Sumatra's East Coast Residency
Sumatra's East Coast Residency Residentie Oostkust van Sumatra | |
---|---|
Residency of Dutch East Indies | |
1873–1942 | |
Malay-language map of East Sumatra Residency (1909) | |
Capital | Medan |
Area | |
• 1930 | 94,583[1] km2 (36,519 sq mi) |
Population | |
• 1930 | 1,693,200[2] |
History | |
• Established | 1873 |
• Disestablished | 1942 |
Today part of | North Sumatra and Riau provinces |
Sumatra's East Coast Residency (Template:Lang-nl) was an administrative subdivision of the Dutch East Indies with its capital in Medan. It was located in northern Sumatra.[3][4]
Formation
From the early 19th century the Dutch gradually took control of Sumatra, starting from the south. In Eastern Indonesia, the sultanates of Asahan, Serdang, Deli and Langkat were subjugated between 1662 and 1865, and these sultans were subsequently used by the Dutch to indirectly rule the "native states", as they became known.
The inland Batak areas were under Dutch control by 1895. The East Coast Residency was established in 1873, headed by a resident initially based in Bengkalis in the Siak sultanate, and from 1887 in Medan, which was at the center of the tobacco plantation region. The residency took its final form in 1908 after Tamiang, a small area in the north, was transferred to Aceh[5][6][7]
Plantations
In 1863, the first Dutch settler, Jacobus Nienjuys, arrived and began to plant tobacco, nutmeg and coconut. Others followed, and established plantations to grow tropical crops such as tobacco, rubber, palm oil and coffee on 1,000 hectares of land leased from the sultan of Deli. These plants grew very well in the region's volcanic soil. The planation economy really began to grow in 1869, with a lease of 25,000 hectares of land in Deli being granted by the sultan to the Deli Corporation (Deli Maatschappij) for tobacco. The company established a local base in the village of Medan, and over the following three decades, transformed the sultanate into a huge commercial tobacco growing region. By 1938, there were 10,026 square kilometers of plantations in the northern part of the residency, known as the Estates Area.[8][9]
Administration
By 1910, all the traditional rulers of East Sumatra had recognized Dutch authority over the areas they previously ruled over. The Malays sultans signed "political contracts" turning their kingdoms into now indirectly ruled "native states", while the other rulers signed "short contracts", acknowledging the incorporation of their kingdoms into the Dutch East Indies.[10]
In 1909, the East Coast plantation region was designated an administrative region, with an advisory council. Medan was declared a municipality, with an advisory council, and in 1917 the same status was applied to Pematangsiantar, Binjei, Tebingtinggi and Tanjung Balai.[11]
The East Coast Residency was divided into five regions (afdeeling), which comprised or contained a total of 34 "native states", which were autonomous to a degree as follows:[12][13][14]
Afdeeling | Notes | Modern administrative regions |
---|---|---|
Langkat | same area as the Langkat sultanate | Langkat Regency, Binjai |
Deli/Serdang | Deli and Serdang sultanates | Deli Serdang Regency, Serdang Bedagai Regency, Medan |
Simalungun/Karoland | Batak region. Comprising Simalungun sub-region (five native states) and Karoland sub-region (five Karo kingdoms) | Karo Regency, Simalungun Regency, Pematangsiantar |
Asahan | Comprising three sub-regions: Asahan (Asahan Sultanate), Batubara (five native states) and Labuhan Batu (four native states) | Asahan Regency, North Labuhan Batu Regency, Labuhan Batu Regency, South Labuhan Batu Regency, Tanjungbalai |
Bengkalis | eliminated by boundary changes in 1938 | Part of Riau province |
The towns of Medan, Pematang Siantar, Tanjong Balai, Tebing Tinggi and Binjei were enclaves within the native states. The first two were governed by a mayor, and the latter three by the assistant resident.[15]
In 1938, all ten residences on the island of Sumatra were brought together to form the Government of Sumatra, with Medan as its capital. The head of each residency was a resident. Under the resident, there were assistant residents, controllers and district administrators, who were responsible for the subdivisions of the residency.[14]
Population
Before 1863, when the first Europeans arrived, the region was populated by a few thousand Malays. As labourers from outside the region were brought in to work on the plantations, the population grew rapidly. Initially these immigrant workers came directly from China, and from 1872, Java. In the late 1880s, the number of Chinese labourers brought in by the tobacco companies reached 20,000 per year. The work force on the coffee, rubber, tea and oil-palm plantations, which began to be planted in the late 1890s, was entirely ethnic Javanese.[16][17]
Year | Europeans | Natives | Chinese | Other "orientals" |
---|---|---|---|---|
1880 | 522 | 90,000 | 25,700 | 2,533 |
1900 | 2,079 | 306,035 | 103,768 | 9,208 |
1915 | 5,200 | 681,000 | 132,000 | 14,320 |
1930 | 11,079 | 1,470,395 | 192,822 | 18,904 |
As of 1938, the "native" population was dominated by ethnic Javanese, mostly from central Java, followed by Bataks. There were also Banjar people from southern Borneo and Mandailing people from west Sumatra. Most of the "other orientals" were from China, but there were also Indians and Arabs. Most of the managers of the tobacco plantations and half the managers of the rubber, tea and oil plantations were Dutch, but there were also other Europeans and Americans.[18][19]
Notes
- ^ Dootjes 1938, p. 47.
- ^ a b Dootjes 1938, p. 50.
- ^ Topografische Inrichting (Batavia) (1915), Schetskaart van het noordelijk gedeelte der Residentie Oostkust van Sumatra, Topographische Inrichting, retrieved 5 January 2023
- ^ Heyligers, Ch A (1912), De agrarische aangelegenheden in de Residentie Oostkust van Sumatra, J. Hallermann, retrieved 5 January 2023
- ^ Cribb 2013, pp. 115–116, 127.
- ^ Reid 2014, pp. 3–4.
- ^ Van Langenberg 1976, pp. 22, 30.
- ^ Dootjes 1938, pp. 45–27.
- ^ Van Langenberg 1976, pp. 16, 21–22.
- ^ Van Langenberg 1976, pp. 27–28.
- ^ Van Langenberg 1976, p. 32.
- ^ Van Langenberg 1976, p. 34.
- ^ Reid 2014, p. 53.
- ^ a b Dootjes 1938, p. 52.
- ^ Dootjes 1938, p. 53.
- ^ Dootjes 1938, pp. 49–50.
- ^ Reid 2014, pp. 43–44.
- ^ Dootjes 1938, pp. 50–51.
- ^ Reid 2014, p. 41.
References
- Cribb, Robert; Kahin, Audrey (2004). Historical Dictionary of Indonesia. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0810849358.
- Cribb, Robert (2013). Historical Atlas of Indonesia. Curzon. ISBN 978-0-7007-0985-4.
- Dootjes, F.J.J. (November 1938). "Deli, the Land of Agricultural Enterprises". In Koninklijk Instituut voor de Tropen (ed.). Bulletin of the Colonial Institute of Amsterdam. Vol. 2. Kominklijk Instituut voor de Troopen. pp. 45–55.
- Van Langenberg, Michael John (1976). National revolution in north Sumatra: Sumatera Timur and Topanuli, 1942-1950 (PDF) (Doctor of Philosophy thesis). The University of Sydney. Retrieved 18 August 2024.
- Reid, Anthony (2014). The Blood of the People: Revolution & the End of Traditional Rule in Northern Sumatra. Singapore: NUS Press. ISBN 978-9971-69-637-5.
- Ricklefs, M.C. (2008) [1981], A History of Modern Indonesia Since c. 1200 (4th ed.), Palgrave MacMillan, ISBN 978-0-230-54686-8