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Bahorok or Bohorok is a subdistrict of Langkat Regency. Its capital is Bohorok town, and Bukit Lawang is a major local tourist attraction for viewing orangutans. The Bohorok river, which is a tributary of the Wampu River, joins the Wampu in the subdistrict. ==History== According to legend, a Karo of marga Peranginangin, submarga Sukatendel was hunting and found a child in some bamboo. The child was given to a childless woman to raise. The area where the child was found eventually became Kuta Buluh. When that child grew older, he married a woman of Sukatendel village. He had five children, the middle being Dewa Perangin-angin. Dewa Perangin-angin converted to Islam, in order to marry Paga Ruyung of Deli Tua. They had three children, Sutan Jabar, Sutan Husin and Putri Hijau. Sutan Husin was in a dispute with his brother, Sultan Jabar, so Slutan Jabar went to Malacca, while Sutan Husin following the Wampu river upstream, and stopped to rest where it met another river (the Bohorok). Eventually he built a house at this point. One day, while on a hunting trip, he climbed the hill from the river, and finding an unknown sweet-tasting fruit tree at the top named it Buah Huruk (or fruit that is atop the hill in Karo language). Bohorok had previously been called Tanjung by the Malays as it was the meeting point of the two rivers. Bohorok was involved in trade along the Wampu river, buying salt at Pangkalan Brandan from the Kampar Malays there. Tengku Tan Deraman, son of Tengku Djukdin, son of Tengku Panji Sakar, son of Tengku Syahmardan, son of Sutan Husin, was the first to promote the cultivation of land for farming. The lineage of Bahorok kingdom, from the 16th century is said to be: * Raja Sutan Husin * Tengku Syahmardan bin Sutan Husin * Tengku Panji Sakar bin Tengku Syahmardan * Tengku Djukdin bin Panji Sakar * Tengku Tan Deraman bin Tengku Djukdin * Tengku Basir bin Tengku Djukdin, he fled in 1835 to Kutacane from the Dutch, and was replaced by * Tengku Tan Perang bin Tengku Djukdin * Tengku Lengkong son of Tengku Tan Perang * Tengku Hasyim, founder of Bohorok mosque (1917), died 27 May 1935 * Tengku Bahagi, younger brother of Tengku Hasyim * Tengku Saidi Husni, son-in-law of Tengku Hasyim * Tengku Sembab, until Indonesian independence in 1945 Thus Bahorok is a historically Malay-Karo kingdom. The kingdoms of Bohorok, Stabat and Binjai eventually united to form the kingdom of Langkat, which became Langkat Regency under Dutch rule, and also later under Indonesian rule. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bohorok」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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