- Madang Province
Infobox Papua New Guinea Province
name = Madang
othername =
districts =Bogia District
Madang District
Middle Ramu District
Rai Coast District
Sumkar District
Usino Bundi District
flag
capital =Madang
area = 29,000 km²
arearank = 7th
pop = 365,106
popdate = 2000
poprank = 5th
popdens = 12.6
governor =Arnold Amet
governordate = 2007
mapMadang is a province on the northern coast of mainland
Papua New Guinea . The province has many of the country's highest peaks, activevolcano es and its biggest mix oflanguage s. The capital is the town ofMadang .History
Man's contact with the
New Guinea mainland has extended through the past 50,000 years, and although as yet unproven one would presume this figure to be true for this region also. Scientists have found evidence of human settlement 12,000 to 15,000 years ago nearSimbai . In the past 6,000 yearssailor s ultimately originating from aroundTaiwan have traversed this area, leaving their mark in theAustronesian languages which are unevenly distributed along the coastline amongst the Papuan language villages.TheYabob andBilbil people used big sailing canoes to trade their pots fromKarkar Island to westernMorobe . They were part of theVitiaz Strait trade network. Bundi was the centre of trade betweenAstrolabe Bay and the Highlands. Trade involved shells,salt ,clay pots and woodenbowl s from thelowlands and stoneaxe s,feather s and women from the Asaro, Simbu and Jimi valleys.The Madang coast received its first real western exploration at the hands of the
Russia n explorerNicholai Miklukho-Maklai in 1871. He introducedpineapple s,mango es,bean s,pumpkins and other new foods. In 1884 theGerman New Guinea Kompagnie started development of the region, buildingtobacco ,cotton andcoffee plantation s atBogia and around Astrolabe Bay. In 1886,Johannes Flierl started aLutheran Mission atSimbang . TheDivine Word Missionaries established missions at Bogia in 1901 andAlexishafen in 1904.In 1914 the
Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force capturedRabaul and took control ofGerman New Guinea . A military administration continued for 7 years. This was ratified by theTreaty of Versailles in 1919. Once again, very little development took place and the next momentous occasion was the occupation of the region aroundHansa Bay by theJapan ese during theSecond World War (1 May 1942 forMadang town). Madang was destroyed in heavy fighting with much loss of life on both sides. The township was recaptured by Allied soldiers on 24th April 1944. Post-war developments have been few and mainly restricted to the coast and Madang town. Madang town is the base ofDivine Word University which was established in 1996.Geography
Madang Province is a large region approximately 300
kilometre s long and 160 kilometres wide with four large and many small offshoreisland s. The province totals 29,000square kilometre s and has apopulation of 365,106 (2000 census).To the south lies the
Bismarck Range with heights ranging over 4,000metre s.Mount Wilhelm , PNG's tallest mountain at 4509m, being found in those ranges. Also in the south, theRamu Valley separates the Bismarck Range from theFinisterre Range to the south east of the province. The mountains aretimber rich with large stands of trees andrainforest , whilst thecoastal plain of the vallery is open and studded withpalm tree s.The
Bismarck Sea laps the northern coast of the region is fed by the larger Ramu, Sogeram, Gogol andMalas River s.Offshore islands in the sea are, in some cases, volcanic, with
Karkar ,Bagabag andManam being notable. In 2004/2005 the population of Manam Island was evacuated due to an eruption of the volcano. Bagabag and Karkar have had no major volcanic activities in recent years. This active volcanic region is part of thePacific Ring of Fire and has created craterlake s, smokingvolcanic cones andblack sand beaches .The Madang province receives ample
rainfall (3.2 metres in Madang itself) with the months of November to June being the wettest.People and Culture
Due to changes caused by outside contact over the years, cultural loss has been great but isolation of many groups has caused that rate of change to be diversely uneven. Because of the environmental diversity, this province also has a very diverse culture as well. Tall lithe coastal people from
Karkar Island , short nuggety highlands men fromSimbai and river people from the Ramu.Many Madang area
costumes includebamboo frames decorated with the very commoncockatoo andparrot feathers asbirds of paradise are relatively uncommon. The Ramu people are prolific carvers and the lower Ramu has cultural links with the villages of the artistically diverseSepik River region. It is interesting to note that the resurgence of cultural festivals (i.e.Maborasa Festival ) has seen many people donning the fantastic traditional dress, feathers and paints of theirancestors .Foods eaten include those grown in fertile coastal
garden s,shellfish andfish ,fruit ,green vegetables ,banana s,taro ,sweet potato and yams which relish drysoil s.Sago is a staple of the Ramu river people especially in its lower reaches. The mountain people have very good gardens with excellent produce.Languages
Linguistically, Madang province is typified by a large number of very small language groups, many with fewer than 1,000 people. Austronesian sailors settled on this coast some 5 to 6,000 years ago and the languages of these intrepid but largely unknown sailors are found along the coast of the province.
Lukep ,Gedaged ,Manam andBilbil languages are examples of this. Inland, theKatiati ,Hinihon andSaki and languages are examples of Papuan (non-Austronesian) languages found in the region. The Ramu river languages includeGamei ,Giri ,Tangu ,Romkun andIgana and theRai Coast languages includeSomau Garia andUsino . The volcanic island of Karkar is unusual in that it is shared by the Papuan languageWaskia and the Austronesian language Takia.Economy
The province is the country's third leading producer of
cocoa andcopra and second producer ofcattle .Ramu Sugar andJant/Gogol woodchip mill are amongst PNG's biggest employers. Most areas are still far from transport and undeveloped.External links
* [http://www.madangtourism.com/ Madang Province Tourism website]
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