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1740 Batavia massacre

The 1740 Batavia massacre (Dutch: Chinezenmoord, lit.'Murder of the Chinese'; Indonesian: Geger Pacinan, lit.'Chinatown tumult') was a massacre and pogrom in which European soldiers of the Dutch East India Company killed ethnic Chinese residents of the port city of Batavia, Dutch East Indies, (present-day Jakarta) in the Dutch East Indies. The violence in the city lasted from 9 October 1740, until 22 October, with minor skirmishes outside the walls continuing late into November that year. Historians have estimated that at least 10,000 ethnic Chinese were massacred; just 600 to 3,000 are believed to have survived.

Batavia massacre
Part of Anti-Chinese sentiment in Indonesia
Chinezenmoord, Unknown author
Date9 October – 22 November 1740
Location
MethodsPogrom
Resulted inSee Aftermath
Parties
Lead figures

Adriaan Valckenier (Dutch East India Company)

Nie Hoe Kong

Casualties and losses
500 soldiers killed
>10,000 killed
>500 wounded
1740 Batavia massacre
Traditional Chinese紅溪慘案
Simplified Chinese红溪惨案
Literal meaningRed River tragedy/massacre[1]
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHóng Xī cǎn'àn

In September 1740, as unrest rose among the Chinese population, spurred by government repression and declining sugar prices, Governor-General Adriaan Valckenier declared that any uprising would be met with deadly force. On 7 October, hundreds of ethnic Chinese, many of them sugar mill workers, killed 50 Dutch soldiers, leading Dutch troops to confiscate all weapons from the Chinese populace and to place the Chinese under a curfew. Two days later, rumors of Chinese atrocities led other Batavian ethnic groups to burn Chinese houses along Besar River and Dutch soldiers to fire cannons at Chinese homes in revenge. The violence soon spread throughout Batavia, killing more Chinese. Although Valckenier declared an amnesty on 11 October, gangs of irregulars continued to hunt down and kill Chinese until 22 October, when the governor-general called more forcefully for a cessation of hostilities. Outside the city walls, clashes continued between Dutch troops and rioting sugar mill workers. After several weeks of minor skirmishes, Dutch-led troops assaulted Chinese strongholds in sugar mills throughout the area.

The following year, attacks on ethnic Chinese throughout Java sparked the two-year Java War that pitted ethnic Chinese and Javanese forces against Dutch troops. Valckenier was later recalled to the Netherlands and charged with crimes related to the massacre. The massacre figures heavily in Dutch literature, and is also cited as a possible etymology for the names of several areas in Jakarta.

Background edit

 
Governor-General Valckenier ordered the killings of ethnic Chinese.

During the early years of the Dutch colonisation of the East Indies (modern-day Indonesia), many people of Chinese descent were contracted as skilled artisans in the construction of Batavia on the northwestern coast of Java;[2] they also served as traders, sugar mill workers, and shopkeepers.[3] The economic boom, precipitated by trade between the East Indies and China via the port of Batavia, increased Chinese immigration to Java. The number of ethnic Chinese in Batavia grew rapidly, reaching a total of 10,000 by 1740. Thousands more lived outside the city walls.[4] The Dutch colonials required them to carry registration papers, and deported those who did not comply to China.[5]

The deportation policy was tightened during the 1730s, after an outbreak of malaria killed thousands, including the Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies, Dirck van Cloon.[5][6] According to Indonesian historian Benny G. Setiono, the outbreak was followed by increased suspicion and resentment in native Indonesians and the Dutch toward the ethnic Chinese, who were growing in number and whose wealth was increasingly visible.[6] As a result, Commissioner of Native Affairs Roy Ferdinand, under orders of Governor-General Adriaan Valckenier, decreed on 25 July 1740, that Chinese considered suspicious would be deported to Ceylon (modern day Sri Lanka) and forced to harvest cinnamon.[6][7][8][9] Wealthy Chinese were extorted by corrupt Dutch officials who threatened them with deportation;[6][10][11] Stamford Raffles, an explorer, administrator and historian of Java, noted in 1830 that in some Javanese accounts, the Dutch were told by the Dutch-appointed Chinese headman of Batavia, Nie Hoe Kong, to deport all Chinese wearing black or blue because these were thought to be poor.[12] There were also rumors that deportees were not taken to their destinations but were thrown overboard once out of sight of Java,[4][10] and in some accounts, they died when rioting on the ships.[12] The deportation of ethnic Chinese caused unrest among the remaining Chinese, leading many Chinese workers to desert their jobs.[4][10]

At the same time native occupants of Batavia, including the ethnic Betawi servants, became increasingly distrustful of the Chinese. Economic factors played a role: most natives were poor, and perceived the Chinese as occupying some of the most prosperous neighbourhoods in the city.[13][14] Although the Dutch historian A.N. Paasman notes that at the time the Chinese were the "Jews of Asia",[8] the actual situation was more complicated. Many poor Chinese living in the area around Batavia were sugar mill workers who felt exploited by the Dutch and Chinese elites equally.[15] Rich Chinese owned the mills and were involved in revenue farming and shipping; they drew income from milling and the distillation of arak, a molasses and rice-based alcoholic beverage.[15][16] However, the Dutch overlords set the price for sugar, which itself caused unrest.[17] Because of the decline of worldwide sugar prices that began in the 1720s caused by an increase in exports to Europe and competition from the West Indies,[18][19] the sugar industry in the East Indies had suffered considerably. By 1740, worldwide sugar prices had dropped to half the price in 1720. As sugar was a major export, this caused considerable financial difficulties for the colony.[20]

Initially some members of the Council of the Indies (Raad van Indië) believed that the Chinese would never attack Batavia,[10] and stronger measures to control the Chinese were blocked by a faction led by Valckenier's political opponent, the former governor of Zeylan Gustaaf Willem van Imhoff, who returned to Batavia in 1738.[21][22][23] Large numbers of Chinese arrived outside Batavia from nearby settlements, however, and on 26 September Valckenier called an emergency meeting of the council, during which he gave orders to respond to any ethnic Chinese uprisings with deadly force.[6] This policy continued to be opposed by van Imhoff's faction; Vermeulen (1938)[a] suggested that the tension between the two colonial factions played a role in the ensuing massacre.[7]

On the evening of 1 October Valckenier received reports that a crowd of a thousand Chinese had gathered outside the gate, angered by his statements at the emergency meeting five days earlier. This report was received incredulously by Valckenier and the council.[24] However, after the murder of a Balinese sergeant by the Chinese outside the walls, the council decided to take extraordinary measures and reinforce the guard.[7][25] Two groups of 50 Europeans and some native porters were sent to outposts on the south and east sides of the city,[26] and a plan of attack was formulated.[7][25]

Incident edit

Massacre edit

 
Chinese houses were burned during the massacre.

After groups of Chinese sugar mill workers revolted using custom-made weapons to loot and burn mills,[15] hundreds of ethnic Chinese,[b] suspected to have been led by Nie Hoe Kong,[c] killed 50 Dutch soldiers in Meester Cornelis (now Jatinegara) and Tanah Abang on 7 October.[6][11] In response, the Dutch sent 1,800 regular troops, accompanied by schutterij (militia) and eleven battalions of conscripts to stop the revolt; they established a curfew and cancelled plans for a Chinese festival.[6] Fearing that the Chinese would conspire against the colonials by candlelight, those inside the city walls were forbidden to light candles and were forced to surrender everything "down to the smallest kitchen knife".[30] The following day the Dutch repelled an attack by up to 10,000 ethnic Chinese, led by groups from nearby Tangerang and Bekasi, at the city's outer walls;[7][31] Raffles wrote that 1,789 Chinese died in this attack.[32] In response, Valckenier called another meeting of the council on 9 October.[7][31]

Meanwhile, rumors spread among the other ethnic groups in Batavia, including slaves from Bali and Sulawesi, Bugis, and Balinese troops, that the Chinese were plotting to kill, rape, or enslave them.[5][33] These groups pre-emptively burned houses belonging to ethnic Chinese along the Besar River. The Dutch followed this with an assault on Chinese settlements elsewhere in Batavia in which they burned houses and killed people. The Dutch politician and critic of colonialism W. R. van Hoëvell wrote that "pregnant and nursing women, children, and trembling old men fell on the sword. Defenseless prisoners were slaughtered like sheep".[d][34]

Troops under Lieutenant Hermanus van Suchtelen and Captain Jan van Oosten, a survivor from Tanah Abang, took station in the Chinese district: Suchtelen and his men positioned themselves at the poultry market, while van Oosten's men held a post along the nearby canal.[35] At around 5:00 p.m., the Dutch opened fire on Chinese-occupied houses with cannon, causing them to catch fire.[9][36] Some Chinese died in the burning houses, while others were shot upon leaving their homes or committed suicide in desperation. Those who reached the canal near the housing district were killed by Dutch troops waiting in small boats,[36] while other troops searched in between the rows of burning houses, killing any survivors they found.[34] These actions later spread throughout the city.[36] Vermeulen notes that many of the perpetrators were sailors and other "irregular and bad elements" of society.[e][37] During this period there was heavy looting[37] and seizures of property.[32]

 
Chinese prisoners were executed by the Dutch on 10 October 1740.

The following day the violence continued to spread, and Chinese patients in a hospital were taken outside and killed.[38] Attempts to extinguish fires in areas devastated the preceding day failed, and the flames increased in vigour, and continued until 12 October.[39] Meanwhile, a group of 800 Dutch soldiers and 2,000 natives assaulted Kampung Gading Melati, where a group of Chinese survivors were holding up under the leadership of Khe Pandjang.[f] Although the Chinese evacuated to nearby Paninggaran, they were later driven out of the area by Dutch forces. There were approximately 450 Dutch and 800 Chinese casualties in the two attacks.[32]

Follow-up and further violence edit

On 11 October Valckenier unsuccessfully requested that officers control their troops and stop the looting.[42] Two days later the council established a reward of two ducats for every Chinese head surrendered to the soldiers as an incentive for the other ethnic groups to assist in the purge.[42] As a result, ethnic Chinese who had survived the initial assault were hunted by gangs of irregulars, who killed those Chinese they found for the reward.[38] The Dutch worked with natives in different parts of Batavia; ethnic Bugis and Balinese grenadiers were sent to reinforce the Dutch on 14 October.[42] On 22 October Valckenier called for all killings to cease.[38] In a lengthy letter in which he blamed the unrest entirely on the Chinese rebels, Valckenier offered an amnesty to all Chinese, except for the leaders of the unrest, on whose heads he placed a bounty of up to 500 rijksdaalders.[43]

Outside the walls skirmishes between the Chinese rebels and the Dutch continued. On October 25, after almost two weeks of minor skirmishes, 500 armed Chinese approached Cadouwang (now Angke), but were repelled by cavalry under the command of Ridmeester Christoffel Moll and Cornets Daniel Chits and Pieter Donker. The following day the cavalry, which consisted of 1,594 Dutch and native forces, marched on the rebel stronghold at the Salapadjang sugar mill, first gathered in the nearby woods and then set the mill on fire while the rebels were inside; another mill at Boedjong Renje was taken in the same manner by another group.[44] Fearful of the oncoming Dutch, the Chinese retreated to a sugar mill in Kampung Melayu, four hours from Salapadjang; this stronghold fell to troops under Captain Jan George Crummel. After defeating the Chinese and retaking Qual, the Dutch returned to Batavia.[45] Meanwhile, the fleeing Chinese, who were blocked to the west by 3,000 troops from the Sultanate of Banten, headed east along the north coast of Java;[46] by 30 October it was reported that the Chinese had reached Tangerang.[45]

A ceasefire order reached Crummel on 2 November, upon which he and his men returned to Batavia after stationing a contingent of 50 men at Cadouwang. When he arrived at noon, there were no more Chinese inside Batavia's walls.[47] On 8 November the Sultanate of Cirebon sent between 2,000 and 3,000 native troops to reinforce the city guard. Looting continued until at least 28 November, and the last native troops stood down at the end of that month.[42]

Aftermath edit

 
Van Imhoff and two fellow councilmen were arrested for insubordination after going against Valckenier.

Most accounts of the massacre estimate that 10,000 Chinese were killed within Batavia's city walls, while at least another 500 were seriously wounded. Between 600 and 700 Chinese-owned houses were raided and burned.[48][49] Vermeulen gives a figure of 600 survivors,[42] while the Indonesian scholar A.R.T. Kemasang estimates that 3,000 Chinese survived.[50] The Indonesian historian Benny G. Setiono notes that 500 prisoners and hospital patients were killed,[48] and a total of 3,431 people survived.[51] The massacre was followed by an "open season"[52] against the ethnic Chinese throughout Java, causing another massacre in 1741 in Semarang, and others later in Surabaya and Gresik.[52]

As part of conditions for the cessation of violence, all of Batavia's ethnic Chinese were moved to a pecinan, or Chinatown, outside of the city walls, now known as Glodok. This allowed the Dutch to monitor the Chinese more easily.[53] To leave the pecinan, ethnic Chinese required special passes.[54] By 1743, however, ethnic Chinese had already returned to inner Batavia; several hundred merchants operated there.[4] Other ethnic Chinese led by Khe Pandjang[40] fled to Central Java where they attacked Dutch trading posts, and were later joined by troops under the command of the Javanese sultan of Mataram, Pakubuwono II. Though this further uprising was quashed in 1743,[55] conflicts in Java continued almost without interruption for the next 17 years.[3]

On 6 December 1740, van Imhoff and two fellow councillors were arrested on the orders of Valckenier for insubordination, and on 13 January 1741, they were sent to the Netherlands on separate ships;[56][57] they arrived on 19 September 1741. In the Netherlands, van Imhoff convinced the council that Valckenier was to blame for the massacre and delivered an extensive speech entitled "Consideratiën over den tegenwoordigen staat van de Ned. O.I. Comp." ("Considerations on the Current Condition of the Dutch East Indies Company") on November 24.[58][59] As a result of the speech, the charges against him and the other councillors were dismissed.[60] On 27 October 1742, van Imhoff was sent back to Batavia on the Hersteller as the new governor-general of the East Indies, with high expectations from the Lords XVII, the leadership of the Dutch East India Company. He arrived in the Indies on 26 May 1743.[58][61][62]

 
Van Imhoff was sent to the Netherlands, but later assigned as the new governor-general of the Dutch East Indies.

Valckenier had asked to be replaced late in 1740, and in February 1741 had received a reply instructing him to appoint van Imhoff as his successor;[63] an alternative account indicates that the Lords XVII informed him that he was to be replaced by van Imhoff as punishment for exporting too much sugar and too little coffee in 1739 and thus causing large financial losses.[64][65] By the time Valckenier received the reply, van Imhoff was already on his way back to the Netherlands. Valckenier left the Indies on 6 November 1741, after appointing a temporary successor, Johannes Thedens. Taking command of a fleet, Valckenier headed for the Netherlands. On 25 January 1742, he arrived in Cape Town but was detained, and investigated by governor Hendrik Swellengrebel by order of the Lords XVII. In August 1742 Valckenier was sent back to Batavia, where he was imprisoned in Fort Batavia and, three months later, tried on several charges, including his involvement in the massacre.[66] In March 1744 he was convicted and condemned to death, and all his belongings were confiscated.[67] In December 1744 the trial was reopened when Valckenier gave a lengthy statement to defend himself.[62][68][69] Valckenier asked for more evidence from the Netherlands, but died in his prison cell on 20 June 1751, before the investigation was completed. The death penalty was rescinded posthumously in 1755.[61][69] Vermeulen characterises the investigation as unfair and fuelled by popular outrage in the Netherlands,[70] and arguably this was officially recognised because in 1760 Valckenier's son, Adriaan Isaäk Valckenier, received reparations totalling 725,000 gulden.[71]

Sugar production in the area suffered greatly after the massacre, as many of the Chinese who had run the industry had been killed or were missing. It began to recover after the new governor-general, van Imhoff, "colonised" Tangerang. He initially intended for men to come from the Netherlands and work the land; he considered those already settled in the Indies to be lazy. However, he was unable to attract new settlers because of high taxes and thus sold the land to those already in Batavia. As he had expected, the new land-owners were unwilling to "soil their hands", and quickly rented out the land to ethnic Chinese.[19] Production rose steadily after this, but took until the 1760s to reach pre-1740 levels, after which it again diminished.[19][72] The number of mills also declined. In 1710 there had been 131, but by 1750 the number had fallen to 66.[16]

After the 1740 massacre, it became apparent over the ensuing decades through a series of considerations that Batavia needed Chinese people for a long list of trades. Considerable Chinese economic expansion occurred in the late eighteenth century, and by 1814 there were 11,854 Chinese people within the total of 47,217 inhabitants.[73]

Legacy edit

Vermeulen described the massacre as "one of the most striking events in 18th-century [Dutch] colonialism".[g][74] In his doctoral dissertation, W. W. Dharmowijono notes that the attack has figured heavily in Dutch literature, early examples of which include a poem by Willem van Haren that condemned the massacre (dating from 1742) and an anonymous poem, from the same period, critical of the Chinese.[75] Raffles wrote in 1830 that Dutch historical records are "far from complete or satisfactory".[76]

Dutch historian Leonard Blussé writes that the massacre indirectly led to the rapid expansion of Batavia, and institutionalised a modus vivendi that led to a dichotomy between the ethnic Chinese and other groups, which could still be felt in the late 20th century.[77] The massacre may also have been a factor in the naming of numerous areas in Jakarta. One possible etymology for the name of the Tanah Abang district (meaning "red earth") is that it was named for the Chinese blood spilled there; van Hoëvell suggests that the naming was a compromise to make the Chinese survivors accept amnesty more quickly.[78][79] The name Rawa Bangke, for a subdistrict of East Jakarta, may be derived from the colloquial Indonesian word for corpse, bangkai, due to the great number of ethnic Chinese killed there; a similar etymology has been suggested for Angke in Tambora.[78]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In Vermeulen, Johannes Theodorus (1938). De Chineezen te Batavia en de troebelen van 1740 [The Chinese of Batavia and the Troubles of 1740] (in Dutch). Leiden: Proefschrift.[7]
  2. ^ For example, the minor post of Qual, located near the Tangerang River and staffed by 15 soldiers, was surrounded by at least five hundred Chinese.[27]
  3. ^ Kong is noted as surviving both the assault and the massacre. How he did so is not known; there is speculation that he had a secret cellar under his house or that he dressed in women's clothing and hid inside the governor's castle.[28] W. R. van Hoëvell suggested that Kong gathered several hundred people after escaping the castle and hid in a Portuguese church near the Chinese quarters.[29] He was later captured and accused of leading the uprising by the Dutch but, despite being tortured, did not confess.[28]
  4. ^ Original: "... Zwangere vrouwen, zoogende moeders , argelooze kinderen, bevende grijsaards worden door het zwaard geveld. Den weerloozen gevangenen wordt als schapen de keel afgesneden".
  5. ^ Original: "... vele ongeregelde en slechte elementen ..."
  6. ^ Sources spell his name alternatively as Khe Pandjang, Que Pandjang, Si Pandjang, or Sie Pan Djiang.[32][40][41] Setiono suggests that his actual name may have been Oie Panko.[41]
  7. ^ Original: "... markante feiten uit onze 18e-eeuwse koloniale geschiedenis tot onderwerp genomen".

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Lee, Khoon Choy (2 June 1999). Fragile Nation, A: The Indonesian Crisis. World Scientific. ISBN 9789814494526 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Tan 2005, p. 796.
  3. ^ a b Ricklefs 2001, p. 121.
  4. ^ a b c d Armstrong, Armstrong & Mulliner 2001, p. 32.
  5. ^ a b c Dharmowijono 2009, p. 297.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Setiono 2008, pp. 111–113.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Dharmowijono 2009, p. 298.
  8. ^ a b Paasman 1999, pp. 325–326.
  9. ^ a b Hall 1981, p. 357.
  10. ^ a b c d Pan 1994, pp. 35–36.
  11. ^ a b Dharmowijono 2009, p. 302.
  12. ^ a b Raffles 1830, p. 234.
  13. ^ Raffles 1830, pp. 233–235.
  14. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 461–462.
  15. ^ a b c Kumar 1997, p. 32.
  16. ^ a b Dobbin 1996, pp. 53–55.
  17. ^ Mazumdar 1998, p. 89.
  18. ^ Ward 2009, p. 98.
  19. ^ a b c Ota 2006, p. 133.
  20. ^ von Wachtel 1911, p. 200.
  21. ^ Dharmowijono 2009, pp. 297–298.
  22. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, p. 460.
  23. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica 2011, Gustaaf Willem.
  24. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 465–466.
  25. ^ a b van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 466–467.
  26. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, p. 468.
  27. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, p. 473.
  28. ^ a b Dharmowijono 2009, pp. 302–303.
  29. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, p. 585.
  30. ^ Pan 1994, p. 36.
  31. ^ a b Setiono 2008, p. 114.
  32. ^ a b c d Raffles 1830, p. 235.
  33. ^ Setiono 2008, pp. 114–116.
  34. ^ a b van Hoëvell 1840, p. 485.
  35. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, p. 486.
  36. ^ a b c Setiono 2008, p. 117.
  37. ^ a b Dharmowijono 2009, p. 299.
  38. ^ a b c Setiono 2008, pp. 118–119.
  39. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 489–491.
  40. ^ a b Dharmowijono 2009, p. 301.
  41. ^ a b Setiono 2008, p. 135.
  42. ^ a b c d e Dharmowijono 2009, p. 300.
  43. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 493–496.
  44. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 503–506.
  45. ^ a b van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 506–507.
  46. ^ Ricklefs 1983, p. 270.
  47. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 506–508.
  48. ^ a b Setiono 2008, p. 119.
  49. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, pp. 491–492.
  50. ^ Kemasang 1982, p. 68.
  51. ^ Setiono 2008, p. 121.
  52. ^ a b Kemasang 1981, p. 137.
  53. ^ Setiono 2008, pp. 120–121.
  54. ^ Setiono 2008, p. 130.
  55. ^ Setiono 2008, pp. 135–137.
  56. ^ Geyl 1962, p. 339.
  57. ^ van Eck 1899, p. 160.
  58. ^ a b Blok & Molhuysen 1927, pp. 632–633.
  59. ^ Raat 2010, p. 81.
  60. ^ van Eck 1899, p. 161.
  61. ^ a b Setiono 2008, pp. 125–126.
  62. ^ a b Geyl 1962, p. 341.
  63. ^ Vanvugt 1985, p. 106.
  64. ^ Ricklefs 2001, p. 124.
  65. ^ Raat 2010, p. 82.
  66. ^ Stellwagen 1895, p. 227.
  67. ^ Blok & Molhuysen 1927, pp. 1220–1221.
  68. ^ Vanvugt 1985, pp. 92–95, 106–107.
  69. ^ a b Blok & Molhuysen 1927, p. 1220.
  70. ^ Terpstra 1939, p. 246.
  71. ^ Blok & Molhuysen 1927, p. 1221.
  72. ^ Bulbeck et al. 1998, p. 113.
  73. ^ Dobbin 1996, p. 49.
  74. ^ Terpstra 1939, p. 245.
  75. ^ Dharmowijono 2009, p. 304.
  76. ^ Raffles 1830, p. 231.
  77. ^ Blussé 1981, p. 96.
  78. ^ a b Setiono 2008, p. 115.
  79. ^ van Hoëvell 1840, p. 510.

Sources edit

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  • Tan, Mely G. (2005). "Ethnic Chinese in Indonesia". In Ember, Melvin; Ember, Carol R. & Skoggard, Ian (eds.). Encyclopedia of Diasporas: Immigrant and Refugee Cultures Around the World. New York: Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 795–807. ISBN 978-0-387-29904-4.
  • Terpstra, H. (1939). M. G. De Boer (ed.). "Rev. of Th. Vermeulen, De Chinezenmoord van 1740". Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis (in Dutch). Groningen: P. Noordhoff: 245–247. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  • Vanvugt, Ewald (1985). Wettig opium : 350 jaar Nederlandse opiumhandel in de Indische archipel [Legal Opium: 350 Years of Dutch Opium Trade in the Indonesian Archipelago] (in Dutch). Haarlem: In de Knipscheer. ISBN 978-90-6265-197-9.
  • von Wachtel, August (May 1911). "Development of the Sugar Industry". The American Sugar Industry and Beet Sugar Gazette. 13. Chicago: Beet Sugar Gazette Co: 200–203.
  • Ward, Katy (2009). Networks of Empire : Forced Migration in the Dutch East India Company. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-88586-7.
Online sources
  • "Gustaaf Willem, baron van Imhoff". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica. 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2011.

External links edit

  •   Media related to 1740 Batavia massacre at Wikimedia Commons

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1740, batavia, massacre, this, article, about, massacre, ethnic, chinese, colonial, city, batavia, earlier, massacre, ship, same, name, batavia, 1628, ship, dutch, chinezenmoord, murder, chinese, indonesian, geger, pacinan, chinatown, tumult, massacre, pogrom,. This article is about the massacre of ethnic Chinese in the colonial city of Batavia For an earlier massacre on a ship of the same name see Batavia 1628 ship The 1740 Batavia massacre Dutch Chinezenmoord lit Murder of the Chinese Indonesian Geger Pacinan lit Chinatown tumult was a massacre and pogrom in which European soldiers of the Dutch East India Company killed ethnic Chinese residents of the port city of Batavia Dutch East Indies present day Jakarta in the Dutch East Indies The violence in the city lasted from 9 October 1740 until 22 October with minor skirmishes outside the walls continuing late into November that year Historians have estimated that at least 10 000 ethnic Chinese were massacred just 600 to 3 000 are believed to have survived Batavia massacrePart of Anti Chinese sentiment in IndonesiaChinezenmoord Unknown authorDate9 October 22 November 1740LocationBataviaMethodsPogromResulted inSee AftermathPartiesDutch East India Company and allies Chinese IndonesiansLead figuresAdriaan Valckenier Dutch East India Company Nie Hoe KongCasualties and losses500 soldiers killed gt 10 000 killed gt 500 wounded1740 Batavia massacreTraditional Chinese紅溪慘案Simplified Chinese红溪惨案Literal meaningRed River tragedy massacre 1 TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHong Xi cǎn anIn September 1740 as unrest rose among the Chinese population spurred by government repression and declining sugar prices Governor General Adriaan Valckenier declared that any uprising would be met with deadly force On 7 October hundreds of ethnic Chinese many of them sugar mill workers killed 50 Dutch soldiers leading Dutch troops to confiscate all weapons from the Chinese populace and to place the Chinese under a curfew Two days later rumors of Chinese atrocities led other Batavian ethnic groups to burn Chinese houses along Besar River and Dutch soldiers to fire cannons at Chinese homes in revenge The violence soon spread throughout Batavia killing more Chinese Although Valckenier declared an amnesty on 11 October gangs of irregulars continued to hunt down and kill Chinese until 22 October when the governor general called more forcefully for a cessation of hostilities Outside the city walls clashes continued between Dutch troops and rioting sugar mill workers After several weeks of minor skirmishes Dutch led troops assaulted Chinese strongholds in sugar mills throughout the area The following year attacks on ethnic Chinese throughout Java sparked the two year Java War that pitted ethnic Chinese and Javanese forces against Dutch troops Valckenier was later recalled to the Netherlands and charged with crimes related to the massacre The massacre figures heavily in Dutch literature and is also cited as a possible etymology for the names of several areas in Jakarta Contents 1 Background 2 Incident 2 1 Massacre 2 2 Follow up and further violence 3 Aftermath 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksBackground edit nbsp Governor General Valckenier ordered the killings of ethnic Chinese During the early years of the Dutch colonisation of the East Indies modern day Indonesia many people of Chinese descent were contracted as skilled artisans in the construction of Batavia on the northwestern coast of Java 2 they also served as traders sugar mill workers and shopkeepers 3 The economic boom precipitated by trade between the East Indies and China via the port of Batavia increased Chinese immigration to Java The number of ethnic Chinese in Batavia grew rapidly reaching a total of 10 000 by 1740 Thousands more lived outside the city walls 4 The Dutch colonials required them to carry registration papers and deported those who did not comply to China 5 The deportation policy was tightened during the 1730s after an outbreak of malaria killed thousands including the Governor General of the Dutch East Indies Dirck van Cloon 5 6 According to Indonesian historian Benny G Setiono the outbreak was followed by increased suspicion and resentment in native Indonesians and the Dutch toward the ethnic Chinese who were growing in number and whose wealth was increasingly visible 6 As a result Commissioner of Native Affairs Roy Ferdinand under orders of Governor General Adriaan Valckenier decreed on 25 July 1740 that Chinese considered suspicious would be deported to Ceylon modern day Sri Lanka and forced to harvest cinnamon 6 7 8 9 Wealthy Chinese were extorted by corrupt Dutch officials who threatened them with deportation 6 10 11 Stamford Raffles an explorer administrator and historian of Java noted in 1830 that in some Javanese accounts the Dutch were told by the Dutch appointed Chinese headman of Batavia Nie Hoe Kong to deport all Chinese wearing black or blue because these were thought to be poor 12 There were also rumors that deportees were not taken to their destinations but were thrown overboard once out of sight of Java 4 10 and in some accounts they died when rioting on the ships 12 The deportation of ethnic Chinese caused unrest among the remaining Chinese leading many Chinese workers to desert their jobs 4 10 At the same time native occupants of Batavia including the ethnic Betawi servants became increasingly distrustful of the Chinese Economic factors played a role most natives were poor and perceived the Chinese as occupying some of the most prosperous neighbourhoods in the city 13 14 Although the Dutch historian A N Paasman notes that at the time the Chinese were the Jews of Asia 8 the actual situation was more complicated Many poor Chinese living in the area around Batavia were sugar mill workers who felt exploited by the Dutch and Chinese elites equally 15 Rich Chinese owned the mills and were involved in revenue farming and shipping they drew income from milling and the distillation of arak a molasses and rice based alcoholic beverage 15 16 However the Dutch overlords set the price for sugar which itself caused unrest 17 Because of the decline of worldwide sugar prices that began in the 1720s caused by an increase in exports to Europe and competition from the West Indies 18 19 the sugar industry in the East Indies had suffered considerably By 1740 worldwide sugar prices had dropped to half the price in 1720 As sugar was a major export this caused considerable financial difficulties for the colony 20 Initially some members of the Council of the Indies Raad van Indie believed that the Chinese would never attack Batavia 10 and stronger measures to control the Chinese were blocked by a faction led by Valckenier s political opponent the former governor of Zeylan Gustaaf Willem van Imhoff who returned to Batavia in 1738 21 22 23 Large numbers of Chinese arrived outside Batavia from nearby settlements however and on 26 September Valckenier called an emergency meeting of the council during which he gave orders to respond to any ethnic Chinese uprisings with deadly force 6 This policy continued to be opposed by van Imhoff s faction Vermeulen 1938 a suggested that the tension between the two colonial factions played a role in the ensuing massacre 7 On the evening of 1 October Valckenier received reports that a crowd of a thousand Chinese had gathered outside the gate angered by his statements at the emergency meeting five days earlier This report was received incredulously by Valckenier and the council 24 However after the murder of a Balinese sergeant by the Chinese outside the walls the council decided to take extraordinary measures and reinforce the guard 7 25 Two groups of 50 Europeans and some native porters were sent to outposts on the south and east sides of the city 26 and a plan of attack was formulated 7 25 Incident editMassacre edit nbsp Chinese houses were burned during the massacre After groups of Chinese sugar mill workers revolted using custom made weapons to loot and burn mills 15 hundreds of ethnic Chinese b suspected to have been led by Nie Hoe Kong c killed 50 Dutch soldiers in Meester Cornelis now Jatinegara and Tanah Abang on 7 October 6 11 In response the Dutch sent 1 800 regular troops accompanied by schutterij militia and eleven battalions of conscripts to stop the revolt they established a curfew and cancelled plans for a Chinese festival 6 Fearing that the Chinese would conspire against the colonials by candlelight those inside the city walls were forbidden to light candles and were forced to surrender everything down to the smallest kitchen knife 30 The following day the Dutch repelled an attack by up to 10 000 ethnic Chinese led by groups from nearby Tangerang and Bekasi at the city s outer walls 7 31 Raffles wrote that 1 789 Chinese died in this attack 32 In response Valckenier called another meeting of the council on 9 October 7 31 Meanwhile rumors spread among the other ethnic groups in Batavia including slaves from Bali and Sulawesi Bugis and Balinese troops that the Chinese were plotting to kill rape or enslave them 5 33 These groups pre emptively burned houses belonging to ethnic Chinese along the Besar River The Dutch followed this with an assault on Chinese settlements elsewhere in Batavia in which they burned houses and killed people The Dutch politician and critic of colonialism W R van Hoevell wrote that pregnant and nursing women children and trembling old men fell on the sword Defenseless prisoners were slaughtered like sheep d 34 Troops under Lieutenant Hermanus van Suchtelen and Captain Jan van Oosten a survivor from Tanah Abang took station in the Chinese district Suchtelen and his men positioned themselves at the poultry market while van Oosten s men held a post along the nearby canal 35 At around 5 00 p m the Dutch opened fire on Chinese occupied houses with cannon causing them to catch fire 9 36 Some Chinese died in the burning houses while others were shot upon leaving their homes or committed suicide in desperation Those who reached the canal near the housing district were killed by Dutch troops waiting in small boats 36 while other troops searched in between the rows of burning houses killing any survivors they found 34 These actions later spread throughout the city 36 Vermeulen notes that many of the perpetrators were sailors and other irregular and bad elements of society e 37 During this period there was heavy looting 37 and seizures of property 32 nbsp Chinese prisoners were executed by the Dutch on 10 October 1740 The following day the violence continued to spread and Chinese patients in a hospital were taken outside and killed 38 Attempts to extinguish fires in areas devastated the preceding day failed and the flames increased in vigour and continued until 12 October 39 Meanwhile a group of 800 Dutch soldiers and 2 000 natives assaulted Kampung Gading Melati where a group of Chinese survivors were holding up under the leadership of Khe Pandjang f Although the Chinese evacuated to nearby Paninggaran they were later driven out of the area by Dutch forces There were approximately 450 Dutch and 800 Chinese casualties in the two attacks 32 Follow up and further violence edit On 11 October Valckenier unsuccessfully requested that officers control their troops and stop the looting 42 Two days later the council established a reward of two ducats for every Chinese head surrendered to the soldiers as an incentive for the other ethnic groups to assist in the purge 42 As a result ethnic Chinese who had survived the initial assault were hunted by gangs of irregulars who killed those Chinese they found for the reward 38 The Dutch worked with natives in different parts of Batavia ethnic Bugis and Balinese grenadiers were sent to reinforce the Dutch on 14 October 42 On 22 October Valckenier called for all killings to cease 38 In a lengthy letter in which he blamed the unrest entirely on the Chinese rebels Valckenier offered an amnesty to all Chinese except for the leaders of the unrest on whose heads he placed a bounty of up to 500 rijksdaalders 43 Outside the walls skirmishes between the Chinese rebels and the Dutch continued On October 25 after almost two weeks of minor skirmishes 500 armed Chinese approached Cadouwang now Angke but were repelled by cavalry under the command of Ridmeester Christoffel Moll and Cornets Daniel Chits and Pieter Donker The following day the cavalry which consisted of 1 594 Dutch and native forces marched on the rebel stronghold at the Salapadjang sugar mill first gathered in the nearby woods and then set the mill on fire while the rebels were inside another mill at Boedjong Renje was taken in the same manner by another group 44 Fearful of the oncoming Dutch the Chinese retreated to a sugar mill in Kampung Melayu four hours from Salapadjang this stronghold fell to troops under Captain Jan George Crummel After defeating the Chinese and retaking Qual the Dutch returned to Batavia 45 Meanwhile the fleeing Chinese who were blocked to the west by 3 000 troops from the Sultanate of Banten headed east along the north coast of Java 46 by 30 October it was reported that the Chinese had reached Tangerang 45 A ceasefire order reached Crummel on 2 November upon which he and his men returned to Batavia after stationing a contingent of 50 men at Cadouwang When he arrived at noon there were no more Chinese inside Batavia s walls 47 On 8 November the Sultanate of Cirebon sent between 2 000 and 3 000 native troops to reinforce the city guard Looting continued until at least 28 November and the last native troops stood down at the end of that month 42 Aftermath edit nbsp Van Imhoff and two fellow councilmen were arrested for insubordination after going against Valckenier Most accounts of the massacre estimate that 10 000 Chinese were killed within Batavia s city walls while at least another 500 were seriously wounded Between 600 and 700 Chinese owned houses were raided and burned 48 49 Vermeulen gives a figure of 600 survivors 42 while the Indonesian scholar A R T Kemasang estimates that 3 000 Chinese survived 50 The Indonesian historian Benny G Setiono notes that 500 prisoners and hospital patients were killed 48 and a total of 3 431 people survived 51 The massacre was followed by an open season 52 against the ethnic Chinese throughout Java causing another massacre in 1741 in Semarang and others later in Surabaya and Gresik 52 As part of conditions for the cessation of violence all of Batavia s ethnic Chinese were moved to a pecinan or Chinatown outside of the city walls now known as Glodok This allowed the Dutch to monitor the Chinese more easily 53 To leave the pecinan ethnic Chinese required special passes 54 By 1743 however ethnic Chinese had already returned to inner Batavia several hundred merchants operated there 4 Other ethnic Chinese led by Khe Pandjang 40 fled to Central Java where they attacked Dutch trading posts and were later joined by troops under the command of the Javanese sultan of Mataram Pakubuwono II Though this further uprising was quashed in 1743 55 conflicts in Java continued almost without interruption for the next 17 years 3 On 6 December 1740 van Imhoff and two fellow councillors were arrested on the orders of Valckenier for insubordination and on 13 January 1741 they were sent to the Netherlands on separate ships 56 57 they arrived on 19 September 1741 In the Netherlands van Imhoff convinced the council that Valckenier was to blame for the massacre and delivered an extensive speech entitled Consideratien over den tegenwoordigen staat van de Ned O I Comp Considerations on the Current Condition of the Dutch East Indies Company on November 24 58 59 As a result of the speech the charges against him and the other councillors were dismissed 60 On 27 October 1742 van Imhoff was sent back to Batavia on the Hersteller as the new governor general of the East Indies with high expectations from the Lords XVII the leadership of the Dutch East India Company He arrived in the Indies on 26 May 1743 58 61 62 nbsp Van Imhoff was sent to the Netherlands but later assigned as the new governor general of the Dutch East Indies Valckenier had asked to be replaced late in 1740 and in February 1741 had received a reply instructing him to appoint van Imhoff as his successor 63 an alternative account indicates that the Lords XVII informed him that he was to be replaced by van Imhoff as punishment for exporting too much sugar and too little coffee in 1739 and thus causing large financial losses 64 65 By the time Valckenier received the reply van Imhoff was already on his way back to the Netherlands Valckenier left the Indies on 6 November 1741 after appointing a temporary successor Johannes Thedens Taking command of a fleet Valckenier headed for the Netherlands On 25 January 1742 he arrived in Cape Town but was detained and investigated by governor Hendrik Swellengrebel by order of the Lords XVII In August 1742 Valckenier was sent back to Batavia where he was imprisoned in Fort Batavia and three months later tried on several charges including his involvement in the massacre 66 In March 1744 he was convicted and condemned to death and all his belongings were confiscated 67 In December 1744 the trial was reopened when Valckenier gave a lengthy statement to defend himself 62 68 69 Valckenier asked for more evidence from the Netherlands but died in his prison cell on 20 June 1751 before the investigation was completed The death penalty was rescinded posthumously in 1755 61 69 Vermeulen characterises the investigation as unfair and fuelled by popular outrage in the Netherlands 70 and arguably this was officially recognised because in 1760 Valckenier s son Adriaan Isaak Valckenier received reparations totalling 725 000 gulden 71 Sugar production in the area suffered greatly after the massacre as many of the Chinese who had run the industry had been killed or were missing It began to recover after the new governor general van Imhoff colonised Tangerang He initially intended for men to come from the Netherlands and work the land he considered those already settled in the Indies to be lazy However he was unable to attract new settlers because of high taxes and thus sold the land to those already in Batavia As he had expected the new land owners were unwilling to soil their hands and quickly rented out the land to ethnic Chinese 19 Production rose steadily after this but took until the 1760s to reach pre 1740 levels after which it again diminished 19 72 The number of mills also declined In 1710 there had been 131 but by 1750 the number had fallen to 66 16 After the 1740 massacre it became apparent over the ensuing decades through a series of considerations that Batavia needed Chinese people for a long list of trades Considerable Chinese economic expansion occurred in the late eighteenth century and by 1814 there were 11 854 Chinese people within the total of 47 217 inhabitants 73 Legacy editVermeulen described the massacre as one of the most striking events in 18th century Dutch colonialism g 74 In his doctoral dissertation W W Dharmowijono notes that the attack has figured heavily in Dutch literature early examples of which include a poem by Willem van Haren that condemned the massacre dating from 1742 and an anonymous poem from the same period critical of the Chinese 75 Raffles wrote in 1830 that Dutch historical records are far from complete or satisfactory 76 Dutch historian Leonard Blusse writes that the massacre indirectly led to the rapid expansion of Batavia and institutionalised a modus vivendi that led to a dichotomy between the ethnic Chinese and other groups which could still be felt in the late 20th century 77 The massacre may also have been a factor in the naming of numerous areas in Jakarta One possible etymology for the name of the Tanah Abang district meaning red earth is that it was named for the Chinese blood spilled there van Hoevell suggests that the naming was a compromise to make the Chinese survivors accept amnesty more quickly 78 79 The name Rawa Bangke for a subdistrict of East Jakarta may be derived from the colloquial Indonesian word for corpse bangkai due to the great number of ethnic Chinese killed there a similar etymology has been suggested for Angke in Tambora 78 See also edit nbsp Indonesia portalChinese Indonesians Chinese Indonesian surname Legislation on Chinese Indonesians Discrimination against Chinese Indonesians 1918 Kudus riot Nanjing Massacre Mergosono massacre Indonesian mass killings of 1965 66 Banjarmasin riot of May 1997 May 1998 riots of Indonesia riots in which many ethnic Chinese were targeted for violenceNotes edit In Vermeulen Johannes Theodorus 1938 De Chineezen te Batavia en de troebelen van 1740 The Chinese of Batavia and the Troubles of 1740 in Dutch Leiden Proefschrift 7 For example the minor post of Qual located near the Tangerang River and staffed by 15 soldiers was surrounded by at least five hundred Chinese 27 Kong is noted as surviving both the assault and the massacre How he did so is not known there is speculation that he had a secret cellar under his house or that he dressed in women s clothing and hid inside the governor s castle 28 W R van Hoevell suggested that Kong gathered several hundred people after escaping the castle and hid in a Portuguese church near the Chinese quarters 29 He was later captured and accused of leading the uprising by the Dutch but despite being tortured did not confess 28 Original Zwangere vrouwen zoogende moeders argelooze kinderen bevende grijsaards worden door het zwaard geveld Den weerloozen gevangenen wordt als schapen de keel afgesneden Original vele ongeregelde en slechte elementen Sources spell his name alternatively as Khe Pandjang Que Pandjang Si Pandjang or Sie Pan Djiang 32 40 41 Setiono suggests that his actual name may have been Oie Panko 41 Original markante feiten uit onze 18e eeuwse koloniale geschiedenis tot onderwerp genomen References editCitations edit Lee Khoon Choy 2 June 1999 Fragile Nation A The Indonesian Crisis World Scientific ISBN 9789814494526 via Google Books Tan 2005 p 796 a b Ricklefs 2001 p 121 a b c d Armstrong Armstrong amp Mulliner 2001 p 32 a b c Dharmowijono 2009 p 297 a b c d e f g Setiono 2008 pp 111 113 a b c d e f g Dharmowijono 2009 p 298 a b Paasman 1999 pp 325 326 a b Hall 1981 p 357 a b c d Pan 1994 pp 35 36 a b Dharmowijono 2009 p 302 a b Raffles 1830 p 234 Raffles 1830 pp 233 235 van Hoevell 1840 pp 461 462 a b c Kumar 1997 p 32 a b Dobbin 1996 pp 53 55 Mazumdar 1998 p 89 Ward 2009 p 98 a b c Ota 2006 p 133 von Wachtel 1911 p 200 Dharmowijono 2009 pp 297 298 van Hoevell 1840 p 460 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2011 Gustaaf Willem van Hoevell 1840 pp 465 466 a b van Hoevell 1840 pp 466 467 van Hoevell 1840 p 468 van Hoevell 1840 p 473 a b Dharmowijono 2009 pp 302 303 van Hoevell 1840 p 585 Pan 1994 p 36 a b Setiono 2008 p 114 a b c d Raffles 1830 p 235 Setiono 2008 pp 114 116 a b van Hoevell 1840 p 485 van Hoevell 1840 p 486 a b c Setiono 2008 p 117 a b Dharmowijono 2009 p 299 a b c Setiono 2008 pp 118 119 van Hoevell 1840 pp 489 491 a b Dharmowijono 2009 p 301 a b Setiono 2008 p 135 a b c d e Dharmowijono 2009 p 300 van Hoevell 1840 pp 493 496 van Hoevell 1840 pp 503 506 a b van Hoevell 1840 pp 506 507 Ricklefs 1983 p 270 van Hoevell 1840 pp 506 508 a b Setiono 2008 p 119 van Hoevell 1840 pp 491 492 Kemasang 1982 p 68 Setiono 2008 p 121 a b Kemasang 1981 p 137 Setiono 2008 pp 120 121 Setiono 2008 p 130 Setiono 2008 pp 135 137 Geyl 1962 p 339 van Eck 1899 p 160 a b Blok amp Molhuysen 1927 pp 632 633 Raat 2010 p 81 van Eck 1899 p 161 a b Setiono 2008 pp 125 126 a b Geyl 1962 p 341 Vanvugt 1985 p 106 Ricklefs 2001 p 124 Raat 2010 p 82 Stellwagen 1895 p 227 Blok amp Molhuysen 1927 pp 1220 1221 Vanvugt 1985 pp 92 95 106 107 a b Blok amp Molhuysen 1927 p 1220 Terpstra 1939 p 246 Blok amp Molhuysen 1927 p 1221 Bulbeck et al 1998 p 113 Dobbin 1996 p 49 Terpstra 1939 p 245 Dharmowijono 2009 p 304 Raffles 1830 p 231 Blusse 1981 p 96 a b Setiono 2008 p 115 van Hoevell 1840 p 510 Sources edit Works citedArmstrong M Jocelyn Armstrong R Warwick Mulliner K 2001 Chinese Populations in Contemporary Southeast Asian Societies Identities Interdependence and International Influence Richmond Curzon ISBN 978 0 7007 1398 1 Blok Petrus Johannes Molhuysen Philip Christiaan eds 1927 Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek New Dutch Biographical Dictionary in Dutch 7th ed Leiden A W Sijthoff OCLC 309920700 Blusse Leonard 1981 Batavia 1619 1740 The Rise and Fall of a Chinese Colonial Town Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 12 1 Singapore Cambridge University Press 159 178 doi 10 1017 S0022463400005051 ISSN 0022 4634 S2CID 162575909 Bulbeck David Reid Anthony Tan Lay Cheng Wu Yiqi 1998 Southeast Asian Exports since the 14th century Cloves Pepper Coffee and Sugar Leiden KITLV Press ISBN 978 981 3055 67 4 Dharmowijono W W 2009 Van koelies klontongs en kapiteins het beeld van de Chinezen in Indisch Nederlands literair proza 1880 1950 Of Coolies Klontong and Captains The Image of the Chinese in Indonesian Dutch Literature 1880 1950 Doctorate in Humanities thesis in Dutch Amsterdam Universiteit van Amsterdaam Retrieved 1 December 2011 Dobbin Christine 1996 Asian Entrepreneurial Minorities Conjoint Communities in the Making of the World Economy 1570 1940 Richmond Curzon ISBN 978 0 7007 0404 0 van Eck Rutger 1899 Luctor et emergo of de Geschiedenis der Nederlanders in den Oost Indischen Archipel Luctor et emergo or the History of the Dutch in the East Indies in Dutch Zwolle Tjeenk Willink OCLC 67507521 Geyl P 1962 Geschiedenis van de Nederlandse Stam History of Dutch Masters in Dutch Vol 4 Amsterdam Wereldbibliotheek ISBN 978 981 3055 67 4 OCLC 769104246 Hall Daniel George Edward 1981 A history of South East Asia 4th illustrated ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 24163 9 van Hoevell Wolter Robert 1840 Batavia in 1740 Tijdschrift voor Nederlands Indie in Dutch 3 1 Batavia 447 557 Kemasang A R T 1981 Overseas Chinese in Java and Their Liquidation in 1740 Southeast Asian Studies 19 Singapore Cambridge University Press 123 146 OCLC 681919230 Kemasang A R T 1982 The 1740 Massacre of Chinese in Java Curtain Raiser for the Dutch Plantation Economy Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars 14 Cambridge Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars 61 71 doi 10 1080 14672715 1982 10412638 ISSN 0007 4810 Kumar Ann 1997 Java and Modern Europe Ambiguous Encounters Surrey Curzon ISBN 978 0 7007 0433 0 Paasman A N 1999 Een klein aardrijkje op zichzelf de multiculturele samenleving en de etnische literatuur A Small Discussion of Multicultural Societies and Ethnic Literature Literatuur in Dutch 16 Utrecht 324 334 Retrieved 4 December 2011 Pan Lynn 1994 Sons of the Yellow Emperor A History of the Chinese Diaspora New York Kodansha Globe ISBN 978 1 56836 032 4 Mazumdar Sucheta 1998 Sugar and Society in China Peasants Technology and the World Market Cambridge Harvard University Asia Center ISBN 978 0 674 85408 6 Ota Atsushi 2006 Changes of Regime and Social Dynamics in West Java Society State and the outer world of Banten 1750 1830 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15091 1 Raat Alexander 2010 The Life of Governor Joan Gideon Loten 1710 1789 A Personal History of a Dutch Virtuoso Hilversum Verloren ISBN 978 90 8704 151 9 Raffles Thomas Stamford 1830 1817 The History of Java Vol 2 London Black OCLC 312809187 Ricklefs Merle Calvin 1983 The crisis of 1740 1 in Java the Javanese Chinese Madurese and Dutch and the Fall of the Court of Kartasura Bijdragen tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde 139 2 3 The Hague 268 290 doi 10 1163 22134379 90003445 ISSN 0006 2294 Archived from the original on 18 October 2017 Retrieved 4 December 2011 Ricklefs Merle Calvin 2001 A History of Modern Indonesia since c 1200 3rd ed Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4479 9 Setiono Benny G 2008 Tionghoa dalam Pusaran Politik Indonesia s Chinese Community under Political Turmoil in Indonesian Jakarta TransMedia Pustaka ISBN 978 979 96887 4 3 Stellwagen A W 1895 Valckenier en Van Imhoff Valckenier and Van Imhoff Elsevier s Geillustreerd Maandschrift in Dutch 5 1 Amsterdam 209 233 ISSN 1875 9645 OCLC 781596392 Tan Mely G 2005 Ethnic Chinese in Indonesia In Ember Melvin Ember Carol R amp Skoggard Ian eds Encyclopedia of Diasporas Immigrant and Refugee Cultures Around the World New York Springer Science Business Media pp 795 807 ISBN 978 0 387 29904 4 Terpstra H 1939 M G De Boer ed Rev of Th Vermeulen De Chinezenmoord van 1740 Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis in Dutch Groningen P Noordhoff 245 247 Retrieved 2 December 2011 Vanvugt Ewald 1985 Wettig opium 350 jaar Nederlandse opiumhandel in de Indische archipel Legal Opium 350 Years of Dutch Opium Trade in the Indonesian Archipelago in Dutch Haarlem In de Knipscheer ISBN 978 90 6265 197 9 von Wachtel August May 1911 Development of the Sugar Industry The American Sugar Industry and Beet Sugar Gazette 13 Chicago Beet Sugar Gazette Co 200 203 Ward Katy 2009 Networks of Empire Forced Migration in the Dutch East India Company New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88586 7 Online sources Gustaaf Willem baron van Imhoff Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica 2011 Retrieved 26 October 2011 External links edit nbsp Media related to 1740 Batavia massacre at Wikimedia Commons 6 7 51 S 106 47 57 E 6 13083 S 106 79917 E 6 13083 106 79917 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1740 Batavia massacre amp oldid 1217728183, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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