The art of metal casting was imported into Indonesia, but its peoples
mastered the secrets of metallurgy, and applied these, in ways often
original and unique, to create their own distinctive civilisation of the
Bronze-Iron Age. In this handbook, which is a sequal to my The Stone Age
of Indo- nesia, I have endeavoured to assemble a comprehensive picture
of the Indonesian Bronze-Iron Age from the results of excavations,
innumerable stray finds in museums, and various studies scattered among
numerous scientific journals and periodicals (often difficult to
obtain). The resulting picture can, of course, be a tentative one only,
valid until many more scientific excavations have taken place. I have
added a bibliography, as complete as it was possible to assemble. The
completion of this summary of the Prehistory of Indonesia has been
assisted by a grant-in-aid from the Wenner Gren Foundation "The Viking
Fund", New York. I am grateful to Mr. Basoeki and Mr. Soebokastowo for
the drawings of Figures 1, 11, 12, 13, 22 and 16, 23, 24, 25
respectively. Figures 2-10 and 15 were drawn by the well-known artist,
the late Mas Pirngadie, and are here published for the first time, with
the generous permission of the Board of Directors of the "Bataviaasch
Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen", Djakarta. I am deeply
grateful to my brother-in-law, Mr. J. H. Reiseger of Kempston,
Bedfordshire, for so willingly undertaking the translation of the Dutch
text into English.