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Page 1: warisan
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BIL TAPAK

1. Bangunan Setiausaha Kerajaan NegeriJalan Raja Syed Saffi, 01000 Kangar, Perlis

2. Istana ArauJalan Arau Kodiang, Arau, Perlis

3. Kota Kuala Kedah

4. Bangunan Lembaga Muzium Pulau Pinang

5. Bangunan Leong San Tong Khoo Kongsi18, Lebuh Cannon

6. Bangunan Municipal (Dewan Bandaran Pulau Pinang)

7. Batu Bertulis Cherok Tukon

8. Kota Cornwallis

9. Mahkamah Tinggi Pulau Pinang

10. Makam Sheikh Omar

11. Masjid Kapitan Keling92, Jalan Masjid Kapitan Keling, 10200 Pulau Pinang

12. Masjid Melayu Leboh Acheh

13. Menara Jam Besar

14. Bangunan Bank Kerapu

15. Bangunan Muzium NegeriKota Bharu

16. Bekas Stesen Keretapi Tanah MelayuKota Bharu

17. Jambatan Sultan Ismail, Kuala Krai

18. Tapak Kawasan Tinggalan Perahu Bunga Mas

19. Makam Sultan Zainal Abidin I

20. Makam Tok Beliau Mahmud

21. Makam Tok Gajah

22.. Makam Tok Panjang

23. Makam Tok Pauh

24. Makam Tok Pulau Manis

25. Makam Tok Raja Re

26. Makam Chondong

27. Batu Bersurat Belanda

28. Batu Peringatan J. W. W. Birch

29. Keramat To’ Yang Beliang

30. Kota Belanda

31. Kota Long Jaafar

32. Kota Ngah IbrahimMatang, Taiping

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33. Kubur Askar Upahan

34. Kubur Gurneer N. Hardy

35. Kubur James Wheeler Woodford Birch

36. Kubur Keptan William Innes

37. Kubur Koperal Pay

38. Kubur Perebet Smith

39. Makam Almarhum Raja Alang Iskandar (Marhum Teja)

40. Makam Daeng Osman bin Daeng Salili

41. Makam Daeng Salili Bin Pajung Luwuk

42. Makam Daeng Uda Tahir (To Janggut Uda Tahir)

43. Makam Dato Busu Sega (Dato Seri Adika Raja 9)

44. Makam Dato Seri Lela

45. Makam Kaum Keluarga Daeng Salili

46. Makam Keramat Bidan Bisu

47. Makam Keramat Imam Jusoh

48. Makam Lama Kerajaan Beruas

49. Makam Orang Kaya Seri Adika Raja Meor  Yahya bin Meor Ngah Mohammad

50. Makam Panglima Alang Ishak

51. Makam Sultan Abdul Malik Mansur Shah

52. Makam Sultan Abdullah Mohamad Shah I

53. Makam Sultan Abdullah Muazzam Shah

54. Makam Sultan Ahmad Tajuddin Shah Marhum Muda

55. Makam Sultan Alauddin Mansor Shah Iskandar Muda Marhum Sulong

56. Makam Sultan Ali Mukammal Inhayat Shah

57. Makam Sultan Iskandar Zulkarnain Marhum Kaharullah

58. Makam Sultan Jaafar Muazzam Shah

59. Makam Sultan Muzaffar Shah I

60. Makam Sultan Muzaffar Shah II

61. Makam Sultan Muzaffar Shah III

62. Makam Sultan Shahabuddin Riayat Shah

63. Makam Sultan Tajul Ariffin

64. Makam Sultan Yusof Sharifuddin Muzaffar Shah

65. Makam Temenggong Wan Hassan

66. Makam Temenggong Wan Hussain

67. Makam To' Subang

68. Makam To’ Kelana

69. Makam To’ Lalang (Dato’ Seri Adika Raja 3)

70. Makam To’ Tun Lela Sakti

71. Makam Tok Makan Lambat (Tok Kuala Kenas)

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72. Makam Tok Sendalu (Seri Adika Raja 4)

73. Makam Tok Temong (Tun Perabu)

74. Makam Tok Tun Lela Setia

75. Makam Tun Saban

76. Makam Y.M. Raja Perempuan Che Neng

77. Sekolah St. MichealJalan S.P Seenivasagam, Ipoh

78. Bangunan Badan Pencegah Rasuah, Jalan Sultan Sulaiman

79. Bangunan Hotel Majestic , Jalan Sultan Hishamuddin

80. Bangunan Lama Dewan Bahasa dan PustakaJalan Dewan Bahasa

81. Bangunan Mahkamah Perusahaan, Jalan Belanda

82. Bangunan Muzium TelekomJalan Raja Chulan, 50200 Kuala Lumpur

83. Bangunan Panggung Drama

84. Bangunan Pusat Penyelidikan Perubatan, Jalan Pahang(Institut Penyelidikan Perubatan)

85. Bangunan SulaimanJalan Sultan Hishamuddin

86. Istana Tetamu

87. Muzium Negara, Jalan Damansara

88. Pustaka Peringatan P. Ramlee

89. Pasar SeniJalan Hang Kasturi

90. Masjid Besar Kuala Terengganu/Masjid Abidin Jalan Masjid Abidin, Kuala Terengganu

91. Masjid HiliranKuala Terengganu

92. Rumah TelePerkarangan Muzium Negeri Terengganu

93. Istana Raja Billah72, Kampung Dato', 31550 Papan,Perak

   Pusat Latihan Polis (PULAPOL)

94. Asrama Anak-Anak Polis Lelaki (JKR 2003)

95. Asrama Anak-Anak Polis Wanita (JKR 1744-1755)

96. Bangunan Cawangan Pancaragam (JKR 1878)

97. Bangunan Cyberpool (JKR 1876)

98. Bangunan Kantin (JKR 1879)

99. Bangunan Pejabat Kem Komandan (Balai Pengawal) (JKR 1786)

100. Bangunan Pejabat Kewangan (JKR 2004)

101. Bangunan Pejabat Komandan(JKR 2019)

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102. Bangunan Pejabat Seni mempertahankan Diri (SMD) (JKR 1874)

103. Bangunan Sekolah Batu Lama (JKR 2006)

104. Bangunan Sukan (Gimnasium) (JKR 1877)

105. Bangunan Tadika Kemas (JKR 1896)

106. Bangunan Ujian Kecerdasan Fizikal (UKF) (JKR 1875)

107. Bangunan Wisma Sukan (JKR 2076)

108. Bengkel Senjata Pusat dan persenjataan PULAPOL (JKR 2005)

109. Berek Bujang Lelaki (JKR 341)

110. Berek Bujang Lelaki (JKR 342)

111. Berek Bujang Lelaki (JKR 394)

112. Berek Bujang Wanita (JKR 386)

113. Dewan Satu (JKR 2006)

114. Gurdwara Sahib PULAPOL (JKR 2078)

115. Kediaman Ajutan (JKR 1331)

116. Kediaman Komandan (JKR 817)

117. Kediaman Timbalan Komandan (Latihan) (JKR 1332)

118. Kediaman Timbalan Komandan (Pentadbiran & Garaj) (JKR 1333)

119. Rumah Kelamin Kelas F (JKR 1541-1544)

120. Surau PULAPOL (JKR 2085)

121. Tugu Polis Diraja Malaysia

122. Rumah PersekutuanJalan Sultan Hishamuddin

123. Stadium Negara

124. Bukit Raja

125. Gedong Raja Abdullah

126. Ibu Empangan Sungai Tengi

127. Istana Alaudddin

128. Kota Malawati

129. Kota Raja Mahadi

130. Kota Tanjong Keramat

131. Makam Diraja Jugra

132. Makam Saiyid Mashor bin Mohammad. Ash-Shahab

133. Masjid Alauddin, Kuala Langat

134. Pejabat Daerah Lama Kuala Langat

135. Penjara Lama Jugra

136. Sekolah ConventJalan Tengku Kelana,Klang

137. Setor Peluru

138. Bangunan Pejabat Daerah dan Jabatan Ukur, Seremban

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139. Bangunan Pejabat Setiausaha Kerajaan, Seremban

140. Batu-Batu Hidup (Nisan Tinggi)

141. Istana Ampang Tinggi (Muzium Negeri)

142. Keramat Sungai Udang

143. Kota Lukut

144. Makam Moyang Salleh

145. Masjid Jamek SerembanSeremban

146. Model Rumah Melayu Negeri Sembilan

147. Sekolah Menengah King George V (blok lama)Jalan Za’ba (Hose Road), Seremban

148. Sekolah Rendah Kebangsaan Ampangan (blok lama)Km 4, Jalan Kuala Pilah, 70400 Seremban, Negeri Sembilan

149. Bangunan "Atlas Ice" (Bangunan Zaman Belanda)Jalan Hang Jebat, 75200, Melaka

150. Bangunan Lama Dewan Undangan NegeriBukit St.Paul,Banda Hilir,75000 Melaka

151. Bangunan Masjid Tanah, Alor Gajah

152. Bangunan Muzium, Jalan Kota

153. Bangunan Pejabat Tali Air (Muzium Senibina Melaka) , Jalan Kota

154. Bangunan Pejabat Ugama (Muzium Islam Melaka) , Jalan Kota

155. Kota Linggi,  Alor Gajah

156. Kubur Belanda

157. Kubur Inggeris

158. Makam Dato Manila

159. Makam Dol Said Taboh Naning

160. Makam Hang Jebat

161. Makam Hang Kasturi

162. Makam Sultan Ali

163. Makam Sultan Hussein

164. Masjid Duyong

165. Masjid Lama MachapMachap Baru, Alor Gajah

166. Masjid Serkam

167. Masjid Tengkera

168. Perigi Batu Alai

169. Perigi Hang Tuah Duyong, Kampung Duyong, Melaka Tengah

170. Perigi Portugis

171. Perigi Raja (Perigi Hang Li Po), Melaka Tengah

172. Rumah Penghulu Md. Nattar , Merlimau

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173. Runtuhan Gereja St. John , Melaka Tengah

174. Kota Batu, Kota Linggi

175. Istana Besar, Johor

176. Masjid Sultan Abu Bakar , Johor

BIL TAPAK

1. Tapak Arkeologi Gua Badak (Lukisan Gua)Antara Kampung Gelok dan Kampung Sumpitan

2. Gua Teluk KelawarBukit Kepala Gajah

BIL TAPAK

1. Taman Negara (Semenanjung Malaysia)Kuala Koh, Relai, Gua Musang

2. Stesen Penyegitigaan TimbalaiBukit Timbalai, Kampung Bebuluh Darat

BIL BUTIRAN

1. Perahu Kemajuan  T.65

2. Perahu Besar Sabar T.82

3. Bekas Bara

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KATEGORI NAMA BIDANG

ORANG HIDUP Encik Mohd. Bahroodin Ahmad Bangsawan,Boria,Ronggeng, Kebudayaan Baba dan Nyonya (Pulau Pinang)

Encik Tan Hooi Song Gendang Tradisi, Muzik Cina Malaysia

Puan Losimin Majanil Seni dan Budaya Kadazan Dusun

Puan Vatsala A/P G.R.Kurup Tarian Bharatsanatyan dan Katakali

Tuan Haji Abu Bakar bin Jaafar Boria

Tuan Haji Ali Badron bin Haji Sabor Penceritaan Rakyat Melayu

Tan Sri Ahmad Othman Merican Muzik

Ramli Ibrahim Tarian Klasik India, Tarian Balet Klasik, dan Tarian Moden

Puan Mek Jah Binti Deris Mak Yong

Puan Jati Anak Ju Penenun Pua Kumbu

Datuk Mohd Nor Bin Khalid Kartunis

Puan Intan Sulga Binti KK Tiring Tarian Tradisional Bajau Laut

Encik Eyo Hock Seng Wayang Kulit

Nyonya Tan Binti Abdullah Dondang Sayang

Encik Kumaresan Karthigesu Seni Muzik Sitar

                                                                    JUMLAH BESAR  15   Orang

 

Senarai Pengiktirafan Dunia

Kali terakhir dikemaskini Sel, 17 Jul 2012 16:40

 

WORLD HERITAGE SITE

Taman Negara Mulu, Sarawak

Kategori Semulajadi2 December 2000

Important both for its high biodiversity and for its karst features, Gunung Mulu National Park, on the island of Borneo in the State of Sarawak, is the most studied tropical karst area in the world. The 52,864-ha park contains seventeen vegetation zones, exhibiting some 3,500 species of vascular plants. Its palm species

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are exceptionally rich, with 109 species in twenty genera noted. The park is dominated by Gunung Mulu, a 2,377 m-high sandstone pinnacle. At least 295 km of explored caves provide a spectacular sight and are home to millions of cave swiftlets and bats. The Sarawak Chamber, 600 m by 415 m and 80 m high, is the largest known cave chamber in the world.

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Taman Negara Kinabalu, SabahKategori Semulajadi2 Dicember 2000

Kinabalu Park, in the State of Sabah on the northern end of the island of Borneo, is dominated by Mount Kinabalu (4,095 m), the highest mountain between the Himalayas and New Guinea. It has a very wide range of habitats, from rich tropical lowland and hill rainforest to tropical mountain forest, sub-alpine forest and scrub on the higher elevations. It has been designated as a Centre of Plant Diversity for Southeast Asia and is exceptionally rich in species with examples of flora from the Himalayas, China, Australia, Malaysia, as well as pan-tropical flora.

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Melaka & GeorgetownKategori Kebudayaan7 July 2008

Melaka and George Town, historic cities of the Straits of Malacca (Malaysia) have developed over 500 years of trading and cultural exchanges between East and West in the Straits of Malacca. The influences of Asia and Europe have endowed the towns with a specific multicultural heritage that is both tangible and intangible. With its government buildings, churches, squares and fortifications, Melaka demonstrates the early stages of this history originating in the 15th-century Malay sultanate and the Portuguese and Dutch periods beginning in the early 16th century. Featuring residential and commercial buildings, George Town represents the British era from the end of the 18th century. The two towns constitute a unique architectural and cultural townscape without parallel anywhere in East and Southeast Asia.

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Tapak Arkeologi Lembah LenggongKategori Kebudayaan 2012

Situated in the lush Lenggong Valley, the property includes four archaeological sites in two clusters which span close to two million years, one of the longest records of early man in a single locality, and the oldest outside the African continent. It features open-air and cave sites with Palaeolithic tool workshops, evidence of early technology. The number of sites found in the relatively contained area, suggests the presence of a relatively large, semi-sedentary population with cultural remains from the Palaeolithic, Neolithic and Metal ages.

 

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MEMORY OF THE WORLD INTERNATIONAL REGISTER

Surat-surat Sultan Abdul Hamid (Letters of the Sultan Abd Hamid Kedah) (1882-1943) 

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Pengiktirafan diberikan pada 2001

The records are unique in that they constitute the only available evidence of the Malay Sultanate prior to the advent of western-style colonialism. The records have a universal appeal in that they portray the precarious life of a State in transition, straddling between two powers in a world that is fast changing. Originating as they do from the Palace, the highest seat of administration in the state of Kedah in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, the records reflect the unified authority wielded by the Palace in all matters relating to Kedah state administration. The Palace may thus be said to have total influence on all aspects of the life of the people. The influence of the Palace, however is waning, as it is no longer able to control the destiny of the State on account of the need to submit itself to foreign powers far superior in might. The records are therefore useful to research from a number of perspectives, including social change, economics, politics, foreign relations, education, religion and customs. However, the Palace is not able to control the destiny of its own people.

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Sejarah Melayu ( The Malay Annals)Pengiktirafan diberikan pada 4 September 2001

The Sejarah Melayu or the Malay Annals are unique in that they constitute the only available account of the history of the Malay Sultanate in the fifteenth and early sixteenth century. They are in the nature of what may be termed as historical literature conveying a historical narration on the origins, evolution and demise of a great Malay maritime empire, with its unique system of government, administration and politics.

The Annals have universal appeal as they relate to a major transformation in the lives of the people of the Malay Archipelago from a Hindu-Malay matrix to an Islamic – Malay culture. Being an entrepot port, Melaka made rapid progress on account of its cosmopolitan population comprising merchants from India, China, Arabia, Portugal and various other nations of the world. They contributed to the social, economic and political evolution of the Malay Kingdom.

The Annals are therefore a vital source of information for scholars in various fields including sociology, anthropology, economics, politics, international relations, linguistics and literature.

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Hikayat Hang TuahPengiktirafan diberikan pada 20 October 2001

Hikayat Hang Tuah is regarded as a Malay literary classic and a traditional Malay epic. This folk tale has been proudly recounted to generations of Malays. It is recognised as a national literary classic which is well-known not only amongst the Malays but also to the people in the Malay Archipelago. Much studies have been made on this manuscript by local and foreign researchers.

Hang Tuah is characterised as most illustrious Malay hero in Malacca and represented absolute loyalty to the ruler as the ultimate champion of Malay loyalty, chivalry and obedience to tradition. Hikayat Hang Tuah symbolises the greatness of Malacca at that time whilst projecting the bravery of the Malays.

The National Library of Malaysia has in its possession two manuscripts of Hikayat Hang Tuah, with identification number MSS 1658 and MSS 1713. The manuscripts are written on old European paper about 200 years ago. Colophon statement is distinctly absent, as is usual in the tradition of Malay manuscripts writing. To this day the author of the hikayat remains unknown. The manuscripts are being preserved in an acid-free box and kept in strong room which is designed according to the accepted standards of preservation requirements.

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Batu Bersurat Terengganu (Inscribed stone of Terengganu)Pengiktirafan diberikan pada 31 Julai 2009.

The Batu Bersurat, Terengganu or Inscribed Stone of Terengganu constitutes the earliest evidence of Jawi writing (writing based on Arabic alphabets) in the Malaya Muslim world of Southeast Asia. The Stone is a testimony to the spread of Islam offering an insight to the life of the people of the era as well as depicting the growing Islamic culture subsumed under a set of religious laws.

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MASTERPIECES OF ORAL AND INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE OF HUMANITY

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Mak Yong Theatre

This ancient theatre form created by Malaysia’s Malay communities combines acting, vocal and instrumental music, gestures and elaborate costumes. Specific to the villages of Kelantan in northwest Malaysia, where the tradition originated, Mak Yong is performed mainly as entertainment or for ritual purposes related to healing practices. Experts believe that Mak Yong appeared well before the Islamization of the country. It was performed as a royal theatre under the direct patronage of the Kelantan Sultanate until the 1920s. Hence, the tradition was perpetuated in a rural context without forsaking the numerous refinements acquired at court, such as sophisticated costume design. A typical Mak Yong performance opens with an offering followed by dances, acting and music as well as improvised monologues and dialogues. A single story can be presented over several consecutive nights in a series of three-hour performances. In the traditional village setting, the performances are held on a temporary open stage built of wood and palm leaves. The audience sits on three sides of the stage, the fourth side being reserved for the orchestra consisting of a three-stringed spiked fiddle (rebab), a pair of doubleheaded barrel drums (gendang) and hanging knobbed gongs (tetawak). Most roles are performed by women, and the stories are based on ancient Malay folk tales peopled with royal characters, divinities and clowns. Mak Yong is also associated with rituals in which shamans attempt to heal through song, trance-dance and spirit possession. Mak Yong, which requires long years of training, has been preserved until the present largely through oral transmission. In today’s society, few young people are willing to commit to such rigorous apprenticeships. As a result, this important tradition is undergoing steady decline, as attested by reduced dramatic and musical repertories and a shortage of seasoned performers.;