Kinarut Mansion
Kinarut Mansion (Malay: Rumah Besar Kinarut) is a ruins of a former manor house in the Graeco-Roman style near Kinarut in the Malaysian state of Sabah.
Kinarut Mansion | |
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Stone staircase entrance of the Kinarut Mansion. | |
General information | |
Status | Destroyed |
Type | Manor house |
Location | Kinarut, Sabah, Malaysia |
Coordinates | 5°48′00″N 116°00′29″E |
Construction started | 1910 |
Completed | 1911 |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 1 |
History
The building was built in 1910 by German W.F.C. Asimont. Asimont was the first manager of a rubber plantation known as Kinarut Rubber Estate, where the British Society for Manchester North Borneo Ltd located. The plantation is the second largest after Sapong Estate's in the west coast of Sabah and was established in 1910–1911 with an area of more than ten square kilometres. Asimont died 1919 in Surabaya, Dutch East Indies and was buried in Singapore.
On 22 August 1994, it was included as one of the historical sites in Sabah.[1] In 2015, the area of the mansion are being upgraded to become one of Sabah's main tourism attractions.[2]
Background
This former manor house is situated on a wooded hill near Kinarut above the Kawang River. Built from 1910 to 1914, the house was one of the few stone houses that existed in North Borneo. It was built of brick with white walls by an Indian architect, who use around 200–300 workers from Java. The manor house with its outdoor facilities spread over an area of about two acres. The main entrance led a 200-metre-long avenue of Greco-Roman columns. The house itself had 45 doors, 152 windows and was illuminated by 42 huge chandeliers.[3]
- The mansion history inscription.
- Inscription on the mansion further history.
- Remains of a Graeco-Roman column.
- Stairs of the mansion ruins.
- The mansion ruins covered with forest today.
Haunted reputation
Local population living near the mansion area claimed the place is haunted with "Hantu Tinggi", a type of Malay ghost in the form of tall tree who usually disguised as a normal tree in the heavily forest area.[4] Aside from that, other passerby claimed to have seen a fast moving apparition and hearing the eerie voice of pontianak, a Malay female ghost at night. These claims were also supported by media crews who covering information about the mansion when they felt "something" was following them through their walk in the area.[4]
References
- "Kinarut Mansion Panorama". Borneo Online. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
- Suzianah Jiffar (25 July 2015). "Rumah Besar Kinarut bakal dinaiktaraf pikat pelancong" [Kinarut Mansion will be upgraded to attract tourists] (in Malay). Berita Harian. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
- Sokial, Page 163, 164, 166
- Suzianah Jiffar (24 July 2015). "Rumah 'hantu tinggi' bongkar sejarah industri getah Sabah" [House of 'tall ghost' unravel the history of the Sabah rubber industry] (in Malay). Berita Harian. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
Literature
- Richard Nelson Sokial: Colonial Townships in Sabah: West Coast, Kapitel The Kinarut Mansion, Page 162–167; Homeland Publisher Sdn Bhd, 2012, Page 46, ISBN 978-983-40734-4-2
External links
Media related to Kinarut Mansion at Wikimedia Commons