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(Redirected from Governor of Dutch Malacca) History of Malacca under Dutch control (1641–1825)

Governorate of MalaccaGouvernement Malacca (Dutch)
Melaka Belanda (Malay)
1641–1795
1818–1825
Flag of Malacca, Dutch Flag until 1795 Coat of arms of Malacca, Dutch Coat of arms
Anthem: Wien Neêrlands Bloed
(1818-1825)
Malacca between 1750 and 1796Malacca between 1750 and 1796
Dutch Malacca, ca. 1724–26Dutch Malacca, ca. 1724–26
StatusColony of the Dutch East India Company (1641–1795)
Part of the Dutch East Indies (1818–1825)
CapitalMalacca Town
Common languagesDutch, Malay
Governor 
• 1641–42 Jan van Twist
• 1824–25 Hendrik S. van Son
British Resident 
• 1795 Archibald Brown
• 1803–18 William Farquhar
Historical eraImperialism
• Established 14 January 1641
• British occupation 1795–1818
• Relinquished by treaty 1 March 1825
Preceded by Succeeded by
Portuguese Malacca
Straits Settlements
Governorate of MalaccaGouvernement Malacca
Governorates of Dutch East Indies
1818–1825
Flag of Malacca Flag

Map of the governorate of Malacca.
CapitalMalacca Town
History 
• Established 1818
• Relinquished by treaty 1 March 1825
Succeeded by
Straits Settlements
Today part ofMalacca, Malaysia

Dutch Malacca (1641–1825) was the longest period that Malacca was under foreign control. The Dutch ruled for almost 183 years with intermittent British occupation during the French Revolutionary and later the Napoleonic Wars (1795–1815). This era saw relative peace with little serious interruption from the Malay sultanates due to the understanding forged between the Dutch and the Sultanate of Johor in 1606. This period also marked the decline of Malacca's importance. The Dutch preferred Batavia (present-day Jakarta) as their economic and administrative centre in the region and their hold in Malacca was to prevent the loss of the city to other European powers and, subsequently, the competition that would come with it. Thus, in the 17th century, with Malacca ceasing to be an important port, the Johor Sultanate became the dominant local power in the region due to the opening of its ports and the alliance with the Dutch.

History

Dutch conquest of Portuguese Malacca

Dutch Malacca, ca. 1665

In the early 17th century, the Dutch East India Company (Dutch: Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie, VOC) began a campaign to usurp Portuguese power in the East. At that time, the Portuguese had transformed Malacca into an impregnable fortress (the Fortaleza de Malaca), controlling access to the sea lanes of the Strait of Malacca and the spice trade there. The Dutch started by launching small incursions and skirmishes against the Portuguese. The first serious attempt was the siege of Malacca in 1606 by the third VOC fleet from the Dutch Republic with eleven ships, under Admiral Cornelis Matelief de Jonge that led to the naval battle of Cape Rachado. Although the Dutch were routed, the Portuguese fleet of Martim Afonso de Castro, the Viceroy of Goa, suffered heavier casualties and the battle rallied the forces of the Sultanate of Johor in an alliance with the Dutch and later on with the Acehnese.

The Dutch along with their local Javanese allies numbered around 700 men, assaulted and wrested Malacca from the Portuguese in January 1641. Assistance was also provided to the Dutch from the Johor Sultanate who provided around 500–600 additional men. The Dutch also received supplies and rations from nearby and their recently-captured base of Batavia. The campaign effectively destroyed the last bastion of Portuguese power, removing their influence in the Malay Archipelago. As per the agreement with Johor in 1606, the Dutch took control of Malacca and agreed not to seek territories or wage war with the Malay kingdoms.

Decline in trade

After the conquest of Malacca, the town yielded great profits in the 17th century, mostly due to the tin trade coming from Perak. But by 1700, the Dutch struggled to revive trade in Malacca. In that year, the town was rarely able to meet its tin quotas sent to Batavia. There were several attempts to revive trade by the governor, but VOC officials in Batavia was unwilling to improve tin trading prospects there and instead made policies to divert trade to Batavia. An Englishman described the town in 1711 "a healthful place, but of no great trade". The start of Bugis rule under the Johor Sultanate encouraged trade to Riau and served to reduce trade activity in Malacca.

Roger de Laver, the governor of Malacca in 1743, commented that despite his efforts to encourage the tin trade, it still did not see any improvement and attributed it from intense competition as Indian traders mainly traded in Aceh, Kedah and Perak.

Transfer of control to the British

In January 1795, Dutch stadtholder William V, Prince of Orange, seeking refuge in Great Britain, issued the Kew Letters, directing Dutch governors in the colonies to temporarily transfer authority to the United Kingdom and to cooperate with the British in the war against the French, so long as the "mother country" was under threat of invasion. Malacca was thus surrendered to British control, and would be under British occupation until the end of the Napoleonic Wars. Malacca remained under nominal Dutch sovereignty throughout the nearly two decades of British governance.

Under British administration, the Portuguese-era fortress of Malacca was demolished in stages beginning in 1807, as the British feared that the Dutch would use it against them in any future regional conflict. Only the Porta de Santiago (A Famosa) was spared destruction after the belated intervention of Sir Stamford Raffles.

The Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1814 restored Malacca to Dutch rule; however, the Dutch did not regain full control until 1818. Sovereignty over Malacca was permanently ceded to the British under the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824.

Administration of Malacca

Part of a series on the
History of Malaysia
Prehistoric period
Paleolithic
 Lenggong Valley c. 2,000,0000 BCE
 Mansuli Valley235,000 BCE
Mesolithic
 Niah cultures 65,000–40,000 BCE
Neolithic
 Bewah man/woman 16,000 BCE
 Perak man/woman 11,000–200 BCE
 Neolithic Klang 500 – 200 BCE
Early kingdoms
Ancient Kedah <100 BCE
Chi Tu 100 BCE–642 CE
Langkasuka 100 BCE–1474 CE
Gangga Negara c. 100 CE–1025
Pan Pan 424–775
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Srivijaya 700s–1025
Majapahit 1300s
Rise of Muslim states
Kedah Sultanate 1136–present
Samudera Pasai Sultanate 1267–1521
Brunei Sultanate 1368–present
Malacca Sultanate 1402–1511
Sulu Sultanate 1450–1899
Pahang Sultanate 1470–1623
Aceh Sultanate 1496–1903
Pattani Sultanate 1516– 1902
Johor Sultanate 1528–present
Sarawak Sultanate 1599–1641
Selangor Sultanate 1766–present
Besut Kingdom 1780–1899
Setul Kingdom 1808–1916
Reman Kingdom 1810–1902
Kubang Pasu Kingdom 1839–1864
Colonial period
Portuguese Malacca 1511–1641
Dutch–Portuguese War 1601–1661
Dutch Malacca 1641–1824
Pahang Kingdom 1770–1881
Straits Settlements 1786–1946
Siamese invasion of Kedah 1821–1826
Anglo-Dutch Treaty1824
Burney Treaty1826
Naning War 1831–1832
Kingdom of Sarawak 1841–1946
Separation of Perlis from Kedah 1843
Crown Colony of Labuan 1848–1946
Pahang Civil War 1857–1863
Larut Wars 1861–1874
Klang War 1867–1874
Pangkor Treaty 1874
Perak War1875–1876
British Malaya / Borneo 1874–1946
Jementah Civil War 1879
North Borneo 1882–1946
Pahang Uprising 1891–1895
Mat Salleh Rebellion 1894–1905
Federated Malay States 1895–1946
Anglo-Siamese Treaty 1909
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Battle of Penang 1914
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World War II
Japanese occupation of Malaya / Borneo
1941–1945
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Formative period
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ASEAN Declaration 1967
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Modern period
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Kuala Lumpur flash floods 1971
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1985 Lahad Datu ambush 1985
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2000 Sipadan kidnappings 2000
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The construction of the Bastion Middelburg was carried out in 1660. It is strategically located at the mouth of Malacca River.
The Dutch Square, with Christ Church (left, built in 1753) and the Stadthuys (right)

Malacca was controlled as a colony of the VOC. All the chief administrators of Malacca were Dutch governors except for the brief period that the city was under British Residents during the Napoleonic Wars. However, focus on the administration of Malacca eventually waned by the Dutch as they preferred to focus on Batavia.

Governors of Malacca


Governors of Dutch Malacca (1641–1795)
Governors From Until
Johan van Twist 1641 1642
Jeremias van Vliet 1642 1645
Arnout de Vlamingh van Oudtshoorn 1645 1646
Jan Thyszoon Payart 1646 1662
Jan Anthonisz van Riebeeck 1662 1665
Balthasar Bort 1665 1679
Jacob Joriszoon Pits 1679 1680
Cornelis van Quaelberg 1680 1684
Nikolaas Schaghen 1684 1685
François Tack 1685 1686
Dirk Komans (1st time) 1686 1686
Thomas Slicher 1686 1691
Dirk Komans (2nd time) 1691 1692
Gelmer Vosberg 1692 1697
Goevert van Hoorn 1697 1700
Bernhard Phoonsen 1700 1704
Johan Grotenhuys (acting) 1704 1704
Karel Bolner 1704 1707
Pieter Rooselaar 1707 1709
Willem Six 1709 1711
Willem Moerman 1711 1717
Herman van Suchtelen 1717 1726
Johan Frederik Gobius 1726 1730
Pieter Rochus Pasques de Chavonnes 1730 1735
Roger de Laver 1735 1741
Willem Bernard Albinus 1741 1748
Pieter van Heemskerk 1748 1753
Willem Dekker 1753 1758
David Boelen 1758 1764
Thomas Schippers 1764 1771
Jan Crans 1771 1775
Pieter Gerardus de Bruijn 1775 1788
Abraham Couperus 1788 1795



British Residents of Malacca (1795–1818)
Residents From Until
Archibald Brown 1795 1795
Thomas Parr 1795 1796
Richard Tolson 1796 1797
David Campbell 1797 1798
Aldwell Taylor 1798 1803
Willem Jacob Cranssen (Dutch Governor) 1802
William Farquhar 1803 1818

Governors of Dutch Malacca (1818–1825)
Governors From Until
Jan Samuel Timmermann Thijssen 1818 1822
Adriaan Koek (acting) 1822 1824
Hendrik Stephanus van Son 1824 1825

The town and fortress of Malacca

The Dutch improved and expanded the Portuguese fortress as well as renovating the fortress' gate in 1670, they further built walls to protect the harbour and expanded city. During the mid-17th century the city hall or Stadthuys was constructed and served as the administrative center of the Dutch colony, which still stands today.

  • The town and fortress of Malacca in 1780 The town and fortress of Malacca in 1780
  • Dutch graves in the ruined St Paul's Church Dutch graves in the ruined St Paul's Church
  • Dutch Graveyard Dutch Graveyard

See also

References

  1. Leupe, P.A.; Hacobian, Mac (1936). "The Siege and Capture of Malacca from the Portuguese in 1640-1641". Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 14 (1 (124)): i–iii, 1–178. ISSN 2304-7550. JSTOR 41559848. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  2. ^ Andaya, Barbara Watson (1981). Perak, the Abode of Grace: A Study of an Eighteenth-century Malay state.
  3. Lowey-Ball, ShawnaKim Blake (2015). Liquid Market, Solid State: The rise and demise of the great global emporium at Malacca, 1400-1641 - ProQuest (Thesis). Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  4. HUSSIN, NORDIN (2002). "A Tale of Two Colonial Port-Towns in the Straits of Melaka: Dutch Melaka and English Penang". Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 75 (2 (283)): 85. ISSN 0126-7353. JSTOR 41493474.

Further reading

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2°11′20″N 102°23′4″E / 2.18889°N 102.38444°E / 2.18889; 102.38444

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