Sarawak Museum https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sarawak_Museum,_Kuching_03.jpg Yeo Jiun Tzen
Sarawak Museum (GPS: 1.55479, 110.34336) is one of the oldest and most renowned museums in Southeast Asia. It is also reputably to be one of the best museums in this region. Although it is not the most sophisticated museum, the Sarawak Museum displays a collection that reflects the passion of its founder, the White Rajah of Sarawak, Charles Brooke.
The Sarawak Museum was built by Charles Brooke, on the encouragement of his friend, the emminent naturalist, Alfred Russell Wallace (famous for the Wallace Line that separates Bali from Lombok). Wallace has spent a few months in Borneo and collecting specimens. The original building was built in 1891 and extended in 1911. It holds a permanent display of native arts and crafts as well as Wallace's extensive collection of stuffed specimens of local fauna.
Sarawak Museum, side view https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c8/Sarawak_Museum%2C_Kuching.jpg Yeo Jiun Tzen
Located between McDougall Road and Jalan Tun Haji Openg, the Sarawak Museum building is rectangular in shape, 44 ft wide by 160 ft in length. The walls are of bricks while the roof is of belian hardwood and concrete. The façade is said to have been styled according to a Normandy manor house, as was suggested by Brooke's French valet.
Jalan Tun Haji Open divides the two wings of the Sarawak Museum between the original building and the annex. But as you enter the original building, you find yourself transported from the city of Kuching, and into the very heart of Borneo. In one display, you see 60 varieties of ancient glass beads of the Kenyah tribe. Another houses figurines of the now extinct Sru Dayaks.
Totem poles and adjoining buildings of the Sarawak Museum complex https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sarawak_Museum,_Kuching_04.jpg Yeo Jiun Tzen
A majestic mural stands in the middle of the Sarawak Museum. It is the Tree of Life of the Kenyah tribe, reproduced for the museum after an original found in a Kenyah longhouse. The most interesting - and gruesome - sections of the museum is the longhouse replica, complete with simulated fires and real human skulls. Indeed, the Sarawak Museum is one of the most fascinating - and original - attractions for those who are keen to learn about the history of Borneo.
Beside the Sarawak Museum building is the Art Museum, while across the road was an annex called the Tun Abdul Razak Hall. However, the building was demolished in 2013 to make way for the new Sarawak Museum building.
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Hello and thanks for reading this page. My name is Timothy and my hobby is in describing places so that I can share the information with the general public. My website has become the go to site for a lot of people including students, teachers, journalists, etc. whenever they seek information on places, particularly those in Malaysia and Singapore. I have been doing this since 5 January 2003, for over twenty years already. You can read about me at Discover Timothy. By now I have compiled information on thousands of places, mostly in Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore, and I continue to add more almost every day. My goal is to describe every street in every town in Malaysia and Singapore.