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Asian Trade and European Influence: In the Indonesian Archipelago between 1500 and about 1630 PDF

478 Pages·1962·17.82 MB·English
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ASIAN TRADE AND EUROPEAN INFLUENCE ASIAN TRADE AND EUROPEAN INFLUENCE IN THE INDONESIAN ARCHIPELAGO BETWEEN 1500 AND ABOUT 1630 BY M. A. P. MEILINK-ROELOFSZ • THE HAGUE MARTINUS NI]HOFF 1962 Published with a grant from the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Pure Research (Z.W.O.) ISBN 978-94-011-8197-6 ISBN 978-94-011-8850-0 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-94-011-8850-0 Copyright I96z by Martinus Nijholt, The Hague, Netherlands All rights reserved, including the right to translate or to reproduce this book or parts thereof in any form A an de nagedachtenis van mijn man PREFACE Now that this study is completed and I wish to make due acknowledg ment to all those who have in any degree contributed towards its realization, my thoughts turn in the first place to the one to whom this book is dedicated. It is a great grief to me that he who took such an intense interest in my work has not lived to see its conclusion. It was he who in the beginning urged me to venture upon this course of study and whose encouragement helped me in moments of de spondency. The high standard which, with his keen and critical judgment, he set for his own work, was an example to me, and I shall strive to maintain it in my future studies. Not only did he help me to lay the foundation of my knowledge of archive science, but he was also my guide in a field new to me in many respects, that of Asian maritime trade. His wide knowledge of medieval European trade in the Baltic area led me to compare and contrast the two worlds of East and West and thus helped me to obtain a deeper insight into the differences and similarities between the various problems involved. I am greatly indebted to Prof. Dr. J. M. Romein, who has followed the progress of my studies with great interest all these years, and on whose help and support, sometimes in very difficult circumstances, I have always been able to rely. His unceasing encouragement, his frequent good advice, and his critical judgment have been of exceptional value to me. For all this, I tender him my warmest thanks. Besides Prof. Romein, I would make special mention of Prof. Dr. W. F. Wertheim, whose critical comments and extensive knowledge of the relevant literature have been of much assistance to me. I am also indebted to Prof. Dr. J. E. van Lohuizen-de Leeuw and to Prof. Dr. T. S. Jansma, who have spared no pains to help me in the com pletion of my task. vm PREFACE I must also express my appreciation of the kindness shown by Prof. C. R. Boxer of London University (King's College) in reading and criticizing the Dutch text of my thesis. His wide knowledge of the Portuguese period in Asia has been of much benefit to me. I am very grateful to Mrs. M. B. Quast for undertaking the arduous task of translating the lengthy Dutch manuscript into English, and to Mr. D. A. S. Reid and Prof. Dr. P. N. U. Harting for checking the translation. My sincere thanks are due to Miss J. Felhoen Kraal, who, when the correction of the proofs was threatened with unforeseen delay, spontaneously gave her help. Miss A. P. M. Mollema must be especially mentioned among those who helped me in compiling the index: her sound advice has been of the greatest value to me. CONTENTS Preface VII Inbroduction 1 I. Trade and Traffic in the Indonesian Archipelago and the Malay Peninsula prior to the 15th century 13 II. The Rise of Malacca 27 III. Malacca at the end of the 15th century. Structure of trade. Trade and traders in Malaccan society 36 IV. The commercial traffic of Malacca at the end of the 15th century: its bearing and density 60 V. Trade in the Indonesian Archipelago not centred exclusively on Malacca: (1) The Sumatran ports 89 - (2) The spice-producing areas: the Moluccas and Banda 93 - (3) Trade in Borneo, Celebes and the Lesser Sunda Islands 100 - (4) The Javanese seaports 103 89 VI. The influence of Portuguese expansion on Asian trade II6 VII. Portuguese Malacca and native trade in the Malay-Indonesian area 136 VIII. The coming of the northern Europeans to the Malay-Indonesian area. Inter-European conflicts and Asian trade 173 IX. The spice monopoly of the United Company and Asian trade in the Malay-Indonesian area 207 X. The United Company monopoly and the foreign Asian merchant in Indonesia at the beginning of the 17th century 239 XI. The United Company monopoly and the spice trade of the towns of Northern Java 269 Sununary 295 Sources consulted in manuscript Bibliography Notes List of Abbreviations Index INTRODUCTION The extremely important propositions about the commercial traffic of the Indonesian Archipelago advanced by B. Schrieke in The Shifts in Political and Economic power in the Indonesian Archipelago in the sixteenth and seventeenth century and by J. C. van Leur in Indonesian Trade and Society 1 inspired the present author to undertake the research which led to the writing of this book. Both Schrieke and Van Leur, however, started from sociological premisses. To supplement their work and to form a basis for comparison, an account is given here of the historical development of this trade, seen from a historical instead of from a sociological standpoint. This was made possible by new sources of information becoming available to augment those already at hand. In the main, therefore, this book is a comparative study of the position of native trade in Indonesia before and after the coming of the Euro peans, the central theme being, of course, the appearance of foreign traders, both Asian and European, in the Malay-Indonesian Archi pelago. A completely integrated picture proved to be an unattainable ideal, owing to the nature of the sources of information. Besides referring to previously published sources, we also drew on original documents in the Dutch East India Company records, a desirable if not an essential procedure and one which neither Schrieke nor Van Leur was in a position to follow. Portuguese, English, and a few native sources were also consulted, in so far as the latter were available in translation. Thanks to the great interest displayed by the Portuguese on their first contact with this strange new world of the East Indies - the most valuable expression of this interest being Tome Pires' Suma Oriental - it has been possible to compile quite an accurate and comprehensive account of trade in the Malay-Indonesian region during the early period, that is to say just before the coming of the Europeans. But, later on, too many matters were assumed to be common knowledge for the Europeans to enlarge upon them. This circumstance determined 2 INTRODUCTION the structure of the present work, which falls into two distinct parts. But even when dealing with the period in which the stress shifts once more to the European element, we have avoided, as far as possible, considering this European expansion from a European point of view and have, instead, attempted to ascertain its impact on Asian trade. Particular attention will be devoted to the destruction of the spice trade, which was the most important branch of independent Asian trade in the Malay-Indonesian area, and to the repercussions this had on the economy of the Spice Islands, the seaports of northern Java, Bantam, and the ports of eastern Sumatra. The part played by con flicting European views and policies in the survival of independent Asian trade will also be demonstrated. While the present research confirmed in part the results of the studies made by Schrieke and Van Leur - also in respect of a peri9d earlier than that which they dealt with in detail - it nevertheless became apparent that, in particular, Van Leur's sometimes very antithetically postulated theses required rectification. Professor Wertheim has justifiably drawn attention both at home and abroad to Van Leur's studies,2 and several scholars have already written about the value of Van Leur's work.3 Romein supported Wertheim's largely laudatory opinion4 while pointing out some shortcomings in the studies,5 but Locher, Boxer and Coolhaas subjected them to harsher criticism.6 Perhaps Coolhaas based his criticism too much on one work about the 18th century? in which Van Leur's findings, according to Coolhaas, were insufficiently documented. For that matter, most of the documents relating to that period are still unpublished, in contrast to the position with respect to the first half of the 17th century, about which a large number of published documents were at Van Leur's disposal. The study relating to the 18th century is said to demonstrate the same defects as attached to Van Leur's treatment of the Portuguese period,8 in respect of which he was certainly not properly documented. Whatever esteem he may feel for Van Leur, Professor Boxer has already pointed this out in several of his publications. 9 When Van Leur wrote his doctor's thesis in 1933-1934, he apparently lacked the time to consult the Portuguese sources, although he certain ly realized the value of doing SO.10 His original intention was to give a sketch of a 16th century Indonesian shipping port and to compare its development with the growth of a west European trading town in the Middle Ages.!1 He may have been inspired to do this by several historical studies of towns which were written from an economic point INTRODUCTION 3 of view at the beginning of the 20th century. But he must soon have realized that it was impossible because of a lack of suitable material. The sources which he did have at his disposal mainly supplied data about the business of the Company in the first half of the I7th century. It was difficult enough to extract adequate information from these documents about the trade of the Asians themselves, in fact this was only possible after prolonged research among widely dispersed and sometimes quite fortuitous data. But it was really only the European sources which qualified as material for this study as the economic element does not play an important part in such native sources as exist at all in accessible form, so that we are entirely dependent on what the Europeans had to say about the trade and industry of the peoples with whom they came into contact. There can be no question of a study based on precise statistical data. The person who enters this territory lacks practically all the aids which an economic historian has at his disposal where European history is concerned and, to quote a somewhat austere pronouncement by Professor C. H. Philips, he is carrying on "single-handed a guerilla warfare in the jungle." 12 Van Leur did not eschew this struggle and thanks to his great originality and the wide extent of his reading, he was still able to achieve re markable results which have already proved extraordinarily fruitful. At a time when the historical scene in Indonesia was still entirely dominated by the colonial point of view and Indonesia was regarded quite simply as the Dutch East Indies,1s he had the inspiration of allowing his vision to swing the full half circle from the European to the Indonesian angle. That at approximately the same time and inde pendently of him others also took up the same position 14 in no way detracts from his merit. For a better understanding of the native backgrounds against which Company business was enacted, we have to go back to the colonial historians of the I9th century. Although they themselves were probably largely unaware of it, historians like De Jonge and Van der Chijs were still being influenced by the ideas of Enlightenment, which held that non-Europeans also had a part to play in world events. In I864, in his description of De opkomst van het Nederlandsch gezag in Oost-Indie (The Rise of Dutch Authority in the East Indies), De Jonge interpolates a comprehensive sketch of the Asian peoples, including an account of their shipping trade before the advent of the Europeans.15 For the rest he wisely confines himself to Company business, but also emphasizes this quite definitely in the title of his work. As late as the middle eighties of the last

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