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Yap Ah Loy

Kapitan China Yap Ah Loy (Chinese: 葉亞來; pinyin: Yè Yǎlái; Cantonese Yale: Yihp A-lòih; Pha̍k-fa-sṳ: Ya̍p Â-lòi, Jawi: يب الوي;[2] 14 March 1837 – 15 April 1885), also known as Yap Tet Loy and Yap Mao Lan, is an important figure of early Kuala Lumpur. He served as the third Kapitan China of Kuala Lumpur, and in this administrative capacity, played an important role in developing the city as a commercial and mining centre during the 19th century.

Yap Ah Loy
葉亞來
Yap Ah Loy
Kapitan China of Kuala Lumpur
In office
1868–1885
Preceded byLiu Ngim Kong
Succeeded byYap Ah Shak
Personal details
Born(1837-03-14)14 March 1837
Huiyang District, Guangdong, China
Died(1885-04-15)15 April 1885 (aged 47)
Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Federated Malay States
Resting placeKwong Tong Cemetery
SpouseKok Kang Kweon (郭庚嬌)
ChildrenYap Hon Chin

Yap Loong Shin
Yap Loong Fong
Yap Kim Neo

Yap Ngit Thian[1]
Residence(s)Kuala Lumpur, British Malaya

After the independence of the Federation of Malaya from the British Empire on 31 August 1957 and later the Formation of Malaysia in 1963, Kuala Lumpur became the capital of Malaysia. Today, there is a street named after him in the heart of Chinatown in Kuala Lumpur, known as "Jalan Yap Ah Loy" or "Yap Ah Loy Road".

Background edit

Yap Ah Loy was born in a poor village at what was formerly known as Canton province, southern China, on 14 March 1837. His parents lived in the town of Danshui/Tamsui (Chinese: 淡水; pinyin: Dànshuǐ) in Kwai Yap district, Huizhou prefecture. He was a Hakka of the Fui Chiu (Chinese: 惠州) clan. Yap Ah Loy left China via Macau for British Malaya in 1854. On his arrival in Malaya, he found the place very different from China. The scenery, with tall coconut and betel palms, and the small Malay houses with atap (nipah thatch) roofs, was a new and fascinating experience to him.

On his arrival at Malacca, Yap Ah Loy was given shelter by one of his clansman called Yap Ket Si. He was then taken to a tin mine in Durian Tunggal, where he stayed for 4 months. He soon left for Kesang in northwestern Johore, where he found work in the shop of a relative named Yap Ng. He remained there for a year before arrangements were made to send him back to China via Singapore. Misfortune befell him when he lost all his money while waiting for the junk to set sail in Singapore for China. Instead of going back to Malacca, he and another of his relatives named Yap Fook travelled on foot to Lukut, then still part of Selangor (now Port Dickson, Negeri Sembilan).

As Kapitan of Kuala Lumpur edit

Yap Ah Loy arrived in Lukut in 1856 at the age of 19. He spent his early years in the peninsula as a miner and petty trader, but in 1862 his fortunes improved when his friend Liu Ngim Kong (Chinese: 劉壬光; pinyin: Liú Rènguāng) succeeded Hiew Siew (Chinese: 丘秀) to become the second Kapitan Cina of Kuala Lumpur, a position not only of leadership within the Chinese community, but also of liaison with the Malay political system and, after British intervention in 1874, with British officials as well. He became Liu's trusted lieutenant and succeeded him as the third Kapitan Cina of Kuala Lumpur after Liu's death in 1869, after which he began to put together a sound administration and a strong fighting force.

Yap's appointment however was challenged by the "relatives" of Liu, and a group opposed to Yap emerged under the leadership of Chong Chong.[3] There were also constant warfare between two Chinese gangs, the Hakka-dominated Hai San (dominant in Kuala Lumpur) and the Cantonese-dominated Ghee Hin (based mainly in the Kanching and Rawang area), who fought to gain control of tin production in the town.[4][5] At Kanching, an ally of Yap Ah Loy, Yap Ah Sze, was ambushed and murdered, probably at the instigation of Chong Chong, another Hakka headman.[6] Yap Ah Loy then took his men to Kanching to drive out Chong Chong in 1870, and 12 Chinese and 8 Malays were killed in what would become known as 'the Kanching Massacre'.[7] Chong Chong then fled to Rawang and joined Raja Mahdi's faction in the Selangor Civil War that broke out earlier in 1867.[8] Yap Ah Loy sided with Tunku Kudin in the civil war, and Kuala Lumpur was attacked in 1870 by Yap's enemies who sided with Raja Mahdi. A further attack was attempted, and in 1872, Raja Mahdi's forces led by Syed Mashhor captured Kuala Lumpur, forcing Yap Ah Loy to flee to Klang. Yap attempted to retake Kuala Lumpur, and in March 1873, Tengku Kudin's faction, with support from Pahang fighters, defeated Mashhor and recaptured Kuala Lumpur.[9]

Yap's victory at Kuala Lumpur in 1873 placed him in a strong political position, and he was almost supreme in the interior of the state. However, Kuala Lumpur was gutted during the war and the mines flooded. Yap then set about rebuilding the town and rejuvenating the mining industry. He also improved the roads linking Kuala Lumpur with adjacent mining areas and other settlements. A slump in tin price mid 1870s however caused severe financial difficulties. He started a brick-making venture at Brickfields, as well as a tapioca plantation although that proved a costly failure. By the late 1870s he was in considerable debt and said to be almost bankrupt. However, a rise in the price of tin in 1879 improved his financial position as well as securing the future of Kuala Lumpur.[10]

Yap's achievement in the postwar recovery of the mining industry established Kuala Lumpur as the economic centre of the peninsula. As the acknowledged leader of the Chinese community, he was given the powers similar to a Malay ruling chief by the British, except for the right to tax, a restriction he easily evaded. Through his control of the tin market, his ownership of local "farms" (monopolies on the sale of items such as opium and exclusive control of activities such as gambling, prostitution, racketeering and loan sharking), and his diverse business interests, he amassed a considerable personal fortune.

In 1879, the first British resident (government advisor) was assigned to Kuala Lumpur, and from that time the power of the Kapitan began to be undermined. None of Yap Ah Loy's successors approached his power and independence of action.

In 1884, Yap Ah Loy planned a visit to China, intending to appoint Yap Ah Shak and Chow Yuk to manage his property in his absence. For some reason the plan was never carried out. On 1 September that year, a violent storm struck the Klang Valley, causing widespread damage to property in Kuala Lumpur. The storm blew down 14 houses and a wing of the newly built Police barracks, as well as the barrack's residential area and the flagstaff.

Developer of Kuala Lumpur edit

In 1868, as the third Chinese Kapitan of Kuala Lumpur, Yap Ah Loy, emerged as leader. He became responsible for the survival and growth of this town.[11] During the early times, Kuala Lumpur was beset with many problems, including the Selangor Civil War which devastated the town. It was also plagued by diseases and constant fires and floods. Kuala Lumpur was destroyed several times,[12] but each time Yap rebuilt the town. He strove to develop Kuala Lumpur from a small, obscure settlement into a booming mining town.[13] In 1880, the state capital of Selangor was moved from Klang to the more strategically advantageous Kuala Lumpur.[14]

In 1881, a flood swept through the town following a fire which engulfed it earlier. These successive problems destroyed the town's structures made of wood and atap (thatching). As a response, Frank Swettenham, the British Resident of Selangor, required that buildings be constructed of brick and tile.[14] Hence, Kapitan Yap Ah Loy bought a sprawling piece of real estate for the setting up of a brick industry which would spur the rebuilding of Kuala Lumpur. This place is the eponymous Brickfields. Destroyed atap buildings were replaced with brick and tiled ones. Yap also restructured the building layout of the town. Many of the new brick buildings mirrored those of shop houses in southern China, characterized by "five foot ways" as well as skilled Chinese carpentry work. This resulted in a distinct eclectic shop house architecture typical of this region. In this developing town, Yap owned a third of all the buildings in Kuala Lumpur, and two thirds of the urban land east of the Klang River, in addition to his control of the tin mines.[12] Yap Ah Loy also spent $20,000 to expand road access in the city significantly, linking up tin mines with the city; these roads include the main arterial roads of Ampang Road, Pudu Road and Petaling Street.

As Chinese Kapitan, he was vested with wide powers on par with Malay community leaders. He implemented law reforms and introduced new legal measures. He would also preside over a small claims court. With a police force consisting of only six officers, he was able to uphold the rule of law. He built a prison which could accommodate 60 prisoners. Kapitan Yap Ah Loy also built Kuala Lumpur's first school and a major tapioca mill in Petaling Street in which the Selangor's Sultan Abdul Samad had an interest.

After Yap's death in 1885, the population of Kuala Lumpur increased greatly due to the construction of a Port Klang Line railway line, initiated by Swettenham and completed in 1886, which increased accessibility into the growing town. In 1896, Kuala Lumpur was chosen as the capital of the newly formed Federated Malay States due to its central position.[15] It was however Yap who was responsible for keeping Kuala Lumpur viable as a town during its many setbacks in its early years.[16] Although there are no public monuments commemorating Yap, according to the scholar on Malaysian history J.M. Gullick, "if you seek his memorial remember that you are in Kuala Lumpur."[17]

Death edit

At the end of 1884, Yap Ah Loy fell ill with bronchitis and an abscess of the left lung. In March 1885, he made little recovery before he died on 15 April 1885 at the age of 47. The doctor examined Yap's body and later confirmed that his death was either due to heart failure or poisoning by the fumes of the charcoal brazier. The doctor also noticed the exceptional brightness of his eyes.[17] He is buried in the large Kwong Tong Cemetery in Kuala Lumpur.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rodrigues, Philp (1980-10-15). (PDF). The Star. Perdana Leadership Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-12-06. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
  2. ^ based on personal seal from: Gallop, Annabel Teh (2019). Malay seals from the Islamic world of Southeast Asia. Singapore: National University of Singapore Press in association with the British Library. ISBN 978-981-3250-86-4.
  3. ^ Sharon A. Carstens (31 March 2005). Histories, Cultures, Identities: Studies in Malaysian Chinese Worlds. Singapore University Press. pp. 17–19. ISBN 978-9971693121.
  4. ^ "From tin town to tower city" 2010-07-27 at the Wayback Machine, kiat.net, Retrieved 2010-09-28
  5. ^ "Kuala Lumpur History". Kuala-Lumpur.ws. Retrieved 2010-09-28.
  6. ^ "The Death of Yap Ah Sze".
  7. ^ J.M. Gullick (2000). A History of Kuala Lumpur 1856–1939. The Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. pp. 10–11.
  8. ^ Tan Ding Eing (1975). A Portrait of Malaysia and Singapore. Oxford University Press. pp. 82–85. ISBN 978-0195807226.
  9. ^ J.M. Gullick (1983). "Chapter 4: The Selangor Civil War (1867-1873)". The Story of Kuala Lumpur, 1857-1939. Eastern Universities Press (M). pp. 17–23. ISBN 978-9679080285.
  10. ^ J.M. Gullick (2000). A History of Kuala Lumpur 1856–1939. The Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. pp. 18–24.
  11. ^ . Virtual Malaysia Magazine. Archived from the original on 12 August 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-18.
  12. ^ a b Richard Baxstrom (14 July 2008). Houses in Motion: The Experience of Place and the Problem of Belief in Urban Malaysia. Stanford University Press. pp. 29–30. ISBN 9780804775861.
  13. ^ . Sejarah Malaysia. Archived from the original on 2002-09-02. Retrieved 2007-12-15.
  14. ^ a b "Kuala Lumpur". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2007-12-06 – via britannica.com.
  15. ^ . Nation History. National Library of Malaysia. Archived from the original on 8 January 2004. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  16. ^ J.M. Gullick (1983). "Chapter 5: Yap Ah Loy's Kuala Lumpur (1873–1880)". The Story of Kuala Lumpur, 1857-1939. Eastern Universities Press (M). pp. 24–29. ISBN 978-9679080285.
  17. ^ a b J.M. Gullick (1983). The Story of Kuala Lumpur, 1857-1939. Eastern Universities Press (M). pp. 46–47. ISBN 978-9679080285.

External links edit

  • The History of Yap Ah Loy
  • , Sejarah Malaysia
  • . Archived from the original on 23 October 2007. The Introduction of Kuala Lumpur Urban History
Government offices
Preceded by
Kapitan Liu Ngim Kong
Kapitan China of Kuala Lumpur
1868–1885
Succeeded by

kapitan, china, chinese, 葉亞來, pinyin, yǎlái, cantonese, yale, yihp, lòih, sṳ, lòi, jawi, يب, الوي, march, 1837, april, 1885, also, known, important, figure, early, kuala, lumpur, served, third, kapitan, china, kuala, lumpur, this, administrative, capacity, pla. Kapitan China Yap Ah Loy Chinese 葉亞來 pinyin Ye Yǎlai Cantonese Yale Yihp A loih Pha k fa sṳ Ya p A loi Jawi يب الوي 2 14 March 1837 15 April 1885 also known as Yap Tet Loy and Yap Mao Lan is an important figure of early Kuala Lumpur He served as the third Kapitan China of Kuala Lumpur and in this administrative capacity played an important role in developing the city as a commercial and mining centre during the 19th century Kapitan ChinaYap Ah Loy葉亞來Yap Ah LoyKapitan China of Kuala LumpurIn office 1868 1885Preceded byLiu Ngim KongSucceeded byYap Ah ShakPersonal detailsBorn 1837 03 14 14 March 1837Huiyang District Guangdong ChinaDied 1885 04 15 15 April 1885 aged 47 Kuala Lumpur Selangor Federated Malay StatesResting placeKwong Tong CemeterySpouseKok Kang Kweon 郭庚嬌 ChildrenYap Hon ChinYap Loong Shin Yap Loong Fong Yap Kim Neo Yap Ngit Thian 1 Residence s Kuala Lumpur British MalayaIn this Chinese name the family name is Yap After the independence of the Federation of Malaya from the British Empire on 31 August 1957 and later the Formation of Malaysia in 1963 Kuala Lumpur became the capital of Malaysia Today there is a street named after him in the heart of Chinatown in Kuala Lumpur known as Jalan Yap Ah Loy or Yap Ah Loy Road Contents 1 Background 2 As Kapitan of Kuala Lumpur 3 Developer of Kuala Lumpur 4 Death 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBackground editYap Ah Loy was born in a poor village at what was formerly known as Canton province southern China on 14 March 1837 His parents lived in the town of Danshui Tamsui Chinese 淡水 pinyin Danshuǐ in Kwai Yap district Huizhou prefecture He was a Hakka of the Fui Chiu Chinese 惠州 clan Yap Ah Loy left China via Macau for British Malaya in 1854 On his arrival in Malaya he found the place very different from China The scenery with tall coconut and betel palms and the small Malay houses with atap nipah thatch roofs was a new and fascinating experience to him On his arrival at Malacca Yap Ah Loy was given shelter by one of his clansman called Yap Ket Si He was then taken to a tin mine in Durian Tunggal where he stayed for 4 months He soon left for Kesang in northwestern Johore where he found work in the shop of a relative named Yap Ng He remained there for a year before arrangements were made to send him back to China via Singapore Misfortune befell him when he lost all his money while waiting for the junk to set sail in Singapore for China Instead of going back to Malacca he and another of his relatives named Yap Fook travelled on foot to Lukut then still part of Selangor now Port Dickson Negeri Sembilan As Kapitan of Kuala Lumpur editYap Ah Loy arrived in Lukut in 1856 at the age of 19 He spent his early years in the peninsula as a miner and petty trader but in 1862 his fortunes improved when his friend Liu Ngim Kong Chinese 劉壬光 pinyin Liu Renguang succeeded Hiew Siew Chinese 丘秀 to become the second Kapitan Cina of Kuala Lumpur a position not only of leadership within the Chinese community but also of liaison with the Malay political system and after British intervention in 1874 with British officials as well He became Liu s trusted lieutenant and succeeded him as the third Kapitan Cina of Kuala Lumpur after Liu s death in 1869 after which he began to put together a sound administration and a strong fighting force Yap s appointment however was challenged by the relatives of Liu and a group opposed to Yap emerged under the leadership of Chong Chong 3 There were also constant warfare between two Chinese gangs the Hakka dominated Hai San dominant in Kuala Lumpur and the Cantonese dominated Ghee Hin based mainly in the Kanching and Rawang area who fought to gain control of tin production in the town 4 5 At Kanching an ally of Yap Ah Loy Yap Ah Sze was ambushed and murdered probably at the instigation of Chong Chong another Hakka headman 6 Yap Ah Loy then took his men to Kanching to drive out Chong Chong in 1870 and 12 Chinese and 8 Malays were killed in what would become known as the Kanching Massacre 7 Chong Chong then fled to Rawang and joined Raja Mahdi s faction in the Selangor Civil War that broke out earlier in 1867 8 Yap Ah Loy sided with Tunku Kudin in the civil war and Kuala Lumpur was attacked in 1870 by Yap s enemies who sided with Raja Mahdi A further attack was attempted and in 1872 Raja Mahdi s forces led by Syed Mashhor captured Kuala Lumpur forcing Yap Ah Loy to flee to Klang Yap attempted to retake Kuala Lumpur and in March 1873 Tengku Kudin s faction with support from Pahang fighters defeated Mashhor and recaptured Kuala Lumpur 9 Yap s victory at Kuala Lumpur in 1873 placed him in a strong political position and he was almost supreme in the interior of the state However Kuala Lumpur was gutted during the war and the mines flooded Yap then set about rebuilding the town and rejuvenating the mining industry He also improved the roads linking Kuala Lumpur with adjacent mining areas and other settlements A slump in tin price mid 1870s however caused severe financial difficulties He started a brick making venture at Brickfields as well as a tapioca plantation although that proved a costly failure By the late 1870s he was in considerable debt and said to be almost bankrupt However a rise in the price of tin in 1879 improved his financial position as well as securing the future of Kuala Lumpur 10 Yap s achievement in the postwar recovery of the mining industry established Kuala Lumpur as the economic centre of the peninsula As the acknowledged leader of the Chinese community he was given the powers similar to a Malay ruling chief by the British except for the right to tax a restriction he easily evaded Through his control of the tin market his ownership of local farms monopolies on the sale of items such as opium and exclusive control of activities such as gambling prostitution racketeering and loan sharking and his diverse business interests he amassed a considerable personal fortune In 1879 the first British resident government advisor was assigned to Kuala Lumpur and from that time the power of the Kapitan began to be undermined None of Yap Ah Loy s successors approached his power and independence of action In 1884 Yap Ah Loy planned a visit to China intending to appoint Yap Ah Shak and Chow Yuk to manage his property in his absence For some reason the plan was never carried out On 1 September that year a violent storm struck the Klang Valley causing widespread damage to property in Kuala Lumpur The storm blew down 14 houses and a wing of the newly built Police barracks as well as the barrack s residential area and the flagstaff Developer of Kuala Lumpur editIn 1868 as the third Chinese Kapitan of Kuala Lumpur Yap Ah Loy emerged as leader He became responsible for the survival and growth of this town 11 During the early times Kuala Lumpur was beset with many problems including the Selangor Civil War which devastated the town It was also plagued by diseases and constant fires and floods Kuala Lumpur was destroyed several times 12 but each time Yap rebuilt the town He strove to develop Kuala Lumpur from a small obscure settlement into a booming mining town 13 In 1880 the state capital of Selangor was moved from Klang to the more strategically advantageous Kuala Lumpur 14 In 1881 a flood swept through the town following a fire which engulfed it earlier These successive problems destroyed the town s structures made of wood and atap thatching As a response Frank Swettenham the British Resident of Selangor required that buildings be constructed of brick and tile 14 Hence Kapitan Yap Ah Loy bought a sprawling piece of real estate for the setting up of a brick industry which would spur the rebuilding of Kuala Lumpur This place is the eponymous Brickfields Destroyed atap buildings were replaced with brick and tiled ones Yap also restructured the building layout of the town Many of the new brick buildings mirrored those of shop houses in southern China characterized by five foot ways as well as skilled Chinese carpentry work This resulted in a distinct eclectic shop house architecture typical of this region In this developing town Yap owned a third of all the buildings in Kuala Lumpur and two thirds of the urban land east of the Klang River in addition to his control of the tin mines 12 Yap Ah Loy also spent 20 000 to expand road access in the city significantly linking up tin mines with the city these roads include the main arterial roads of Ampang Road Pudu Road and Petaling Street As Chinese Kapitan he was vested with wide powers on par with Malay community leaders He implemented law reforms and introduced new legal measures He would also preside over a small claims court With a police force consisting of only six officers he was able to uphold the rule of law He built a prison which could accommodate 60 prisoners Kapitan Yap Ah Loy also built Kuala Lumpur s first school and a major tapioca mill in Petaling Street in which the Selangor s Sultan Abdul Samad had an interest After Yap s death in 1885 the population of Kuala Lumpur increased greatly due to the construction of a Port Klang Line railway line initiated by Swettenham and completed in 1886 which increased accessibility into the growing town In 1896 Kuala Lumpur was chosen as the capital of the newly formed Federated Malay States due to its central position 15 It was however Yap who was responsible for keeping Kuala Lumpur viable as a town during its many setbacks in its early years 16 Although there are no public monuments commemorating Yap according to the scholar on Malaysian history J M Gullick if you seek his memorial remember that you are in Kuala Lumpur 17 Death editAt the end of 1884 Yap Ah Loy fell ill with bronchitis and an abscess of the left lung In March 1885 he made little recovery before he died on 15 April 1885 at the age of 47 The doctor examined Yap s body and later confirmed that his death was either due to heart failure or poisoning by the fumes of the charcoal brazier The doctor also noticed the exceptional brightness of his eyes 17 He is buried in the large Kwong Tong Cemetery in Kuala Lumpur See also editSin Sze Si Ya TempleReferences edit Rodrigues Philp 1980 10 15 Woman I m Daughter of Yap Ah Loy PDF The Star Perdana Leadership Foundation Archived from the original PDF on 2015 12 06 Retrieved 2015 12 03 based on personal seal from Gallop Annabel Teh 2019 Malay seals from the Islamic world of Southeast Asia Singapore National University of Singapore Press in association with the British Library ISBN 978 981 3250 86 4 Sharon A Carstens 31 March 2005 Histories Cultures Identities Studies in Malaysian Chinese Worlds Singapore University Press pp 17 19 ISBN 978 9971693121 From tin town to tower city Archived 2010 07 27 at the Wayback Machine kiat net Retrieved 2010 09 28 Kuala Lumpur History Kuala Lumpur ws Retrieved 2010 09 28 The Death of Yap Ah Sze J M Gullick 2000 A History of Kuala Lumpur 1856 1939 The Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society pp 10 11 Tan Ding Eing 1975 A Portrait of Malaysia and Singapore Oxford University Press pp 82 85 ISBN 978 0195807226 J M Gullick 1983 Chapter 4 The Selangor Civil War 1867 1873 The Story of Kuala Lumpur 1857 1939 Eastern Universities Press M pp 17 23 ISBN 978 9679080285 J M Gullick 2000 A History of Kuala Lumpur 1856 1939 The Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society pp 18 24 Old World Charm Virtual Malaysia Magazine Archived from the original on 12 August 2007 Retrieved 2007 12 18 a b Richard Baxstrom 14 July 2008 Houses in Motion The Experience of Place and the Problem of Belief in Urban Malaysia Stanford University Press pp 29 30 ISBN 9780804775861 Yap Ah Loy Sejarah Malaysia Archived from the original on 2002 09 02 Retrieved 2007 12 15 a b Kuala Lumpur Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2007 12 06 via britannica com The Federated Malay States 1896 Nation History National Library of Malaysia Archived from the original on 8 January 2004 Retrieved 2007 12 06 J M Gullick 1983 Chapter 5 Yap Ah Loy s Kuala Lumpur 1873 1880 The Story of Kuala Lumpur 1857 1939 Eastern Universities Press M pp 24 29 ISBN 978 9679080285 a b J M Gullick 1983 The Story of Kuala Lumpur 1857 1939 Eastern Universities Press M pp 46 47 ISBN 978 9679080285 External links editThe History of Yap Ah Loy Yap Ah Loy Sejarah Malaysia The Beginning Archived from the original on 23 October 2007 The Introduction of Kuala Lumpur Urban HistoryGovernment officesPreceded byKapitan Liu Ngim Kong Kapitan China of Kuala Lumpur1868 1885 Succeeded byKapitan Yap Ah Shak Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yap Ah Loy amp oldid 1180528005, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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