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Dutch East Indies

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Dutch East Indies, or Netherlands East Indies, was the Dutch colony that is now modern Indonesia and the Malacca state of Malaysia. The main city was Batavia, now called Jakarta.

Satellite map of the Dutch East Indies
The old Stadhuis of Batavia, the home of Governor General of the Dutch East India Company. The building is now the Jakarta Historical Museum.

It was made from the colonies of the Dutch East India Company that came under the control of the Netherlands in 1800.

In the Java War (1741–1743), Chinese rebels worked with Javanese Muslim rebels who forcibly circumcised Dutch men and enslaved Dutch women and children.[1][2]

During World War II it was part of the Japanese Empire. In 1945 the Japanese had surrendered their colonies in the pacific, thus losing control of Indonesia, and Indonesian leaders made a declaration of independence. They fought a war of independence until the Netherlands gave Indonesia sovereignty in December 1949.

References

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  1. Raffles, Thomas Stamford (1817). The History of Java, Volume 2. p. 218.
  2. Raffles, Sir Thomas Stamford (1817). "The" History of Java, Volume 2. Black, Parbury, and Allen, Booksellers to the Hon. East-India Company ... and John Murray. p. 218.