Malacca & Malay Archipelago

Oriental Commerce

Malay Peninsula

Source = "Oriental Commerce": containing a geographical description of the principal places in the East Indies, China, and Japan, with their produce, manufactures, and trade - Willaim Milburn, 1813 Google Books 2LpLAAAAYAAJExcerpts = Malay Peninsula (Chapter 23 p. 295-324)

MALAY PENINSULA

THE coast between Junkceylon and Queda is fronted by numerous islands of various sizes, and inside most of the groups, and between them, there are passages for small vessels, but large ships generally sail outside. The country of Queda extends from the River Trang, in 7° 30 North, to that of Carian in 5° 10 North; its length is about 150 miles, and its breadth from 20 to 35 miles. From Trang to Purlis the coast is sheltered by many islands and sandbanks navigable for small vessels only; the entire country is exceedingly well watered, and fertile. Twenty-three rivers, all navigable for proas, and many of them for larger vessels, empty themselves into the sea; the principal of which is


PURLIS.

This river is deep and narrow, at the entrance of which is a small sandy island, on which stands a fishing village, protected by a few pieces of cannon: the bar of the river is very long, with only ten feet water upon it at spring tides; the town is situated 4 or 5 miles from this entrance, in a valley encompassed with steep hills. The old King of Queda in his latter days chose this place for his residence, which occasioned many people to resort here; but since his death it has sunk into its former obscurity. Pulo Ladda and several other islands lie to the westward of this port, about 5 leagues. The Great Ladda is inhabited by a race of Malays, who are in general great thieves, and commit frequent acts of piracy. There is exceeding good anchorage on the eastern side of them, of sufficient capacity for the largest fleet, with a plentiful supply of wood and water at hand. On the S. W. side is a harbour, where the French refitted and masted, after an engagement with Commodore Barnet in 1745.


QUEDA,

The principal seaport, is called Qualla Batrang, and is in latitude 6° North. The river is navigable for vessels of 300 tons, but its entrance is choked up by a mud bank, 2½ miles in length, with about 12 feet water in spring tides. Large ships anchor about 4 miles off', in 5 or 6 fathoms, the entrance of the river bearing E. N. E. and a mountain called the Elephant N. E. At the mouth of the river is a small brick fortress, with a few guns; the greater part of the fort is in ruins, so that the spring tides flow into it. The river is about 300 yards wide; both shores are muddy, and have swampy plains covered with jungle. Seven miles up the river is Allestar, where the King resides; all vessels that pass the bar, can go to Allestar: the river is narrow, but deep. The King's residence is in a small brick fort; the inhabitants near him are composed of Chulias, Chinese, and Malays. This place was plundered and burnt by the Buggesses in 1770; since which it has continued in a very poor state.


Queda contains about 300 houses, inhabited by Chinese, Chulias, and Malays. It was formerly a place of considerable trade; but since the establishment at. Pulo Pinang, the Malay proas have carried the greater part of their trade there, for the European and country ships bound to China.


The following account of the mode of transacting business is extracted from Elmore's Directory - "When going on shore, you land on the east side of the river, and the Captain Chinaman will report your arrival to the Shabundar, who will introduce you to the King. You must not neglect to carry a present with you, according to the quantity of goods you expect to sell, which will be but small, Queda being constantly well supplied from Pulo Pinang. However, your present should be genteel; and do not forget the Captain Chinaman and Shabundar, as they can be of great service to you, and inform you of all the customs, as well as the markets, and whether any thing is likely to be done. The King, like most other Malay Princes, engrosses almost the whole foreign trade of the port, excepting that of an annual Chinese junk, which used to come here regularly, that pays a certain sum only as duty, and then has leave to trade freely with the inhabitants."

COINS, WEIGHTS, AND MEASURES.

Spanish dollars are the principal coin. All goods are weighed by the China dotchin, or wooden steelyards; but English scales and weights are in common use. The bahar is 424 lbs. avoirdupois.

IMPORTS AND EXPORTS.

IMPORTS.–Opium and Spanish dollars form the principal part of the cargoes of the country ships. For the latter you are certain of procuring goods, if any are to be had; and frequently a few chests of opium will bring a good price. The Chinese junks import coarse China-ware in considerable quantities, thin irons, pans, gongs, white and blue cloths, and other articles suitable to the Malay market.

EXPORTS. - The chief produce of Queda is tin; but beech de mer, bees wax, birds’-nests, cautch or terra Japonica, dammer, fish-maws, rice, rattans, and shark's-fins, are to be procured in their way to China. These compose the return cargo of the Chinese junk, and of the few country ships which visit this place.

DUTIES.

The duties here are 2 per cent, and the most reasonable of any port on the Malay Coast, or to the eastward, and fewer impositions; but presents are necessary to the King and principal men.

PROVISIONS AND REFRESHMENTS.

Bullocks, with poultry of various kinds, fruits, and vegetables, are in abundance. Very good water is procured from the river, at an inconsiderable expence.

QUALLA MOORBA

Is about 18 miles to the southward of Queda; it is a large river, deep and rapid; the water here is always fresh to the sea; the heavy surge, which breaks upon this shore during the S. W. monsoon, has, by opposing the current from the river, formed a dangerous sandbank, extending three miles out to sea, and on which there is only one fathom water. This river is, however, convenient, on account of its situation with the tin mines. The annual produce here is about 1000 peculs; this small quantity is not, however, owing to the scarcity of ore, but to the want of hands, and to the few people employed, being badly paid.


PRY RIVER

Is abreast the north point of Pulo Pinang; it has a mud bar, with 12 or 13 feet water on it in spring tides. In 1790 the King of Queda constructed a fort, and assembled a number of forces and proas for an attack upon Pulo Pinang. The English landed there, took the fort by assault, and destroyed most of the vessels. In 1800, a district of land on the banks of this river, 18 miles in length, and 3 in breadth, was ceded by the King of Queda to the East India Company in perpetuity, for which they agreed to pay him 10,000 dollars per annum. The town, which is situated at the entrance of the river, was previously a receptacle for vagrants of every description; but a number of people having resorted thither, it is expected that many beneficial consequences will arise from the acquisition.

PRINCE OF WALES'S ISLAND.

This island, called by the Malays Pulo Pinang, extends from latitude 5° 16 to 5° 30 North; it is of an irregular four-sided figure, the north side being the longest, and the south the shortest; it is near 5 leagues in length, and 7 or 8 miles in breadth. The N.W. end of the island is high uneven land; and excepting the south part, and the eastern side, where the town is built, and where there is a considerable tract of low land cultivated contiguous to the sea, the rest of the island is all high, and covered with trees. About five miles west from the fort stands a mountain, on which signals are displayed for ships approaching the island; it is 2,170 feet above the sea.


Prince of Wales's Island is separated from the Malay Peninsula by a narrow strait about two miles broad, which forms the harbour, and affords excellent anchorage for the largest ships: there is also an inner harbour, where ships may receive every kind of repair that can be performed, without going into dock.

Plan of Fort Cornwallis with the Town on the East Point of the Island.

Fort Cornwallis is built on the N. E. point of the island, and is in latitude 5° 24- North, and longitude 100° 21 East; it was originally badly constructed, and large sums have been spent upon it without completing it. On the west face there never has been any rampart; there is no parapet except on the four bastions at the angles; the ditch is narrow, and fordable in every part. The fort is incapable of defence; from its size, construction, and situation, a 74 gun ship could anchor within pistol shot, and from their tops drive away the men from their guns. No fort of any strength can be erected on the site of the present one, without destroying one half the town in order to form a glacis. In the fort are barracks for the military, the arsenal, magazine, and military storehouses. The sea has of late years made encroachments on the north face of the fort, and along the esplanade, and for upwards of a mile in that direction.


The town, called George Town by the English, and Panjang Panaique by the Malays, is of considerable extent; it is bounded on the north and east by the sea, on the south by a small river, and on the west by the high road. The streets, which cross each other at right angles, are spacious and airy; but having been at first merely lined out, without being either raised or drained, were frequently impassable after hard rain. This inconvenience has been removed, as the principal streets are now properly raised and drained, and the town has in consequence improved much in appearance and cleanliness. There is a large pier for landing and shipping goods, to which fresh water is conducted by pipes.


Since the island has become the seat of Government, considerable alterations have taken place in every department. A Government house, a church, a jail, and several substantial bridges have been built; the fortifications have been improved and strengthened, and the public roads repaired and widened.


Pulo Pinang was originally granted to the East India Company by the King of Queda, at the request of Captain Francis Light of the Country service, who had married his daughter. The Bengal Government seeing the island so peculiarly adapted as a mercantile station for vessels from all the Malay ports, the Moluccas, Borneo, Celebes, and the Philippine Islands, did not hesitate to accept the King of Queda's grant; conceiving that, by an establishment properly secured, the Bengal trade with that of China would be connected, and from the conduct of the Dutch, it became necessary to have a port where the Country ships might meet the Eastern merchants, as well for the promotion of that valuable commerce, as to afford a windward station of refreshment and repair to the King's, the Company's, and the country ships. A small detachment was accordingly sent from Calcutta, under the command of Captain Light, who took possession of the island, in the name of His Majesty, and for the use of the East India Company, on the 12th of August, 1786, and immediately commenced clearing the country, and began the construction of a small fort for the protection of the detachment against any attempts of the Malay powers, who might be instigated by the Dutch at Malacca, or induced by the fickleness of their own disposition, to cut them off. Captain Light was authorized to receive such colonists as he might judge expedient; to allot such a portion of land to each family as circumstances would admit; and, as an encouragement to trade, the port was made free to all nations.


In a very short space of time numerous adventurers flocked to the settlement, some with the intention of remaining, others merely with a view of traffic. These finding a ready sale for their goods, and meeting with the merchandise they required in return, the commerce of the port rapidly increased. A town, called George Town, was marked out, and within the year there were upwards of sixty Chinese families living in it, besides great numbers of Malays, Buggesses, and other Eastern traders. The settlements continued in a progressive state of improvement, both in regard to its population and cultivation.


In the year 1797 there were 6937 inhabitants on the island, exclusive of Europeans and the garrison; and in 1801 they had increased to 10,310. Previous to 1805, the government of the island had been considered merely as of a temporary nature. It had long been the intention of the Company to establish a regular system of administration for the island, but from various causes it was not formed. Although from the spirit of British rule, even when imperfectly administered, industry, enterprise, and improvement appeared to a great extent on the island, and its population, produce, and commerce were very respectable, yet the growth of the colony had in many ways been impeded by the want of regular government and laws; and as the inhabitants had become more numerous, that want had been more felt and complained of.

Antique print of Malacca in 1726 by Valentijn showing St. Paul's Church at the top of the hill, surrounded by the fort & Malacca river to the left.

PERA.

From the S. W. end of Prince of Wales's Island, Pulo Dinding bears S. S. E. distant about 60 miles. This island and the Sambelongs lie at the entrance of Pera River, which is in latitude about 3° 50 North. The ebb tide runs strong near the mouth of the river, where it narrows, especially after rain; it will admit of a vessel drawing 12 or 14 feet water, but the bar requires attention, being hard sand. There is but one dangerous shoal in the river. In other respects it is navigable with safety, having a continued muddy bottom up to the place where the Dutch had a factory, which they relinquished. The town of Pera, where the King resides, is about fifty miles from the sea. There is little trade here. The Dutch formerly contracted with the King for all the tin at 10 Spanish dollars a pecul; but much of it was smuggled to Pulo Pinang, by the rivers that empty themselves into the sea to the northward of Pera.


Cattle and poultry are not so cheap here as at Queda. Oysters are to be had in quantities near the river's mouth, and great plenty of excellent fish. Good water may be procured at a watering-place near the ruins of the Dutch fort, on the east side of Pulo Dinding.


SALANGORE.

The kingdom of Salangore extends from the river Bima in 3° 35' North, to Ginting River, to the eastward of Tanjong Tuan, in latitude 2° 10 North. There are several rivers which are navigable for vessels; the only one frequented by Europeans is Salangore river, in 3° 20 North, and longitude 101° 18 East The town where the King resides, is situated a short distance up the river, to which small ships occasionally proceed. You are perfectly safe in this port while in the river, and it is the only one upon the Malay Coast, except Tringano, where you are free from apprehensions for your life and property. But lying in the roads, it will be necessary to be on the alert, and ready to repel any attack made by the straggling proas that are always about, and ready to take advantage of any inattention: you should not, therefore, suffer any proas to come near after dark. It never has been known that any accident happened in the river of Salangore by a ship being cut off, as the Rajah finds it his interest to establish a good name to the port. Coming into the river, steer for the look-out house, keeping it rather on the larboard bow, and the river's mouth fairly open. It is said that the Dutch have sunk large stones across the entrance of the river, which should be guarded against. The fishing stakes may be run between, observing to keep clear of those to which nets are attached, as you may do the fishermen an injury, which they will not easily forget. You anchor off the Shabundar's house, which is on the right hand side of the river as you go in.


Upon your arrival, your first visit is to the Shabundar, who will introduce you to the Rajah. The next day you bring your musters on shore; and having made your bargain to sell, you will stipulate likewise for your returns. Should there be any Buggess proas in the river, avoid making any private bargains with them, as the King does not allow any to trade with them or the Chinese; he monopolizes all this trade, and if he finds it out, which he is certain of doing by his informers, he will ever after give a preference in trade to any body else than you.

Landing place at Malacca c. 1833-9 [source- Linda Hall Library].

MALACCA.

This city, which gives its name to the straits formed by the Malay Peninsula and the Island of Sumatra, is situated at the head of a small bay, in latitude 2° 12' North, and longitude 102° 10' East, and has a very neat and beautiful appearance from the sea. The city is large; many of the houses are of stone and well built; and several of the streets are spacious and handsome. The fort is on the south side of a small river, over which is a bridge of several arches. The church stands upon a hill, and being always kept white, is conspicuous at a great distance.


Large ships anchor with the church bearing E. 27° N. in 10 fathoms, about 1½ mile from the town. Ships' boats may proceed into the river at about three-quarters flood. In going in, keep the fort well open to the starboard, till the river is open between the fort and the houses; then steer directly in for the river, that being the deepest channel; the landing-place is on the larboard side, as soon as you enter the river, about two stones' throw from the bridge.


Malacca was first visited by the Portuguese, under Sequeira, in 1508, and they experienced a friendly reception from the King; but great jealousy arose among the commercial people of the different nations frequenting the place, especially the Arabs, which they so effectually instilled into the Prince, as soon to destroy the good understanding between him and the Portuguese, whom he did not dare attack by open force, but used every species of treachery to destroy. Finding his plots detected, he ordered the massacre of all the Europeans who were in his power. Numbers were slain, but a few were kept as hostages, to prevent the revenge of the Admiral. Albuquerque, who was then the Portuguese Governor


General, taking advantage of this quarrel, sailed from Goa in 1511, and appearing before the port of Malacca, demanded the release of his countrymen. This demand was at first refused; but after some hostilities, the King was so terrified as to send the surviving Portuguese, and offered to make peace with them upon their own terms. Those prescribed by Albuquerque were very high; he demanded leave to build a fort where he thought fit; reparation of all damages done to the Portuguese; and a sum of money equivalent to the expence of the expedition. The King absolutely refused to yield to them; whereupon hostilities recommenced on both sides, which ended in Albuquerque's attacking the city by sea and land with great fury. After an obstinate resistance, it was taken by storm, given to the pillage of the troops, and the plunder was very considerable. The Portuguese immediately erected a strong fort, and put a good garrison into it: in a very short time it became famous all over India and Europe, and from its situation, commanded the trade of the neighbouring countries.


The Kings of Acheen made repeated attempts to expel the Portuguese from Malacca, the principal of which were in 1537, in 1567, in 1615, and in 1628; and notwithstanding the resources of the Acheenese were prodigious at those periods, yet the Portuguese were successful in repelling their attacks.


In 1605 the Dutch attacked and destroyed a fleet of Portuguese vessels, consisting of 34 sail in the roads, and made an attempt upon the place, but were repulsed. In 1640 the Dutch, knowing the importance of the place, and the vast advantages accruing to the Portuguese from the possession of it, fitted out a large fleet from Batavia with a great body of land forces, and at the same time concluded an alliance with the King of Johore, who invested the place by land, while the Dutch blocked it up by sea. The Governor is accused of treachery, and to have been bribed into a surrender; but it is certain that he did not give the place up till after a gallant defence of six months against a very superior force.


The Dutch retained possession of it till the breaking out of the war with Great Britain, to whom it was surrendered on the 17th of August, 1795, since which period the establishment of Pulo Pinang, having superseded the necessity of maintaining it, as it was possessed of no natural advantages, either in point of product, trade, or harbour, the Company came to the resolution in 1805, of withdrawing the garrison and stores from Malacca and its dependencies; and, previous to the abandonment of the place, the fortifications and public works of all descriptions were completely demolished, so as to render it of the least possible value to the enemy, in case it should ever again come into his possession. Many of the inhabitants, with their families and effects, repaired to Prince of Wales's Island, and established themselves under the Company's protection.


JOHORE.

The town of Johore is about 20 miles from the entrance of the river, of which the bluff land, called Johore Hill, forms the southern side. There are two entrances into the river. It was formerly a place of considerable importance. In 1511, on the Portuguese conquering Malacca, the Sultan and principal inhabitants fled, and founded the City of Johore. In 1608 it was taken by the Portuguese, and destroyed. In the following year the Malays built another town higher up the river, which they called Batusubar, and to which the Dutch contributed, out of the plunder they obtained from the Portuguese on the Peninsula.


In 1613 the town was taken by the King of Acheen, after a siege of 29 days, who plundered it of every thing moveable, and made slaves of the inhabitants. The Dutch had at this period a factory on the river, which was involved in the war with Acheen, and several of that nation were made prisoners.


The surrounding country produces pepper, gold, tin, canes, sago, and elephants' teeth; but it is seldom visited by Europeans, the Malays bringing their produce to Pulo Pinang in their own proas.


In 1703 Captain Hamilton visited the place, and was kindly received. The King made him a present of the Island of Sincapore, situated near the entrance of the river; but he declined taking possession of it, notwithstanding its convenient situation for trade, and the surrounding country being well supplied with excellent timber and trees fit for masts.


BINTANG.

This island is situated at the entrance of the Straits of Sincapore, and is in latitude about 1° 2 North, and longitude 104° 30' East. Rhio, the principal town, is about five miles to the northward of the S. W. extreme of the island, and was formerly a place of considerable trade. The Sultan was under the controul of the Dutch; but on the capture of Malacca by the English, their influence was done away. It is seldom visited by European vessels; but Chinese junks and Malay proas from the neighbouring countries carry on a considerable trade.


PACKANGA RIVER.

The north point of this river is a bluff head land, in latitude 4° 50 North. The town was formerly a place of some note, but fell to decay, being dependent on Rhio, the place where most of the eastern trade was carried, till it came into the hands of the Dutch; it has now returned under the subjection of its native Prince, and has regained, in a small degree, its commerce. This river is very conveniently situated for trade, being deep enough at its mouth to admit vessels of 100 tons burthen.

All goods are bought and sold for Spanish dollars, and are weighed by the Chinese dotchin,

Painting of Malaka in 1750 by Didot from "Histoire générale des voyages".Note that this colour painting is a flipped version of Valentijn's print (see above, earlier picture).

TRINGANO

Is situated at the entrance of a river, in latitute 5° 21' North, and longitude 103° 4 East. This is a place of considerable trade; the Rajah resides in a strong fort, and is very friendly to Europeans. Ships are in no danger of surprise from the inhabitants of Tringano. The usual anchorage is with the flag-staff bearing S.W. by W. the Redang Islands N. by W. distance from the mouth of the river about two miles. Ships occasionally salute the fort with nine guns, which is considered a great compliment by the Rajah, and a like number is returned.


In November this is a lee-shore, and no ships should stay in the roads; December, January, and February are the blowing months, and a heavy surf rolls in from the China seas and the Gulf of Siam. Commanders are sometimes detained on board ten days on account of the large surf on the bar, and the ship riding with three anchors a-head.


The following account of the manners and customs is extracted from Elmore's Directory:

" On your arrival, your first visit must be to the King's datoo or merchant, who will introduce you to the King, and the male part of the Royal Family. It is the custom here (as in all other eastern ports) to give a present at your first audience, which you must proportion according to the rank of the people. The King's present should not be less than the value of 50 dollars, the Prince about 50, the Shabundar and agent about 50 each; these are the only presents absolutely necessary to be given at this place. It will be proper to visit the datoo after you have seen the Royal Family: a little attention to him may be of service in the course of your business, as he can give you every information relative to the markets. At every Malay port you will find some man who has an influence with the King; keep well with him: and if you find you are likely to sell a quantity of opium, promise a chest for himself when you have done all your business; he can assist you very much by praising your opium to all the merchants; and, as he attends the weighing part for the King, you have good weight, and no trouble."


The following remarks on the Malays were made by a gentleman long conversant with them and the whole trade to the eastward:—" Though the Malays are not possessed of many virtues, they admire them in Europeans, and invariably give the preference to the man who has dealt honourably with them. Endeavour by all means to learn the language, which, with proper application, may be done in a few months. Your linguist and touchadar are often great knaves, which renders it absolutely necessary for every man to be his own linguist. When you are dealing with them, guard yourself from passion; it is common for them, when you ask 600 dollars, to offer 150; they will tell you not to be angry. Never swear; though you mean no harm to them, their jealous disposition makes them think otherwise, and it may be attended with serious consequences, particularly when expressed in anger, which is too common a case. A man of this temper they will keep in constant agitation, in order to harass him, expecting by such means he will be glad to sell, in order to get away; but when they meet with a man who, if they offer one dollar, will put on a pleasant countenance, and tell them they have an undoubted right to offer what they please, they are gratified with his behaviour, and give him the name of a sensible man. If you take a touchadar, be cautious he plays you no tricks in cleaning the gold; you should therefore always carry a bottle of aqua-fortis, which must have a glass stopper; and likewise some magnets. If you take golddust, clear it from the sand as well as possible, then put it into a glass, and drop some aqua-fortis upon it, which will destroy and turn black every thing else but the gold. Let it dry, then use your magnet; it appears in the gold like black sand, and will all stick to the magnet; practice will soon make it familiar to you. Be careful of keeping aqua-fortis, as it is easily put into fermentation, and the vapour arising therefrom may be of the most fatal consequence, by either instant death, or the loss of your sight. Never keep any thing of value on shore with you, and always remember to send off your gold-dust as you receive it: you will then be safe; for 100 dollars are sufficient to induce a Malay to assassinate you, if he can with impunity. You should likewise have a set of gold touches and stone, to try the bar-gold, which is done with the different touches, by rubbing them on the stone, and observing which the gold comes the nearest to, and value it accordingly, always taking care to cut it lengthwise and through the middle. Practice on board with your touches, and the different sorts of gold, will soon make it familiar to you."


The tin procured here is brought from Palembang or Banca, in the Malay proas. The pepper, which is the produce of the country, is good; but they often mix it with the Dutch sweepings from Palembang, which must be looked into: they will always garble it if you mention it in your contract.


The merchants may want credit for about 20 days; more they will not expect, as you should always tell them you are bound to China, that they may use dispatch. If your time will admit of it, give it them; it insures you so much sold; and it often happens they have not the pepper brought in, or gold-dust; and if you refuse them credit, the merchants, among whom the King wants to take and distribute the opium go away, and you thereby lose the sale of 30 or 40 chests: besides, you may depend upon receiving the goods as they come in. You should make it a part of your agreement to have the King's seal put upon the gold, as he will then be in some degree answerable for its quality.


Some years since the King of Tringano was anxious to have an English factory established here, and sent a proposition to that effect to the Supreme Government. If it were thought worth while to settle in any part of this coast, this should be preferred, from the attention and respect paid by the Sultan, or King, to the English in general.


This place is conveniently situated for any of the Company's ships bound to China, which are early in the season, the commanders of which are provided with opium, cutlery, or Spanish dollars.


REDANG ISLANDS.

These islands, which extend along the coast about 30 miles from 5° 30' North, to 6° 4' North latitude, belong to the Government of Tringano, and from some of which pepper, rattans, and black-wood are brought for the King's use. The inhabitants are apt to take advantage of any small vessels they can overcome. Having no convenient harbours, the islands are seldom visited by European ships.


PATANY

Is in latitude about 6° 50' North; the town is about six miles from the road, and was formerly a place of very great trade. The English established a factory here about 1610, which took off annually about 10,000 dollars value of Surat and Coromandel cloths; but the trade falling off, the factory was withdrawn in 1623. The town is surrounded with wooden palisadoes, and has a strong fort, well mounted with cannon. The houses are built of timber and bamboos, and have a mean appearance. Considerable numbers of Chinese are settled here, who carry on a trade in their own junks with Siam, CochinChina, China, and Batavia.


CALANTAN RIVER

This river is in latitude 6° 16' North, and under the Government of Tringano. The bar of the river is shoal, and there is a number of sandbanks inside, on which boats will ground. Ships sometimes touch here to procure pepper. The anchorage is with the river bearing south, about three miles distance. The coast from hence stretches westward into the Gulf of Siam; the principal place in which is


LIGORE,

About 12 leagues to the northward, between which is a low island called Papier. The anchorage is about two leagues from the river. About a league within the river's mouth the Dutch had formerly a factory. The town stands about two miles above the factory; it is built of bamboos covered with reeds. There are many temples with small steeples, which at a distance appear like ships' masts. This place is under the Siamese Government. There used to be a great trade carried on upon this part of the coast; but of late years, in consequence of the unsettled state of the country, it has been discontinued. The Malay proas carry on what little trade there is between it and Juthia, the capital of Siam.

Sultans from Sumatra
Sultan of Serdang, circa 1897 [source- TropenMuseum].

Sultan of Asahan, Sultan Muhammad Husain Rahmad Syah II, circa 1897 [source- TropenMuseum].

Sultan of Langkat, circa 1897 [source-TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Deli, Sultan Ma'amun Al Rashid Perkasa Alam Shah, circa 1897 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Deli, Sultan Amaluddin Sani Perkasa Alam Shah, circa 1931 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Siak, circa 1890 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Serdang, before 1938 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Siak, circa 1897 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan Achmad Nazaruddin (r. 1858-81) of Jambi, circa 1878 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Siak, May 1918 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Langkat, circa 1923 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Deli, circa 1870 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Asahan, before 1938 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Deli, Sultan Ma'amun Al Rashid Perkasa Alam Shah, circa 1917 [source- TropenMuseum].
Sultan of Siak, circa 1920 [source- TropenMuseum].

Encyclopaedia Londinensis

Malacca

Source = "Encyclopaedia Londinensis, Volume 14", 1816 books.google.com/books?id=PV8MAQAAMAAJExcerpt = item "Malacca"

- p. 180 b -

MALAC’CA, or MALAYA, a peninsula of Asia, at the extremity of the kingdom of Siam, surrounded by the sea, except at its junction with this kingdom. The northern limits are not strictly defined; but the peninsula is reckoned to be about 80°, or 560 British miles, in length, and in medial breadth about 150 miles. It derives its name from the Malays, who are mostly Mahometans, and in considerable degree civilized: but the inland parts seem to be possessed by a more rude native race, of which our knowledge is very imperfect.


In the last century, Mandelflo, or rather Olearius, who published his voyage, describes Malacca as divided into two kingdoms, that of Patani in the north, and that of Johor in the south. The former was inhabited by Malays and

- p. 181 a -

and Siamese; who were by profession Mahometans, and tributary to Siam. The town is built of reeds and wood, but the mosque of brick ; and the commerce was conducted by the Chinese and Portuguese settlers, while the native Malays were chiefly employed in fishing and agriculture. From this traveller we learn, that in Malacca there are continued rains with a north-east wind during the months of November, December, and January. Agriculture was conducted with oxen and buffaloes, the chief product being rice. Game and fruits were abundant, and the forests swarmed with monkeys, tigers, wild boars, and wild elephants. Besides the tiger and elephant, Malacca produces the civet cat ; and Sonnerat says that wild men are found here, meaning perhaps orang-outangs. Some singular birds are also found ; and it likewise produces a delicious fruit called the mangosten. The Portuguese were accustomed to purchase annually from Patani about 1500 cattle for their settlement at Malacca. The kingdom of Johor comprehended the southern extremity of the Chersonese ; and its chief towns were Linga, Bintam, Carimon, and Betusabea ; the last of which was the capital, situated in a marshy situation, on the river Johor, about six leagues from the sea, and consisting of houses elevated about eight feet from the ground. The whole of this country belonged to the king, who assigned lands to those who demanded them ; but the indolence of the Malays left it to the wild luxuriance of nature.


According to the account of Valentyn, the peninsula of Malacca is bounded on the north by the river Riadang, which runs by Linga to the east, and by a small range of hills that separate it from the kingdom of Siam ; and it contained five provinces, which derive their names from their capitals. On the eastern coast are those of Patani and Pahang, followed by the most southern kingdom of Djohor, or Johor ; and on the western coast: are those of Keidah, or Quedah, and Perah, followed by another province called the Malay coast, and of which the capital is Malacca. The inland part of the peninsula seems to remain full of extensive and original forests, without towns or villages ; but the country, though not sufficiently explored, is now known to produce pepper and other spices, with some precious gums and woods. The chief mineral is tin, in which Quedah and Perah are rich ; and a high mountain north-east of Malacca supplies rivers that afford small quantities of gold-dust. In the river Pahaung, flowing near the town of Malacca, lumps of gold about five or six ounces in weight have been found at the depth of from three to ten fathoms.


From an account of the ancient history of this country, cited by Valentyn in his Description of the Dutch Settlements in the East Indies, 1726, from a Malay manuscript written in the Arabic character, we are led to believe that the Malays were first settled on the eastern coast of Sumatra, in the kingdom of Palambang, opposite to the Isle of Branca, at the river Malajee, which encircles the mountain Mahameirae, and afterwards joins the river Tatang. Some have supposed that the river derives its name from the Malays ; but Valentyn is of opinion that they derived their name from the river, and communicated it to their present peninsula, which formerly belonged to the king of Siam, and was inhabited by fishermen. This manuscript being recent, we can only infer from it that the Malays came from the west. The traditions founded on this and other similar manuscripts report, that the Malays, during their residence in Sumatra, chose a king who reigned forty-eight years, and pretended to be a descendant of Alexander the Great. This happened about the year 1160 of the Christian era. During this reign, it is said, the Malays proceeded to the opposite coast, and settled on the north-east corner, whence they gradually spread ; and the country assumed the name of Tanah Malajee, or Malay Land, extending from 2° to 11° N. lat. After a residence of some years, the Malays built their first town Singapoera, which gave its name to the southern strait. The last king of Singapoera was compelled by

VOL. XIV. No. 965.

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a hostile sovereign of a district in the Isle of Java to retire northward, where, in the year 1253, he built a new capital, called Malacca, as it is said, from the name of a tree under which he had taken shelter, while he was hunting. Having established salutary laws, he died in the year 1274. As this king had adopted the appellations of Shah and Sultan, it furnishes a presumption, that Mahometanism was now introduced. The second in succession after this prince, who is esteemed the first Mahometan sovereign, reigned fifty-seven years. He extended more widely the name of Malays ; and, having acquired by marriage the kingdom of Aracan, he died in 1333. In process of time, the commercial town of Malacca was regarded, with Madjapit and Posi, as the third celebrated city in these regions. Sultan Mantsoer Shah, who ascended the throne in 1374, and in the course of his long reign of seventy-three years annexed by marriage the kingdom of Andrigiri, on the east side of Sumatra, to Malacca, became so powerful, that he was styled emperor. In consequence of an alliance with the emperor of China, whose daughter he married, he subdued the kingdom of Pahang. Malacca was now esteemed the chief city in these parts of the eastern world. Mantsoer died in 1447. During an inglorious reign of his son and successor, the eleventh king of the Malays, the sixth of Malacca, and the fifth who professed the Mahometan religion, Malacca became subject to Siam ; but at his death, in 1477, he was succeeded by a prince, under whose government, in the year 1509, the Malays threw off the yoke of Siam. It was in this year that the Portuguese discovered Malacca, to which they were led by the vain idea of finding the golden Chersonese of the ancients. With this view, Emanuel king of Portugal sent out a fleet of sixteen ships under the command of Sequeira. Among the officers of this fleet was Magalhaens, or Magellan, who afterwards became famous as the first circumnavigator of the globe. Many attempts were made to assassinate Sequeira ; who, finding it impossible to make a commercial arrangement advantageous to his country, returned to Portugal. At this time Albuquerque was the Portuguese viceroy in the East Indies. On the 1st of August, 1511, he arrived before Malacca with a powerful fleet, while the king of Pahang was in the town on occasion of celebrating his nuptials with the daughter of Sultan Mahmud Shah, the sovereign of the peninsula. Malacca was taken by storm ; and the king fled to Johor, where he founded a new town and kingdom. The Portuguese, having gained complete possession of Malacca, formed an alliance with Siam. The king of Johor died in 1513, and was succeeded by his son Sultan Ahmud Shah, who afterwards made a treaty with the Portuguese. Among the Portuguese governors of Malacca was Peter Mascarenhas in 1526, from whom was, probably, derived the name anciently given to the Isle of Bourbon. During the reign of a sovereign called Alawoddin, who took possession of the throne in 1591, the Dutch arrived, and formed an alliance with this prince against the Portuguese. In 1606, the Dutch, in conjunction with the king of Johor, attacked Malacca; they made various attempts in succeeding years to gain possession of the country ; but were obliged to content themselves with a factory in Johor. At length Anthony Van Diemen, the famous governor-general of the Dutch Settlements in the East Indies, finding a favourable opportunity for the execution of his purpose, dispatched, in June 1640, a fleet of twelve ships and six sloops to blockade Malacca ; and these were joined by about twenty small vessels of Johor. The Dutch soon erected a battery ; and the siege was accompanied with famine and pestilence. In January 1541, the famine was so severe, that the inhabitants were obliged to expel their women and children. The Dutch also suffered much from heat and fatigue ; and at length impatience and desperation produced a general assault, which was executed on the 14th of January ; and the governor capitulated. Valentyn reports, that during the siege more than 7000 died in the town, and a greater number found means to escape.

3A

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escape. The Dutch lost about 1500, chiefly by the plague. Thus the Portuguese, after a possession of nearly 130 years, lost this valuable settlement, then esteemed, after Goa, the richest in the East Indies. Malacca, which is represented as a strong place, was taken possession of by the English in Augult 1795. The Malay empire is now added to the dominions of Great Britain in the East by the capture of Java ; in consequence of which, Britain is become the mistress of the whole of the Malayan Archipelago.


The Malays, whose origin is not satisfactorily ascertained, are in general a well-made people, somewhat be low the middle stature. Their limbs are small, but well shaped, and they are particularly slender at the wrists and ankles. Their complexion is tawny, their eyes large, their noses seem to be flattened more by art than nature ; and their hair is very long, black, and shining. As the Malays resemble the Chinese and Tartars in their features, it has been suggested as probable that they are descended from those nations. Their progress from Malacca, across the narrow strait of that name, to Sumatra, from thence to Java, and from Java to all Polynesia, was so easy, even in the most frail vessels, that there is no difficulty in accounting for their being found, as they really are, in possession of the sea-coasts of almost every island. Mr. Marsden, in the last edition of his valuable work, seems to have retracted the opinion which he once held of Malacca being the original country of the Malays, and to think that they passed thither from Sumatra. Not only their physical appearance, but their manners and customs, as well as language, have undergone a considerable change by the overwhelming influence of the Arabs, who, from the 9th to the 14th century, appear to have enjoyed the exclusive commerce and dominion of the oriental islands, the greater part of which has received the religion of Mahomet. These people in former times possessed great powers, and made a very considerable figure on the theatre of Asia ; and their country was well cultivated and populous. The sea was covered with their ships, and their commerce was very extensive. At different times they sent out various colonies, which in succession peopled a great part of Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Celebes, Macassar, the Moluccas, the Philippines, and those innumerable islands of the Archipelago which bound Asia on the east, and which occupy an extent of 700 leagues in longitude from east to west, and about 600 in latitude from north to south. Every-where the people seem to be the same. They speak almost the same language, and they have the same laws and the same manners. Kaempfer says, in his History of Japan, that the Malayans had in former times the greatest trade in the East Indies, and frequented with their merchant-ships not only all the coasts of Asia, but ventured even over to the coasts of Africa, particularly to the great island of Madagascar. That the Malayans have not only frequented Madagascar, but that they have been the progenitors of some of the present race of inhabitants, is continued by the testimony of M. de Pages, who visited that island so late as 1774. The title which the king of the Malayans assumed to himself, says Kaempfer, of “ Lord of the Winds and Seas to the East and West,“ is an evident proof of their extensive migration ; but much more the Malay language, which spread almost all over the East, after the same manner as formerly the Latin, and of late the French, did all over Europe.


M. le Poivre, cited by Mr. Pennant in his Outlines of the Globe, says, that travellers, who make observations on the Malays, are astonished to find in the centre of Asia, under the scorching climate of the line, the laws, the manners, the customs, and the prejudices, of the ancient inhabitants of the north of Europe. The Malays are governed by feudal laws, “ that capricious system, conceived for the defence of the liberty of a few against the tyranny of one, whilst the multitude is subject to slavery and oppression." Thus we have here a chief, who has the title of king or sultan, issuing his commands to his great vasals, who obey when they think proper; these

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have inferior vassals whose conduct is similar to that of their superiors. The Oramcai, or nobles, forming a small part of the nation, live independent, and nobly sell their services to those who are disposed or able to give them the best price; whilst the body of the nation is composed of slaves, and lives in perpetual servitude. With these laws, says M. le Poivre, the Malays are restless, fond of navigation, war, plunder, emigrations, colonies, desperate enterprises, adventures, and gallantry. They talk incessantly of their honour and bravery, whilst they are universally considered by those with whom they have intercourse as the most treacherous and ferocious people on the face of the globe ; and yet, which appears extremely singular, they speak the softest language of Asia. The ferocity of the Macassars is the reigning characteristic of all the Malay nations ; and, as an evidence of their faithlessness and treachery, it is alleged, that their treaties of peace and friendship never subsist beyond that self-interest by which they were induced to make them ; and they are almost always armed, and either at war among themselves, or employed in pillaging their neighbours. Their ferocity, misnamed courage by the Malays, is so well known to the Europeans who have settlements in the Indies, that they have universally agreed in prohibiting the captains of their ships, who may put into the Malay islands, from taking on-board any seamen of that nation, except in the greatest distress, and then on no account to exceed two or three. It is not uncommon for a few of these savages suddenly to embark, attack a vessel by surprise, poignard in hand, massacre the people, and make themselves master of her. Malay barks, with twenty-five or thirty men, have been known to board European ships of thirty or forty guns, in order to take possession of them, and murder with their poignards great part of their crew. Those Malays who are not slaves always go armed ; and they would think themselves disgraced if they went abroad without their poignards, or crisses.


The attire of the males consisits of pantaloons with a wide robe of blue, red, or green ; the neck is bare, but the head is covered with a turban. The female dress, like that generally used in the East Indies, is a long narrow petticoat, reaching from the breast to the feet, whilst the other parts are naked, and the hair is commonly tied. The women are reckoned more intelligent than most others in the east ; and their conversation is of course sensible and agreeable.


The other inhabitants of Malacca are Portuguese, Moors, and Chinese, and some settlers from Bengal and Guzerat. The chief articles of commerce are azel-wood and camphor from the kingdom of Pahang; tin, gold, pepper, pedra de porco, and ivory. The manufactures are various articles of dress, worn here and in Hindoostan, cottons, chintz, &c. and some articles of copper. When Malacca came into the possession of the Dutch, the Dutch East-India company appointed the governor, under whose controul were several factories, some in the peninsula, and others on the coast of Sumatra. The factories are those of Peirah, or Perah, on the Malay coast, for the tin.-trade ; of Keidah, or Quedah, on the same coast, for carrying on commerce with the petty king of Xeedah, for tin, gold, and ivory ; of Oedjan-Salang, for tin and ivory ; of Andrigiri, on the coast of Sumatra, for pepper and gold. The Dutch also traded with Ligor and Tanaserim, in the dominions of Siam, for tin ; and with Bangkoelo, for gold and pedra de porco ; before the English established themselves there. The island Dending was also considered as a dependence of Malacca.


The country possessed by the Malays is, in general very fertile. It abounds with odoriferous woods, such as the aloe, the sandal, and cassia. The ground is covered with flowers of the greatest fragrance, of which there is perpetual succession throughout the year. There are, abundance of mines of the most precious metals, said to be richer even than those of Brasil or Peru ; and in some places are mines of diamonds. The sea also abounds with

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with excellent fish, together with ambergrise, pearls, and those delicate bird-nests so much in request in China, formed in the rocks with the spawn of fishes and the foam of the sea, by a species of small-sized swallow peculiar to those seas. These curious -little fabrics are of an oval shape, arranged in regular rows, composed of fine filaments, cemented together by viscous matter ; and, when white and transparent, are said to be worth their weight in silver.


Notwithstanding all this plenty, however, the Malays are miserable. The culture of the lands, abandoned to slaves, is fallen into contempt. These wretched labourers, dragged incessantly from their rustic employments by their restless masters, who delight in war and maritime enterprises, have never time or resolution to give the necessary attention to the labouring of their grounds; of consequence the lands for the most part are uncultivated, and produce no kind of grain for the subsistence of the inhabitants. The sago-tree indeed supplies in part the defect of grain. It is a species of the palm-tree, which grows naturally in the woods to the height of about twenty or thirty feet ; its circumference being sometimes from five to six. Its ligneous bark is about an inch in thickness, and covers a multitude of long fibres, which, being interwoven one with another, envelope a mass of a gummy kind of meal. As soon as this tree is ripe, a whitish dust, which transpires through the pores of the leaves, and adheres to their extremities, indicates that the trees are in a state of maturity. The Malays then cut them down near the root, and divide them into several sections, which they split into quarters ; they then scoop out the mass of mealy substance, which is enveloped by and adheres to the fibres ; they dilute it in pure water, and then pass it through a straining-bag of fine cloth, in order to separate it from the fibres. When this paste has lost part of its moisture by evaporation, the Malays throw it into a kind of earthen vessel of different shapes, where they allow it to dry and harden. This paste is wholesome nourishing food, and preserves for many years.


The Malay doosoons, or villages, are frequently situated on the borders of a lake, and generally command an eminence difficult of access. Their houses are raised from the ground on posts or standards, in the manner of the granaries in England; the frames are of wood; the flooring consists of layers of bamboo, over which is a lath of bamboo split thin, and tied down with the filaments of the rattan. This elastic floor is covered with mats of various kinds. The sides of the house are closed in with paloopo, which is the bamboo half split, opened, and rendered flat, by notching the circular joints withinside, laying it to dry in the sun, pressed down with weights. The houses are commonly covered with the altafs, a species of palm-leaf; the larger houses have three pitches in the roof; the middle one, under which the door is placed, being much lower than the other two ; in smaller houses there are but two pitches, and the entrance is in the smaller, which covers a kind of hall or cooking-room. The ascent to these dwellings is by a light scaling-ladder of notched bamboo, which is seldom fattened to the timbers, and is sometimes taken in at night, to guard against the sudden incursions of ferocious animals. The furniture is simple as the edifice; the bed is no other than a fine mat, with pillows embellished with some showy material resembling foil; a canopy composed of party-coloured cloths is suspended over the head ; neither chairs nor tables are necessary articles to the Javanese, who sit on the floor reclining on the left side, supported on the left hand. With the use of knives and spoons they are wholly unacquainted ; they use salvers called the doolong, which move on feet ; on these are placed the cross waiters, and in them are the cups containing their curry and rice, which at their meals is always taken up between the right thumb and fingers. The houses have not the convenience of chimneys ; the fire-places are formed of loose bricks or stones arranged on the landing-place before the door.

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The art which is celebrated as having been carried so the greatest perfection among the Malays, is that of gold and silver fillagree. It is the minuteness of the parts, and the delicacy of finger required in the manipulation, for which this manufacture is justly admired ; and Mr. Marsden remarks the usual rudeness of implement, and. dexterity of use, which distinguish the arts of an uncultivated people. They manufacture silk and cotton cloths for their own consumption. “Some of their work," says Mr. Marsden, “is very fine, and the patterns prettily fancied.“ But no branch of industry appears to be pursued among them to any considerable extent.


In literature, it would appear that the Malays have rather made a greater progress than in government and the arts. Their language is celebrated for its softness and melody. See the article LANGUAGE, vol. xii. p. 167. The most numerous class of writers, of course, are the poets ; but Dr. Leyden seems not to hold them in great account. Historical narratives, be says, abound; “occasionally," he doubts not, “embellished by fiction." He also affirms, that “the juridical customs, or traditions of the Malays, have been collected into codes.“ And the most ancient of their legal regulations, he thinks, have been derived from the Javanese. “Malayan literature," says Mr. Marsden, “consists chiefly of transcripts and versions of the Koran; commentaries on» the Mussulman law; and historic tales, both in prose and verse, resembling in some respect our old romances. Many of these are original compositions; and others are translations of the popular tales current in Arabia, Persia, India, and the neighbouring island of Java." The cultivation of the sciences they appear not to have begun. Tens of thousands are the highest class of numbers the Malay language has a name for.


One of the most remarkable peculiarities in the description of the Malays is their religion. It is the Mahometan; derived immediately from connexion with the Arabs. It is sufficiently known, that during the thirteenth century, to which the conversion of the Malays is-assigned; the Arabs were a maritime people, and conducted a trade of considerable extent with the islands and continents of the east. By what means they recommended their religion to the Malays is yet buried in obscurity ; but they founded the city of Malacca about the year 1260, when it appears not that any thing deserving the name of a city was yet possessed by the Malays. The introduction of the Mussulman religion was also the introduction of the Mussulman law, the Koran being the divine standard of both. As the Koran, however, is sufficiently vague, and still more so the laws or traditionary customs of the Malays, a worse amalgamation might easily be made. The Malays, too, embraced the religion of the prophet with a kind of laxity, retaining a large proportion of their ancient feelings and ideas ; and it is not the purest and most rigid Mahometanism which they profess. Their laws, accordingly, are a mixture of their own customs with the regulations which the Mahometan doctors have pretended to draw from the sacred text. Of the form of their tribunals, or the modes of procedure, we have as yet received no information.


The moral character of the Malays is painted by Mr. Marsden in the most unfavourable colours: “They retain a strong share of pride, (says he) but not of that laudable kind which restrains men from the commission of mean and fraudulent actions. They possess much low cunning, and plausible duplicity ; and know how to dissemble the strongest passions, and most inveterate antipathy, till the opportunity of gratifying their resentment offers. Veracity, gratitude and integrity are not to be found in the list of their virtues; and their minds are almost strangers to the sentiments of honour and integrity. They are jealous and vindictive. Their courage is desultory, the effect of a momentary enthusiasm, which enables them to perform deeds of incredible desperation; but they are strangers to steady magnanimity, and cool resolution in battle.


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battle. The Malay may be compared to the animals of his country, the buffalo the tyger. In his domestic slate, he is indolent, stubborn, and voluptuous as the former ; in his adventurous life, he is insidious, blood-thirsty, and rapacious as the latter." Marsden's Hist. of Sumatra. Daniel’s Picturesque Voyage to India. Pinkerton‘s Geography, vol. ii.


MALAC'CA, a seaport town of Asia, on the west coast of the country, and in the straits of the same name. When the Portuguese first became acquainted with the country, this city was in the possession of the king of Johore, from whom it was taken by them ; and, in a short time, became famous all over India and Europe, lying almost in the centre of trade, brought thither by shipping from the rich kingdoms of Japan, China, Formosa, Lucon, Tonquin, Cochin-china, Cambodia, and Siam ; besides what Johore produced, and Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Macassar, Banda, Amboyua, and Ternate, islands that abound in the most valuable commodities. After Goa and Ormuz, this was by far the richest city in the Indies, and a great market for all the different commodities these countries produced. It was the see of a bishop ; and the cathedral church, dedicated to St. Paul, was extremely elegant. They had besides five other parish-churches, and a noble college for the Jesuits, together with an seminary in which all new converts to the faith were instructed. The whole was encompassed with a strong stone wall, regularly fortified with bastions, the place extremely well peopled, and the garrison numerous and well supplied ; because the Portuguese considered it as the eastern frontier of their dominions, which therefore could not be kept too secure. In 16o5, the Dutch attacked and destroyed a fleet of Portuguese here, consisting of 34 sail, on-board of which were 3000 men ; but, notwithstanding this victory, they were not able to take the place. Next year the king of Johore invested it, with an army of 60,000 men, in revenge of what the Portuguese had done against him three years before, when they took and destroyed his capital; however, he was obliged to raise the siege, with great loss ; but the Dutch, well knowing the importance of the place, and the vast advantages accruing to the Portuguese from its situation and commerce, the former affording them an opportunity of levying 10 per cent upon all vessels passing through the Straits of Malacca, and the latter annually producing a large revenue, they attacked it in the year 1640, so vigorously, that they became masters of it, after a siege of six months. The walls and fortifications they preserved, as also the church of St. Paul; but most of the other churches they destroyed, and the great hospital they turned into a warehouse. In 1795, this place was taken by the British. Lat. 2. 12. N. lon. 102. 12. E.


MALAC’CA (Straits of), a narrow sea between the island of Sumatra and the country of Malacca, extending from the equinoctial line to lat. 5. N.


MALACCA PASSAGE, a channel of the Eastem -Indian Sea, between Pulo Way and the coast of Sumatra, about thirteen miles long.

Universal Geography

Peninsula of Malacca

Source = "Universal Geography, vol. 3" - M Malte-Brun, 1822 books.google.com/books?id=I0oNAQAAIAAJ Excerpt = Peninsula of Malacca (p. 390-3),
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PENINSULA OF MALACCA: To the south-east of the kingdom of Siam lies the Peninsula Of Malacca or Malaya, 550 miles long, and from eighty to 110 broad.


The interior of this peninsula seems to be entirely occupied with vast natural forests. No maps, ancient or modern, describe it as containing towns or villages. Attempts to explore the interior: In the year 1644, Governor Van Vliet, to whom we are indebted for a good account of Siam, attempted to send detachments into the interior. The level parts were covered with un-

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derwood, where it was necessary to open a road with the hatchet; and with marshes, in which the natives alone were able to get along over the trunks of felled trees x. When an eminence is gained, the eye is delighted with beautiful trees; but among these trees, brambles, thorns, and creeping plants, are so closely interwoven as often to present an insurmountable obstacle to the progress of the traveller. In these forests musquitoes fly in swarms like thick clouds. At every step there is a risk of treading on a poisonous serpent. Leopards, tigers, and rhinoceroses, when disturbed in their native haunts, are ready to devour any traveller who is not provided with a strong escort, and who does not keep up a fire during the whole night. Nor is an escort easily commanded. The Malays, a hundred times more dangerous than the tigers and the serpents, never attend a European but with great reluctance. Even those who were subject to Dutch authority often seized the first opportunity to betray the persons whom they had been employed Journey of to conduct.

Journey of Van Der Putten: In 1745 Van der Putten, a zealous traveller, undertook, with a detachment furnished to him by Governor Albinus, to penetrate to Mount Ophir, called in Malay, Goonong-Lelang, situated near the sources of the river Moar, in the south-east of Malacca; but as soon as he quitted his boat, his escort gradually took to flight, and he could not accomplish his undertaking.


Productions: The parts best known produce pepper and other aromatics, and some species of gums. The forests, arrayed in eternal verdure, contain aloe-wood, eagle-wood, sea- wood, and cassia odorata, a species of cinnamon. The air is impregnated with the odour of innumerable flowers, which perpetually succeed one another without an interval. But the uncultivated state of the country generates in many parts a highly noxious atmosphere, and occasions a general deficiency of human food. Fish, however, beans, and fruits, are found in this country y. The animal kingdom is little


x Balthasar Bort, MS. p. 103, quoted in the Memoirs of Batavia.y Blaneard, Commerce des Indes, p. 328
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known. Among the birds which seem to be numerous and extremely beautiful, the bird of Juno is mentioned, which, without the tail of the peacock, displays a plumage equal to his in elegance and in beauty z. The tiger, pursuing the antelopes over the rivers, sometimes falls a prey to the caiman a. From the hedgehog of Malacca is obtained the Malacca bezoar from the wild elephants plenty of ivory.

Tin mines: Tin is the only mineral substance exported, though gold is found in some of the rivers. The tin mines of Pera are found in valleys. After large roots of trees, sometimes seven feet in depth, are removed, the ore is found in a fine black sand, which closely resembles it in appearance. When a rocky stratum appears, the digging is discontinued, although it also seems to contain the same ore, because the mining resources of the Malays are too confined to enable them to make their way through the rocks b. Sometimes the Chinese undertake the mining operations, and they are decidedly more expert than the natives in refining and smelting the metal.


Provinces or kingdoms: The maritime parts are divided into six Malay kingdoms; Patani, Tronganon, and Pahang, on the east coast ; Johor at the southern extremity ; Pera and Queda on the west side. To these we may add Malacca and its territory, called Malaya. In the interior, the state of ManangCabo is separated from the Dutch territory by the Romboon mountains.


Patani: In the time of Mandelslo, the city of Patani, inhabited by Malays and Siamese, was built of wood and cane, but the mosque was of brick, and the trade was in the hands of the Chinese and Portuguese, the natives being chiefly occupied in fishing and husbandry. According to this traveller, continual rains fall, accompanied with a north-east wind, during the months of November, December, and


z Van Wurmb, Mem.de Batavia, p. 461.a Valentyn, Malacca, p. 310.b Memoirs of Batavia, IV. p. 558.
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January. Oxen and buffaloes were used for agricultural purposes, and crops of rice were cultivated. Fruit and game were abundant; the forests swarmed with monkeys, tigers, boars, and elephants.


Tronganon: A modern traveller praises Tronganon as a favourable mart for the purchase of pepper and of tin c. Pahang: Pahang, (in Chinese Pang-Hang,) exports gold, areca nuts, and rattans d. Johor: The kingdom of Johor occupied the eastern extremity of this Chersonese. Batusaber, the capital of the kingdom, was situated sixteen miles from the sea, on- the river Yohor, in a marshy soil. But at present this kingdom is in a state of vassalage to a piratical chief, who is called king of Riom, and resides in Poolo-Binlang Island, one of those which divide the strait of Sincapoor from that of Malacca. This strait derives its name from a Malay town, founded by the first colonies of that people after their emigration from Sumatra. Cape Romania, the southern point of Asia, is called in the country itself Oodjon Tana.


City of Malacca: The city of Malacca, founded by a Malay prince about the middle of the thirteenth century, was in the hands of the Portuguese from 1511 till 1641, when the Dutch took it. According to le Gentil, this place, which once rivalled Goa and Ormuz, has now very little commercial importance, and is weakly fortified. But the marshes which render the approach difficult, the river Crysorant, which partly encircles it, and the solidity of the works of St. Paul, which are built of a regular iron-stone, render it capable of a long defence e. From 20,000 inhabitants, which it contained under the Portuguese, its population is reduced to 3000 or 4000. The suburb Tranquera is peopled with Chinese and persons of Portuguese extraction. Within the last half century some successful attempts have been made to cultivate the camphor tree in this neighbourhood, the


c Blancard, p. 328.d Mem. of Batavia, IV. p. 344.e See the plate No. 37 in Valentyn, and the Memoirs of Batavia, IV. p. 325.
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produce of which has somewhat re-animated a languishing commerce. .


Pera: Pera, a kingdom rich in tin, is governed by Mahometan princes, who are withheld from working their mines by a superstitious fear of giving offence to the genii of the mountains. Queda: The adjoining state takes its name from the capital Queda, a town containing 8000 souls. It has a harbour, which is well frequented, and carries on a great trade in tin and elephant's teeth.


Poolo-Penang, or Prince of Wales' Island: An English captain, having married the daughter of the king while he was on the coast of Queda, obtained the sovereignty of the island Poolo-Penang, which he, without delay, transferred to his country. The English call it Prince of Wales' Island, and have formed on it an important establishment, as the harbour is so situated as to command the strait of Malacca, while the soil is rich, covered with teak forests, sugar canes, and rice fields, and found well adapted to the cultivation of pepper and indigo f.


In our general view of the races of mankind, we have distinguished the Malays as the model of the fifth variety of our species. That people is not indigenous in the peninsula of Malacca, but one of their tribes invaded and colonized it in the 12th century, having fled from the territory on the river Malaya, in the island of Sumatra, before the victorious armies of a king of Java. This tradition has now been completely confirmed by the investigations of Messrs. Leyden and Marsden, according to whom, the Malays form the indigenous population of Sumatra, and probably also of Java. They belong, therefore, to the fifth great division of the world, Oceanica, which is to be described in the six following books.


f Sir Home Popham's Description of Prince of Wales's Island, 1805. Howison, Extract in the Ephemerides of Weimar, XV III. p. 139.
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Table of the Chief Geographical Positions of Chin-India.

Places. N. Lat. E.Long. Authorities deg.min.sec. deg.min.sec.
Cape Negrais . . . . . . Dalrymple.Mergui 12 12 . 98 18 15 Forest.Prince of Wales' Island 5 30 . 99 55 15 Popham.Malacca 2 12 . 102 5 15 Batavian Memoirs.Cape Romania 1 30 . 104 5 15 Connaiss.des Tems.Tronganon 5 25 . . . . Blancard.Capital of Siam 14 20 40 100 50 15 Idem.Condor Island 8 40 . 106 31 52 Connaiss.des Tems.Saigong 10 38 . 106 44 15 Blancard.Faifo, or Bay of Touron 15 57 . 108 15 15 Idem.Huefo Kehoe 16 29 . 107 20 15 Idem.
Map text: "The Iland of Sumatra, in times past called Taprobana"
Map - south (right) section
Map - Middle section.
Map - north (left) section.


Universal Geography

Empire of the Menangkaboo

Source = "Universal Geography, vol. 3" - M Malte-Brun, 1822 books.google.com/books?id=I0oNAQAAIAAJ Excerpt = Empire of the Menangkaboo (p. 439-40)

Empire of the Menangkaboo: In the centre of the island is Menangkaboo, extending partly to the northward, but mostly to the southward of the equator. It is the chief seat of empire of the island, formerly extending over the whole, and held in high respect in the east. At present, its longest diameter does not exceed 100 miles, and probably falls much short of it. The capital is called Pangarooyoong.

Sultan: The sultan's power is greatly limited, and is chiefly founded on a superstitious veneration in which he is held as a sort of Mahometan pontiff. It is supported by the priesthood, but very little submitted to by persons possessing any military power beyond a very limited territory. The titles which he assumes in the preambles to his edicts are absurdly pompous, containing a minute enumeration of his wealth, and the mysterious power of his military weapons.

Literature: The people have no records or annals. They write expertly in the Arabic character; but their whole literature consists of

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transcripts of the Koran and bold historic tales. They are famous for composing songs called pantoon.

Their arts: Their arts are carried to greater perfection among them than among the other natives of Sumatra. They are well skilled in the manufacture of gold and fillagree. They have, from the earliest times, manufactured arms for their own use, and for sale in the northern parts of the island.


They use lances, kreeses, and various side arms.

Kreeses: The kreese has a blade fourteen inches long. It is not polished, but has a waving surface, resembling that of an imperfectly mixed metal; it has several serpentine bends. The handle is of ivory or some beautiful polished wood, finely carved and ornamented. The sheath is made of a hollow piece of beautiful wood. They used to go frequently to war with the Acheenese, but the modern English settlement at Nattal operates as a check on that warfare, the settlers in that locality having placed themselves under the protection of the English Company. The people of Menangkaboo differ from the other inland inhabitants, in being all Mahometans, having been converted, at a very early period. The capital is the resort of pilgrims of that religion.


A province called Tigablas Cottas yields a very pure gold, and contains a great lake called Dano. In the interior the Googons, a wild and hairy race resembling ourang-outangs rather than men, dispute with the lower animals the dominion of the forests.

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