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Temanggung Regency

Regencies of Central Java
Pringsurat, Temanggung 2009
Pringsurat, Temanggung 2009

Temanggung Regency (Indonesian: Kabupaten Temanggung) is an inland regency in the Central Java Province of Indonesia. It covers a land area of 870.65 km2 and had a population of 708,546 at the 2010 Census and 790,174 at the 2020 Census; the official estimate as at mid 2022 was 799,764, comprising 402,114 males and 397,650 females. Its capital is the town of Temanggung. All travellers going to the Dieng temple complex from Yogya or Semarang have to pass through this regency. Temanggung Regency is famous for longan, a small sweet fruit that is harvested in January and February.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Temanggung Regency (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Temanggung Regency
Jalan Sawah Jlegong-Selayur,

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Wikipedia: Temanggung RegencyContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -7.3 ° E 110.16666666667 °
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Address

Jalan Sawah Jlegong-Selayur

Jalan Sawah Jlegong-Selayur
56219
Central Java, Indonesia
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Pringsurat, Temanggung 2009
Pringsurat, Temanggung 2009
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Rawaseneng Monastery
Rawaseneng Monastery

Rawaseneng Monastery (Indonesian: Pertapaan Rawaseneng, Pertapaan Santa Maria Rawaseneng) is a monastery complex of the Catholic Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance (O.C.S.O.), popularly known as the Trappists, located in Temanggung Regency, Central Java, Indonesia. The monastery was officially established on 1 April 1953 as a daughter house of Koningshoeven Abbey in Tilburg, Netherlands. Apart from being a residence for the monks, there are also a church, prayer garden, retreat houses, coffee plantations, dairy farms along with the processing industries within the monastery complex. Ronald Bell, a pilgrim from the United States, shares his impression about this place, "You will get all the stages, praying, meditating, contemplating sacred readings, and working. All of those constitute an inseparable part of the experience." Not far from the monastery complex, it lies the Church of Santa Maria dan Yoseph as the center of the Rawaseneng Parish, just ahead of the Kindergarten and Elementary School of Fatima Rawaseneng which are managed by the Dominican nuns.Like the monks in other Trappist monasteries, the monks of Rawaseneng Monastery lives on prayer and works of their hands. The results of their works on coffee plantations, dairy farms, and bakery/cake industries become the main source of livelihood of the monks in the monastery, thus they do not live by relying on contribution from the congregation. In his address during the 60th anniversary celebration of the Rawaseneng Monastery on 25 August 2013, Archbishop Johannes Pujasumarta said, "Together with the nuns of the Trappist Gedono, they present a Church that prays and works in the Archdiocese of Semarang."