Cirebonese peopleThe Cirebon or Cirebonese (Wong Cirebon; Urang Cirebon) are an indigenous ethnic group native to Cirebon in the northeastern region of West Java, Indonesia. With a population of approximately 1.9 million, Cirebonese population, they are mainly adherents of Sunni Islam. Their native language is the Cirebonese, which is a form of mixed language between the Javanese and Sundanese, with a heavier influence from Javanese. Initially, Cirebonese ethnicity was closely associated with that of the Javanese people and Sundanese.
SalatigaSalatiga est une ville d'Indonésie dans la province de Java central, située à 47 km au sud de Semarang, la capitale provinciale, et environ 100 km au nord de la ville royale de Yogyakarta. Sa population est d'un peu moins de 150 000 habitants. Salatiga a le statut de kota. Elle est subdivisée en 4 kecamatan (districts) : Argomulyo, Tingkir, Sidomukti et Sidorejo. Salatiga est enclavée dans le kabupaten de Semarang.
Tengger (peuple)Infobox ethnic group | group = Tenggerese people | native_name = / / | native_name_lang = | image = | caption = Tenggerese children from East Java | population = 100,000 | popplace = (East Java) | langs = Javanese language (Tenggerese dialect), Indonesian language | rels = Majority : Hinduism Minority : Sunni Islam (4%), Christianity (Protestant) | related = other Javanese sub-ethnic such as Mataram, Cirebonese, Osing, Boyanese, Samin, Banyumasan, etc.
Osingthumb|300px|Carte linguistique de Java montrant l'aire de la langue osing, en hachuré rouge et blanc, à l'extrémité sud-est de l'île Les Osing sont une population de l'extrémité orientale de l'île de Java en Indonésie. Au nombre de environ et parlant l'osing, ils habitent le kabupaten de Banyuwangi dans la province de Java oriental. Les Osing se disent les héritiers de l'ancienne principauté de Blambangan, dont les souverains étaient restés hindouistes jusqu'à ce que la VOC (Compagnie néerlandaise des Indes orientales les forcent à se convertir à l'islam en 1770.
Dusun languageCentral Dusun, also known as Bunduliwan (Dusun: Boros Dusun), is an Austronesian language and one of the more widespread languages spoken by the Dusun (including Kadazan) peoples of Sabah, Malaysia. What is termed as Central Dusun (or simply Dusun) and Coastal Kadazan (or simply Kadazan) are deemed to be highly mutually intelligible to one other; many consider these to be part of a single language. Under the efforts of the Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah, in 1995, the central Bundu-Liwan dialect was selected to serve as the basis for a standardised "Kadazandusun" language.
PancasilaLe Pancasila (prononcer /panʧaˈsiːla/) est la philosophie de l'État indonésien. Ce nom est formé à partir des mots sanskrit panca, « cinq », et sila « principe » ou « précepte ». Il a été repris à celui des cinq préceptes du bouddhisme (ne pas tuer, ne pas voler, ne pas mal se conduire sexuellement, ne pas mentir, ne pas se droguer). Ces cinq principes sont : La croyance en un Dieu unique. Une humanité juste et civilisée. L'unité de l’Indonésie. Une démocratie guidée par la sagesse à travers la délibération et la représentation.
Banyumasan peopleBanyumasan or Banyumasan Javanese (Javanese: Ngoko: (Wòng Banyumasan), Indonesian: Orang Banyumasan) (colloquially known as Javanese Ngapak) is a collective term for a Javanese subgroup native to the Indonesia's westernmost part of Central Java. At approximately ±9 million people, they are concentrated in Banyumas, Cilacap, Kebumen, Purworejo, Purbalingga, and Banjarnegara regencies. The Banyumasan-Javanese speak Banyumasan dialect of Javanese language, a dialect which is often called "basa ngapak-ngapak".
Javanese poetryJavanese poetry (poetry in the Javanese or especially the Kawi language; Low Javanese: tembang; High Javanese: sekar) is traditionally recited in song form. The standard forms are divided into three types, sekar ageng, sekar madya, and sekar macapat, also common with the ngoko terms: tembang gedhé, tembang tengahan, and tembang macapat. All three types follow strict rules of poetic construction. These forms are highly influential in Javanese gamelan. The most sacred are the sekar ageng (Low Javanese: tembang gedhé; "great songs").