Deskripsi Lengkap

Sumber Pengatalogan : LibUI eng rda
ISSN : 14112272
Majalah/Jurnal : WACANA: Jurnal Ilmu Pengetahuan Budaya
Volume : Vol. 23, No. 2, (2022): Hal. 337-359
Tipe Konten : text (rdacontent)
Tipe Media : unmediated (rdamedia)
Tipe Carrier : volume (rdacarrier)
Akses Elektronik : https://scholarhub.ui.ac.id/wacana/vol23/iss2/3/
Institusi Pemilik : Universitas Indonesia
Lokasi : Perpustakaan UI, Lantai 4 R. Koleksi Jurnal
 
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No. Panggil No. Barkod Ketersediaan
909 UI-WACANA 23:2 (2022) 08-23-92613895 TERSEDIA
Tidak ada ulasan pada koleksi ini: 9999920521286
 Abstrak
People have been interacting with bees in the Indo-Malay world for thousands of years. Though the practice of robbing bees of honey and wax is relatively well-documented, we know very little about the early history of beekeeping in Southeast Asia. In this study I will use Old Javanese evidence to demonstrate that providing honey bees with artificial cavities was a practice known in Java at least by the twelfth century CE, several centuries earlier than suggested by the historians of beekeeping. In the second part of my contribution I will discuss in detail an intriguing passage in the Sumanas?ntaka, a court poem composed in the early thirteenth century CE, in which a literary motif of the ?marriage by choice? (swayamwara) of Princess Indumat? is based on the image and structure of beehive. The idea that a bee-colony is ruled by the ?queen? rather than the ?king? was not widely known in pre-modern world, and the Sumanas?ntaka suggests that pre-Islamic Javanese were good observers of nature.