Online Encyclopedia

CERAM (Sirang)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 703 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CERAM (Sirang)  , an island of the Dutch East Indies, in the Molucca
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group, lying about 3° S., and between 127° 45' and 131° E . Its length is a little over 200 m., its greatest breadth about 50 m., and its
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area, including neighbouring islets, 6621 sq. m . It consists of two parts,
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Great Ceram and Little Ceram or Huvamohel,
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united by the isthmus of Taruno; and, for administrative purposes, is assigned to the residency of Amboyna, being divided into Kairatu or West Ceram, Wahai and Amahai, the
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northern and the
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southern parts of
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Middle Ceram, and Waru or Eastern Ceram . No central chain of mountains stretches west and east through the island, but near the north coast hills, rising 2300 to 2600 ft., slope steeply to the
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shore . Near the south coast, west of the
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Bay of Elpaputeh, a complex mass of mountains forms, a
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colossal
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pyramid, with peaks rising to nearly 5000 ft . The isthmus connecting the two parts of the island is very narrow, and has a height of only 46o to 490 ft . The chief rivers flow north and south into bays, but are navigable only for a few miles during the rainy season . The rainfall is very heavy, amounting to 121 in . (mean
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annual) on the south coast . On the north coast the bays of Savai and Waru are accessible for small vessels . The
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geological structure, consisting chiefly of eruptive rocks and crystalline
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limestone, is similar to that of northern Amboyna . In the eastern section the prevailing rock is crystal-
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line
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chalk, similar to that of
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Buru .

Several hot springs occur, and earthquakes are not infrequent . About 4000 persons perished in the

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earthquake of 1899 . A large
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part of the interior is covered with dense forests, and except along the coast the population is scanty . For the naturalist Ceram is without much
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interest, lacking characteristic
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species or abundance of specimens . The Bandanese pay occasional visits to shoot bears and deer; there are numbers of wild goats and cattle; and among birds are mentioned cassowaries, cockatoos, birds of paradise, and the swallows that furnish edible nests . A large number of fish are to be found in the various rivers; and as early as 186o no fewer than 213 species were described . The most valuable
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timber tree is the iron-wood . Rice, maize,
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cocoa-nuts,
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sugar-
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cane and a variety of fruits are grown; and some
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tobacco is exported to
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Europe; but by far the most important production is the
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sago palm, which grows abundantly in the swampy districts, especially of Eastern Ceram, and furnishes a vast supply of food, not only to Ceram itself, but to other islands to the east . The Dutch have established cocoa and coffee plantations at various points . The coast-villages are inhabited by a mixed
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Malay population, Buginese, Macassars, Balinese and other races of the
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archipelago . The interior is occupied by the
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aborigines, a
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people of Papuan stock . They are savages and head-hunters .

The introduction of

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Christianity was hampered by the baneful influence of a secret society called the Kakian Union, to which pagans, Mahommedans and Christians indiscriminately attached themselves; and it has several times cost the Dutch authorities considerable efforts to frustrate their machinations (see Tijdschrift
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van Ned . Ind., fifth
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year) . The
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total population is estimated at roo,000, including 12,000 Christians and 16,000 Mahommedans . The chief settlements are Savai at the north and Elpaputeh at the south end of the isthmus of Taruno . There was a Dutch fort at Kambello, on the west side of Little Ceram, as early as 1646 .

End of Article: CERAM (Sirang)
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CERAMICS, or KERAMICS (Gr. KEpapos, earthenware)

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