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North Borneo

North Borneo (usually known as British North Borneo, also known as the State of North Borneo)[2] was a British protectorate in the northern part of the island of Borneo, which is present day Sabah. The territory of North Borneo was originally established by concessions of the Sultanates of Brunei and Sulu in 1877 and 1878 to a German-born representative of Austria-Hungary, a businessman and diplomat, Gustav Overbeck.

North Borneo
Borneo Utara
1877–1942
1945–1946
Badge
Motto: Latin: Pergo et Perago[1]
(I persevere and I achieve)[1]
Anthem: 
Map of North Borneo, 1903
StatusProtectorate of the United Kingdom
CapitalKudat (1881–1884);
Sandakan (1884–1945);
Jesselton (1946)
Common languagesEnglish, Kadazan-Dusun, Bajau, Murut, Sabah Malay, Chinese etc.
GovernmentChartered company, Protectorate
Governor 
• 1881–1887
William Hood Treacher (first)
• 1937–1946
Charles Robert Smith (last)
Historical eraNew Imperialism
• North Borneo Provisional Association Ltd
26 August 1881
• Granted royal charter
1 November 1881
May 1882
• Protectorate
12 May 1888
2 January 1942
10 June 1945
• Ceded to the Crown colony
15 July 1946
CurrencyNorth Borneo dollar
Today part ofMalaysia

Overbeck had recently purchased a small tract of land in the western coast of Borneo in 1876 from American merchant Joseph William Torrey, who had promoted the territory in Hong Kong since 1866. Overbeck then transferred all his rights to Alfred Dent before withdrawing in 1879. In 1881, Dent established the North Borneo Provisional Association Ltd to manage the territory, which was granted a royal charter in the same year. The following year, the Provisional Association was replaced by the North Borneo Chartered Company. The granting of a royal charter worried both the neighbouring Spanish and Dutch authorities; as a result, the Spanish began to stake their claim of northern Borneo. A protocol known as the Madrid Protocol was signed in 1885 to recognise Spanish presence in the Philippine archipelago, in return establishing the definite border of Spanish influence beyond northern Borneo. To avoid further claims from other European powers, North Borneo was made a British protectorate in 1888.

North Borneo produced timber for export; along with agriculture this industry remained the main economic resource for the British in Borneo. As the population was too small to effectively serve the economy, the British sponsored various migration schemes for Chinese workers from Hong Kong and China to work in the European plantations, and for Japanese immigrants to participate in the economic activities of North Borneo. The starting of World War II with the arrival of Japanese forces however brought an end to protectorate administration, with the territory placed under a military administration and then designated as a crown colony.

History

Foundation and early years

 
Alfred Dent, the founder of North Borneo Provisional Association Ltd (later replaced by the North Borneo Chartered Company) was the key player to the establishment of solid British presence in northern Borneo.

North Borneo was founded in 1877–1878 through a series of land concessions in northern Borneo from the Sultanate of Brunei and Sulu to an Austrian-German businessman and diplomat, Gustav Overbeck.[3][4][5] A former American Trading Company of Borneo territory in the western coast of northern Borneo had already passed to Overbeck,[6] requiring him to go to Brunei to renew the concession of the land he bought from Joseph William Torrey.[7][8][9] William Clark Cowie played an important role as a close friend of the Sultanate of Sulu in helping Overbeck to buy additional land in the eastern coast of Borneo.[10][11][12] Meanwhile, the Sultanate of Bulungan's influence also reached Tawau in eastern southern coast,[13] but came under the influence of the more dominating Sulu Sultanate.[14]

Following his success in leasing a large tract of lands from both the western and eastern parts of northern Borneo, Overbeck went to Europe to promote the territory in Austria-Hungary and Italy as well as in his own country of Germany, but none showed any real interest.[6][15] Only Great Britain, which had sought to control trade routes in the Far East since the 18th century, responded.[16][17][18] The interest of the British was strengthened by their presence in the Crown Colony of Labuan since 1846.[19][20][21] As a result, Overbeck received financial support from the British Dent brothers (Alfred Dent and Edward Dent) and diplomatic and military support from the British government.[5][17][22] Following the entrance of support from the British side, a clause was included in the treaties that the ceded territories could not be sold or given to another party without the permission of the British government.[3]

Unable to attract the interest of the governments of Austria, Italy and Germany, Overbeck withdrew in 1879; all his treaty rights with the Sultanates were transferred to Alfred Dent, who in 1881 formed the North Borneo Provisional Association Ltd with the support of countrymen Rutherford Alcock, Admiral Henry Keppel, Richard Biddulph Martin, Admiral Richard Mayne, and William Henry Read.[23][24][25] The Provisional Association then applied to Queen Victoria for a royal charter, which was granted on 1 November 1881.[6][26][27] William Hood Treacher was appointed as the first governor,[28] and Kudat at the northern tip of Borneo was chosen as the Provisional Association administration capital.[29][30] The granting of the royal charter had worried both the Dutch and the Spanish, who feared that Britain might threaten the position of their colonies.[31]

In May 1882, the Provisional Association was replaced by the newly formed North Borneo Chartered Company, with Alcock acting as the first President and Dent becoming the company managing director.[32] The administration is not considered as a British acquisition of the territory, but rather simply as a private enterprise with government guidelines to protect the territory from being encroached upon by other European powers.[33] Under Governor Treacher, the company gained more territories on the western coast from the Sultanate of Brunei.[34] The company subsequently acquired further sovereign and territorial rights from the sultan of Brunei, expanding the territory under control to the Putatan river (May 1884), the Padas district (November 1884), the Kawang river (February 1885), the Mantanani Islands (April 1885) and additional minor Padas territories (March 1898).[note 1]

At the early stage of the administration, there was a claim in northern Borneo by the Spanish authorities in the Philippines, and an attempt to raise the Spanish flag over Sandakan was met with interference by a British warship.[18] To prevent further conflict and to end the Spanish claim to northern Borneo, in 1885 an agreement known as the Madrid Protocol was signed in Madrid between the United Kingdom, Germany and Spain, recognising the Spanish presence in the Philippine archipelago.[27][35] As the company did not wish to be involved in further foreign affairs issues,[31] North Borneo was made a British Protectorate on 12 May 1888.[36][37] In 1890, the Crown Colony of Labuan was incorporated into the administration of North Borneo, before returning to British government direct rule in 1904.[38] There were several local insurrections from 1894 to 1900 by Mat Salleh and by Antanum in 1915.[39] The First World War did not greatly affect the territory, and logging business grew during the interwar period.[40]

World War II and decline

 
Japanese military movement throughout the Malay Archipelago from 1941 to 1942

In World War II, the Japanese invasion of the island of Borneo started with the unopposed landing of the Japanese forces at Miri and Seria on 16 December 1941, with the objective of securing oil supplies.[41] On 1 January 1942, the Japanese navy landed unopposed in Labuan.[42] The next day, 2 January 1942, the Japanese landed at Mempakul on North Borneo territory. After negotiations with the Officers-in-charge of Jesselton as to its surrender, while they were waiting for troop reinforcements, Jesselton was occupied by the Japanese on 8 January. Another strong Japanese army detachment arrived from Mindanao and began to land on Tarakan Island, before proceeding to Sandakan on 17 January.[43] The Japanese arrival was met with no strong resistance, as the protectorate mainly relied on the Royal Navy for defence. Although North Borneo has a police force, it never had its own army or navy.[44] By the end of January, North Borneo was completely occupied by the Japanese.[45] It was administered as part of the Empire of Japan, with the officers of the chartered company being allowed to continued administration under Japanese supervision.[46]

The arrival of the Japanese forces to Borneo and the fall of Anglo-Japanese Alliance had already been predicted by revelation through secret telegrams that Japanese ships docked regularly at Jesselton were engaged in espionage.[47] Many of the British and Australian soldiers captured after the fall of Malaya and Singapore were brought to North Borneo and held as a prisoners of war (POWs) in Sandakan camp where they were then forced to march from Sandakan to Ranau.[48][49] Other POWs were also sent to Batu Lintang camp in neighbouring Sarawak. The occupation drove residents in the coastal areas to the interior in searching for food and escaping the brutality during the war period,[50] which led to the creation of several resistance movements; one of the such movement known as the Kinabalu Guerrillas which led by Albert Kwok and supported by indigenous groups in North Borneo.[51][52]

As part of the Allied Campaign to retake their possessions in the East, Allied forces deployed to Borneo under the Borneo Campaign to liberate the island. The Australian Imperial Force (AIF) played a significant part in the mission,[53] with the force being sent to Tarakan and Labuan islands to secure the east and western Borneo.[54] The Allied Z Special Unit provided intelligence gatherings and other information from the Japanese that could facilitated the AIF landings,[54] while US submarines were used to transport Australian commandos to Borneo.[55] Most of the major towns of North Borneo were heavily bombed during these period.[56] The war ended on 15 August 1945 following the Japanese surrender and the administration of North Borneo was undertaken by the British Military Administration (BMA) from September.[57] The company official administration returned to administer the territory but, unable to finance the reconstruction cost after the war, ceded administration of the protectorate to the crown colony government on 15 July 1946.[1][58][59]

Government

 
1899 photograph of the British administration building in Sandakan, capital of North Borneo from 1884 to 1945

The Chartered Company's system of administration was based on standard British colonial empire administration structures, with the land divided into Residencies, and sub-divided into Districts. Initially, there were only two Residencies: East Coast and West Coast, with Residents based at Sandakan and Jesselton respectively. Each Residency was divided into Provinces, later known as Districts, which were run by district officers. By 1922, there were five Residencies to accommodate new areas that were opened up for development. These were the West Coast, Kudat, Tawau, Interior and East Coast Residencies. These Residencies were in turn divided into 17 districts. Under this system, British held top posts, while native chiefs managed the people at grassroots level. This was not a conscious attempt by the British to instill indirect rule but a convenient arrangement for the district officers who were unfamiliar with local customs and politics.[citation needed]

The company administration established a foundation for economic growth in North Borneo by restoring peace to a land where piracy and tribal feuds had grown rampant. It abolished slavery and set up transport, health and education services for the people, and allowed indigenous communities to continue their traditional lifestyles.[60] The British North Borneo Constabulary, the territory's police force, in 1883 comprised 3 Europeans, 50 Indians (Punjabis and Pashtuns), 30 Dayaks, 50 Somalis and 20 Malays.[61] Constables trained at depot an average of three days per week.[62] In 1884 the force had a total of 176 members,[61] which increased to about 510 over three years.[62] While under the protectorate, international relations fell under the purview of the British government, internally North Borneo was governed by the North Borneo Chartered Company as an independent state with British protection.[2] The treaty signed on 12 May 1888 stipulated:

 
Agreement between the British Government and the British North Borneo Company for the establishment of a British Protectorate —Signed at London, 12 May 1888[2]


I. The State of North Borneo comprises the territories specified in the said Royal Charter, and such other territories as the Company have acquired, or may hereafter acquire, ‘under the provisions of Article XV of the said Charter.
It is divided into nine Provinces, namely:

Province Alcock;
Province Cunliffe;
Province Dent;
Province Dewhurst;
Province Elphinstone;
Province Keppel;
Province Martin;
Province Mayne;
Province Myburgh.

II. The State of North Borneo shall continue to be governed and administered as an independent State by the company in conformity with the provisions of the said Charter; under the protection of Great Britain; but such protection shall confer no right on Her Majesty's Government to interfere with the internal administration of the State further than is provided herein or by the Charter of the Company.
III. The relations between the State of North Borneo and all foreign States, including the States of Brunei and of Sarawak, shall be conducted by Her Majesty's Government, or in accordance with its directions; and if any difference should arise between the Government of North Borneo and that of any other State, the Company, as representing the State of North Borneo, agrees to abide by the decision of Her Majesty's Government, and to take all necessary to give effect thereto.
IV. Her Majesty's Government shall have the right to establish British Consular officers in any part of the said territories, who shall receive exequaturs in the name of the Government of North Borneo. They shall enjoy whatever privileges are usually granted to Consular officers, and they shall be entitled to hoist the British flag over their residences and public offices.
V. British subjects, commerce, and shipping shall enjoy the same right, privileges, and advantages as the subjects, commerce, and shipping of the most favoured nation, as well as any other rights, privileges, and advantages which may be enjoyed by the subjects, commerce and shipping of North Borneo.
VI. No cession or other alienation of any part of the territory of the State of North Borneo shall be made by its Government to any foreign State, or the subjects or the citizens thereof, without the consent of Her Majesty's Government; but this restriction shall not apply to ordinary grants or leases of lands or houses to private individuals for purposes of residence, agriculture, commerce, or other business.

Economy

 
The opening of the North Borneo Railway Line on 3 February 1898 to transport commodity in the west coast area

With the beginning of well-planned economic activities under British administration, the North Borneo authorities began to open land for agriculture, and native land rights began to be formed.[63][64] The government however felt that the native population was too small and unsuited to meet the requirements of modern development, so they began to sponsor various schemes for the migration of Chinese workers from Hong Kong and China.[65][66] In 1882, the North Borneo authorities appointed Walter Henry Medhurst as Commissioner for Chinese Immigration in the mission to attract more businessmen to invest in North Borneo by providing a workforce.[67] Medhurst's efforts were costly and unsuccessful; however, the Hakka, not part of the plan, began to migrate to North Borneo where they formed an agricultural community.[67]

 
Bond Street in Jesselton with Chinese shoplots, c. 1930
 
Tobacco estate in Lahad Datu, 1899

Since the 18th century, tobacco was North Borneo's foremost planting industry.[68] The logging history in North Borneo can be traced since the 1870s.[69] From 1890s, hardwood exports increased,[70] with logging expanding especially during the interwar period.[40] In the 1900s, North Borneo joined the rubber boom. The completion of North Borneo Railway Line helped to transport the resources to a major port on the west coast. By 1915, around 34,828 acres (14,094 ha) of land, in addition to Chinese and North Borneo smallholdings, had been planted with rubber tree.[67] In the same year, North Borneo Governor Aylmer Cavendish Pearson invited Japanese emigrants to participate in the economic activities there. The Japanese government received the request warmly and send researchers to discover potential economic opportunities.[71]

At the early stage, the Japanese encouraged their farmers to go to North Borneo to cultivate rice, as their country depended on rice imports. With increasing economic interest from the Japanese side, they purchased a rubber estate owned by the North Borneo government.[71] By 1937, North Borneo exported 178,000 cubic metres of timber, surpassing Siam, which exporting 85,000 cubic metres of timber.[70] Many of the privately owned Japanese estates and companies had been involved in the economic sectors of North Borneo since been invited by the British.[72] With the increasing numbers of Japanese investments, many Japanese also migrate with their family to the east coast of North Borneo, primarily to Tawau and Kunak.[73]

Currency

 
One North Borneo dollar, 1940

The original monetary unit of North Borneo was the Mexican dollar, equal to 100 cents. The dollar was later matched to the Straits dollar and rated at 9 Straits dollars (equal to 5 US dollars at the time).[74] Different notes were issued throughout the administration, with backgrounds featuring the Mount Kinabalu or the company arms.[75]

Society

 
Ethnic composition map of the natives of North Borneo and the neighbouring Raj of Sarawak, 1896
 
1911 specimen stamps of North Borneo

Demography

In 1881, 60,000 to 100,000 indigenous people lived in North Borneo.[65] The people on the coast were mainly Muslims, with the aborigines mostly located inland.[74] The Kadazan-Dusun and Murut were the largest indigenous group in the interior, while Bajau, Bruneian, Illanun, Kedayan and Suluk dominated the coastal areas.[76] Following various immigration schemes initiated by the British, the population increased to 200,000 in 1920,[77] 257,804 in 1930,[74] 285,000 in 1935,[62] and 331,000 in 1945.[78] Under company rule, the government of North Borneo not only recruited Chinese workers but also Japanese immigrants to overcome the shortage of manpower in the economic sectors.[79] From 1911 until 1951, the total of Chinese population increased from only 27,801 to 74,374 which is divided between Hakka (44,505), Cantonese (11,833), Hokkien (7,336), Teochew (3,948), some Hailam (Hainan) (3,571) and other Chinese groups (3,181).[80]

Public service infrastructure

North Borneo was connected to the Singapore-Hongkong submarine cable by a link from the island of Labuan to Menumbok. The first message from the Borneo mainland to London was sent on 19 May 1894. A few days later, the work on a telegraph line from the West Coast to Sandakan was started. It took three years and exacted a heavy toll in human life to push the line through the almost uninhabited interior territory, until on 7 April 1897 a congratulatory message from the Governor in Sandakan for transmission to the Court of Directors in London was successfully transmitted from Sandakan to Labuan. In the early 1910s the technical and financial problems with the telegraph line prompted the company to venture into the construction of a wireless network, based on the quench-spark system of the German Telefunken Company. The first stage of this network comprised stations in Sandakan, Jesselton, Tawau and Kudat. The first wireless communication was established on 24 October 1913 between British North Borneo and Jolo on the Philippine Islands. Inland communication was effected on 14 January 1914 between Sandakan and Jesselton.[81][page needed]

The North Borneo Railway opened to the public on 1 August 1914 as the main transportation facility for west coast communities.[82] Postal service was also available throughout the administration.[83]

Media

The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (since 1820) and British North Borneo Herald (since 1883) held a significant amount of records regarding North Borneo before and during the British administration.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ See Treaties and Engagements and Orders of Her Britannic Majesty in Council.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c Great Britain. Colonial Office 1956, p. 6.
  2. ^ a b c Great Britain. Foreign Office 1888, p. 238.
  3. ^ a b Pryer 2001, p. 11.
  4. ^ Wright 1988, p. 107.
  5. ^ a b Doolittle 2011, p. 32.
  6. ^ a b c Ooi 2004, p. 265.
  7. ^ Pryer 2001, p. 10.
  8. ^ Wright 1988, p. 143.
  9. ^ Saunders 2013, p. 87.
  10. ^ Press 2017, p. 61.
  11. ^ Great Britain. Colonial Office 1958, p. 164.
  12. ^ Kratoska 2001, p. 282.
  13. ^ Trost 1998, p. 234.
  14. ^ Magenda 2010, p. 42.
  15. ^ Press 2017, p. 150.
  16. ^ Fry 2013, p. 15.
  17. ^ a b Fitzgerald 2016, p. 70.
  18. ^ a b Barbara Watson & Leonard Y 2016, p. 193.
  19. ^ Hong Kong Daily Press Office 1912, p. 1504.
  20. ^ Webster 1998, p. 130.
  21. ^ McCord & Purdue 2007, p. 220.
  22. ^ Webster 1998, p. 200.
  23. ^ British North Borneo Chartered Company 1886, p. 113.
  24. ^ Hilton & Tate 1966, p. 82.
  25. ^ de Vienne 2015, p. 85.
  26. ^ Doolittle 2011, p. 173.
  27. ^ a b Olson 1991, p. 92.
  28. ^ Tregonning 1965, p. 13.
  29. ^ Great Britain. Colonial Office 1958, p. 172.
  30. ^ Yong 1965, p. 25.
  31. ^ a b Olson & Shadle 1996, p. 192.
  32. ^ Welman 2017, p. 163.
  33. ^ Pryer 2001, p. 12.
  34. ^ Wright 1988, p. 185.
  35. ^ Chamber's 1950, p. 448.
  36. ^ Dahlhoff 2012, p. 1133.
  37. ^ Panton 2015, p. 90.
  38. ^ Olson & Shadle 1996, p. 645.
  39. ^ Welman 2017, p. 153.
  40. ^ a b Jones 2013, p. 12.
  41. ^ War Intelligence Telegram UK High Commissioner Australia to Dominions Office, 2 January 1942; CO 968/9/6, p. 95.
  42. ^ Tregonning 1967, p. 216.
  43. ^ Rottman 2002, p. 206.
  44. ^ Tregonning 1960, p. 14.
  45. ^ Lines 1991, p. 193.
  46. ^ Evans 2012, p. 16.
  47. ^ Saya & Takashi 1993, p. 54.
  48. ^ Bickersteth & Hinton 1996, p. 19.
  49. ^ Braithwaite 2016, p. 347.
  50. ^ Lim 2008, p. 36.
  51. ^ Evans 1990, p. 50.
  52. ^ Kratoska 2013, p. 124.
  53. ^ Ooi 2010, p. 201.
  54. ^ a b Heimann 1998, p. 174.
  55. ^ Feuer 2005, p. 27.
  56. ^ Ooi 2013, p. 77.
  57. ^ Ooi 2010, p. 208.
  58. ^ Oxford Business 2011, p. 13.
  59. ^ Welman 2017, p. 159.
  60. ^ Skutsch 2013, p. 679.
  61. ^ a b Adams 1929, p. 310.
  62. ^ a b c Northwestern University 1935, p. 28.
  63. ^ Cleary 1992, p. 170.
  64. ^ Colchester 2011, p. 87.
  65. ^ a b Danny 1999, p. 134.
  66. ^ Wordie 2016.
  67. ^ a b c Tarling 2003, p. 215.
  68. ^ John & Jackson 1973, p. 88.
  69. ^ Ibbotson 2014, p. 116.
  70. ^ a b Dixon 1991, p. 107.
  71. ^ a b Akashi & Yoshimura 2008, p. 23.
  72. ^ Robertson 1979, p. 64.
  73. ^ Sabah Museum and State Archives Department 1986, p. 16–22.
  74. ^ a b c Lane 2010, p. 51.
  75. ^ Judkins 2016, p. 149.
  76. ^ Herb & Kaplan 2008, p. 1215.
  77. ^ Hose, McDougall & Haddon 1912, p. 28.
  78. ^ Vinogradov 1980, p. 73.
  79. ^ Jude 2016.
  80. ^ 林開忠 2013, p. 67.
  81. ^ Aranas 2018.
  82. ^ Lajiun 2017.
  83. ^ Armstrong 1920, p. 32.

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  • Doolittle, Amity A. (2011). Property and Politics in Sabah, Malaysia: Native Struggles Over Land Rights. University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-80116-2.
  • Colchester, Marcus (2011). Divers Paths to Justice: Legal Pluralism and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Southeast Asia. Forest Peoples Programme. ISBN 978-616-90611-7-5.
  • Oxford Business (2011). The Report: Sabah. Oxford Business Group. ISBN 978-1-907065-36-1.
  • Dahlhoff, Guenther (2012). Bibliographic Set (2 Vol Set). International Court of Justice, Digest of Judgments and Advisory Opinions, Canon and Case Law 1946 - 2011. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 978-90-04-23062-0.
  • Evans, I. H. N. (2012). The Religion of the Tempasuk Dusuns of North Borneo. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-64603-2.
  • Skutsch, Carl (2013). Encyclopedia of the World's Minorities. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-19388-1.
  • Jones, Geoffrey G (2013). The Multinational Traders. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-68001-6.
  • Saunders, Graham (2013). A History of Brunei. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-87394-2.
  • Fry, Howard T. (2013). Alexander Dalrymple and the Expansion of British Trade. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-136-60694-6.
  • Ooi, Keat Gin (2013). Post-war Borneo, 1945-50: Nationalism, Empire and State-Building. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-05803-7.
  • 林開忠 (2013). 客居他鄉-東南亞客家族群的生活與文化 [Living in a hometown - the life and culture of the Southeast Asian Hakka family]. 客家委員會客家文化發展中心 [Hakka Committee, Hakka Cultural Development Centre]. ISBN 978-986-03-7668-5.
  • Kratoska, Paul H. (2013). Southeast Asian Minorities in the Wartime Japanese Empire. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-12506-5.
  • Ibbotson, Ross (2014). "The History of Logging in North Borneo". 87 (2): 116–118. doi:10.1353/ras.2014.0011. S2CID 160334993. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Panton, Kenneth J. (2015). Historical Dictionary of the British Empire. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8108-7524-1.
  • de Vienne, Marie-Sybille (2015). Brunei: From the Age of Commerce to the 21st Century. NUS Press. ISBN 978-9971-69-818-8.
  • Barbara Watson, Andaya; Leonard Y, Andaya (2016). A History of Malaysia. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-60515-3.
  • Judkins, Maggie (2016). Standard Catalog of World Paper Money, General Issues, 1368-1960. F+W Media, Inc. ISBN 978-1-4402-4707-1.
  • Jude, Marcel (2016). "Japanese community in North Borneo long before World War II". The Borneo Post. PressReader.
  • Epstein, Mortimer (2016). The Statesman's Year-Book: Statistical and Historical Annual of the States of the World for the Year 1943. Springer. ISBN 978-0-230-27072-5.
  • Braithwaite, Richard Wallace (2016). Fighting Monsters: An Intimate History of the Sandakan Tragedy. Australian Scholarly Publishing. ISBN 978-1-925333-76-3.
  • Fitzgerald, Robert (2016). The Rise of the Global Company: Multinationals and the Making of the Modern World. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-84974-6.
  • Wordie, Jason (2016). . South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 31 July 2017.
  • Welman, Frans (2017). Borneo Trilogy Volume 1: Sabah. Booksmango. ISBN 978-616-245-078-5.
  • Lajiun, Jenne (2017). . The Borneo Post. Archived from the original on 19 July 2017.
  • Press, Steven (2017). Rogue Empires: Contracts and Conmen in Europe's Scramble for Africa. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-97185-1.
  • Aranas, Uwe (2018). The History of Wireless Telegraphy in British North Borneo. Department of Sabah Museum, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. ISBN 978-983-9638356.

Further reading

  • Keppel, Henry; Brooke, James; WalterKeating, Kelly (1847). "The expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the suppression of piracy : with extracts from the journal of James Brooke, Esq., of Sarawak". University of California Libraries. London : Chapman and Hall. p. 347.  
  • British North Borneo Chartered Company (1878). "British North Borneo company charter". Cornell University Library. [S.l. : s.n. p. 32.  
  • Daly, D. D. (1888). "Explorations in British North Borneo, 1883–87". Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society. Wiley on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers). 10 (1): 1–24. doi:10.2307/1801441. JSTOR 1801441.
  • Mayne, R. C. (1888). "Summary of Explorations in British North Borneo". Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society. Wiley on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers). 10 (3): 134–146. doi:10.2307/1800783. JSTOR 1800783.
  • Treacher, W. H (1891). "British Borneo: sketches of Brunai, Sarawak, Labuan, and North Borneo". University of California Libraries. Singapore, Govt. print. dept. p. 190.  
  • Roth, Henry Ling; Low, Hugh Brooke (1896). "The natives of Sarawak and British North Borneo; based chiefly on the mss. of the late H. B. Low, Sarawak government service". University of Michigan Library. London, Truslove & Hanson. p. 503.  
  • British North Borneo Chartered Company (1899). "Views of British North Borneo : with a brief history of the colony, compiled from official records and other sources of information of an authentic nature, with trade returns, &c., showing the progress and development of the chartered company's territory to the latest date ." Cornell University Library. London : Printed by W. Brown & Co., Ltd. p. 76.  
  • Rutter, Owen (1922). "British North Borneo : an account of its history, resources, and native tribes". Cornell University Library. London : Constable & Co. Ltd. p. 496.  

External links

  • North Borneo Historical Society – More information on heritage of North Borneo

north, borneo, this, article, about, former, british, protectorate, former, unsuccessful, proposed, country, federation, crown, colony, that, succeeded, protectorate, crown, colony, modern, indonesian, province, north, kalimantan, usually, known, british, also. This article is about a former British protectorate For a former unsuccessful proposed country see North Borneo Federation For the Crown colony that succeeded the protectorate of North Borneo see Crown Colony of North Borneo For the modern Indonesian province see North Kalimantan North Borneo usually known as British North Borneo also known as the State of North Borneo 2 was a British protectorate in the northern part of the island of Borneo which is present day Sabah The territory of North Borneo was originally established by concessions of the Sultanates of Brunei and Sulu in 1877 and 1878 to a German born representative of Austria Hungary a businessman and diplomat Gustav Overbeck North BorneoBorneo Utara1877 19421945 1946Flag BadgeMotto Latin Pergo et Perago 1 I persevere and I achieve 1 Anthem source source track track track track track track track track track track God Save the King QueenMap of North Borneo 1903StatusProtectorate of the United KingdomCapitalKudat 1881 1884 Sandakan 1884 1945 Jesselton 1946 Common languagesEnglish Kadazan Dusun Bajau Murut Sabah Malay Chinese etc GovernmentChartered company ProtectorateGovernor 1881 1887William Hood Treacher first 1937 1946Charles Robert Smith last Historical eraNew Imperialism North Borneo Provisional Association Ltd26 August 1881 Granted royal charter1 November 1881 North Borneo Chartered CompanyMay 1882 Protectorate12 May 1888 Japanese invasion2 January 1942 Allied liberation10 June 1945 Ceded to the Crown colony15 July 1946CurrencyNorth Borneo dollarPreceded by Succeeded byBruneian EmpireSultanate of SuluSultanate of BulunganCrown Colony of Labuan Japanese occupation of British BorneoBritish Military Administration Borneo Crown Colony of North BorneoToday part ofMalaysiaOverbeck had recently purchased a small tract of land in the western coast of Borneo in 1876 from American merchant Joseph William Torrey who had promoted the territory in Hong Kong since 1866 Overbeck then transferred all his rights to Alfred Dent before withdrawing in 1879 In 1881 Dent established the North Borneo Provisional Association Ltd to manage the territory which was granted a royal charter in the same year The following year the Provisional Association was replaced by the North Borneo Chartered Company The granting of a royal charter worried both the neighbouring Spanish and Dutch authorities as a result the Spanish began to stake their claim of northern Borneo A protocol known as the Madrid Protocol was signed in 1885 to recognise Spanish presence in the Philippine archipelago in return establishing the definite border of Spanish influence beyond northern Borneo To avoid further claims from other European powers North Borneo was made a British protectorate in 1888 North Borneo produced timber for export along with agriculture this industry remained the main economic resource for the British in Borneo As the population was too small to effectively serve the economy the British sponsored various migration schemes for Chinese workers from Hong Kong and China to work in the European plantations and for Japanese immigrants to participate in the economic activities of North Borneo The starting of World War II with the arrival of Japanese forces however brought an end to protectorate administration with the territory placed under a military administration and then designated as a crown colony Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation and early years 1 2 World War II and decline 2 Government 3 Economy 3 1 Currency 4 Society 4 1 Demography 4 2 Public service infrastructure 4 3 Media 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditFurther information History of Sabah Foundation and early years Edit Alfred Dent the founder of North Borneo Provisional Association Ltd later replaced by the North Borneo Chartered Company was the key player to the establishment of solid British presence in northern Borneo North Borneo was founded in 1877 1878 through a series of land concessions in northern Borneo from the Sultanate of Brunei and Sulu to an Austrian German businessman and diplomat Gustav Overbeck 3 4 5 A former American Trading Company of Borneo territory in the western coast of northern Borneo had already passed to Overbeck 6 requiring him to go to Brunei to renew the concession of the land he bought from Joseph William Torrey 7 8 9 William Clark Cowie played an important role as a close friend of the Sultanate of Sulu in helping Overbeck to buy additional land in the eastern coast of Borneo 10 11 12 Meanwhile the Sultanate of Bulungan s influence also reached Tawau in eastern southern coast 13 but came under the influence of the more dominating Sulu Sultanate 14 Following his success in leasing a large tract of lands from both the western and eastern parts of northern Borneo Overbeck went to Europe to promote the territory in Austria Hungary and Italy as well as in his own country of Germany but none showed any real interest 6 15 Only Great Britain which had sought to control trade routes in the Far East since the 18th century responded 16 17 18 The interest of the British was strengthened by their presence in the Crown Colony of Labuan since 1846 19 20 21 As a result Overbeck received financial support from the British Dent brothers Alfred Dent and Edward Dent and diplomatic and military support from the British government 5 17 22 Following the entrance of support from the British side a clause was included in the treaties that the ceded territories could not be sold or given to another party without the permission of the British government 3 Unable to attract the interest of the governments of Austria Italy and Germany Overbeck withdrew in 1879 all his treaty rights with the Sultanates were transferred to Alfred Dent who in 1881 formed the North Borneo Provisional Association Ltd with the support of countrymen Rutherford Alcock Admiral Henry Keppel Richard Biddulph Martin Admiral Richard Mayne and William Henry Read 23 24 25 The Provisional Association then applied to Queen Victoria for a royal charter which was granted on 1 November 1881 6 26 27 William Hood Treacher was appointed as the first governor 28 and Kudat at the northern tip of Borneo was chosen as the Provisional Association administration capital 29 30 The granting of the royal charter had worried both the Dutch and the Spanish who feared that Britain might threaten the position of their colonies 31 In May 1882 the Provisional Association was replaced by the newly formed North Borneo Chartered Company with Alcock acting as the first President and Dent becoming the company managing director 32 The administration is not considered as a British acquisition of the territory but rather simply as a private enterprise with government guidelines to protect the territory from being encroached upon by other European powers 33 Under Governor Treacher the company gained more territories on the western coast from the Sultanate of Brunei 34 The company subsequently acquired further sovereign and territorial rights from the sultan of Brunei expanding the territory under control to the Putatan river May 1884 the Padas district November 1884 the Kawang river February 1885 the Mantanani Islands April 1885 and additional minor Padas territories March 1898 note 1 At the early stage of the administration there was a claim in northern Borneo by the Spanish authorities in the Philippines and an attempt to raise the Spanish flag over Sandakan was met with interference by a British warship 18 To prevent further conflict and to end the Spanish claim to northern Borneo in 1885 an agreement known as the Madrid Protocol was signed in Madrid between the United Kingdom Germany and Spain recognising the Spanish presence in the Philippine archipelago 27 35 As the company did not wish to be involved in further foreign affairs issues 31 North Borneo was made a British Protectorate on 12 May 1888 36 37 In 1890 the Crown Colony of Labuan was incorporated into the administration of North Borneo before returning to British government direct rule in 1904 38 There were several local insurrections from 1894 to 1900 by Mat Salleh and by Antanum in 1915 39 The First World War did not greatly affect the territory and logging business grew during the interwar period 40 World War II and decline Edit Main articles Battle of Borneo 1941 42 Japanese occupation of British Borneo and Battle of North Borneo Japanese military movement throughout the Malay Archipelago from 1941 to 1942 In World War II the Japanese invasion of the island of Borneo started with the unopposed landing of the Japanese forces at Miri and Seria on 16 December 1941 with the objective of securing oil supplies 41 On 1 January 1942 the Japanese navy landed unopposed in Labuan 42 The next day 2 January 1942 the Japanese landed at Mempakul on North Borneo territory After negotiations with the Officers in charge of Jesselton as to its surrender while they were waiting for troop reinforcements Jesselton was occupied by the Japanese on 8 January Another strong Japanese army detachment arrived from Mindanao and began to land on Tarakan Island before proceeding to Sandakan on 17 January 43 The Japanese arrival was met with no strong resistance as the protectorate mainly relied on the Royal Navy for defence Although North Borneo has a police force it never had its own army or navy 44 By the end of January North Borneo was completely occupied by the Japanese 45 It was administered as part of the Empire of Japan with the officers of the chartered company being allowed to continued administration under Japanese supervision 46 The arrival of the Japanese forces to Borneo and the fall of Anglo Japanese Alliance had already been predicted by revelation through secret telegrams that Japanese ships docked regularly at Jesselton were engaged in espionage 47 Many of the British and Australian soldiers captured after the fall of Malaya and Singapore were brought to North Borneo and held as a prisoners of war POWs in Sandakan camp where they were then forced to march from Sandakan to Ranau 48 49 Other POWs were also sent to Batu Lintang camp in neighbouring Sarawak The occupation drove residents in the coastal areas to the interior in searching for food and escaping the brutality during the war period 50 which led to the creation of several resistance movements one of the such movement known as the Kinabalu Guerrillas which led by Albert Kwok and supported by indigenous groups in North Borneo 51 52 As part of the Allied Campaign to retake their possessions in the East Allied forces deployed to Borneo under the Borneo Campaign to liberate the island The Australian Imperial Force AIF played a significant part in the mission 53 with the force being sent to Tarakan and Labuan islands to secure the east and western Borneo 54 The Allied Z Special Unit provided intelligence gatherings and other information from the Japanese that could facilitated the AIF landings 54 while US submarines were used to transport Australian commandos to Borneo 55 Most of the major towns of North Borneo were heavily bombed during these period 56 The war ended on 15 August 1945 following the Japanese surrender and the administration of North Borneo was undertaken by the British Military Administration BMA from September 57 The company official administration returned to administer the territory but unable to finance the reconstruction cost after the war ceded administration of the protectorate to the crown colony government on 15 July 1946 1 58 59 Government EditSee also Governor of North Borneo 1899 photograph of the British administration building in Sandakan capital of North Borneo from 1884 to 1945 The Chartered Company s system of administration was based on standard British colonial empire administration structures with the land divided into Residencies and sub divided into Districts Initially there were only two Residencies East Coast and West Coast with Residents based at Sandakan and Jesselton respectively Each Residency was divided into Provinces later known as Districts which were run by district officers By 1922 there were five Residencies to accommodate new areas that were opened up for development These were the West Coast Kudat Tawau Interior and East Coast Residencies These Residencies were in turn divided into 17 districts Under this system British held top posts while native chiefs managed the people at grassroots level This was not a conscious attempt by the British to instill indirect rule but a convenient arrangement for the district officers who were unfamiliar with local customs and politics citation needed The company administration established a foundation for economic growth in North Borneo by restoring peace to a land where piracy and tribal feuds had grown rampant It abolished slavery and set up transport health and education services for the people and allowed indigenous communities to continue their traditional lifestyles 60 The British North Borneo Constabulary the territory s police force in 1883 comprised 3 Europeans 50 Indians Punjabis and Pashtuns 30 Dayaks 50 Somalis and 20 Malays 61 Constables trained at depot an average of three days per week 62 In 1884 the force had a total of 176 members 61 which increased to about 510 over three years 62 While under the protectorate international relations fell under the purview of the British government internally North Borneo was governed by the North Borneo Chartered Company as an independent state with British protection 2 The treaty signed on 12 May 1888 stipulated Agreement between the British Government and the British North Borneo Company for the establishment of a British Protectorate Signed at London 12 May 1888 2 I The State of North Borneo comprises the territories specified in the said Royal Charter and such other territories as the Company have acquired or may hereafter acquire under the provisions of Article XV of the said Charter It is divided into nine Provinces namely Province Alcock Province Cunliffe Province Dent Province Dewhurst Province Elphinstone Province Keppel Province Martin Province Mayne Province Myburgh II The State of North Borneo shall continue to be governed and administered as an independent State by the company in conformity with the provisions of the said Charter under the protection of Great Britain but such protection shall confer no right on Her Majesty s Government to interfere with the internal administration of the State further than is provided herein or by the Charter of the Company III The relations between the State of North Borneo and all foreign States including the States of Brunei and of Sarawak shall be conducted by Her Majesty s Government or in accordance with its directions and if any difference should arise between the Government of North Borneo and that of any other State the Company as representing the State of North Borneo agrees to abide by the decision of Her Majesty s Government and to take all necessary to give effect thereto IV Her Majesty s Government shall have the right to establish British Consular officers in any part of the said territories who shall receive exequaturs in the name of the Government of North Borneo They shall enjoy whatever privileges are usually granted to Consular officers and they shall be entitled to hoist the British flag over their residences and public offices V British subjects commerce and shipping shall enjoy the same right privileges and advantages as the subjects commerce and shipping of the most favoured nation as well as any other rights privileges and advantages which may be enjoyed by the subjects commerce and shipping of North Borneo VI No cession or other alienation of any part of the territory of the State of North Borneo shall be made by its Government to any foreign State or the subjects or the citizens thereof without the consent of Her Majesty s Government but this restriction shall not apply to ordinary grants or leases of lands or houses to private individuals for purposes of residence agriculture commerce or other business Economy Edit The opening of the North Borneo Railway Line on 3 February 1898 to transport commodity in the west coast area With the beginning of well planned economic activities under British administration the North Borneo authorities began to open land for agriculture and native land rights began to be formed 63 64 The government however felt that the native population was too small and unsuited to meet the requirements of modern development so they began to sponsor various schemes for the migration of Chinese workers from Hong Kong and China 65 66 In 1882 the North Borneo authorities appointed Walter Henry Medhurst as Commissioner for Chinese Immigration in the mission to attract more businessmen to invest in North Borneo by providing a workforce 67 Medhurst s efforts were costly and unsuccessful however the Hakka not part of the plan began to migrate to North Borneo where they formed an agricultural community 67 Bond Street in Jesselton with Chinese shoplots c 1930 Tobacco estate in Lahad Datu 1899 Since the 18th century tobacco was North Borneo s foremost planting industry 68 The logging history in North Borneo can be traced since the 1870s 69 From 1890s hardwood exports increased 70 with logging expanding especially during the interwar period 40 In the 1900s North Borneo joined the rubber boom The completion of North Borneo Railway Line helped to transport the resources to a major port on the west coast By 1915 around 34 828 acres 14 094 ha of land in addition to Chinese and North Borneo smallholdings had been planted with rubber tree 67 In the same year North Borneo Governor Aylmer Cavendish Pearson invited Japanese emigrants to participate in the economic activities there The Japanese government received the request warmly and send researchers to discover potential economic opportunities 71 At the early stage the Japanese encouraged their farmers to go to North Borneo to cultivate rice as their country depended on rice imports With increasing economic interest from the Japanese side they purchased a rubber estate owned by the North Borneo government 71 By 1937 North Borneo exported 178 000 cubic metres of timber surpassing Siam which exporting 85 000 cubic metres of timber 70 Many of the privately owned Japanese estates and companies had been involved in the economic sectors of North Borneo since been invited by the British 72 With the increasing numbers of Japanese investments many Japanese also migrate with their family to the east coast of North Borneo primarily to Tawau and Kunak 73 Currency Edit Main article British North Borneo dollar One North Borneo dollar 1940 The original monetary unit of North Borneo was the Mexican dollar equal to 100 cents The dollar was later matched to the Straits dollar and rated at 9 Straits dollars equal to 5 US dollars at the time 74 Different notes were issued throughout the administration with backgrounds featuring the Mount Kinabalu or the company arms 75 Society Edit Ethnic composition map of the natives of North Borneo and the neighbouring Raj of Sarawak 1896 1911 specimen stamps of North Borneo Demography Edit In 1881 60 000 to 100 000 indigenous people lived in North Borneo 65 The people on the coast were mainly Muslims with the aborigines mostly located inland 74 The Kadazan Dusun and Murut were the largest indigenous group in the interior while Bajau Bruneian Illanun Kedayan and Suluk dominated the coastal areas 76 Following various immigration schemes initiated by the British the population increased to 200 000 in 1920 77 257 804 in 1930 74 285 000 in 1935 62 and 331 000 in 1945 78 Under company rule the government of North Borneo not only recruited Chinese workers but also Japanese immigrants to overcome the shortage of manpower in the economic sectors 79 From 1911 until 1951 the total of Chinese population increased from only 27 801 to 74 374 which is divided between Hakka 44 505 Cantonese 11 833 Hokkien 7 336 Teochew 3 948 some Hailam Hainan 3 571 and other Chinese groups 3 181 80 Public service infrastructure Edit North Borneo was connected to the Singapore Hongkong submarine cable by a link from the island of Labuan to Menumbok The first message from the Borneo mainland to London was sent on 19 May 1894 A few days later the work on a telegraph line from the West Coast to Sandakan was started It took three years and exacted a heavy toll in human life to push the line through the almost uninhabited interior territory until on 7 April 1897 a congratulatory message from the Governor in Sandakan for transmission to the Court of Directors in London was successfully transmitted from Sandakan to Labuan In the early 1910s the technical and financial problems with the telegraph line prompted the company to venture into the construction of a wireless network based on the quench spark system of the German Telefunken Company The first stage of this network comprised stations in Sandakan Jesselton Tawau and Kudat The first wireless communication was established on 24 October 1913 between British North Borneo and Jolo on the Philippine Islands Inland communication was effected on 14 January 1914 between Sandakan and Jesselton 81 page needed The North Borneo Railway opened to the public on 1 August 1914 as the main transportation facility for west coast communities 82 Postal service was also available throughout the administration 83 Media Edit The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society since 1820 and British North Borneo Herald since 1883 held a significant amount of records regarding North Borneo before and during the British administration See also EditHistory of Sabah Postage stamps and postal history of North Borneo Postal orders of British North BorneoNotes Edit See Treaties and Engagements and Orders of Her Britannic Majesty in Council Footnotes Edit a b c Great Britain Colonial Office 1956 p 6 a b c Great Britain Foreign Office 1888 p 238 a b Pryer 2001 p 11 Wright 1988 p 107 a b Doolittle 2011 p 32 a b c Ooi 2004 p 265 Pryer 2001 p 10 Wright 1988 p 143 Saunders 2013 p 87 Press 2017 p 61 Great Britain Colonial Office 1958 p 164 Kratoska 2001 p 282 Trost 1998 p 234 Magenda 2010 p 42 Press 2017 p 150 Fry 2013 p 15 a b Fitzgerald 2016 p 70 a b Barbara Watson amp Leonard Y 2016 p 193 Hong Kong Daily Press Office 1912 p 1504 Webster 1998 p 130 McCord amp Purdue 2007 p 220 Webster 1998 p 200 British North Borneo Chartered Company 1886 p 113 Hilton amp Tate 1966 p 82 de Vienne 2015 p 85 Doolittle 2011 p 173 a b Olson 1991 p 92 Tregonning 1965 p 13 Great Britain Colonial Office 1958 p 172 Yong 1965 p 25 a b Olson amp Shadle 1996 p 192 Welman 2017 p 163 Pryer 2001 p 12 Wright 1988 p 185 Chamber s 1950 p 448 Dahlhoff 2012 p 1133 Panton 2015 p 90 Olson amp Shadle 1996 p 645 Welman 2017 p 153 a b Jones 2013 p 12 War Intelligence Telegram UK High Commissioner Australia to Dominions Office 2 January 1942 CO 968 9 6 p 95 Tregonning 1967 p 216 sfn error no target CITEREFTregonning1967 help Rottman 2002 p 206 Tregonning 1960 p 14 Lines 1991 p 193 Evans 2012 p 16 Saya amp Takashi 1993 p 54 Bickersteth amp Hinton 1996 p 19 Braithwaite 2016 p 347 Lim 2008 p 36 Evans 1990 p 50 Kratoska 2013 p 124 Ooi 2010 p 201 a b Heimann 1998 p 174 Feuer 2005 p 27 Ooi 2013 p 77 Ooi 2010 p 208 Oxford Business 2011 p 13 Welman 2017 p 159 Skutsch 2013 p 679 a b Adams 1929 p 310 a b c Northwestern University 1935 p 28 Cleary 1992 p 170 Colchester 2011 p 87 a b Danny 1999 p 134 Wordie 2016 a b c Tarling 2003 p 215 John amp Jackson 1973 p 88 Ibbotson 2014 p 116 a b Dixon 1991 p 107 a b Akashi amp Yoshimura 2008 p 23 Robertson 1979 p 64 Sabah Museum and State Archives Department 1986 p 16 22 a b c Lane 2010 p 51 Judkins 2016 p 149 Herb amp Kaplan 2008 p 1215 Hose McDougall amp Haddon 1912 p 28 Vinogradov 1980 p 73 Jude 2016 林開忠 2013 p 67 Aranas 2018 Lajiun 2017 Armstrong 1920 p 32 References EditBritish North Borneo Chartered Company 1886 Handbook of British North Borneo W Clowes amp Sons Limited Great Britain Foreign Office 1888 British and Foreign State Papers H M Stationery Office Hong Kong Daily Press Office 1912 The Directory amp Chronicle for China Japan Corea Indo China Straits Settlements Malay States Sian Netherlands India Borneo the Philippines amp c With which are Incorporated The China Directory and The Hong Kong List for the Far East Hong Kong Daily Press Office Hose Charles McDougall William Haddon Alfred Cort 1912 The pagan tribes of Borneo a description of their physical moral and intellectual condition with some discussion of their ethnic relations Macmillan and co limited Armstrong Douglas Brawn 1920 British amp colonial postage stamps a guide to the collection and appreciation of the adhesive postal issues of the British empire Methuen Adams W C 1929 The Constabulary of North Borneo The Police Journal Theory Practice and Principles SAGE Publications 2 2 310 315 doi 10 1177 0032258X2900200211 S2CID 149341169 Northwestern University 1935 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland etc Colonies Protectorates and Mandated Territories PDF Northwestern University a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Chamber s 1950 Chamber s encyclopaedia Vol 2 G Newnes Great Britain Colonial Office 1956 Annual Report on North Borneo H M Stationery Office Great Britain Colonial Office 1958 Annual Report on North Borneo H M Stationery Office Tregonning K G 1960 North Borneo H M Stationery Office Baker Michael H 1962 North Borneo The First Ten Years 1946 1956 Malaya Publishing House Tregonning K G 1965 A History of Modern Sabah North Borneo 1881 1963 University of Singapore treacher Yong Leng Lee 1965 North Borneo Sabah A Study in Settlement Geography Eastern Universities Press Hilton P B Tate Donna J 1966 The modern world Oxford University Press John David W Jackson James C 1973 The Tobacco Industry of North Borneo A Distinctive Form of Plantation Agriculture Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 4 1 88 106 doi 10 1017 S002246340001643X S2CID 163137161 Robertson Eric 1979 The Japanese File Pre war Japanese Penetration in Southeast Asia Heinemann Asia Vinogradov A G 1980 The population of the countries of the world from most ancient times to the present days Demography WP IPGEB GGKEY CPA09LBD5WN Sabah Museum and State Archives Department 1986 Sabah Museum and Archives Journal Sabah Museum and State Archives Department Wright Leigh R 1988 The Origins of British Borneo Hong Kong University Press ISBN 978 962 209 213 6 Evans Stephen R 1990 Sabah North Borneo Under the Rising Sun Government Tropical Press Olson James Stuart 1991 Historical Dictionary of European Imperialism Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 26257 9 Dixon Chris 1991 South East Asia in the World Economy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31237 0 Lines William J 1991 Taming the Great South Land A History of the Conquest of Nature in Australia University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07830 7 Cleary M C 1992 Plantation Agriculture and the Formulation of Native Land Rights in British North Borneo c 1880 1930 The Geographical Journal 158 2 170 181 doi 10 2307 3059786 JSTOR 3059786 Saya Shiraishi Takashi Shiraishi 1993 The Japanese in Colonial Southeast Asia SEAP Publications ISBN 978 0 87727 402 5 Olson James Stuart Shadle Robert 1996 Historical Dictionary of the British Empire Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 29366 5 Bickersteth Jane Hinton Amanda 1996 Malaysia amp Singapore Handbook Footprint Handbooks ISBN 978 0 8442 4909 4 Heimann Judith M 1998 The Most Offending Soul Alive Tom Harrisson and His Remarkable Life University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2199 9 Webster Anthony 1998 Gentleman Capitalists British Imperialism in Southeast Asia 1770 1890 I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 86064 171 8 Trost R Haller 1998 The Contested Maritime and Territorial Boundaries of Malaysia An International Law Perspective Kluwer Law International ISBN 978 90 411 9652 1 Danny Wong Tze Ken 1999 Chinese Migration to Sabah Before the Second World War Archipel Persee 58 3 131 158 doi 10 3406 arch 1999 3538 Pryer Ada 2001 A Decade in Borneo A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 7185 0197 6 Kratoska Paul H 2001 South East Asia Colonial History Empire building in the nineteenth century Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 21541 1 Rottman Gordon L 2002 World War II Pacific Island Guide A Geo military Study Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 31395 0 Tarling Nicholas 2003 Imperialism in Southeast Asia Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 57082 9 Ooi Keat Gin 2004 Southeast Asia A Historical Encyclopedia from Angkor Wat to East Timor ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 770 2 Feuer A B 2005 Australian Commandos Their Secret War Against the Japanese in World War II Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 3294 9 McCord Norman Purdue Bill 2007 British History 1815 1914 OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 926164 2 Herb Guntram H Kaplan David H 2008 Nations and Nationalism A Global Historical Overview 4 volumes A Global Historical Overview ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 908 5 Lim Regina 2008 Federal state Relations in Sabah Malaysia The Berjaya Administration 1976 85 Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 978 981 230 812 2 Akashi Yōji Yoshimura Mako 2008 New Perspectives on the Japanese Occupation in Malaya and Singapore 1941 1945 NUS Press ISBN 978 9971 69 299 5 Magenda Burhan Djabier 2010 East Kalimantan The Decline of a Commercial Aristocracy Equinox Publishing ISBN 978 602 8397 21 6 Ooi Keat Gin 2010 The Japanese Occupation of Borneo 1941 45 Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 96309 4 Lane Roger Dewardt 2010 Encyclopedia Small Silver Coins Roger deWardt Lane ISBN 978 0 615 24479 2 Doolittle Amity A 2011 Property and Politics in Sabah Malaysia Native Struggles Over Land Rights University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 80116 2 Colchester Marcus 2011 Divers Paths to Justice Legal Pluralism and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Southeast Asia Forest Peoples Programme ISBN 978 616 90611 7 5 Oxford Business 2011 The Report Sabah Oxford Business Group ISBN 978 1 907065 36 1 Dahlhoff Guenther 2012 Bibliographic Set 2 Vol Set International Court of Justice Digest of Judgments and Advisory Opinions Canon and Case Law 1946 2011 Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 23062 0 Evans I H N 2012 The Religion of the Tempasuk Dusuns of North Borneo Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 64603 2 Skutsch Carl 2013 Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 19388 1 Jones Geoffrey G 2013 The Multinational Traders Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 68001 6 Saunders Graham 2013 A History of Brunei Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 87394 2 Fry Howard T 2013 Alexander Dalrymple and the Expansion of British Trade Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 136 60694 6 Ooi Keat Gin 2013 Post war Borneo 1945 50 Nationalism Empire and State Building Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 05803 7 林開忠 2013 客居他鄉 東南亞客家族群的生活與文化 Living in a hometown the life and culture of the Southeast Asian Hakka family 客家委員會客家文化發展中心 Hakka Committee Hakka Cultural Development Centre ISBN 978 986 03 7668 5 Kratoska Paul H 2013 Southeast Asian Minorities in the Wartime Japanese Empire Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 12506 5 Ibbotson Ross 2014 The History of Logging in North Borneo 87 2 116 118 doi 10 1353 ras 2014 0011 S2CID 160334993 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Panton Kenneth J 2015 Historical Dictionary of the British Empire Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0 8108 7524 1 de Vienne Marie Sybille 2015 Brunei From the Age of Commerce to the 21st Century NUS Press ISBN 978 9971 69 818 8 Barbara Watson Andaya Leonard Y Andaya 2016 A History of Malaysia Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 60515 3 Judkins Maggie 2016 Standard Catalog of World Paper Money General Issues 1368 1960 F W Media Inc ISBN 978 1 4402 4707 1 Jude Marcel 2016 Japanese community in North Borneo long before World War II The Borneo Post PressReader Epstein Mortimer 2016 The Statesman s Year Book Statistical and Historical Annual of the States of the World for the Year 1943 Springer ISBN 978 0 230 27072 5 Braithwaite Richard Wallace 2016 Fighting Monsters An Intimate History of the Sandakan Tragedy Australian Scholarly Publishing ISBN 978 1 925333 76 3 Fitzgerald Robert 2016 The Rise of the Global Company Multinationals and the Making of the Modern World Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84974 6 Wordie Jason 2016 From settlers to snorkelling Hong Kong has long had links to Sabah South China Morning Post Archived from the original on 31 July 2017 Welman Frans 2017 Borneo Trilogy Volume 1 Sabah Booksmango ISBN 978 616 245 078 5 Lajiun Jenne 2017 Sabah s first railway station proposed as historical heritage site The Borneo Post Archived from the original on 19 July 2017 Press Steven 2017 Rogue Empires Contracts and Conmen in Europe s Scramble for Africa Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 97185 1 Aranas Uwe 2018 The History of Wireless Telegraphy in British North Borneo Department of Sabah Museum Kota Kinabalu Sabah Malaysia ISBN 978 983 9638356 Further reading EditKeppel Henry Brooke James WalterKeating Kelly 1847 The expedition to Borneo of H M S Dido for the suppression of piracy with extracts from the journal of James Brooke Esq of Sarawak University of California Libraries London Chapman and Hall p 347 British North Borneo Chartered Company 1878 British North Borneo company charter Cornell University Library S l s n p 32 Daly D D 1888 Explorations in British North Borneo 1883 87 Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society Wiley on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society with the Institute of British Geographers 10 1 1 24 doi 10 2307 1801441 JSTOR 1801441 Mayne R C 1888 Summary of Explorations in British North Borneo Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society Wiley on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society with the Institute of British Geographers 10 3 134 146 doi 10 2307 1800783 JSTOR 1800783 Treacher W H 1891 British Borneo sketches of Brunai Sarawak Labuan and North Borneo University of California Libraries Singapore Govt print dept p 190 Roth Henry Ling Low Hugh Brooke 1896 The natives of Sarawak and British North Borneo based chiefly on the mss of the late H B Low Sarawak government service University of Michigan Library London Truslove amp Hanson p 503 British North Borneo Chartered Company 1899 Views of British North Borneo with a brief history of the colony compiled from official records and other sources of information of an authentic nature with trade returns amp c showing the progress and development of the chartered company s territory to the latest date Cornell University Library London Printed by W Brown amp Co Ltd p 76 Rutter Owen 1922 British North Borneo an account of its history resources and native tribes Cornell University Library London Constable amp Co Ltd p 496 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to British North Borneo North Borneo Historical Society More information on heritage of North Borneo Portals British Empire Malaysia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North Borneo amp oldid 1117760109, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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