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#1 |
Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 199
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Pak Ganja,
The young prince was wearing a ring with stone (agate). Was that agate Kiai Basuki? Where is that legendary agate now? regards, OeS |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: J a k a r t a
Posts: 991
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Really I don't know, Raden,
I don't even know that the young Prince had a ring that called Ki Basuki, until you mentioned it... What I know is that he (Paku Alam) loved traditional archery. Once, in Indonesian National sports forum, he popularized traditional archery as one national sport beside pencak silat (please correct me, if I'm wrong...) GANJAWULUNG |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 199
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Pak Ganja,
Agate (akik) as pusaka was a common practice in villages of Jawa. I feel that it is still now. Paku Alam VIII was quite popular in Jogja's villages. His popularity was not only in his effort to perpetuate the jawanese traditional archery but also in his other activities. Villagers believed that, in some special abilities, he was much stronger that ordinary people. It was believed that he had powerful pusakas. One of them was Ki Basuki. I don't know exactly why a lot of villagers considered agate as pusaka. Was it because of the scarcity of keris in the village. As post WWII (or post coldwar generation), I just think that because at that time, keris was much more expensive than agate. Most villagers couldn't afford kerises. They created othe kind of pusaka. Perhaps.... OeS |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 318
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Many thanks for the interesting info so far on behalf of the owner of the photo. Regards, Erik
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7,014
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In traditional Javanese thought, money and things associated with money are something less than clean, and are certainly not things that a man of good breeding should be associated with.
As a consequence, the ways in which to store wealth that were available to a man who respected himself, were limited. One of those ways was by using precious and semi-precious stones as a store of wealth. Perhaps one of the most affordable of semi-precious stones is the agate.Once the accountable value of the commodity had been established, it automatically became worthy of being something that could be passed to a following generation, and as an object that would have been in close personal contact with the previous custodian, it became elevated to the position of a recognised pusaka. Of and by itself it could not become a pusaka,it could only achieve this status through contact with a previous custodian. |
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