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Batavia, Dutch East Indies

Batavia was the capital of the Dutch East Indies. The area corresponds to present-day Jakarta, Indonesia. Batavia can refer to the city proper or its suburbs and hinterland, the Ommelanden, which included the much-larger area of the Residency of Batavia in the present-day Indonesian provinces of Jakarta, Banten and West Java.

Batavia
Former city
Other transcription(s)
 • Chinese勿礁维 (Simplified)
勿礁維 (Traditional)
From top left to right: Kali Besar in 1938, Stadhuis in Oud Batavia, Statue of Jan Pieterszoon Coen in front of Grote Huis building, an aerial view of Batavia Zuid railway station, Tandjoengpriok port
Map of Batavia, c. 1920
TerritoryDutch East Indies
GovernorateWest Java
ResidencyBatavia
Founded30 May 1619
Japanese occupation; renamed to Jakarta1942–1945
Dutch re-occupation1946–1949
Independence1945
Government
 • TypeGemeenteraad Batavia
 • MayorG. J. Bisschop (first)
Sastromoeljono (last)
Population
 (1920)
 • Total253,800
Batavia around 1780

The founding of Batavia by the Dutch in 1619, on the site of the ruins of Jayakarta, led to the establishment of a Dutch colony; Batavia became the center of the Dutch East India Company's trading network in Asia. Monopolies on local produce were augmented by non-indigenous cash crops. To safeguard their commercial interests, the company and the colonial administration absorbed surrounding territory.

Batavia is on the north coast of Java, in a sheltered bay, on a land of marshland and hills crisscrossed with canals. The city had two centers: Oud Batavia (the oldest part of the city) and the relatively newer city, on higher ground to the south.

It was a European colonial city for about 320 years until 1942, when the Dutch East Indies was occupied by Japan during World War II. During the Japanese occupation and after Indonesian nationalists declared independence on 17 August 1945, the city was known as Jakarta. It was internationally known by its Dutch name until Indonesia achieved full independence in 1949, when the city was renamed Jakarta.

Dutch East India Company (1610–1799)

Arrival

 
Batavia between 1675 and 1725

Amsterdam merchants embarked on an expedition to the East Indies archipelago in 1595 under the command of Cornelis de Houtman. The English East India Company's first voyage in 1602, commanded by James Lancaster, arrived in Aceh and sailed on to Bantam. There, Lancaster was allowed to build a trading post which was the center of English trade in the East Indies archipelago until 1682.[1]: 29 

The Dutch government granted the Dutch East India Company (VOC) a monopoly on Asian trade in 1602. A year later, the first permanent Dutch trading post in the East Indies archipelago was established in Bantam, West Java. Prince Jayawikarta gave Dutch merchants permission to build a wooden warehouse and houses on the east bank of the Ciliwung river opposite Jayakarta in 1610, and the outpost was established the following year.[2]: 29  As Dutch power increased, Jayawikarta allowed the English to build houses on the west bank of the Ciliwung and a fort near his customs office to maintain a balance of power.

 
Replica of the East Indiaman Amsterdam of the Dutch East India Company/United East Indies Company (VOC).

Tensions between Prince Jayawikarta and the Dutch escalated until 1618, when Jayawikarta's soldiers besieged the Dutch fortress containing the Nassau and Mauritius warehouse. An English fleet of 15 ships arrived under Thomas Dale, former governor of the colony of Virginia. After a sea battle, newly appointed Dutch governor Jan Pieterszoon Coen escaped to the Moluccas to seek support; the Dutch had taken over the first of the Portuguese forts there in 1605. Dutch garrison commander Pieter van den Broecke and five other men were arrested during negotiations, since Jayawikarta believed that he had been deceived by the Dutch. Jayawikarta and the English then forged an alliance.[citation needed]

The Dutch army was on the verge of surrendering to the English when, in 1619, the Sultanate of Banten sent a group of soldiers to summon Jayawikarta. Jayawikarta's agreement with the English had not been approved by the Bantenese authorities. The conflict between Banten and Jayawikarta and the tense relationship between Banten and the English provided a new opportunity for the Dutch. Coen returned from the Moluccas with reinforcements on 28 May 1619,[3] razing Jayakarta to the ground two days later[4]: 35  and expelling its population.[5]: 50  Only the Luso-Sundanese padrão remained.

Jayawikarta retreated to Tanara, in the interior of Banten, where he later died. The Dutch established a closer relationship with Banten and assumed control of the port, which became the regional Dutch center of power.

Founding

The region which became Batavia came under Dutch control in 1619, initially as an expansion of the original Dutch fort and a new building on the ruins of the former Jayakarta. Coen decided to expand the original fort into a larger fortress on 2 July 1619, and sent plans for Batavia Castle to the Netherlands on 7 October of that year. The castle was larger than the previous one, with two northern bastions protecting it from a maritime attack.[6] The Nassau and Mauritius warehouses were expanded with the erection of an eastern fort extension, overseen by Commander Van Raay, on 12 March 1619.[7]

Although Coen wanted to name the new settlement Nieuw-Hoorn after Hoorn (his birthplace), he was prevented from doing so by the board of the VOC.[7] Batavia was chosen as the new name of the fort and settlement, and a naming ceremony was held on 18 January 1621.[7] It was named after the Batavi Germanic tribe, which inhabited the Batavian region during the Roman Empire; at the time, it was believed that the tribe was the ancestors of the Dutch people. Jayakarta was called Batavia for over 300 years.[8]

There were three governmental administrations in the Batavia region.[9]: 7  Initial authority was established in 1609[9]: 7  and became the colonial High Government, consisting of the Governor-General and the Council of the Indies.[9]: 7  The urban (or civil) administration of the city of Batavia was established in 1620.[9]: 9  On 24 June 1620, two company officials and three free citizens (or burghers) were appointed to the first College of Aldermen.[10] The local rural administration, formed in 1664, became fully functional in 1682.[9]: 10  The Javanese people were prohibited from settling in Batavia from the time of its founding in 1619.[11]: 194 

Expansion

 
Batavia and its eastern expansion

From its founding, Batavia was planned in a well-defined layout.[12] Three trenches were dug east of the Ciliwung River in 1619, its first Dutch-made canals. The canals were named (from south to north) Leeuwengracht, Groenegracht, and Steenhouwersgracht.[13] The castle area begins in a former field north of Steenhouwersgracht,[12] in which a town market was established.[12][13] The first church and town hall were built c. 1622 on the east bank of the river; Batavia's first combined church and town hall (replaced during the 1630s) was at 6°07′56″S 106°48′42″E / 6.132212°S 106.811779°E / -6.132212; 106.811779.[12]

 
The coconut tree-lined Tijgersgracht canal

Around 1627, the three canals were connected with the Tijgersgracht canal. The new canal was lined with coconut trees; according to a contemporary observer, "Among the Grachts, the Tygersgracht is the most stately and most pleasant, both for the goodliness of its buildings, and the ornamentation of its streets, which afford a very agreeable shadow to those who pass along the street".[14] The Prinsestraat, originally the street leading to the castle, became an urban center connecting the castle's south gate with the city hall.[12]

Eastern Batavia was protected by a long canal which linked the castle moat and the Ciliwung riverbend, and ran at a slight angle to Tijgersgracht. The canal cost over 160,000 real, which was paid mostly by the Chinese instead of the company (who had strengthened the castle with slave and prison labor).[12] The short-lived outer canal was redesigned several years after the 1628–1629 siege of Batavia.

 
Batavia in 1667

East of Batavia, Sultan Agung (king of the Mataram Sultanate) gained control of most of Java by defeating Surabaya in 1625.[15]: 31  On 27 August 1628, Agung began the siege of Batavia.[4]: 52  After heavy losses in his first attempt, he retreated and launched a second offensive the following year.[15]: 31 [4]: 52–53  This also failed; the Dutch fleet destroyed his supplies and ships in the harbors of Cirebon and Tegal.[4]: 53  Mataram troops, starving and decimated by illness, retreated again.[4]: 53  Agung then moved east,[4]: 53  attacking Blitar, Panarukan and the Blambangan Kingdom in eastern Java (a vassal state of the Balinese kingdom of Gelgel).[4]: 55 

After the siege, it was decided that Batavia needed a stronger defense system. Based on the work of Flemish mathematician and military engineer Simon Stevin, Governor-General Jacques Specx[5]: 463  designed a moat and city wall; extensions of the wall were built west of Batavia, and the city was completely enclosed.

In 1656, due to a conflict with Banten, the Javanese were not allowed to live within the city walls and settled outside Batavia. The Chinese and the Mardijkers were the only non-Dutch settlers within the walled city. A 1659 truce with Banten enabled the city to grow, and more bamboo houses were built. Bamboo houses and livestock were banned in 1667, and the wealthy Dutch built tall houses and canals.

The region

The region was an important source of food crops and building materials.[9] The VOC established a local government in 1664, which became fully functional in 1682.[9]: 10  Chinese inhabitants began to cultivate sugarcane.[9]: 6 [16]

Large-scale cultivation negatively impacted the environment, and Batavia's northern area experienced coastal erosion. The canals required extensive maintenance, with frequent closures for dredging.[17] Residents of the Ommelanden lived in country houses or ethnic kampungs governed by a headman.[9]: 5 [18]

1740 massacre and Opening to Trade

 
Contemporary etching of the massacre

Batavia's sugar industry declined during the 1730s,[9]: 169 [19]: 29  with rising unemployment and social disorder.[9]: 169  In 1739, there were 10,574 Chinese people living in the Ommelanden.[9]: 53  Tensions grew as the colonial government attempted to restrict Chinese immigration with deportations to Ceylon and South Africa.[3]

The Chinese, afraid that they would be thrown overboard to drown, rioted.[3][20]: 99  Ten thousand Chinese were killed from 9 to 22 October 1740.[3] The few surviving Chinese inhabitants were moved to Glodok, outside the city walls, the following year.[21]

In 1789, the Americans visited and were permitted through formal applications to trade.[22]

Dutch East Indies (1800–1949)

 
Southern expansion, 1840

After the VOC went bankrupt and was dissolved in 1800, the Batavian Republic nationalized its debts and possessions and expanded its territorial claims into a colony known as the Dutch East Indies. Batavia evolved from a regional company headquarters into the colony's capital.

Southward expansion

In 1808, Herman Willem Daendels decided to leave the dilapidated, unhealthy Old Town. A new town center was built further south, on the Weltevreden estate. Batavia became a city with two centers; Kota was the business hub with offices and warehouses of shipping and trading companies, and Weltevreden was home to the government, military, and shops. The centers were connected by the Molenvliet Canal and a road alongside the canal.[23]

British rule

Under British rule, Daendels was replaced by Stamford Raffles.[1][24]: 115–122 [25][26]: 25  In 1811, Raffles—who was employed by the British East India Company as secretary to the governor of Malacca—decided to take over the government in Batavia. One reason was to prevent the French from stepping in completely, since Napoleon had nominated Daendels (who worked closely with the French).

In 1816, the Dutch returned to rule the region. Europeans were brought to the archipelago to establish a colony on vacant land, triggering wars in Java and Sumatra. Large numbers of troops were brought into the Dutch Indies to suppress unrest (particularly on Sumatra) and extend Dutch government influence beyond Java. However, the Dutch never conquered the entire archipelago.[27]

The development of Weltevreden as the colony's administrative center continued, gradually shifting the center of Batavia south from Oud Batavia. A new Indies Empire style of architecture emerged; white-plastered villas with a large front porch were built, especially around the Koningsplein and at Weltevreden. This newer part of Batavia generally had a more open look than Oud Batavia's developed, canal cityscape.[28]

Technological advances

 
Trams in Molenvliet

Unlike the first half of the 19th century, the second half of the century was a peaceful period characterized by economic and technological expansion and a stable government. In 1856, the region's first telegraph line was installed between Batavia and Buitenzorg. In 1859, Batavia was connected to Singapore with the Dutch East Indies' first international telegraph connection. The city completed its first gasworks two years later, and its streets were lit with gas by 1862. The first trams and telephones came in 1882.[29]

Horse-drawn tram, introduced to Batavia in 1869, were upgraded to steam power in 1882 and electricity in 1900. The city's first railway also began in 1869, and the line from Batavia to Buitenzorg was completed in 1873.[29] The city's first ice house was built in 1870.[29]

The 1869 opening of the Suez Canal increased the need for a new port. The port of Tanjung Priok was completed in 1885, replacing the centuries-old, inadequate Sunda Kelapa, significantly increasing trade and tourism in Batavia and the Dutch East Indies.[29]

Abolition of Cultivation System

 
Batavia in 1897

The Cultivation System (cultuurstelsel) was a mid-19th-century Dutch government policy which required a portion of agricultural production to be export crops. Indonesian historians refer to it as tanam paksa (enforced planting).

The 1870 abolition of the Cultivation System led to the rapid development of private enterprise in the Dutch East Indies. A number of trading companies and financial institutions were established on Java, particularly in Batavia. The Old Town's deteriorating structures were replaced with offices, usually along the Ciliwung River. Private companies owned (or managed) plantations, oil fields, and mines. The island's first railway line opened in 1867, and railway stations were built in urban centers such as Batavia.[30]

Schools, hospitals, factories, offices, trading companies, and post offices were established throughout the city. Improvements in Batavia's transportation, health, and technology encouraged more Dutch people to move to the capital, and Batavian society became increasingly Dutch. The city traded with Europe, and increased shipping led to the construction of a new harbor at Tanjung Priok between 1877 and 1883.[31]

Foreigners were known locally as totoks, distinguishing new Chinese arrivals from the peranakans. Many totoks adopted Indonesian culture, wearing kebayas, sarongs, and summer dresses.[32]

By the end of the 19th century, Batavia's population was 115,887 people; of these, 8,893 were Europeans, 26,817 were Chinese and 77,700 were indigenous islanders.[33] The city's expanding commercial activity led to the immigration of large numbers of Dutch employees and rural Javanese to Batavia. The 1905 population of Batavia and its surrounding area reached 2.1 million, including 93,000 Chinese people, 14,000 Europeans, and 2,800 Arabs.[34] This growth resulted in an increased demand for housing, and land prices soared. New houses were built close together, and kampung settlements filled spaces between the houses. Settlements, built with little regard for the region's tropical conditions, resulted in overcrowding, poor sanitation, and an absence of public amenities.[23] Java had an outbreak of plague in 1913.[23]

Old Batavia's abandoned moats and ramparts experienced a boom during the period, as trading companies were established along the Ciliwung.[23] The old city soon re-established itself as a commercial center, with 20th- and 17th-century buildings adjacent to each other.

Dutch Ethical Policy

 
Batavia, Weltevreden, Koningsplein, Hotel der Nederlanden c. 1912
 
Batavia c. 1914

The Dutch Ethical Policy was introduced in 1901, expanding educational opportunities for the indigenous population of the Dutch East Indies. In 1924, a law school was founded in Batavia.[35] The city's population in the 1930 census was 435,000.[5]: 50 

The University of Batavia was established in 1941, and later became the University of Indonesia.[35] In 1946, the Dutch colonial government established the Nood Universiteit (Emergency University) in Jakarta. The following year, its name was changed to Universiteit van Indonesië (UVI). After the Indonesian National Revolution the government established Universiteit Indonesia, a state university, in Jakarta in February 1950. Its name was later changed to Universitas Indonesia.

Independence movement

 
Volksraad parliament building

Volksraad member Mohammad Husni Thamrin criticized the colonial government for ignoring the kampungs and catering to the wealthy in Menteng. In 1909, Tirto Adhi Soerjo founded the Islamic Commercial Union in Batavia to support Indonesian merchants. Branches in other areas followed. In 1920, Oemar Said Tjokroaminoto and Agus Salim established a committee in Batavia to support the Ottoman Caliphate.[35]

Spies warned the Dutch about a planned revolt in 1926, and Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI) leaders were arrested. Andries Cornelis Dirk de Graeff replaced Dirk Fock as governor-general, and uprisings in Batavia, Banten, and Priangan were quickly crushed.[35] Armed Communists occupied the Batavia telephone exchange for one night before they were captured. The Dutch sent prisoners to Banden and to a penal colony at Boven-Digoel in West New Guinea, where many died of malaria.[35] Sukarno and the Study Club founded the Indonesian Nationalist Association (which became the Indonesian National Party and later joined the Partai Sarekat Islam, Budi Utomo, and the Surabaya Study Club to form the Union of Indonesian Political Associations) on 4 July 1927.[35]

A youth congress was held in Batavia in October 1928, and the groups began referring to the city as Jakarta. They demanded Indonesian independence, displayed the red-and-white flag, and sang the Indonesian national anthem written by Wage Rudolf Supratman. The Dutch banned the flag, the national anthem, and the words "Indonesia" and "Indonesian".[35]

 
Drawing of the imagined Japanese entry into Batavia

On 5 March 1942, Batavia fell to the Japanese. The Dutch formally surrendered to the Japanese occupation forces on 9 March 1942, and the colony's government was transferred to Japan. Batavia was renamed Jakarta. The economic situation and the physical condition of Indonesian cities deteriorated during the occupation. Buildings were converted to internment camps for the Dutch.

After the Japanese defeat in 1945, the region experienced a period of transition and upheaval during the Indonesian struggle for independence. During the Japanese occupation, and when the Indonesian nationalists declared independence on 17 August 1945, the city was renamed Jakarta.[36] In 1945, it was briefly occupied by the Allies and returned to the Dutch. The Dutch name, Batavia, remained the internationally recognized name until Indonesian independence was achieved and Jakarta proclaimed the national capital on 27 December 1949.[36]

Society

 
Many coolies and slaves were employed from outside Java.

Batavia, founded as the trade and administrative center of the VOC, was never intended to be a Dutch settlement. Jan Pieterszoon Coen founded Batavia for trade, with the city's inhabitants producing and supplying food. There was no migration of intact Dutch families, and there were few Dutch women in Batavia. A mixed society was formed; relationships between Dutchmen and Asian women did not usually result in marriage, and the women did not have the right to return to the Dutch Republic. This societal pattern created a group of mestizos in Batavia. Since the VOC preferred to maintain complete control of its business, a large number of slaves was employed.

Women became an important feature of Batavia's social network; they were accustomed to dealing with slaves, and spoke the same language (mostly Portuguese and Malay). Many of these women effectively became widows; their husbands left Batavia to return to the Netherlands, and their children were often removed as well.

Most of Batavia's residents were of Asian descent. Thousands of slaves were brought from India and Arakan; later, slaves were brought from Bali and Sulawesi. To avoid an uprising, a decision was made to free the Javanese people from slavery. Chinese people made up the largest group in Batavia (most being merchants and laborers), and were the most decisive group in the city's development. Other residents included Malays and Muslim and Hindu merchants from India.

Initially, these ethnic groups lived together; however, in 1688, segregation was imposed on the indigenous population. Each ethnic group was forced to live in its own village outside the city wall. Each person was tagged to identify their ethnic group; later, the identity tags were replaced with parchment.

Batavia experienced more malaria epidemics during the 18th century, as its marsh areas bred mosquitoes.[37] The disease killed many Europeans and Batavia received the nickname "cemetery of Europeans".[38][39] Wealthier European settlers moved to southern areas at higher elevations.[20]: 101 

Within Batavia's walls, the wealthy Dutch built tall houses and canals. Commercial opportunities attracted Indonesian and Chinese immigrants, with the increasing population imposing a burden on the city. During the 18th century, over 60 percent of Batavia's population were slaves working for the VOC. Laws protected slaves against overly cruel actions by their masters; Christian slaves were freed after the death of their masters, and other slaves were allowed to own a store and earn money to buy their freedom.

Although Batavia became the political and administrative center of the Dutch East Indies and the main port in Southeast Asian trade, the city's population remained relatively small. Early-19th-century estimates of its population were smaller than that of Surabaya, although it overtook the latter by the end of the century; the 1920 census indicated a population of 306,000, compared to 192,000 for Surabaya, 158,000 for Semarang and 134,000 for Surakarta. Its population increased rapidly, exceeding half a million ten years later.[40]

The population of the Dutch East Indies was never purely European. Of the 30,000 Dutch citizens in the Dutch East Indies in 1860, less than 5,000 were purely Dutch. Seventy percent of the population was male, since more male immigrants arrived from Europe.[41]

Slavery existed in Batavia until its abolition in 1853. Slaves mainly lived in the back of the garden of the main house and were paid, with free food and lodging. Female slaves, known as baboe, cooked and cared for children.[27]

Children went to school, where the teachers were locally trained. Many children did not finish school; to counter this, the school system awarded prizes to well-performing children.[27]

When Stamford Raffles was governor of Java, he changed social interaction in Batavian society. Raffles disapproved of the relaxed Dutch dress code, where many men wore Javanese attire. Raffles and his wife, Olivia, introduced European dress (with much white, because of the tropical climate) for men and women.[27]

When the British left Batavia in 1815, most of the native people reverted to their original Javanese attire but some new aspects persisted. Native males chosen to be the governing elite wore a European outfit on duty, but after hours they would change to sarongs and kebaya. Lower-ranked Dutchmen might wear the local style all day. Women wore sarongs and kebaya to official events, where they wore tighter-fitting robes or richly colored (or flowered) cloth—in the style of British India—and batik shawls.[42]

People associated with Batavia

Notes

  1. ^ from Johnson Chart of the Flags and National Emblems of the World - Geographicus, 1864

References

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  6. ^ de Haan 1922, pp. 44–5.
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  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Kanumoyoso, B. Beyond the city wall: society and economic development in the Ommelanden of Batavia, 1684–1740 Doctoral thesis, Leiden University 2011 [2]
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  11. ^ Lucassen J, Lucassen L. Globalising Migration History: The Eurasian Experience (16th–21st Centuries). Brill, 2014. ISBN 9789004271364
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  15. ^ a b Drakeley S. The History of Indonesia. Greenwood, 2005. ISBN 9780313331145
  16. ^ Blussé, L. Strange Company. Chinese settlers, mestizo women and the Dutch in VOC Batavia. Dordrecht: Floris Publication, 1986.
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  18. ^ de Haan 1922, p. 469.
  19. ^ Knight GR. Sugar, Steam and Steel: The Industrial Project in Colonial Java, 1830–1885 University of Adelaide Press, 2014. ISBN 9781922064998
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  22. ^ Cary, Thomas Greaves. Memoir of Thomas Handasyd Perkins. Boston, Little, Brown and company, 1856. p. 17. Pdf. Library of Congress website Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  23. ^ a b c d Gunawan Tjahjono 1998, p. 109.
  24. ^ Hannigan T. A Brief History of Indonesia: Sultans, Spices, and Tsunamis: The Incredible Story of Southeast Asia's Largest Nation. Tuttle Publishing, 2015. ISBN 9780804844765
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  27. ^ a b c d "Batavia in the 19th century". Argelander-Institut für Astronomie. Universität Bonn. 23 June 2014. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  28. ^ de Jong 1998, p. 257.
  29. ^ a b c d Merrillees 2001, p. 14.
  30. ^ Gunawan Tjahjono 1998, p. 116.
  31. ^ Teeuwen, Dirk (2007). Landing stages of Jakarta/Batavia.
  32. ^ Nordholt, Henk Schulte; M Imam Aziz (2005). Outward appearances: trend, identitas, kepentingan (in Indonesian). PT LKiS Pelangi Aksara. p. 227. ISBN 9789799492951.
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  37. ^ van der Brug PH. Malaria in Batavia in the 18th century. Tropical Medicine and International Health. 1997; volume 2, issue 9, pages 892–902. PMID 9315048
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  43. ^ Taylor, Jean Gelman (December 2004). The Social World of Batavia: European and Eurasian in Dutch Asia. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-299-09474-4. Retrieved 23 October 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Works cited

  • de Haan, F. (1922). Oud Batavia. Vol. 1. Batavia: G. Kolff & Co, Koninklijk Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen.
  • de Jong, J.J.P. (1998). De waaier van het fortuin: van handelscompagnie tot koloniaal imperium : de Nederlanders in Azië en de Indonesische archipel. Sdu. ISBN 9789012086431.
  • Gunawan Tjahjono, ed. (1998). Architecture. Indonesian Heritage. Vol. 6. Singapore: Archipelago Press. ISBN 981-3018-30-5.
  • Kaart van het Kasteel en de Stad Batavia in het Jaar 1667 [Map of the Castle and the City Batavia in year 1667] (Map) (Den Haag ed.). 50 rhijnlandsche roeden (in Dutch). Cartography by J.J. Bollee. G.B. Hooyer and J.W. Yzerman. 1919.
  • Merrillees, Scott (2001). Batavia in Nineteenth Century Photographs. Singapore: Editions Didier Millet. ISBN 9789813018778.
  • Mulyawan Karim, ed. (2009). Ekspedisi Ciliwung, Laporan Jurnalistik Kompas, Mata Air – Air Mata. Jakarta: PT. Kompas Media Nusantara. ISBN 978-9797094256.

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For other uses see Batavia disambiguation Batavia was the capital of the Dutch East Indies The area corresponds to present day Jakarta Indonesia Batavia can refer to the city proper or its suburbs and hinterland the Ommelanden which included the much larger area of the Residency of Batavia in the present day Indonesian provinces of Jakarta Banten and West Java BataviaFormer cityOther transcription s Chinese勿礁维 Simplified 勿礁維 Traditional From top left to right Kali Besar in 1938 Stadhuis in Oud Batavia Statue of Jan Pieterszoon Coen in front of Grote Huis building an aerial view of Batavia Zuid railway station Tandjoengpriok portFlagCoat of armsMap of Batavia c 1920TerritoryDutch East IndiesGovernorateWest JavaResidencyBataviaFounded30 May 1619Japanese occupation renamed to Jakarta1942 1945Dutch re occupation1946 1949Independence1945Government TypeGemeenteraad Batavia MayorG J Bisschop first Sastromoeljono last Population 1920 Total253 800Batavia around 1780The founding of Batavia by the Dutch in 1619 on the site of the ruins of Jayakarta led to the establishment of a Dutch colony Batavia became the center of the Dutch East India Company s trading network in Asia Monopolies on local produce were augmented by non indigenous cash crops To safeguard their commercial interests the company and the colonial administration absorbed surrounding territory Batavia is on the north coast of Java in a sheltered bay on a land of marshland and hills crisscrossed with canals The city had two centers Oud Batavia the oldest part of the city and the relatively newer city on higher ground to the south It was a European colonial city for about 320 years until 1942 when the Dutch East Indies was occupied by Japan during World War II During the Japanese occupation and after Indonesian nationalists declared independence on 17 August 1945 the city was known as Jakarta It was internationally known by its Dutch name until Indonesia achieved full independence in 1949 when the city was renamed Jakarta Contents 1 Dutch East India Company 1610 1799 1 1 Arrival 1 2 Founding 1 3 Expansion 1 4 The region 1 5 1740 massacre and Opening to Trade 2 Dutch East Indies 1800 1949 2 1 Southward expansion 2 2 British rule 2 3 Technological advances 2 4 Abolition of Cultivation System 2 5 Dutch Ethical Policy 2 6 Independence movement 3 Society 4 People associated with Batavia 5 Notes 6 References 7 Works citedDutch East India Company 1610 1799 EditArrival Edit Batavia between 1675 and 1725Amsterdam merchants embarked on an expedition to the East Indies archipelago in 1595 under the command of Cornelis de Houtman The English East India Company s first voyage in 1602 commanded by James Lancaster arrived in Aceh and sailed on to Bantam There Lancaster was allowed to build a trading post which was the center of English trade in the East Indies archipelago until 1682 1 29 The Dutch government granted the Dutch East India Company VOC a monopoly on Asian trade in 1602 A year later the first permanent Dutch trading post in the East Indies archipelago was established in Bantam West Java Prince Jayawikarta gave Dutch merchants permission to build a wooden warehouse and houses on the east bank of the Ciliwung river opposite Jayakarta in 1610 and the outpost was established the following year 2 29 As Dutch power increased Jayawikarta allowed the English to build houses on the west bank of the Ciliwung and a fort near his customs office to maintain a balance of power Replica of the East Indiaman Amsterdam of the Dutch East India Company United East Indies Company VOC Tensions between Prince Jayawikarta and the Dutch escalated until 1618 when Jayawikarta s soldiers besieged the Dutch fortress containing the Nassau and Mauritius warehouse An English fleet of 15 ships arrived under Thomas Dale former governor of the colony of Virginia After a sea battle newly appointed Dutch governor Jan Pieterszoon Coen escaped to the Moluccas to seek support the Dutch had taken over the first of the Portuguese forts there in 1605 Dutch garrison commander Pieter van den Broecke and five other men were arrested during negotiations since Jayawikarta believed that he had been deceived by the Dutch Jayawikarta and the English then forged an alliance citation needed The Dutch army was on the verge of surrendering to the English when in 1619 the Sultanate of Banten sent a group of soldiers to summon Jayawikarta Jayawikarta s agreement with the English had not been approved by the Bantenese authorities The conflict between Banten and Jayawikarta and the tense relationship between Banten and the English provided a new opportunity for the Dutch Coen returned from the Moluccas with reinforcements on 28 May 1619 3 razing Jayakarta to the ground two days later 4 35 and expelling its population 5 50 Only the Luso Sundanese padrao remained Jayawikarta retreated to Tanara in the interior of Banten where he later died The Dutch established a closer relationship with Banten and assumed control of the port which became the regional Dutch center of power Founding Edit The region which became Batavia came under Dutch control in 1619 initially as an expansion of the original Dutch fort and a new building on the ruins of the former Jayakarta Coen decided to expand the original fort into a larger fortress on 2 July 1619 and sent plans for Batavia Castle to the Netherlands on 7 October of that year The castle was larger than the previous one with two northern bastions protecting it from a maritime attack 6 The Nassau and Mauritius warehouses were expanded with the erection of an eastern fort extension overseen by Commander Van Raay on 12 March 1619 7 Although Coen wanted to name the new settlement Nieuw Hoorn after Hoorn his birthplace he was prevented from doing so by the board of the VOC 7 Batavia was chosen as the new name of the fort and settlement and a naming ceremony was held on 18 January 1621 7 It was named after the Batavi Germanic tribe which inhabited the Batavian region during the Roman Empire at the time it was believed that the tribe was the ancestors of the Dutch people Jayakarta was called Batavia for over 300 years 8 There were three governmental administrations in the Batavia region 9 7 Initial authority was established in 1609 9 7 and became the colonial High Government consisting of the Governor General and the Council of the Indies 9 7 The urban or civil administration of the city of Batavia was established in 1620 9 9 On 24 June 1620 two company officials and three free citizens or burghers were appointed to the first College of Aldermen 10 The local rural administration formed in 1664 became fully functional in 1682 9 10 The Javanese people were prohibited from settling in Batavia from the time of its founding in 1619 11 194 Expansion Edit Batavia and its eastern expansionFrom its founding Batavia was planned in a well defined layout 12 Three trenches were dug east of the Ciliwung River in 1619 its first Dutch made canals The canals were named from south to north Leeuwengracht Groenegracht and Steenhouwersgracht 13 The castle area begins in a former field north of Steenhouwersgracht 12 in which a town market was established 12 13 The first church and town hall were built c 1622 on the east bank of the river Batavia s first combined church and town hall replaced during the 1630s was at 6 07 56 S 106 48 42 E 6 132212 S 106 811779 E 6 132212 106 811779 12 The coconut tree lined Tijgersgracht canalAround 1627 the three canals were connected with the Tijgersgracht canal The new canal was lined with coconut trees according to a contemporary observer Among the Grachts the Tygersgracht is the most stately and most pleasant both for the goodliness of its buildings and the ornamentation of its streets which afford a very agreeable shadow to those who pass along the street 14 The Prinsestraat originally the street leading to the castle became an urban center connecting the castle s south gate with the city hall 12 Eastern Batavia was protected by a long canal which linked the castle moat and the Ciliwung riverbend and ran at a slight angle to Tijgersgracht The canal cost over 160 000 real which was paid mostly by the Chinese instead of the company who had strengthened the castle with slave and prison labor 12 The short lived outer canal was redesigned several years after the 1628 1629 siege of Batavia Batavia in 1667East of Batavia Sultan Agung king of the Mataram Sultanate gained control of most of Java by defeating Surabaya in 1625 15 31 On 27 August 1628 Agung began the siege of Batavia 4 52 After heavy losses in his first attempt he retreated and launched a second offensive the following year 15 31 4 52 53 This also failed the Dutch fleet destroyed his supplies and ships in the harbors of Cirebon and Tegal 4 53 Mataram troops starving and decimated by illness retreated again 4 53 Agung then moved east 4 53 attacking Blitar Panarukan and the Blambangan Kingdom in eastern Java a vassal state of the Balinese kingdom of Gelgel 4 55 After the siege it was decided that Batavia needed a stronger defense system Based on the work of Flemish mathematician and military engineer Simon Stevin Governor General Jacques Specx 5 463 designed a moat and city wall extensions of the wall were built west of Batavia and the city was completely enclosed In 1656 due to a conflict with Banten the Javanese were not allowed to live within the city walls and settled outside Batavia The Chinese and the Mardijkers were the only non Dutch settlers within the walled city A 1659 truce with Banten enabled the city to grow and more bamboo houses were built Bamboo houses and livestock were banned in 1667 and the wealthy Dutch built tall houses and canals The region Edit The region was an important source of food crops and building materials 9 The VOC established a local government in 1664 which became fully functional in 1682 9 10 Chinese inhabitants began to cultivate sugarcane 9 6 16 Large scale cultivation negatively impacted the environment and Batavia s northern area experienced coastal erosion The canals required extensive maintenance with frequent closures for dredging 17 Residents of the Ommelanden lived in country houses or ethnic kampungs governed by a headman 9 5 18 1740 massacre and Opening to Trade Edit Main article 1740 Batavia massacre Contemporary etching of the massacreBatavia s sugar industry declined during the 1730s 9 169 19 29 with rising unemployment and social disorder 9 169 In 1739 there were 10 574 Chinese people living in the Ommelanden 9 53 Tensions grew as the colonial government attempted to restrict Chinese immigration with deportations to Ceylon and South Africa 3 The Chinese afraid that they would be thrown overboard to drown rioted 3 20 99 Ten thousand Chinese were killed from 9 to 22 October 1740 3 The few surviving Chinese inhabitants were moved to Glodok outside the city walls the following year 21 In 1789 the Americans visited and were permitted through formal applications to trade 22 Dutch East Indies 1800 1949 Edit Southern expansion 1840After the VOC went bankrupt and was dissolved in 1800 the Batavian Republic nationalized its debts and possessions and expanded its territorial claims into a colony known as the Dutch East Indies Batavia evolved from a regional company headquarters into the colony s capital Southward expansion Edit In 1808 Herman Willem Daendels decided to leave the dilapidated unhealthy Old Town A new town center was built further south on the Weltevreden estate Batavia became a city with two centers Kota was the business hub with offices and warehouses of shipping and trading companies and Weltevreden was home to the government military and shops The centers were connected by the Molenvliet Canal and a road alongside the canal 23 British rule Edit Under British rule Daendels was replaced by Stamford Raffles 1 24 115 122 25 26 25 In 1811 Raffles who was employed by the British East India Company as secretary to the governor of Malacca decided to take over the government in Batavia One reason was to prevent the French from stepping in completely since Napoleon had nominated Daendels who worked closely with the French In 1816 the Dutch returned to rule the region Europeans were brought to the archipelago to establish a colony on vacant land triggering wars in Java and Sumatra Large numbers of troops were brought into the Dutch Indies to suppress unrest particularly on Sumatra and extend Dutch government influence beyond Java However the Dutch never conquered the entire archipelago 27 The development of Weltevreden as the colony s administrative center continued gradually shifting the center of Batavia south from Oud Batavia A new Indies Empire style of architecture emerged white plastered villas with a large front porch were built especially around the Koningsplein and at Weltevreden This newer part of Batavia generally had a more open look than Oud Batavia s developed canal cityscape 28 Technological advances Edit Trams in MolenvlietSee also Trams in Batavia Unlike the first half of the 19th century the second half of the century was a peaceful period characterized by economic and technological expansion and a stable government In 1856 the region s first telegraph line was installed between Batavia and Buitenzorg In 1859 Batavia was connected to Singapore with the Dutch East Indies first international telegraph connection The city completed its first gasworks two years later and its streets were lit with gas by 1862 The first trams and telephones came in 1882 29 Horse drawn tram introduced to Batavia in 1869 were upgraded to steam power in 1882 and electricity in 1900 The city s first railway also began in 1869 and the line from Batavia to Buitenzorg was completed in 1873 29 The city s first ice house was built in 1870 29 The 1869 opening of the Suez Canal increased the need for a new port The port of Tanjung Priok was completed in 1885 replacing the centuries old inadequate Sunda Kelapa significantly increasing trade and tourism in Batavia and the Dutch East Indies 29 Abolition of Cultivation System Edit Batavia in 1897The Cultivation System cultuurstelsel was a mid 19th century Dutch government policy which required a portion of agricultural production to be export crops Indonesian historians refer to it as tanam paksa enforced planting The 1870 abolition of the Cultivation System led to the rapid development of private enterprise in the Dutch East Indies A number of trading companies and financial institutions were established on Java particularly in Batavia The Old Town s deteriorating structures were replaced with offices usually along the Ciliwung River Private companies owned or managed plantations oil fields and mines The island s first railway line opened in 1867 and railway stations were built in urban centers such as Batavia 30 Schools hospitals factories offices trading companies and post offices were established throughout the city Improvements in Batavia s transportation health and technology encouraged more Dutch people to move to the capital and Batavian society became increasingly Dutch The city traded with Europe and increased shipping led to the construction of a new harbor at Tanjung Priok between 1877 and 1883 31 Foreigners were known locally as totoks distinguishing new Chinese arrivals from the peranakans Many totoks adopted Indonesian culture wearing kebayas sarongs and summer dresses 32 By the end of the 19th century Batavia s population was 115 887 people of these 8 893 were Europeans 26 817 were Chinese and 77 700 were indigenous islanders 33 The city s expanding commercial activity led to the immigration of large numbers of Dutch employees and rural Javanese to Batavia The 1905 population of Batavia and its surrounding area reached 2 1 million including 93 000 Chinese people 14 000 Europeans and 2 800 Arabs 34 This growth resulted in an increased demand for housing and land prices soared New houses were built close together and kampung settlements filled spaces between the houses Settlements built with little regard for the region s tropical conditions resulted in overcrowding poor sanitation and an absence of public amenities 23 Java had an outbreak of plague in 1913 23 Old Batavia s abandoned moats and ramparts experienced a boom during the period as trading companies were established along the Ciliwung 23 The old city soon re established itself as a commercial center with 20th and 17th century buildings adjacent to each other Dutch Ethical Policy Edit Batavia Weltevreden Koningsplein Hotel der Nederlanden c 1912 Batavia c 1914The Dutch Ethical Policy was introduced in 1901 expanding educational opportunities for the indigenous population of the Dutch East Indies In 1924 a law school was founded in Batavia 35 The city s population in the 1930 census was 435 000 5 50 The University of Batavia was established in 1941 and later became the University of Indonesia 35 In 1946 the Dutch colonial government established the Nood Universiteit Emergency University in Jakarta The following year its name was changed to Universiteit van Indonesie UVI After the Indonesian National Revolution the government established Universiteit Indonesia a state university in Jakarta in February 1950 Its name was later changed to Universitas Indonesia Independence movement Edit Volksraad parliament buildingVolksraad member Mohammad Husni Thamrin criticized the colonial government for ignoring the kampungs and catering to the wealthy in Menteng In 1909 Tirto Adhi Soerjo founded the Islamic Commercial Union in Batavia to support Indonesian merchants Branches in other areas followed In 1920 Oemar Said Tjokroaminoto and Agus Salim established a committee in Batavia to support the Ottoman Caliphate 35 Spies warned the Dutch about a planned revolt in 1926 and Communist Party of Indonesia PKI leaders were arrested Andries Cornelis Dirk de Graeff replaced Dirk Fock as governor general and uprisings in Batavia Banten and Priangan were quickly crushed 35 Armed Communists occupied the Batavia telephone exchange for one night before they were captured The Dutch sent prisoners to Banden and to a penal colony at Boven Digoel in West New Guinea where many died of malaria 35 Sukarno and the Study Club founded the Indonesian Nationalist Association which became the Indonesian National Party and later joined the Partai Sarekat Islam Budi Utomo and the Surabaya Study Club to form the Union of Indonesian Political Associations on 4 July 1927 35 A youth congress was held in Batavia in October 1928 and the groups began referring to the city as Jakarta They demanded Indonesian independence displayed the red and white flag and sang the Indonesian national anthem written by Wage Rudolf Supratman The Dutch banned the flag the national anthem and the words Indonesia and Indonesian 35 Drawing of the imagined Japanese entry into BataviaOn 5 March 1942 Batavia fell to the Japanese The Dutch formally surrendered to the Japanese occupation forces on 9 March 1942 and the colony s government was transferred to Japan Batavia was renamed Jakarta The economic situation and the physical condition of Indonesian cities deteriorated during the occupation Buildings were converted to internment camps for the Dutch After the Japanese defeat in 1945 the region experienced a period of transition and upheaval during the Indonesian struggle for independence During the Japanese occupation and when the Indonesian nationalists declared independence on 17 August 1945 the city was renamed Jakarta 36 In 1945 it was briefly occupied by the Allies and returned to the Dutch The Dutch name Batavia remained the internationally recognized name until Indonesian independence was achieved and Jakarta proclaimed the national capital on 27 December 1949 36 Society Edit Many coolies and slaves were employed from outside Java Batavia founded as the trade and administrative center of the VOC was never intended to be a Dutch settlement Jan Pieterszoon Coen founded Batavia for trade with the city s inhabitants producing and supplying food There was no migration of intact Dutch families and there were few Dutch women in Batavia A mixed society was formed relationships between Dutchmen and Asian women did not usually result in marriage and the women did not have the right to return to the Dutch Republic This societal pattern created a group of mestizos in Batavia Since the VOC preferred to maintain complete control of its business a large number of slaves was employed Women became an important feature of Batavia s social network they were accustomed to dealing with slaves and spoke the same language mostly Portuguese and Malay Many of these women effectively became widows their husbands left Batavia to return to the Netherlands and their children were often removed as well Most of Batavia s residents were of Asian descent Thousands of slaves were brought from India and Arakan later slaves were brought from Bali and Sulawesi To avoid an uprising a decision was made to free the Javanese people from slavery Chinese people made up the largest group in Batavia most being merchants and laborers and were the most decisive group in the city s development Other residents included Malays and Muslim and Hindu merchants from India Initially these ethnic groups lived together however in 1688 segregation was imposed on the indigenous population Each ethnic group was forced to live in its own village outside the city wall Each person was tagged to identify their ethnic group later the identity tags were replaced with parchment Batavia experienced more malaria epidemics during the 18th century as its marsh areas bred mosquitoes 37 The disease killed many Europeans and Batavia received the nickname cemetery of Europeans 38 39 Wealthier European settlers moved to southern areas at higher elevations 20 101 Within Batavia s walls the wealthy Dutch built tall houses and canals Commercial opportunities attracted Indonesian and Chinese immigrants with the increasing population imposing a burden on the city During the 18th century over 60 percent of Batavia s population were slaves working for the VOC Laws protected slaves against overly cruel actions by their masters Christian slaves were freed after the death of their masters and other slaves were allowed to own a store and earn money to buy their freedom Although Batavia became the political and administrative center of the Dutch East Indies and the main port in Southeast Asian trade the city s population remained relatively small Early 19th century estimates of its population were smaller than that of Surabaya although it overtook the latter by the end of the century the 1920 census indicated a population of 306 000 compared to 192 000 for Surabaya 158 000 for Semarang and 134 000 for Surakarta Its population increased rapidly exceeding half a million ten years later 40 The population of the Dutch East Indies was never purely European Of the 30 000 Dutch citizens in the Dutch East Indies in 1860 less than 5 000 were purely Dutch Seventy percent of the population was male since more male immigrants arrived from Europe 41 Slavery existed in Batavia until its abolition in 1853 Slaves mainly lived in the back of the garden of the main house and were paid with free food and lodging Female slaves known as baboe cooked and cared for children 27 Children went to school where the teachers were locally trained Many children did not finish school to counter this the school system awarded prizes to well performing children 27 When Stamford Raffles was governor of Java he changed social interaction in Batavian society Raffles disapproved of the relaxed Dutch dress code where many men wore Javanese attire Raffles and his wife Olivia introduced European dress with much white because of the tropical climate for men and women 27 When the British left Batavia in 1815 most of the native people reverted to their original Javanese attire but some new aspects persisted Native males chosen to be the governing elite wore a European outfit on duty but after hours they would change to sarongs and kebaya Lower ranked Dutchmen might wear the local style all day Women wore sarongs and kebaya to official events where they wore tighter fitting robes or richly colored or flowered cloth in the style of British India and batik shawls 42 People associated with Batavia EditSouw Beng Kong 1580 1644 the first Kapitan Cina of Batavia Untung Surapati 1660 1706 former Balinese slave from the city imprisoned in Stadhuis Adriana Bake 1724 1787 first Indonesian born first lady of Batavia 43 Si Pitung 1866 1893 well known 19th century preman bandit from Batavia Mohammad Husni Thamrin 1894 1941 pre independence Indonesian politician and nationalist Reinout Willem van Bemmelen 1904 1983 geologist Ben Bot born 1937 diplomat and politician Tonke Dragt born 1930 writer and illustrator of children s literature Boudewijn de Groot born 1944 musician Michel van Hulten born 1930 politician Yvonne Keuls born 1931 writer Taco Kuiper 1941 2004 investigative journalist and publisher Carel Jan Schneider 1932 2011 foreign service diplomat and writer Francis Steinmetz 1914 2006 Royal Netherlands Navy officer Frans Tutuhatunewa 1923 2016 president of the Republic of South MalukuNotes Edit from Johnson Chart of the Flags and National Emblems of the World Geographicus 1864References Edit a b Ricklefs MC A History of Modern Indonesia since c 1200 Palgrave Macmillan 4th edition Sep 10 2008 ISBN 9781137149183 Ricklefs MC A History of Modern Indonesia since c 1200 MacMillan 2nd edition 1991ISBN 0333576896 a b c d Gimon CA Sejarah Indonesia An Online Timeline of Indonesian History gimonca com 2001 1 a b c d e f g Ricklefs MC A History of Modern Indonesia since c 1200 Palgrave Macmillan 3rd edition 2001 ISBN 9780804744805 a b c Cribb R Kahin A Historical Dictionary of Indonesia The Scarecrow Press Inc 2nd edition ISBN 9780810849358 de Haan 1922 pp 44 5 a b c Batavia De VOCsite in Dutch de VOCsite 2002 2012 Retrieved 27 November 2012 Jan Pieterszoon Coen 1587 1629 Stichter van Batavia Historiek 21 August 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l Kanumoyoso B Beyond the city wall society and economic development in the Ommelanden of Batavia 1684 1740 Doctoral thesis Leiden University 2011 2 Robson McKillop R translator The Central Administration of the VOC Government and the Local Institutions of Batavia 1619 1811 an Introduction Hendrik E Niemeijer 3 Lucassen J Lucassen L Globalising Migration History The Eurasian Experience 16th 21st Centuries Brill 2014 ISBN 9789004271364 a b c d e f de Haan 1922 pp 46 7 a b Bollee Kaart van Batavia 1667 Gunawan Tjahjono 1998 p 113 a b Drakeley S The History of Indonesia Greenwood 2005 ISBN 9780313331145 Blusse L Strange Company Chinese settlers mestizo women and the Dutch in VOC Batavia Dordrecht Floris Publication 1986 Mulyawan Karim 2009 pp 91 2 de Haan 1922 p 469 Knight GR Sugar Steam and Steel The Industrial Project in Colonial Java 1830 1885 University of Adelaide Press 2014 ISBN 9781922064998 a b Ward K Networks of Empire Forced Migration in the Dutch East India Company Cambridge University Press 2009 ISBN 9780521885867 Indonesia Lonely Planet 2007 p 101 ISBN 9781741798456 Cary Thomas Greaves Memoir of Thomas Handasyd Perkins Boston Little Brown and company 1856 p 17 Pdf Library of Congress website Retrieved 18 January 2023 a b c d Gunawan Tjahjono 1998 p 109 Hannigan T A Brief History of Indonesia Sultans Spices and Tsunamis The Incredible Story of Southeast Asia s Largest Nation Tuttle Publishing 2015 ISBN 9780804844765 Hannigan T Raffles and the British Invasion of Java Monsoon Books 2013 ISBN 9789814358859 National Information Agency Indonesia 2004 an official handbook Republic of Indonesia a b c d Batavia in the 19th century Argelander Institut fur Astronomie Universitat Bonn 23 June 2014 Retrieved 24 April 2017 de Jong 1998 p 257 a b c d Merrillees 2001 p 14 Gunawan Tjahjono 1998 p 116 Teeuwen Dirk 2007 Landing stages of Jakarta Batavia Nordholt Henk Schulte M Imam Aziz 2005 Outward appearances trend identitas kepentingan in Indonesian PT LKiS Pelangi Aksara p 227 ISBN 9789799492951 Teeuwen Dirk Rendez Vous Batavia Rotterdam 2007 Archived July 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine Oosthoek s Geillustreerde Encyclopaedie 1917 a b c d e f g Beck S South Asia 1800 1950 Indonesia and the Dutch 1800 1950 a b Waworoentoe WJ Jakarta Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc accession date August 30 2015 4 van der Brug PH Malaria in Batavia in the 18th century Tropical Medicine and International Health 1997 volume 2 issue 9 pages 892 902 PMID 9315048 Pols H Notes from Batavia the Europeans graveyard the nineteenth century debate on acclimatization in the Dutch East Indies J Hist Med Allied Sci 2012 volume 67 issue 1 pages 120 148 DOI 10 1093 jhmas jrr004 PMID 21317422 van Emden F J G W S B Klooster 1964 Willem Brandt ed Kleurig memoriaal van de Hollanders op Oud Java A J G Strengholt Hiroyoshi Kano Growing Metropolitan Suburbia A Comparative Sociological Study on Tokyo and Yayasan Obor Indonesia 2004 pp 5 6 de Jong 1998 p 258 de Jong 1998 p 259 Taylor Jean Gelman December 2004 The Social World of Batavia European and Eurasian in Dutch Asia University of Wisconsin Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 299 09474 4 Retrieved 23 October 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint url status link Works cited Editde Haan F 1922 Oud Batavia Vol 1 Batavia G Kolff amp Co Koninklijk Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen de Jong J J P 1998 De waaier van het fortuin van handelscompagnie tot koloniaal imperium de Nederlanders in Azie en de Indonesische archipel Sdu ISBN 9789012086431 Gunawan Tjahjono ed 1998 Architecture Indonesian Heritage Vol 6 Singapore Archipelago Press ISBN 981 3018 30 5 Kaart van het Kasteel en de Stad Batavia in het Jaar 1667 Map of the Castle and the City Batavia in year 1667 Map Den Haag ed 50 rhijnlandsche roeden in Dutch Cartography by J J Bollee G B Hooyer and J W Yzerman 1919 Merrillees Scott 2001 Batavia in Nineteenth Century Photographs Singapore Editions Didier Millet ISBN 9789813018778 Mulyawan Karim ed 2009 Ekspedisi Ciliwung Laporan Jurnalistik Kompas Mata Air Air Mata Jakarta PT Kompas Media Nusantara ISBN 978 9797094256 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Batavia Dutch East Indies amp oldid 1165314470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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