A new nation of untouched beauty
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LOCATION
Timor-Leste is located in Southeast Asia, northwest of Australia on the southernmost edge of of the Indonesian archipelago. The country includes the eastern half of the island of Timor as well as the enclave of Oekussi in the northwest portion of Indonesian West Timor and the islands of Atauro and Jako. Timor-Leste has a tropical monsoon climate and the landscape is a patchwork of rugged mountains in the interior, surrounded by low lying coastal lagoons, waterfalls, dry grasslands and areas of dense rainforests.
It was the vast stands of Sandalwood and other hard woods that brought traders from China to Timor well before European colonialists arrived, as documented in 1260 by merchants from mainland China who also noted Timor as a source of honey and beeswax. The proximity of Timor to major trade routes and its abundance of sandalwood led to the Dutch and the Portuguse splitting the island (although this was only legally formalized in the early 1900s) and begin colonizing it. The missionaries soon arrived after the traders, spreading the Protestant and Catholic faith throughout the island. The colonists were mostly concerned with trading and for the most part concentrated their presence around the coastal areas. As a result even after the first high schools were established in the 18th century in Oekussi and Manatuto, the lifestyle, traditional animist beliefs and heritage of the numerous ethnic groups in Timor Leste were left relatively unchanged well into the 20th century.
