Anglo-Dutch Java War - Factbites
 Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Anglo-Dutch Java War


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


Related Topics

In the News (Thu 31 Dec 09)

  
 Anglo-Dutch Java War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Anglo-Dutch Java War in 1810 - 1811 was a war between Great Britain and Netherlands fought entirely on the Island of Java in colonial Indonesia.
Afterward it moved against Java, captured the port city of Batavia ( Jakarta) in August 1811, and forced the Dutch to surrender at Semarang on September 17, 1811.
In 1816, the British returned Java and other East Indian possessions to the Dutch as part of the accord ending the Napoleonic Wars.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Anglo-Dutch_Java_War

  
 Dutch
Anglo-Dutch Java War Anglo-Dutch Java War in Indonesia The governor-general of the Napoleonic Wars.
Anglo-Dutch Wars The Anglo-Dutch Wars were fought in the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands for control over the s...
First Anglo-Dutch War The First Anglo-Dutch War was a war, fought entirely at sea, between 1654.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /topics/dutch.html

  
 Murni's in Bali: Online Shop
By 1914 the Dutch were firmly in control, operating through the Balinese kings, who learned Dutch from the colonial service and who were encouraged to send their children to school in Java or Holland.
From 1811 to 1816 Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles (1781-1826) administered the Dutch possessions as the Lieutenant Governor-General in Batavia.
One reason the Dutch left Bali alone for so much of their 300 years of colonisation of the Dutch East Indies was that Bali had no good, natural, protected harbours and the coral reefs around the coasts caused shipwrecks.
www.murnis.com /culture/articlebalinesehistorytheeuropeans.htm

  
 Wars of Great Britain
The war proceeded for over a decade, and was marked by the military leadership of notable generals such as the Claude-Louis-Hector de Villars and the James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick-upon-Tweed for France, the John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough for England, and Eugene of Savoy for the Austrians.
The War of the Spanish Succession (1701—1714) was a major European war that arose in 1701 after the death of the last Spanish Habsburgs king, Charles II of Spain.
As the War of the Grand Alliance came to a close in 1697, the issue of the Spanish succession was becoming critical.
read-and-go.hopto.org /Wars-of-Great-Britain

  
 Untitled Document
Dutch armies, allied with the English in his war against France, have suffered extremely: they have not a hundred men left in each battalion out of a total of thirty battalions that engaged the French at the beginnig of the war.
The government of the Dutch Republic is a shattered and divided thing; the province Holland alone must expect to bear the financial burden in a war because the other provinces are poor.
For the Dutch Republic, the period from 12650 to the Peace of Utrecht (1713) was one of shifting aliances and a series of military conflicts with other European powers.
www.thecaveonline.com /APEH/dutchrep.html

  
 Articles - Anglo-Dutch Wars
In a period of growing mercantilism this was the spark that ignited the first Anglo-Dutch war, the British seeking a pretext to start a war which led to sporadic naval engagements across the globe.
Believing that the war was all but over, the English divided their forces and in 1653 were routed by the fleet of Dutch Admiral Maarten Tromp at the Battle of Dungeness in the North Sea.
The war ended on 1654 - 04-05 with the signing of the Treaty of Westminster, but the commercial rivalry was not resolved, the British still having failed to replace the Dutch as the world's dominant trade nation.
www.gaple.com /articles/Anglo-Dutch_Wars?mySession=bdb0f6b1e895adeea6f257ca5b2f73e4

  
 ANISTORITON: An Essay
The final act of the drama however was delayed by the arrival in the archipelago in April 1620 of the news of the Anglo-Dutch treaty, news that must have certainly displeased the governor-general.
The Bandanese were convinced that they were betrayed by the English who did not offer any help because they lacked the power to do so and also felt bound to the Anglo-Dutch treaty (Haal, p.
When the Dutch arrived in the Bandas, situated to the south of the island of Ceram, it seemed that contacts between them and the Bandanese were to develop cordially.
www.anistor.co.hol.gr /english/enback/e002.htm

  
 WHKMLA : List of Wars of the Dutch Republic / Netherlands
1740-43 Javanese-Chinese-Dutch War fearful of decisions taken by the Dutch, the Chinese population of the area surrounding Batavia rose in revolt.
In 1683, because of French transgressions on Spanish territory in the Spanish Netherlands, Spain declared war on France.
The Dutch suffered defeats at the hands of combined Portuguese-Creole forces in two battles in 1648-1649; the Dutch garrison at Recife surrendered in 1654; the Netherlands recognized Portuguese rule over Brazil in 1661.
www.zum.de /whkmla/military/lowcountries/milxnederland.html

  
 Articles - Aceh
War began again in 1883, when the British ship Nisero was stranded in Aceh, in an area not controlled by the Dutch.
Around 1880 the Dutch strategy changed: rather than continuing the war, they now concentrated on defending areas already under control, which were the central region (modern day Banda Aceh), and the harbour town of Ulhee Lheue.
The Dutch colonial government declared war on Aceh on 26 March 1873.
www.lastring.com /articles/Aceh

  
 [CTRL] [1b] The East India Company
The years of the sword were beginning.[* Anglo-Mughal War, 1685-8.] The Nabob of Dacca, the supreme Mughal authority in Bengal, was incensed at the insolence and perfidy of the foreigners in challenging the Emperor.
A treaty had been signed between the Dutch and English, in 1619, on a live-and-let-live basis; the British were to be allowed one-third of the trade, and would contribute the same proportion to the cost of the forts, which were, however, to be manned by the Dutch; the treaty had solved nothing.
A Japanese mercenary in the Dutch garrison was suspected of spying for the English.
www.mail-archive.com /ctrl@listserv.aol.com/msg31942.html

  
 History of Indonesia #5:The Netherlands Indies Empire - indonesiaphoto.com
Thereupon ensued the Java War, a bitter guerrilla conflict in which as many as 200,000 Javanese died in fighting or from indirect causes (the population of Java at the end of the eighteenth century was only 3 million).
Java was divided into a number of residencies, each headed by a Dutch chief administrator; each of these was further subdivided into a number of regencies that were formally headed by a Javanese regent assisted by a Dutch official.
The Aceh War (1873-1903) was one of the longest and bloodiest in DutchIndonesian history.
www.indonesiaphoto.com /content/view/34/46

  
 Wars
The background to the wars lies in the incomplete emergence of nation-states on the fringes of the Ottoman Empire during the nineteenth century.
The wars were an important precursor to World War I, to the extent that Austria-Hungary took alarm at the great increase in Serbias territory and regional status.
Serbia had gained substantial territory during the Russo-Turkish War, 1877-78 of 1877-78, while Greece acquired Thessaly in 1881 (although she lost a small area to Turkey in 1897) and Bulgaria (an autonomous principality since 1878) incorporated the formerly distinct province of Eastern Rumelia (1885).
read-and-go.hopto.org /Wars

  
 The Jakarta Post - Online Special: Aceh
"In Java, the Dutch and their henchmen have committed aggression against the freedom of the Republic of Indonesia, leading to wars in a number of areas that eventually were won by us.
But some historians said the Aceh War did not really end in 1903, as the Dutch continued to face guerrilla uprisings in a number of areas even after the sultan surrendered.
Under Dutch rule, the Acehnese began to forge cooperation with other areas in Indonesia and were involved in various national and political movements.
www.thejakartapost.com /special/os_7_history.asp

  
 Tempus Spinozanum
Beginning of the second Anglo-Dutch war (lasts until 1667).
Treaty of Westminster ends the first Anglo-Dutch war.
The Dutch open the dikes and manage to hold the French within a day’s march of Amsterdam.
frank.mtsu.edu /~rbombard/RB/Spinoza/chrono4.html

  
 Review of Three Days to Pearl: Incredible Encounter on the Eve of War
This recently written military memoir emphasizes personal events experienced by the author that relate to the initial Japanese attacks on Anglo-Dutch-American installations in December 1941, effectively initiating World War II in the Pacific and creating the global war.
However, the reader should recall that unlike the United States' archives, the Public Record Office in the United Kingdom has yet to declassify a significant corpus of its World War II documents, so there may yet be written evidence to support the author's assertions.
Pearl Harbor: A Chance Meeting that Did Not Change the Course of the War
www.ess.uwe.ac.uk /GENOCIDE/Reviewsw107.htm

  
 Singapore - Founding and Early Years
After war in Europe ended in 1814, however, the British agreed to return Java and Malacca to the Dutch.
By 1795, the Dutch enterprise in the East was losing money and, in Europe, the Netherlands was at war with France.
When he learned that the Dutch had occupied Riau and were claiming that all territories of the sultan of Johore were within their sphere of influence, Raffles dispatched Colonel William Farquhar, an old friend and Malayan expert, to survey the Carimon Islands (modern Karimun Islands near Riau).
countrystudies.us /singapore/4.htm

  
 Origins of some Brooklyn Street Names - Brooklyn dot com
The British captured the Dutch territory in 1664 during the Second Anglo-Dutch War, and when the British combined the six villages into one County (Kings County), under the British flag, the Dutch residents began "anglicizing" many place names and family names -- that is, changing or translating the names into English.
By the end of the war, he and Lincoln were recognized as the two most influential men in public life.
During the Revolutionary War, it was a key route for the Continental Army, and a place where riflemen would position themselves to attack the British Army.
www.brooklyn.com /streets.html

  
 Alfons van der Kraan - UNE
Contest for the Java Cotton Trade, 1811-1840: An Episode in Anglo-Dutch Rivalry, Centre for Southeast Asian Studies, Occasional Papers Series, no. 32, University of Hull, 1998, pp.
Bali at War: A History of the Dutch-Balinese Conflict of 1846-49, Centre of Southeast Asian Studies, Monash Monographs on Southeast Asia, Monash University, Melbourne, 1995, pp.
Dutch Rule in Lombok, 1900-40: The Development of Underdevelopment, Southeast Asian Monograph Series, no. 6, Townsville, James Cook University, 1980.
www.une.edu.au /febl/Staff/avanderk.htm

  
 Acheh Timeline; An Achenese Chronology
It is the longest war ever fought by the Dutch, costing them over 10, 000 lives.
Eight asylum seekers remain in the Dutch and Swiss embassies (in 1997, the UNHCR grants mandate refugee status to all eight).
In that period there were frequent wars with the Portuguese at Malacca, and the Portuguese fleet was defeated at Bintan in 1614.
www.achehtimes.com /timeline

  
 indonesia - ppu information
In 1825 there was a revolt - 'the Java war' - against the Dutch, and another from 1894-6; but the Dutch established and kept firm control and developed the region into one the world's richest colonies.
An Anglo-Dutch treaty was agreed in 1824, whereby the British recognised Indonesia as a Dutch 'sphere of influence'.
From the 14th to the 16th century the dominant empire was based on Java.
www.ppu.org.uk /war/countries/asia/indonesia.html

  
 Acheh Early History..
A Chinese resistance to Dutch control culminated in a long and bitter conflict (1873-1908), which recurred at intervals until the establishment after World War II of the Republic of Indonesia.
The island extends in a southeastern to northwestern direction; it is separated by the Strait of Malacca from the Malay Peninsula on the northeast and by Sunda Strait from Java on the southeast.
Throughout the 19th century the Dutch continued to extend their authority over local rulers; the last great struggle (1873-1903) was with the Achenese.
www.achehtimes.com /history

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Mohammed and Mohammedanism (Islam)
Mohammed, "the Praised One", the prophet of Islam and the founder of Mohammedanism, was born at Mecca (20 August?) A.D. Arabia was then torn by warring factions.
The rights of non-Moslem subjects are of the vaguest and most limited kind, and a religious war is a sacred duty whenever there is a chance of success against the "Infidel".
Thus, e.g., the first day of the fourteenth century came in the course of the year of Our Lord 1883.) The first, seven, eleventh and twelfth months ofthe Mohammedan year are sacred; during these months it is not lawful to wage war.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/10424a.htm

  
 Timeline 600CE to 999CE
Ali prepared for war but was murdered by an angry former supporter.
He fled all the way to Spain where he united the warring Muslin groups there and built a new Umayyad government.
610-632 During Mohammed’s ministry in Mecca and Medina the definition of jihad moved from persuasive proselytism to Muslim war against all infidels.
timelines.ws /0600AD_999AD.HTML

  
 List of wars
1532 - 1546 Ottoman-Habsburg War in the Mediterranean
1918 Finnish Civil War, fought between "the reds" (rebellious Socialists) and "the whites" (anti-Socialists) in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution of 1917.
161 - 166 - Parthian war of Lucius Verus
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/L/List-of-wars.htm

  
 Re: [CTRL] [prj] Occult (Secret) Technology of Commercial Im
The last Anglo-Dutch War was in the days of Cromwell, I believe.
The Dutch had long lost control of their settlers is South Africa though the Boer's fondness for slavery was part of the old Dutch system (Brazil too).
One wonders the degree to which the Javanese kleptocratic elite that has brought Indonesia to bankruptcy was the heirs to the VOC and its methods.
www.mail-archive.com /ctrl@listserv.aol.com/msg05286.html

  
 Articles - Bengkulu
Despite these difficulties, the British persisted, maintaining the presence there for 150 years before ceding it to the Dutch as part of the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824 to focus attention on Malacca.
Like the rest of present-day Indonesia, Bengkulu remained a Dutch colony until after World War II.
During Sukarno 's imprisonment by the Dutch in the early 1930s, the future first president of Indonesia lived briefly in Bengkulu.
www.beadscenter.com /articles/Bencoolen

  
 The Vault-The memorable and not so memorable past.
The Causes of the First Anglo-Dutch War 1652-1654
Comparison and Contrast of Selected Civil War Documents
www.tropicdistortion.com /writings/writing.php

  
 Battlegames : History : Chronology of Conflict
Paraguayan War (Lopez War, or War of the Triple Alliance)
War of the Third Coalition ( Napoleonic Wars)
Columbian Civil War (War of a Thousand Days)
www.battlegames.co.uk /html/history/chrono_AD19th.htm

  
 Cyndi's List - Asia & The Pacific
The IGV mainly researches Dutch (Eurasian) families that originated in the former Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).
Ancestors from the former Dutch East Indies and the former Colony of Ceylon 
Baptism & marriages from the Dutch Church in Cochin, India (1754-1804).
www.cyndislist.com /asia.htm

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.