French and British interregnum in the Dutch East Indies explained

French and British interregnum in the Dutch East Indies
Location:East Indies
Start:5 June 1806
End:19 August 1816
Before:Dutch East Indies
After:Dutch East Indies
Key Events:Napoleonic wars

The French and British interregnum in the Dutch East Indies of the Dutch East Indies took place between 1806 and 1816. The French ruled between 1806 and 1811, while the British took over for 1811 to 1816 and transferred its control back to the Dutch in 1816.[1]

the French invaded the Dutch Republic and established the Batavian Republic by 1795, and then the Kingdom of Holland in 1806. The fall of the Netherlands to Revolutionary France and the dissolution of the Dutch East India Company led to some profound changes in the European colonial administration of the East Indies, as one of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars was fought in Java.[2] This period, which lasted for almost a decade, witnessed a tremendous change in Java, as vigorous infrastructure and defence projects took place, followed by battles, reformation and major changes of administration in the colony.

Introduction

In 1800, five years after the French invasion, the Dutch East India Company (Dutch; Flemish: Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie|links=no (VOC)) was declared bankrupt and nationalised by the Dutch government. As a result, its assets, which included seaports, storehouses, fortifications, settlements, lands and plantations in the East Indies were nationalised as a Dutch colony, the Dutch East Indies. Based in Batavia (today Jakarta), the Dutch ruled most of Java (with exception of interior lands of Vorstenlanden Mataram and Banten), conquering coastal West Sumatra, wrested former Portuguese colonies in Malacca, the Moluccas, South and North Celebes also in West Timor. Among these Dutch possessions, Java was the most important one, as the production of cash-crops and Dutch-controlled plantations was located there.

On the other side on the world, Europe was devastated by the Napoleonic Wars. The war was shifting the politics, relations and dynamics among the European empires and nations, which also affected their colonies abroad, including in the Far East. The Netherlands under Napoleon Bonaparte in 1806, oversaw the Batavian Republic become the Commonwealth of Batavia and then dissolved and replaced by the Kingdom of Holland, a French puppet kingdom ruled by Napoleon's third brother Louis Bonaparte (Lodewijk Napoleon). As a result, the East Indies during this time were treated as a proxy French colony, administered through a Dutch intermediary.[3]

The power struggle and rivalry between France and Britain had spilled to other parts of the world, involving the colonies of each empires in Americas, Africa, as well as in Asia. Since 1685 the British had consolidated their rule in Bencoolen on western coast of Sumatra, and also had established their rule in Malaccan strait, the island of Singapore and Penang. As the British coveted the Dutch colonies in the region, the Dutch-controlled East Indies was bracing for the predicted incoming British invasion.

French interregnum (1806–1811)

Conventional Long Name:French rule over the Dutch East Indies
Common Name:Indonesia
Image Flag2:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1958).svg
Capital:Batavia
Life Span:1806–1811
Status:French colony administered through Dutch proxy
Title Leader:Monarch
Year Leader1:1806-1810
Leader1:Louis I
Year Leader2:1810
Leader2:Louis II
Year Leader3:1810-1811
Leader3:Napoleon I
Title Representative:Governor
Year Representative1:1806-1808
Representative1:Albertus H. Wiese
Year Representative2:1808-1811
Representative2:Herman Willem Daendels
Year Representative3:1811
Representative3:Jan Willem Janssens
P1:Dutch East Indies
S1:
  1. British interregnum (1811–1816)British Interregnum
Flag P1:Flag of the navy of the Batavian Republic.svg
Flag S1:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg

In 1806, King Lodewijk Napoleon of the Netherlands sent one of his generals, Herman Willem Daendels, serving as governor-general of East Indies based in Java. Daendels was sent to strengthen Javanese defenses against a perceived incoming British invasion. He arrived in the city of Batavia (now Jakarta) on 5 January 1808 and relieved the former Governor General, Albertus Wiese. He raised new forces, built new roads within Java, and improved the internal administration of the island.[2] [4]

Daendels' rule was a harsh and martial one, as the colony prepared for the British threat. He built new hospitals and military barracks, a new arms factories in Surabaya and Semarang, and a new military college in Batavia. He demolished the Castle in Batavia and replaced it with a new fort at Meester Cornelis (Jatinegara), and built Fort Lodewijk in Surabaya. However, his best-known achievement was the construction of the Great Post Road (Indonesian: Jalan Raya Pos) across northern Java from Anjer to Panaroecan. The road now serves as the main road in the island of Java; some sections of the road that go through the northern coast of Java became part of Jalur Pantura. The thousand-kilometre road was completed in only one year, during which thousands of Javanese forced labourers died.[5] Major William Thorn wrote that about 12,000 natives are said to have perished during the construction.[6]

The reign of Catholic King Lodewijk in the Netherlands ended the centuries-old of religious discriminations against Catholics both in the Netherlands and in the East Indies. Previously the Netherlands only favoured Protestantism. The Catholics were permitted freedom of worship in the Dutch Indies, though this measure was mainly intended for European Catholics, since Daendels ruled under the authority of Napoleonic France. This religious freedom would be consolidated later by Stamford Raffles.

Daendels — known as an avid Francophile — built a new governor general palace in smaller version Château de Versailles-style in Batavia, known as Daendels' Palace or Witte Huis (White House) is often referred to Groote Huis (Big House). It is now Indonesia's Ministry of Finance office on the east side of Lapangan Banteng (Waterlooplein). He also renamed Buffelsveld (buffalo field) to Champs de Mars (today Merdeka Square). Daendels' rule oversaw the complete adoption of Continental Law into the colonial Dutch East Indies law system, retained even until today in Indonesian legal system. Indonesian law is often described as a member of the 'civil law' or 'Continental' group of legal systems found in European countries such as France and the Netherlands.[7]

Daendels displayed a firm attitude towards the local Javanese rulers, with the result that the rulers later were willing to work with the British against the Dutch. He also subjected the population of Java to forced labour (Rodi). There were some rebellious actions against this, such as those in Cadas Pangeran, West Java. He was also responsible for the dissolution of Banten Sultanate. In 1808, Daendels ordered Sultan Aliyuddin II of Banten to move the Sultanate capital to Anyer and to provide labour to build a new port planned to be built at Ujung Kulon. The Sultan refused Daendels' command, and in response Daendels ordered the invasion of Banten and destruction of Surosowan palace. The Sultan, together with his family, was arrested in Puri Intan and held as a prisoner in Fort Speelwijk, and later sent into exile in Ambon. On 22 November 1808, Daendels declared from his headquarters in Serang that the Sultanate of Banten had been absorbed into the territory of the Dutch East Indies.[8]

British interregnum (1811–1816)

See main article: Invasion of the Spice Islands and Invasion of Java (1811).

Conventional Long Name:British rule over the Dutch East Indies
Common Name:Indonesia
Capital:Batavia
Image Map Caption:A map of Java: Chiefly from surveys made during the British administration constructed in illustration of an account of Java by Thomas Stamford Raffles
Life Span:1811–1816
Status:Crown colony
Government Type:Adminstered as part of company rule in India
Title Leader:Governor-General of Bengal
Year Leader1:1811–1813
Leader1:1st Earl of Minto
Year Leader2:1813–1816
Leader2:Francis Rawdon-Hastings
Title Representative:Governor
Year Representative1:1811
Representative1:Robert Rollo Gillespie
Year Representative2:1811-1816
Representative2:Stamford Raffles
Year Representative3:1816
Representative3:John Fendall Jr.
P1:
  1. French interregnum (1806–1811)French Interregnum
S1:Dutch East Indies
Flag P1:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1958).svg
Flag S1:Flag of the Netherlands.svg

In the middle of 1809 the Colonial Governor-General of India, the 1st Earl of Minto wanted to conquer the lucrative Spice islands. For the East India Company the occupation of these islands meant not only a reduction of Dutch and French trade and power in the East Indies but also an equivalent gain to the company of the rich trade in spice. In addition the conquest of these islands meant that they would be a good base from which to conquer Java. In 1810 the most heavily defended islands Banda Neira, Ambon and Ternate fell, and by August the region had been conquered with little loss.

In 1811, Java fell to a British force under Minto. He appointed Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles as lieutenant governor of Java.[9] Raffles carried further the administrative centralisation previously initiated by Daendels. He planned to group the regencies of Java into 16 residencies. He ended Dutch administrative methods, liberalised the system of land tenure, and extended trade. Raffles tried to implement the liberal economic principles and the cessation of compulsory cultivation in Java.

Raffles took his residence at Buitenzorg and despite having a small subset of Britons as his senior staff, he kept many of the Dutch civil servants in the governmental structure. He also negotiated peace and mounted several military expeditions against local Javanese princes. The most significant of these was 21 June 1812 assault on Yogyakarta, one of the two most powerful indigenous polities in Java. During the attack the Yogyakarta kraton was badly damaged and sacked, with Raffles seizing much of the contents of the court archive. The event was unprecedented in Javanese history, as it was the first time an indigenous court had been captured by a European army, resulting in the humiliation of the local aristocracy.[10] [11] Raffles also ordered an expedition to Palembang in Sumatra to depose the local sultan, Mahmud Badaruddin II, and to seize the nearby Bangka Island to set up a permanent British presence in the area.[12] Other than Javanese court archives, Raffles also sent a number of Javanese archaeological artefacts, such as a Buddha head from Borobudur and two large ancient Javanese stone inscriptions, known today as the Minto Stone and the Calcutta Stone to Lord Minto as a token of appreciation.[13] [14]

Raffles particularly holds special interest on the history, culture and the people of Java. During his short reign, British Java saw the surge of archaeological surveys and government attention on local culture, art and history. His administration rediscovered the ruins of the great Buddhist mandala of Borobudur in Central Java. Other archaeological sites in Java such as Prambanan Hindu temple and ancient Majapahit city of Trowulan, also came to light during his administration. Under Raffles patronage, a large number of ancient monuments in Java were rediscovered, excavated and systematically catalogued for the first time. Raffles was the enthusiast of the island's history, as he wrote the book History of Java published later in 1817.[11]

In 1816, under the administration of British governor John Fendall, Java was returned to control of the Netherlands as per the terms of the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1814. After regaining full control of their colony in Java and other parts of the archipelago, the Dutch would embark on their conquest over other independent polities in the region.[1] By 1820 they had consolidated their realm, a colonial state in the Indonesian archipelago, established Dutch East Indies as one of the most profitable European colonies in the world's colonial history.

References

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Campbell, Donald Maclaine, 1869-1913; Wheeler, G. C . Java: past & present, a description of the most beautiful country in the world, its ancient history, people, antiquities, and products . London : W. Heinemann . 24 August 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210824162608/https://opac.perpusnas.go.id/DetailOpac.aspx?id=711740 . 24 August 2021 . 404 . bot: unknown .
  2. Web site: The French and the British in Java, 1806–15. Britannica . Asvi Warman Adam .
  3. Book: Kalman Dubov . Journey to the Republic of Indonesia Review & Analysis . 13 December 2021 . Kalman Dubov . Part one: H . 29 August 2022.
  4. Book: H. L. Wesseling . The European Colonial Empires 1815-1919 . 23 October 2015 . Taylor & Francis . 9781317895077 . 104 . 2 September 2022 . English.
  5. Pramoedya sheds light on dark side of Daendels' highway. The Jakarta Post 8 January 2006.
  6. Book: Thorm, William . The Conquest of Java . 1993 . originally 1815 . Singapore . Periplus Editions .
  7. Book: Indonesia, Law and Society. Timothy Lindsey . Federation Press . 2008 . 9781862876606 . 2. 9 November 2015.
  8. Book: Ekspedisi Anjer-Panaroekan, Laporan Jurnalistik Kompas . Penerbit Buku Kompas, PT Kompas Media Nusantara, Jakarta Indonesia . November 2008. 1–2. 978-979-709-391-4.
  9. Book: . The History of Java . 1830 . J. Murray . xxiii . 12 August 2022.
  10. Ricklefs, M. C. A History of Modern Indonesia Since C. 1200, 4th Edition, Palgrave Macmillan, 2008
  11. Carey, Peter, The Power of Prophecy: Prince Dipanagara and the End of an Old Order in Java, 1785-1855, 2008
  12. Book: Abdullah. Husnial Husin. Sejarah Perjuangan Kemerdekaan R.I. Di Bangka Belitung. 1983. Karya Unipress. 393.
  13. Book: Noltie, Henry. Raffles' Ark Redrawn: Natural History Drawings from the Collection of Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles. 19–20. British Library & Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. London & Edinburgh. 2009.
  14. Kern, H., (1917), Steen van den berg Pananggungan (Soerabaja), thans in't India Museum te Calcutta, Verspreide Gescriften VII, 85-114, Gravenhage: Martinus Nijhoff.