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Kota Bharu

Kota Bharu (Kelantanese: Koto Baru; Jawi: كوتبهارو‎), colloquially referred to as KB, is a town in Malaysia that serves as the state capital and royal seat of Kelantan. It is situated in the northeastern part of Peninsular Malaysia and lies near the mouth of the Kelantan River.

This article is about the city in Malaysia. For the federal constituency, see Kota Bharu (federal constituency). For entire district, see Kota Bharu District.

Kota Bharu
Koto Baru

كوتبهارو

哥打峇鲁 (Simplified)
哥打峇魯 (Traditional)
Gēdǎ Bālǔ (Hanyu Pinyin)

கோத்தா பாரு
Kōttā Pāru (Transliteration)

1844

1936

1971

1 January 1978

Sultan Muhammad II

Kota Bharu Municipal Council

Mohd Anis Bin Hussein (incumbent)

Mohd Shaifudeen Bin Md Salleh

115 km2 (44 sq mi)

568,900

4,900/km2 (13,000/sq mi)

Not observed

15xxx

+60-09-7

The town is home to many religious buildings, various museums, the unique architecture of the old royal palaces (still occupied by the sultan and sultanah and off-limits to visitors but viewable from outside) and former royal buildings (which can be visited). It is served by Keretapi Tanah Melayu's East Coast Line at the nearby Wakaf Bharu Terminal Station, in the town of Wakaf Bharu across the Kelantan River and Sultan Ismail Petra Airport, located in Pengkalan Chepa.

Etymology[edit]

Kota Bharu means "new city" or "new castle/fort" in Malay. Occasionally, the name of the city is written as Kota Baharu.

History[edit]

Kota Bharu was founded during the late 19th century. Before the establishment, Kota Bharu was home to Kelantan's Royal Palace, then established by Sultan Muhammad II of Kelantan in 1844 as Kelantan's state capital who wanted the new state capital built in his honour.[2] Prior to this, Kota Bharu was known as Kuala Kelantan. Before Kota Bharu assumed the role, the Kelantanese capital was divided into two which were Kota Kubang Labu and Kota Pengkalan Datu.[3] During the 19th century, Kelantan was a prosperous and populous state with a population of around 30,000 to 50,000 people including a thousand Chinese. Production from within the state include gold, tin ore, black pepper, areca nut, rice, rattan, bamboo, agarwood and songket. Kota Bharu acts as entrepot for goods due to its strategic location beside the Kelantan River.[4]


During World War II, Pantai Sabak, about 10 km (6.2 mi) from Kota Bharu, was the initial landing point of the Japanese invasion forces on 8 December 1941, beginning the Battle of Kota Bharu, the first battle of the Malayan campaign. Japanese forces captured the city and would go on to successfully engage the British in jungle warfare and ultimately capture Singapore.[5]


Kota Bharu was declared as the "Cultural City" on 25 July 1991 by the late Sultan Ismail Petra on the basis of two important aspects – the history of Kota Bharu and the uniqueness of its local arts and cultures. Kota Bharu was rebranded as the "Islamic City" (Malay: Bandar Raya Islam) by the Kelantan State Government on 1 October 2005 through its "Developing With Islam" (Malay: Membangun Bersama Islam) policy.[6]

Islamic City of Kota Bharu Municipal Council

Majlis Perbandaran Kota Bharu Bandar Raya Islam
مجليس ڤربندرن كوتا بهارو بندراي اسلام

1 January 1978

Rosnazli Bin Haji Amin
Mohd Shaifudeen Md Salleh

Transportation[edit]

Public transportation[edit]

Grab Car services, available for 24 hours a day, are provided in Kota Bharu since April 2017.[12]


Kota Bharu is serviced by Sultan Ismail Petra Airport, the busiest airport in east coast of Peninsular Malaysia (IATA: KBR).


The closest railway station is the Wakaf Bharu station on the other side of the river, 6 km from the city centre.


The under construction MRL East Coast Rail Link will have a station at Kota Bahru. The Kota Bharu station will be located near Kampung Tunjong.

Roadways[edit]

Highway 8 is the main highway leading Kota Bharu to the federal capital Kuala Lumpur. Highway 3 connects Kota Bharu to Pasir Mas and the Thailand border in the west, or Kuala Terengganu, Kuantan or even Johor Bahru due south. Connection to Penang is possible via highway 4. The Lebuhraya Rakyat, or People's Expressway, is a planned expressway that is to connect Kota Bharu to Kuala Krai in southern Kelantan. The project has been integrated into the Central Spine Road project (assigned as highway 34), scheduled to be complete by 2020.

Private schools

Islamic religious schools

National schools

Chinese Type Primary and Secondary School

Technical secondary schools: Sekolah Menengah Teknik (SMT)

MRSM and SBP

Notable educational establishments include Open University Malaysia, Universiti Tun Abdul Razak, MSU College and Wadi Sofia International School. However, the most plentiful type of school are national schools,[13] which include

Tourism[edit]

Beaches[edit]

Strong surf threatens all major beaches in the vicinity of Kota Bharu with substantial erosion. The community has been implementing wave breakers by piling up massive amounts of boulders in an effort to protect the coastline. Regular beach activity has become impossible as visitors frequent beaches further south. In terms of tourism, the most famous beach in Kota Bharu is Pantai Cahaya Bulan.

Wreck diving[edit]

Diving in Kota Bharu is a relatively new activity. At present, only one dive shop operates in the area. Trips out to the wreck of the IJN Awazisan Maru (known locally as the "Japanese Invasion Wreck") are among the sites offered. This Japanese transport ship was the first vessel to sink in the Pacific War. The wreck is a 30-minute boat journey from a jetty which is 10 minutes outside of Kota Bharu.

[15]

Omar Abdul Rahman

Nik Safiah Karim

Kasaoka, Japan.[16]

Japan

Linxia Hui ,China

China

Official website

on YouTube

Daily life in Kota Bahru

at Tourism Malaysia

Kelantan