Indonesian Megaliths: A forgotten cultural heritage' highlights aspects
of Indonesian culture which are currently misunderstood and sometimes
threatened by destruction. Although they are relatively recent in
origin, the Indonesian megaliths offer similarities to their
counterparts in the Middle East and Arabia: they reflect the rise to
prominence of local chiefs in a context of acculturation which prompted
the need to build megalithic monuments to bury the dead, and to honour,
commemorate and communicate with ancestors. In societies of oral
tradition, these stones punctuate the landscape to transmit the memory
of men and social structure from one generation to the next. Based on
scientific documents (articles, archaeological reports) and field
visits, this new exploration clarifies various elements of the
Indonesian megaliths, including their function in the daily life of the
tribes and the use of certain stones for musical purposes (lithophony).
In Nias, Sumba and Toraya, the megalith tradition is still alive and
ethno-anthropological studies of these three regions provide a unique
chance to complement the archaeological perspectives on megalithic
monuments abandoned for several centuries in the rest of the
Archipelago. The book includes numerous photographs documenting the
monuments which were taken during the author's stay in Indonesia
(2010-2013).