Indonesia Dutch Expansion in Sumatra and the Eastern Archipelago
Fort Marlborough, a remnant of the British occupation of
Sumatra, in present-day Bengkulu
Courtesy Indonesian Department of Information
Part of the palace of the Sultan of Yogyakarta
Courtesy Indonesian Department of Information
Both the British occupation of the archipelago during
the
Napoleonic Wars and the Java War seriously weakened Dutch
authority
outside of Java. Pirates flourished in the power vacuum,
making
Indonesian waters among the most dangerous in the world.
In the
1840s, the British established a presence in northern
Kalimantan
(North Borneo), where James Brooke made himself the first
"White
Rajah" of Sarawak. Alarmed by such developments, the Dutch
initiated policies of colonial expansion in the
Outer Islands (see Glossary),
which brought all the land area of modern
Indonesia,
with the exception of Portuguese Timor, under their
control.
Dutch expansion began first in neighboring Sumatra. By
1823 the
eastern part of the island, including Palembang, was under
Dutch
control. The Padri War (1821-38) pacified the Minangkabau
region.
The padri were religious teachers committed to the
reform
and propagation of Islam and were dominant in the region
after the
assassination of the Minangkabau royal family in 1815.
Conflicts
arose between them and secular adat leaders, and
the latter
called for Dutch intervention. Between the 1870s and the
end of the
century, colonial troops also defeated the fierce Batak
ethnic
group, living north of the Minangkabau, and the colonial
government
encouraged the populace to convert to Christianity.
The 1824 Treaty of London defined a British sphere of
influence
on the Malay Peninsula and a Dutch sphere on Sumatra,
although its
provisions placed no restrictions on British trade on the
island.
Sumatran trade became an issue of contention, however,
because the
British resented what they saw as Dutch attempts to
curtail their
commercial activities. One provision of the Treaty of
London was
the independence of the north Sumatran state of Aceh. But
Aceh
controlled a large portion of the pepper trade and alarmed
the
Dutch by actively seeking relations with other Western
countries.
A new Anglo-Dutch treaty, signed in 1871, gave the Dutch a
free
hand in Sumatra concerning Aceh. Two years later, talks
between the
United States consul in Singapore and Acehnese
representatives gave
Batavia the pretext for opening hostilities. Dutch
gunboats
bombarded the sultanate's capital, Banda Aceh, and troops
were
landed. The capital fell under Dutch occupation the
following year,
but Acehnese forces undertook guerrilla resistance. The
Aceh War
(1873-1903) was one of the longest and bloodiest in DutchIndonesian history.
During the nineteenth century, militant or reformist
Islam
posed a major challenge to Dutch rule, especially in
Sumatra. The
padri of Minangkabau, for example, were returned
pilgrims
from Mecca who were inspired by Wahhabism--a Western term
given to
the strict form of Islam practiced in Arabia--that
stressed the
unitary nature of God. The padri were determined to
purge
their society of non-Islamic elements, such as the
traditional
system of matrilineal inheritance and consumption of
alcohol and
opium. The Acehnese, the most rigorously fundamentalist of
Indonesian Muslims, also had close contacts with Mecca.
The principal architect of colonial Islamic policy was
Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje, a scholar of Arabic who had
gone to
Mecca to study Indonesian pilgrims and served as adviser
to the
Netherlands Indies government from 1891 to 1904. His
policy was one
of cooptation rather than opposition: instead of promoting
the
spread of Christianity, he suggested, the government
should
maintain supportive relations with established Islamic
authorities
such as the qadi or judges of the royal courts.
"Established" Islam was no threat, according to Snouck
Hurgronje,
but "fanatic" Muslim teachers who maintained independent
Islamic
schools were. He also advised that the government coopt
local nonIslamic chiefs, whose source of authority was based on
adat
or local law and custom. This practice was, in fact, Dutch
policy
in Aceh after the war. Local Acehnese chiefs, the
uleebalang, were given much the same role as the
priyayi on Java.
Farther east, the Dutch imposed rust en orde,
the
colonial system, on Madura, where local rulers were
assimilated
into the regency system in 1887; on Kalimantan, where in
1860 the
sultanate of Banjarmasin had been dethroned and replaced
by direct
colonial rule; in Sulawesi, where wars between the Dutch
and the
Makassarese and Buginese states of Gowa and Bone continued
until
1905-06 and where the headhunting Toraja people were also
subjugated; and in the remote western half of New Guinea,
which was
brought under full control only after World War I. The
Dutch had
first built a fort at Lobo in West New Guinea in 1828, but
abandoned it eight years later.
The Balinese stubbornly resisted Dutch attempts to
subjugate
them throughout the nineteenth century. This mountainous,
volcanic
island of great natural beauty, with its own Hindu-animist
culture,
art, and ways of life, was divided into a number of small
kingdoms
whose rulers saw no more reason to submit to Batavia than
they had
to Islamic states during the previous four centuries.
Although the
northern part of the island came under Dutch control by
1882 and
was joined with the neighboring island of Lombok as a
single
residency, the southern and eastern rulers refused to
accept full
Dutch sovereignty. Between 1904 and 1908, military
expeditions were
sent to suppress them. Some of the kings and their royal
families,
including women and children, realizing that the
independence and
self-sufficiency of their ancient world were crumbling,
committed
suicide by marching in front of Dutch gunners during the
height of
battle.
Data as of November 1992
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