Colonialism in Southeast Asia (Portugal, Spain, Dutch)
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Transcript of Colonialism in Southeast Asia (Portugal, Spain, Dutch)
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COLONIALISM IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Dean Ruffel R. Flandez
M. History - 1
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CONTENTS
PORTUGUESE
SPANISH DUTCH
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PORTUGUESE
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PORTUGUESE
Portuguese colonization
reached Southeast Asia
particularly in some parts
of Indonesia, Malacca,
Timor, and Moluccas.
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PORTUGUESE MALACCA
The news of Malacca's wealth attracted the
attention of Manuel I, King of Portugal and he
sent Admiral Diogo Lopes de Sequeira to find
Malacca, to make a trade compact with its ruler as
Portugal's representative east of India.
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PORTUGUESE MALACCA
Although he was initially well-received by Sultan
Mahmud Shah trouble however quickly ensued.
The international Muslim trading community
convinced Mahmud that the Portuguese were a
grave threat. Mahmud subsequently captured
several of his men, killed others and attempted to
attack the four Portuguese ships, although they
escaped.
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PORTUGUESE MALACCA
In April 1511, Alfonso de
Albuquerque set sail from Goa to
Malacca with a force of some 1200
men and seventeen or eighteen
ships.
Conflict was unavoidable, and
after 40 days of fighting, Malacca
fell to the Portuguese on 24 August
1511.
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PORTUGUESE MALACCA
It soon became clear that
Portuguese control of
Malacca did not also mean
they controlled Asian trade
centered there. Their
Malaccan rule was
severely hampered by
administrative and
economic difficulties.
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PORTUGUESE MALACCA
In the early 17th century, the Dutch East India Company
began contesting 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 Straits of
Malacca and the spice trade there.
The Dutch with their local allies assaulted and finally
wrested Malacca from the Portuguese in January 1641.
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PORTUGUESE TIMOR
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PORTUGUESE TIMOR
The Portuguese first settled on Timor in 1520, and
the Spanish arrived in 1522. The Dutch took
possession of the western portion of the island in
1613. The British governed the island in 1812–15.
The Dutch and the Portuguese fought for supremacy
over Timor; Portuguese sovereignty over the island's
eastern half was settled by treaties in 1860 and
1893, although the latter became effective only in
1914.
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PORTUGUESE TIMOR
Japanese forces occupied Timor during World War II.
East Timor province, including the Ambeno enclave,
thereafter remained in Portuguese possession until 1975,
when one of the major political parties there, FRETILIN
(Frente Revolucionária de Timor Leste
Independente [Revolutionary Front of Independent
East Timor]), gained control of much of the territory
and declared its independence (November) as the
Democratic Republic of East Timor.
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PORTUGUESE MOLUCCAS
Sought after by
many European
nations because of its
famous spices. It is
known as the Spice
Islands.
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PORTUGUESE MOLUCCAS
Apart from some relatively minor cultural
influences the most significant lasting effects of the
Portuguese presence was the disruption and
reorganization of the Southeast Asian trade, and in
eastern Indonesia—including Maluku—the
introduction of Christianity.
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PORTUGUESE MOLUCCAS
After the Portuguese annexed Malacca in August 1511, one
Portuguese diary noted 'it is thirty years since they became
Moors‘- giving a sense of the competition then taking place
between Islamic and European influences in the region.
Alfonso de Albuquerque learned of the route to the Banda
Islands and other 'Spice Islands', and sent an exploratory
expedition of three vessels under the command of António de
Abreu, Simão Alfonso Bisigudo and Francisco Serrão.
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PORTUGUESE MOLUCCAS
Allying himself with
Ternate's ruler, Serrão
constructed a fortress on that
tiny island and served as the
head of a mercenary band of
Portuguese seamen under the
service of one of the two local
feuding sultans who
controlled most of the spice
trade.
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PORTUGUESE MOLUCCAS
Sometime in the 16th century, there had been encounters
between Spanish and Portuguese.
The Dutch and British soon joined in the conflicts to try to
gain a monopoly over the trade and expel Portugal. The fighting
for control over these small islands became very intense in the
17th and 18th centuries with the Dutch even giving the island
of Manhattan to the British in exchange for, among other
things, the tiny island of Run which gave the Dutch full control
over the Banda archipelago's nutmeg production.
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SPANISH
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SPANISH
Spanish colonization
reached Southeast Asia
particularly in
Philippines, where they
reign for over 300 years.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
Spanish colonial motives were not, however,
strictly commercial. The Spanish at first viewed the
Philippines as a stepping-stone to the riches of the
East Indies (Spice Islands), but, even after the
Portuguese and Dutch had foreclosed that possibility,
the Spanish still maintained their presence in the
archipelago.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
The Portuguese navigator and explorer Ferdinand
Magellan headed the first Spanish foray to the
Philippines when he made landfall on Cebu in March
1521; a short time later he met an untimely death on
the nearby island of Mactan. After King Philip II (for
whom the islands are named) had dispatched three
further expeditions that ended in disaster, he sent
out Miguel López de Legazpi, who established the
first permanent Spanish settlement, in Cebu, in
1565.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
The Spanish city of Manila was founded in 1571,
and by the end of the 16th century most of the
coastal and lowland areas from Luzon to northern
Mindanao were under Spanish control. Friars
marched with soldiers and soon accomplished the
nominal conversion to Roman Catholicism of all
the local people under Spanish administration. But
the Muslims of Mindanao and Sulu, whom the
Spanish called Moros, were never completely
subdued by Spain.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
Spanish rule for the first 100 years was exercised
in most areas through a type of tax farming imported
from the Americas and known as the encomienda.
But abusive treatment of the local tribute payers and
neglect of religious instruction by encomenderos
(collectors of the tribute), as well as frequent
withholding of revenues from the crown, caused the
Spanish to abandon the system by the end of the
17th century.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
Manila dominated the islands not only as the
political capital. The galleon trade with Acapulco,
Mex., assured Manila's commercial primacy as well.
The exchange of Chinese silks for Mexican silver not
only kept in Manila those Spanish who were seeking
quick profit, but it also attracted a large Chinese
community.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
By the late 18th century,
political and economic changes
in Europe were finally
beginning to affect Spain and,
thus, the Philippines. Important
as a stimulus to trade was the
gradual elimination of the
monopoly enjoyed by the
galleon to Acapulco.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
The growth of commercial agriculture resulted in
the appearance of a new class. Alongside the
landholdings of the church and the rice estates of
the pre-Spanish nobility there arose haciendas of
coffee, hemp, and sugar, often the property of
enterprising Chinese-Filipino mestizos.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
Not until 1863 was there public education in the
Philippines, and even then the church controlled the
curriculum. Less than one-fifth of those who went to
school could read and write Spanish, and far fewer
could speak it properly. The limited higher education
in the colony was entirely under clerical direction,
but by the 1880s many sons of the wealthy were sent
to Europe to study.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
There, nationalism and a passion for reform
blossomed in the liberal atmosphere. Out of this
talented group of overseas Filipino students arose
what came to be known as the Propaganda
Movement. Magazines, poetry, and pamphleteering
flourished. José Rizal, this movement's most
brilliant figure, produced two political novels—Noli
me tangere (1886; Touch Me Not) and El
filibusterismo (1891; The Reign of Greed)—which
had a wide impact in the Philippines.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
Rizal was quickly arrested by the overly fearful
Spanish, exiled to a remote island in the south, and
finally executed in 1896. Meanwhile, within the
Philippines there had developed a firm commitment
to independence among a somewhat less privileged
class.
Shocked by the arrest of Rizal in 1892, these
activists quickly formed the Katipunan under the
leadership of Andres Bonifacio, a self-educated
warehouseman.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
In August 1896, Spanish friars uncovered evidence
of the Katipunan's plans, and its leaders were forced
into premature action. Revolts broke out in several
provinces around Manila. After months of fighting,
severe Spanish retaliation forced the revolutionary
armies to retreat to the hills. In December 1897 a
truce was concluded with the Spanish
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
Emilio Aguinaldo, a municipal mayor
and commander of the rebel forces, was
paid a large sum and was allowed to go
to Hong Kong with other leaders; the
Spanish promised reforms as well. But
reforms were slow in coming, and small
bands of rebels, distrustful of Spanish
promises, kept their arms; clashes grew
more frequent
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
Meanwhile, war had broken out between Spain and
the United States (the Spanish-American War). After the
U.S. naval victory in the Battle of Manila Bay in May
1898, Aguinaldo and his entourage returned to the
Philippines with the help of Adm. George Dewey.
Confident of U.S. support, Aguinaldo reorganized his
forces and soon liberated several towns south of Manila.
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
Independence was declared on June 12 (now
celebrated as Independence Day). In September a
constitutional congress met in Malolos, north of
Manila, which drew up a fundamental law derived
from European and Latin American precedents. A
government was formed on the basis of that
constitution in January 1899, with Aguinaldo as
president of the new country, popularly known as the
“Malolos Republic.”
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
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SPANISH PHILIPPINES
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DUTCH
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DUTCH
Dutch colonization
reached Southeast Asia
particularly all of
Indonesia and a part of
Cambodia.
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DUTCH EAST INDIES
From the arrival of the first Dutch ships in the late
sixteenth century, to the declaration of independence
in 1945, Dutch control over the Indonesian
archipelago was always tenuous. Although Java was
dominated by the Dutch, many areas remained
independent throughout much of this time including
Aceh, Bali, Lombok and Borneo.
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DUTCH EAST INDIES
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DUTCH EAST INDIES
In 1806, with the Netherlands
under French domination,
Napoleon appointed his
brother Louis Bonaparte to the
Dutch throne which led to the
1808 appointment of Marshall
Herman Willem Daendels to
Governor General of the Dutch
East Indies.
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DUTCH EAST INDIES
In 1811, British forces occupied several Dutch East
Indies ports including Java and Thomas Stamford
Raffles became Lieutenant Governor. Dutch control
was restored in 1816. Under the 1824 Anglo-Dutch
Treaty, the Dutch secured British settlements in
Indonesia, such as Bengkulu in Sumatra, in
exchange for ceding control of their possessions in
the Malay Peninsula and Dutch India.
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DUTCH EAST INDIES
Kingdom by
kingdom, the
Dutch slowly
conquered the
whole range that
would form the
territory of the
Republic of
Indonesia.
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DUTCH EAST INDIES
During World War II the entire Dutch
East Indies, excepting a part of
southern Netherlands New Guinea, was
occupied by Japan. The years 1945–49
formed a transition period in which The
Netherlands unsuccessfully tried to
regain control of the islands; the
islands achieved independence as the
new nation of Indonesia in 1949.
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DUTCH EAST INDIES
The Dutch East Indies (Indonesia) were
administered by the Dutch East India Company and
later the Dutch government. The Netherlands
developed its empire without challenge due
to winning concessions and political influence from
local rulers, placing Chinese in positions of authority
and imposing systems of forced labor.
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ARIGATOUGOZAIMASU!
Thank You!