed by the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army, Dutch military. The rebuilding of the pura began in 1865; this building still stands today. The pura was designed as a combination of Pura Prajapati and Pura Dalem, each dedicated to Durga and Shiva. The combination of both temples is possible because the deities are still one family.


Northern Balinese style

Typical of northern Balinese temple, Pura Dalem Segara Madhu is carved more ornately than its southern counterpart. Pura Dalem Jagaraga is carved with depictions of foliage, flowers, nagas, and human figures; a type of carvings that can be found in other northern Balinese pura e.g. Pura Beji Sangsit. Pura Dalem Segara Madhu is one of a few temples in Bali with carvings that depict the western world. Carvings in the perimeter wall of the temple feature unusual 20th-century figures e.g. carving of an airplane falling into the sea, carving of a ship attacked by a sea monster, and carving of an early 20th-century automobile. The carvings depicting the western world can also be found in other northern Balinese pura e.g. Pura Meduwe Karang and Pura Beji Sangsit, indicating contact with the western world in northern Bali. The Dutch colonial government entered Bali through the north. This entry is followed by several conflicts between the Dutch colonial government and the Balinese kingdom. In the mid-19th-century, the Dutch government conducted a series of History of Bali#Northern Bali campaigns (1846–1849), campaigns to impose its colonial rule on the kingdom of Bali. The last campaign occurred in two times in the early 20th-century; it caused the death of 1000 Balinese civilians and the erasement of a kingdom. The massacre shocked the West where the disproportion between the offense and the harshness of the punitive actions was pointed out. Image of the Netherlands as a benevolent and responsible colonial power was seriously affected as a consequence. The Netherlands, also under criticism for their policies in Java, Sumatra and the eastern island, decided to make amends, and announced the establishment of an "Dutch Ethical Policy, Ethical policy". As a consequence, the Dutch started to learn about and protect Balinese culture and endeavored to preserve it in addition to their initial modernization role. Efforts were made at preserving Bali culture and at making it a "living museum" of classical culture. In 1914, Bali was opened to tourism.


Temple compound

Pura Dalem Segara Madhu is a , a type of dedicated to Shiva, the Hindu God of death and destruction. is associated with death rituals, and so decorated with sculptures of monstrous nature e.g. the statue of Batari Durga and carving of the demon Rangda. Pura Dalem Segara Madhu is divided into three areas: the outer sanctum of the temple ( or ), the middle sanctum ( or ), and the inner main sanctum ( or ). The outer sanctum or is located right beside the main street of the village, basically, it is the street itself. Access to the middle sanctum is provided by a gate carved with intricately in northern Balinese style. The features monstrous Bhoma head on top of the portal. Beyond the gate is the middle sanctum or . The middle sanctum is where several Balinese pavilions () i.e. ("food pavilion") used to prepare cooking for offering and ("gong pavilion") to keep and perform the orchestra are situated. The innermost sanctum or is the most sacred courtyard of the temple. The area contains several shrines dedicated to the deities, e.g., , , , , (the main shrine of Prajapati or Durga), , and .


See also

*Balinese temple


References


Cited works

* * * * * * {{Hindu temples in Indonesia Balinese temples Hindu temples in Indonesia