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Last month, my school went on a study tour to Yogyakarta. We visited many places.

First we visited Borobudur temple. The sun was shining brightly and the view was
very beautiful there. We felt the wind blowing towards us. We also saw many people
at Borobudur temple. There were many birds flying in the sky. The beauty of
Borobudur temple was one of the tourist highlights. domestically and abroad.
Borobudur temple has many small shrines, two rather large shrines, and one large
shrine in the middle of the temple.

Second, we visited the aerospace museum, the Indonesian Air Force Central Museum
"Dirgantara Mandala" is a museum initiated by the Indonesian Air Force to
immortalize historical events within the Indonesian Air Force, headquartered at the
Adi Sutjipto Air Base complex, Yogyakarta. This museum was previously located on
Jalan Tanah Abang Bukit, Jakarta and was inaugurated on April 4 1969 by Air Force
Commander Admiral Roesmin Noerjadin then moved to Yogyakarta on July 29 1978. This
museum holds a number of photos of historical figures as well as dioramas of
historical events of the Indonesian Air Force. A number of fighter planes and their
replicas are also in this museum, most of which come from World War II and the
struggle for independence, including: •Ki-43 aircraft made in Japan •PBY-5A
(Catalina) aircraft. •Replica of the WEL-I RI-X aircraft (the first aircraft
produced in Indonesia) •A6M5 Zero Sen aircraft made in Japan. •B-25 Mitchell, B-26
Invader, TU-16 Badger bombers. •Hillier 360 helicopter made in the US. •US-made P-
51 Mustang aircraft. •The KY51 Cureng aircraft is made in Japan. •Replica of the
Kampret Glider aircraft made in Indonesia. •US-made TS-8 Dies aircraft. •Lavochkin
La-11, Mig-15, MiG-17 and •MiG-21 aircraft made in Russia. •SA-75 missile[3]. The
Dirgantara Mandala TNI-AU Central Museum recently received an addition to its
collection in the form of 9 bomb prototypes made by Dislitbangau in collaboration
with PT. Pindad and PT. Sari Bahari. These bombs are training bombs (BLA/BLP) and
sharp bombs (BT) which have high explosive power, as weapons for Sukhoi Su-30, F-
16, F-5, Sky Hawk, Super Tucano aircraft, etc. .

The third place we visited was the Yogya Returns Museum. The Yogya Returns Museum
or Monjali is a museum of the history of the Indonesian independence struggle in
the Special Region of Yogyakarta and is managed by the Ministry of Tourism and
Creative Economy. This museum, which is located in the northern part of the city,
is visited by many students on field trips. This cone-shaped monument museum
consists of 3 floors and is equipped with a library and multipurpose room. On the
shutter at the entrance are written the names of 422 heroes who died in the
Wehrkreise III (RIS) area between 19 December 1948 and 29 June 1949. In the 4
museum rooms on the 1st floor there are collection objects: reliefs, replicas,
photos, documents, heraldry, various types of weapons, evocative forms of public
kitchens in the atmosphere of the 1945-1949 war of independence. The palanquin and
dokar (horse-drawn carriage) once used by Commander-in-Chief General Soedirman are
also kept here (in museum room number 2). The Yogya Museum again also displays
important monuments for tourists. These monuments include: 1.Replicas of military
clothing, various types of clothing for soldiers, special police, guerrillas,
student soldiers, heiho, regional troops, Vaadright cadet clothing before uniting
into the Indonesian National Army. 2. Handheld firearms, various types of firearms
captured from Dutch soldiers during the war for independence. 3. Diorama of
Soeharto, this diorama shows the situation when Soeharto planned the attack tactics
for the March 1 General Offensive 4. General Soedirman's palanquin, the palanquin
used by General Soedirman when he was guerrillaing against the Dutch in Yogya,
Madiun, to Kediri.

Fourthly, we went to the Yogyakarta Palace. This palace has a very unique history.
The Yogyakarta Palace was founded in 1755 as a result of the Giyanti Agreement. The
Yogyakarta Palace, as the forerunner to the existence of settlements in the
Yogyakarta region, left traces of history that we can still find today. This area
is a living monument, which is still alive and also has an area.

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