Marantutul – small Moluccan settlement in Wermaktian District
Marantutul is an Indonesian settlement belonging to Wermaktian District (kecamatan) within Maluku Tenggara Barat Regency (kabupaten) in Maluku Province. Geographically, it is located in the southern part of the Moluccas, near coordinates -7.58 latitude and 131.13 longitude. The capital of Maluku Province is the city of Ambon, which is also the most populous city in the province. At the end of 2024, the province had a population of approximately 1.94 million people, and smaller villages like Marantutul form part of the distinctive, diverse fabric of this section of the Indonesian archipelago.
General overview
No independent, detailed database entry or Wikipedia-level source is available for Marantutul, so characterizing the settlement necessarily relies on the broader administrative and geographical context. The village is administratively encompassed by Wermaktian District within Maluku Tenggara Barat Regency. This region belongs to the eastern and southern island group of Maluku Province, characterized by a transitional zone between the Banda Sea and the Arafura Sea. Maluku Province is generally characterized by a scattered, dispersed settlement structure with islands and areas that are partly difficult to access, where numerous small communities live primarily from fishing and small-scale agriculture. Villages like Marantutul are typically distinguished by the preservation of local traditions, relative isolation, and a lifestyle closely tied to nature, a pattern common in the Moluccas.
Real estate and investment
No real estate market or investment data is available for Marantutul. To understand the broader picture, it is useful to examine the situation at the level of Maluku Tenggara Barat Regency and Maluku Province. This region is one of Indonesia's less developed eastern provinces, where infrastructure development, accessibility, and economic activity lag far behind those of Java and Bali. The real estate market in this area is typically narrow and local in character, with a low number of transactions and minimal foreign investor presence. It is generally true that in Indonesia, foreign citizens cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over property; they primarily have access to Hak Pakai (usage rights) with limited duration. These rules also apply to Maluku Province, so foreigners can only participate in the real estate market in Marantutul or its surroundings within these legal frameworks. The region's long-term development prospects may relate to the fishing sector, marine tourism, and natural resources, but in their current state these represent more theoretical potential than an active investment market.
Safety and security
No specific local-level statistics or incident data regarding public safety in Marantutul are available, so only the generally characteristic situation of the broader region can be discussed. After religious and ethnic conflicts in the early 2000s in Maluku Province, the situation gradually consolidated, and general public safety has been relatively stabilized over the past decade. Smaller villages in the Maluku Tenggara Barat Regency area, including communities in Wermaktian District, typically operate according to local norms and customary law resulting from small-community conditions. In remote, rarely visited areas, public safety characteristically differs from urban settings, which should be taken into account when traveling, and it is advisable to check the current situation from reliable sources beforehand.
Tourist attractions
No identified, source-supported, named tourist attractions in Marantutul are listed in the available source material. The broader region's appeal, Maluku Province, is primarily formed by natural resources. The Moluccan archipelago, to which the southern part of Maluku Tenggara Barat also belongs, has outstanding natural diversity within Indonesia: the sea, coral reefs, volcanic landscape, and tropical vegetation together characterize this region. All of Maluku Province once formed the so-called Spice Islands (Kepulauan Rempah), where clove and nutmeg cultivation held global trade significance for centuries, and this historical heritage remains part of the region's cultural identity today. However, due to lack of sources, it is not possible to identify specific named natural or cultural attractions located at precise distances from Marantutul.
Summary
Marantutul is a small Moluccan settlement in Wermaktian District, located in Maluku Tenggara Barat Regency, for which detailed, independent data are not publicly available. The broader region, Maluku Province, is a distinctive and historically significant province of Indonesia's eastern archipelago, whose natural and cultural heritage is noteworthy; however, regarding infrastructural endowments and accessibility, significant differences exist compared to more developed Indonesian regions. Acquiring more detailed knowledge about Marantutul requires access to local or regional sources and personal on-site inquiry.

