Nina Sulistyowati - English for Tourism

11 The love-struck prince agrees, and immediately starts work on the well. Using his supernatural powers once again, the prince swiftly finishes construction and proudly displays his work for the princess. As a trick, she urges him to enter the well and when he does so, Patih Gupolo piles stones into it and buries him alive. With great effort Bandung Bondowoso escapes, but his love for the princess is so strong that he forgives her the attempt on his life. To fulfill the second condition, the prince enters into meditation and conjures up a multitude of demon spirits from the earth. With their help he builds the first 999 temples and starts work on the final one. To thwart his efforts, the princess and her maids light a fire in the east and begin pounding rice, a traditional dawn activity. Fooled into thinking the sun is about to rise, the spirits flee back into the earth leaving the last temple unfinished. The prince is furious when he learns of this deception, and places a curse on Roro Jonggrang which turns her into a stone statue. In this way she herself becomes a feature of the final temple, completing its construction and fulfilling the conditions for their marriage. According to the tale, Roro Jonggrang remains in the northern chamber of the Prambanan Temple. Roro Jonggrang remains like a statue of Shiva’s consort, Durga. Until now, the place where she stays called Roro Jonggrang temple. The temples that built by Bandung Bondowoso are now called Sewu Temple or Seribu Candi (The Thousand Temples). From the legend that is transformed into a myth, an unmarried couple going to Roro Jonggrang statue chamber in Prambanan will have doomed relationship just like the creators of the temples. Local residents believe that returning couple from Prambanan immediately broke up. Source:https://borobudurpark.com/en/the-myth-of-rorojonggrang-and-breakups/

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