Name Card 1

Name Card 1

NGC AWARDS FOR YEAR 2014

NGC AWARDS FOR YEAR 2014

Sunday, November 2, 2014

PENANG PERANAKAN ANTIQUES MUSEUM PART 1

Instead of writing about banknotes and coins and just for a change i want to blog about the newly restored Peranakan mansion or Nyonya and Babas museum located in Penang that i just visited. I took lots of photos inside museum with lots of heritage and all Penangites could be proud off.
Many of you may share the same hobby of collecting the Peranakan antiques which are highly sought after by collectors that we share the same similarities with Singapore and Malacca during the era of Straits Settlements.

The Peranakans, also known as the Babas and Nyonyas, was a prominent community of acculturated Chinese unique to this part of the world, especially in the Straits Settlements (Penang, Malacca and Singapore) hence its other name, the Straits Chinese. Adopting selected ways of the local Malays and later, the colonial British, the Peranakans had created a unique lifestyle and customs which had not only left behind a rich legacy of antiques but its cultural influences like cuisine and language are still evident in Penang today.


At the Pinang Peranakan Mansion, the typical home of a rich Baba of a century ago is recreated to offer a glimpse of their opulent lifestyle and of their many customs and traditions. With over 1,000 pieces of antiques and collectibles of the era on display, this Baba-Nyonya museum is also housed in one of Penang’s heritage mansion of eclectic design and architecture. Built at the end of the 19th century by one of local history’s famous personalities, the ‘Hai Kee Chan’ or Sea Remembrance Store had once served as the residence and office of Kapitan Cina Chung Keng Kwee. Though not a Baba himself, his Chinese courtyard house was much like a typical large Baba home of eclectic style, incorporating Chinese carved-wood panels and English floor tiles and Scottish ironworks. Having survived the many decades of neglect and decay, the mansion has now been restored to its former glory of a stately home.




















To be continue.....

Enjoy !

Andrew

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