Amlapura
Crossing a wide, solidified lava flow which year by year is slowly being
brought back to cultivation, you enter Amlapura, the main town of Karangasem
regency. The former kingdom was founded during the weakening of the Gelgel
dynasty late in the 17th century, and became in the late 18th and early
19th centuries the most powerful state in Bali. Puri Agung Karangasem
long served as the residence of these kings, who extended their domain
across the eastern straits to the island of Lombok. The puri's austere,
three-tiered gate, penetrating the thick walls of red brick, is a notable
introduction to Karangasem architecture.

During the Dutch conflict at the turn of the century, the raja of Karangasem
co-operated with the European army and was allowed to retain his title
and autocratic powers. Puri Kanginan, the palace where the last raja
was born, is a 20th century eclectic creation of designs from Europe,
China and Bali. The main building with a large veranda is called "Bale
London" because the furniture bears the central motif of the Royal
Crest of England. The wooden paneling appears to be Chinese work, while
Ramayana relief's, on the adjacent tooth filing pavilion, retain a Balinese
flavor. The photograph over the entrance to Bale London portrays the
late king, Anak Agung Anglurah Ketut, as a young man studying with his
religious teacher.
It was his pleasure to make fantastic moats and Pools. Five kilometers
south, on the beach at Ujung, he helped design a floated water palace,
opened in 1921. In about 1947, he built Tirta Gangga (6 kilometers north
on the road to Culik) as a rest place, where he laid out a series of
Pools decorated with unusual statuary. It suffered damage during the
1963 eruption and at the hands of political agitators during that period
as well as from an earthquake in 1979. The coast road born, is a 20th
century eclectic creation 6f., continues-through spectacular scenery
to the designs from Europe, China and Bali. The main northern capital
of Singaraja.
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