The Batak Toba are one of six
Batak tribes that inhabit northern and central Sumatra. Each tribe has a
distinctive culture and architectural style. Two Batak tribes are Muslim, while
the the Toba and another tribe are Christian. The Batak Toba people are concentrated
around Lake Toba, the world's largest caldera lake. Their houses are among the
most distinctive in Indonesia, with their famous boat-shaped roofs and
finely-decorated carvings.
Batak Toba houses are found
in groups of ten or less, constituting small villages. Because of frequent
warfare among the other tribes in the past, the houses are built close
together, often side-by-side (though rarely connected). Since much of the area
is wet year-round, the Batak place their buildings on stilts to avoid flooding
and dampness. A typical village consists of a row of houses flanking a
corresponding number of small rice granaries, one for each house. Between the
two rows of buildings runs a street called an "alaman", which used to
serve as a workyard and as a place for drying out rice in the hot sun.
Nowadays, most of the granary buildings have been converted into houses, but
their original purpose remains recognizable since the granaries were always
built on six pillars, while houses had more.
The highest and most important level of the house is the upper storey, which extends about 1/3 of the depth in from the front of the house. In this area family valuables and ancestral shrines are located. In front of this area, facing the street, is a veranda used for open-air storage.
The roofs of the Batak Toba houses are formed of sugar palm fiber thatch, held together with rattan cords. However, many houses have abandoned the labor-intensive thatched roof and have converted to zinc metal roofs, which are far more durable in the humid climate.
SUMATRA TRIPS
Medan - north Sumatra INDONESIA
pHONE : +62 81 263 355 335
Email : sumatratrips@gmail.com
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