CHAPTER 1
Geography
of BorneoBorneo
is one of the largest islands of the world. Its area is roughly
290,000 square miles, or about five times that of England and Wales.
Its greatest length from north-east to south-west is 830 miles, and
its greatest breadth is about 600 miles. It is crossed by the equator
a little below its centre, so that about two-thirds of its area lie
in the northern and one-third lies in the southern hemisphere.
Although surrounded on all sides by islands of volcanic origin,
Borneo differs from them in presenting but small traces of volcanic
activity, and in consisting of ancient masses of igneous rock and of
sedimentary strata.The
highest mountain is Kinabalu, an isolated mass of granite in the
extreme north, nearly 14,000 feet in height. With this exception the
principal mountains are grouped in several massive chains, which rise
here and there to peaks about 10,000 feet above the sea. The
principal of these chains, the Tibang-Iran range, runs south-westward
through the midst of the northern half of the island and is prolonged
south of the equator by the Schwaner chain. This median
south-westerly trending range forms the backbone of the island. A
second much-broken chain runs across the island from east to west
about 1[degree] north of the equator. Besides these two principal
mountain chains which determine the main features of the
river-system, there are several isolated peaks of considerable
height, and a minor ridge of hills runs from the centre towards the
south-cast corner. With the exception of the northern extremity,
which geographically as well as politically stands apart from the
rest of the island, the whole of Borneo may be described as divided
by the two principal mountain chains into four large watersheds. Of
these, the north-western basin, the territory of Sarawak, is drained
by the Rejang and Baram, as well as by numerous smaller rivers. Of
the other three, which constitute Dutch Borneo, the north-eastern is
drained by the Batang Kayan or Balungan river; the south-eastern by
the Kotei and Banjermasin rivers; and the south-western by the
Kapuas, the largest of all the rivers, whose course from the centre
of the island to its south-west corner is estimated at 700 miles.
Although the point of intersection of the two principal mountain
chains lies almost exactly midway between the northern and southern
and the eastern and western extremities of the island, the greater
width of the southern half of the island gives a longer course to the
rivers of that part, in spite of the fact that all the six principal
rivers mentioned above have their sources not far from this central
point. The principal rivers thus radiate from a common centre, the
Batang Kayan flowing east-north-east, the Kotei south-east by east,
the Banjermasin south, the Kapuas a little south of west, the Rejang
west, and the Baram north-west. This radiation of the rivers from a
common centre is a fact of great importance for the understanding of
the ethnography of the island, since the rivers are the great
highways which movements of the population chiefly follow.In
almost all parts of the island, the land adjoining the coast is a
low-lying swampy belt consisting of the alluvium brought down by the
many rivers from the central highlands. This belt of alluvium extends
inland in many parts for fifty miles or more, and is especially
extensive in the south and south-east of the island.Between
the swampy coast belt and the mountains intervenes a zone of very
irregular hill country, of which the average height above the
sea-level is about one thousand feet, with occasional peaks rising to
five or six thousand feet or more.There
seems good reason to believe that at a comparatively recent date
Borneo was continuous with the mainland of Asia, forming its
south-eastern extremity. Together with Sumatra and Java it stands
upon a submarine bank, which is nowhere more than one hundred fathoms
below the surface, but which plunges down to a much greater depth
along a line a little east of Borneo (Wallace's line). The abundance
of volcanic activity in the archipelago marks it as a part of the
earth's crust liable to changes of elevation, and the accumulation of
volcanic matter would tend to make it an area of subsidence; while
the north-east monsoon, which blows with considerable violence down
the China Sea for about four months of each year, may have hastened
the separation of Borneo from the mainland. That this separation was
effected in a very recent geological period is shown by the presence
in Borneo of many species of Asiatic mammals both large and small,
notably the rhinoceros (R. BORNIENSIS, closely allied to R.
SUMATRANUS); the elephant (E. INDICUS, which, however, may have been
imported by man); the wild cattle (BOS SONDIACUS, which occurs also
in Sumatra); several species of deer and pig (some of which are found
in Sumatra and the mainland); several species of the cat tribe, of
which the tiger-cat (FELIS NEBULOSA) is the largest; the civet-cat
(VIVERRA) and its congeners HEMIGALE, PARADOXURUS, and ARCTOGALE; the
small black bear (URSUS MALAYANUS); the clawless otter (LUTRA
CINEREA); the bear-cat (ARCTICTIS BINTURONG); the scaly ant-eater
(MANIS JAVANICUS); the lemurs (TARSIUS SPECTRUM and NYCTICEBUS
TARDIGRADUS); the flying lemur (GALEOPITHECUS VOLANS); the porcupine
(HYSTRIX CRASSISPINIS); numerous bats, squirrels, rats and mice; the
big shrew (GYMNURA); several species of monkeys, and two of the
anthropoid apes. The last are of peculiar significance, since they
are incapable of crossing even narrow channels of water, and must be
regarded as products of a very late stage of biological evolution. Of
these two anthropoid species, the gibbon (HYLOBATES MULLERI) is
closely allied to species found in the mainland and in Sumatra, while
the MAIAS or orang-utan (SIMIA SALYRUS) is found also in Sumatra and,
though not now surviving on the continent, must be regarded as
related to anthropoids whose fossil remains have been discovered
there.[2]The
zoological evidence thus indicates a recent separation of Borneo and
Sumatra from the continent, and a still more recent separation
between the two islands.The
climate of the whole island is warm and moist and very equable. The
rainfall is copious at all times of the year, but is rather heavier
during the prevalence of the north-east monsoon in the months from
October to February, and least during the months of April and May. At
Kuching, during the last thirty years, the average yearly rainfall
has been 160 inches, the maximum 225, and the minimum 102 inches; the
maximum monthly fall recorded was 69 inches, and the minimum .66, and
the greatest rainfall recorded in one day was 15 inches. The
temperature hardly, if ever, reaches 100[degree] F.; it ranges
normally between 70[degree] and 90[degree] F.; the highest reading of
one year (1906) at Kuching was 94[degree], the lowest 69[degree].
Snow and frost are unknown, except occasionally on the summits of the
highest mountains. Thunder-storms are frequent and severe, but
wind-storms are not commonly of any great violence.The
abundant rainfall maintains a copious flow of water down the many
rivers at all times of the year; but the rivers are liable to rise
rapidly many feet above their normal level during days of
exceptionally heavy rain. In their lower reaches, where they traverse
the alluvial plains and swamps, the rivers wind slowly to the sea
with many great bends, and all the larger ones are navigable by small
steamers for many miles above their mouths: thus a large steam launch
can ascend the Rejang for 160 miles, the Baram for 120, and some of
the rivers on the Dutch side for still greater distances. The limit
of such navigation is set by beds of rock over which the rivers run
shallow, and which mark the beginnings of the middle reaches. In
these middle reaches, where the rivers wind between the feet of the
hills, long stretches of deep smooth water alternate with others in
which the water runs with greater violence between confining walls of
rock, or spreads out in wide rapids over stony bottoms. The upper
reaches of the rivers, where they descend rapidly from the slopes of
the mountains, are composed of long series of shallow rapids and low
waterfalls, alternating at short intervals with still pools and calm
shallows, bounded by rock walls and great beds of waterworn stones,
which during the frequent freshets are submerged by a boiling flood.
The whole river in these upper reaches is for the most part roofed in
by the overarching forest.Practically
the whole of Borneo, from the seacoast to the summits of the highest
mountains, is covered with a dense forest. On the summits this
consists of comparatively stunted trees, of which every part is
thickly coated with moss. In all other parts the forest consists of
great trees rising to a height of 150 feet, and even 200 feet, and of
a dense undergrowth of younger and smaller trees, and of a great
variety of creepers, palms, and ferns. Trees of many species (nearly
500) yield excellent timber, ranging from the hardest ironwood or
BILIAN, and other hard woods (many of them so close-grained that they
will not float in water), to soft, easily worked kinds. A
considerable number bear edible fruits, notably the mango (from which
the island derives its Malay name, PULU KLEMANTAN), the durian,
mangosteen, rambutan, jack fruit, trap, lansat, banana of many
varieties, both wild and cultivated, and numerous sour less
nutritious kinds. Wild sago is abundant in some localities. Various
palms supply in their unfolding leaves a cabbage-like edible. Among
edible roots the caladium is the chief. Rubber is obtained as the sap
of a wild creeper; gutta-percha from trees of several varieties;
camphor from pockets in the stem of the camphor tree (DRYOBALANOPS
AROMATICA). But of all the jungle plants those which play the most
important parts in the life of the people are the many species of the
rattan and the bamboo; without them more than half the crafts and
most of the more important material possessions of the natives would
be impossible, and their lives would perhaps nearly conform to the
conventional notion of savage existence as something 'nasty, dull,
and brutish.' The jungle of Borneo is, of course, famous for its
wealth of orchids, and can claim the distinction of producing the
largest flower of the world (RAFFLESIA), and many beautiful varieties
of the pitcher plant.The
forests of Borneo harbour more than 450 species of birds, many of
them being of gorgeous colouring or strange and beautiful forms;
especially noteworthy are many hawks, owls, and eagles, fly-catchers,
spider-hunters, sun-birds, broad-bills, nightjars, orioles, miners,
pigeons, kingfishers, hornbills, trojans, magpies, jays, crows,
partridges, pheasants, herons, bitterns, snipes, plovers, Curlews,
and sandpipers. Amongst these are many species peculiar to Borneo;
while on the mountains above the 4000-feet level are found several
species which outside Borneo are known only in the Himalayas.Besides
the mammals mentioned above, Borneo claims several species of mammal
peculiar to itself, notably the long-nosed monkey (NASALIS LARVATUS);
two species of ape (SEMNOPITHECUS HOSEI and S. CRUCIGER); many shrews
and squirrels, including several flying species; a civet-cat
(HEMIGALE HOSEI); a deer (CERVUS BROOKII); the bearded pig (SUS
HARBATUS); the curious feather-tailed shrew (PTYLOCERCUS LOWII).Reptiles
are well represented by the crocodile, which abounds in all the
rivers, a long-snouted gavial, numerous tortoises and lizards with
several flying species, and more than seventy species of snakes, of
which some are poisonous, while the biggest, the python, attains a
length of thirty feet. The rivers abound in edible fish of many
species; insects are of course numerous and varied, and, aided by the
multitude of frogs, they fill the island each evening at sunset with
one vast chorus of sound.
CHAPTER 2
History
of BorneoThe
Pagan tribes of Borneo have no written records of their history and
only very vague traditions concerning events in the lives of their
ancestors of more than five or six generations ago. But the written
records of more cultured peoples of the Far East contain references
to Borneo which throw some small rays of light upon the past history
and present condition of its population. It has seemed to us worth
while to bring together in these pages these few historical notes.
The later history of Borneo, which is in the main the story of its
occupation by and division between the Dutch and English, and
especially the romantic history of the acquisition of the raj of
Sarawak by its first English rajah, Sir James Brooke, has often been
told,[3] and for this reason may be dismissed by us in a very few
words.The
coasts of Borneo have long been occupied by a Mohammedan population
of Malay culture; this population is partly descended from Malay and
Arab immigrants, and partly from indigenous individuals and
communities that have adopted the Malay faith and culture in recent
centuries. When Europeans first visited the island, this population,
dwelling for the most part, as it still does, in villages and small
towns upon the coast and in or near the mouths of the rivers, owed
allegiance to several Malay sultans and a number of subordinate
rulers, the local rajahs and pangirans. The principal sultans had as
their capitals, from which they took their titles, Bruni on the
north-west, Sambas in the west, Pontianak at the mouth of the Kapuas
river, Banjermasin in the south at the mouth of the river of the same
name, Pasir at the south-east corner, Kotei and Balungan on the east
at the mouths of the rivers of those names; while the Sultan of Jolo,
the capital of the Sulu islands, which lie off the north coast,
claimed sovereignty over the northern end of Borneo. But these Malay
sultans were not the first representatives in the island of culture
and of civilised or semi-civilised rule; for history preserves some
faint records of still earlier times, of which some slight
confirmation is afforded by surviving traces of the culture then
introduced.In
spite of all the work done on the history of the East Indies, most of
what occurred before and much that followed the arrival of Europeans
remains obscure. There are several Asiatic nations whose records
might be expected to contain valuable information, but all are
disappointing. The Klings, still the principal Hindu traders in the
Far East, visited the Malay Archipelago in the first or at any rate
the second century after Christ,[4] and introduced their writing[5]
and chronology. But their early histories are meagre and
unsatisfactory in the extreme. The Arab culture of the Malays, which
took root in Sumatra in the twelfth century, is of course of no
assistance in regard to events of earlier date, and does not give
trustworthy and detailed accounts until the fifteenth century. The
Chinese, on the other hand, always a literary people, carefully
preserved in their archives all that could be gathered with regard to
the "southern seas." But China was far away, and many local
events would possess no interest for her subjects. Under the
circumstances, the official historians deserve our gratitude for
their geographical descriptions and for the particulars of
tribute-bearing missions to the Son of Heaven, though they have
little else to tell.The
first account we have been able to find referring to Borneo is a
description of the kingdom of Poli from the Chinese annals of the
sixth century. Poli was said to be on an island in the sea south-east
of Camboja, and two months south-east of Canton. The journey thither
was made by way of the Malay Peninsula, a devious route still
followed by Chinese junks. Envoys were sent to the Imperial court in
A.D. 518, 523, and 616. "The people of this country," our
authority says, "are skilled in throwing a discus-knife, and the
edge is like a saw; when they throw it at a man, they never fail to
hit him. Their other arms are about the same as in China. Their
customs resemble those of Camboja, and the productions of the country
are the same as of Siam. When one commits a murder or theft they cut
off his hands,[6] and when adultery has been committed, the culprit
has his legs chained for the period of a year. For their sacrifice
they choose the time when there is no moon; they fill a bowl with
wine and eatables and let it float away on the surface of the water;
in the eleventh month they have a great sacrifice. They get corals
from the sea, and they have a bird called s'ari, which can talk."
A later reference to the same place says: "They carry the teeth
of wild beasts in their ears, and wrap a piece of cotton round their
loins; cotton is a plant of which they collect the flowers to make
cloth of them; the coarser kind is called KUPA, and the finer cloth
T'IEH. They hold their markets at night, and cover their faces…. At
the east of this country is situated the land of the Rakshas, which
has the same customs as Poli."[7]This
is an interesting account in many ways, and tallies very closely with
what other evidence would lead one to suspect. For there is reason to
think that Bruni, before it became Mohammedan, was a Bisaya kingdom
under Buddhist sovereigns and Hindu influence; and nearly all the
particulars given with regard to the people of Borneo are true of one
or other of the races allied to Bisayas and living near Bruni to-day.
The discus-knife, a wooden weapon, is not now in use, but is known to
have been used formerly. The wild Kadayans sacrifice after every new
moon, and are forbidden to eat a number of things until they have
done so. The Malanaus set laden rafts afloat on the rivers to
propitiate the spirits of the sea. The very names of the two kinds of
cotton, then evidently a novelty to the Chinese, are found in Borneo:
KAPOK is a well-known Malay word; but TAYA is the common name for
cotton among the Sea Dayaks, though it is doubtful whether it is
found in Sumatra at all, and is not given in Marsden's great
Dictionary. The use of teeth as ear-ornaments may refer to Kenyahs.
If these identities are sufficient to show that Poli was old Bruni,
we have an almost unique illustration here of the antiquity of savage
customs. That an experience of fourteen hundred years should have
failed to convince people of the futility of feeding salt waves is a
striking demonstration of the widespread fallacy, that what is old
must needs be good.Poli
had already attained a certain measure of civilisation, and even of
luxury. The kingly dignity was hereditary, and the Buddhist monarch
was served with much ceremony. He was clad in flowered silk or
cotton, adorned with pearls, and sat on a golden throne attended by
servants with white dusters and fans of peacock feathers. When he
went out of his palace, his chariot, canopied with feathers and
embroidered curtains, was drawn by elephants, whilst gongs, drums,
and conches made inspiriting music. As Hindu ornaments have been
found at Santubong together with Chinese coins of great antiquity, as
the names of many offices of state in Bruni are derived from
Sanskrit, and the people of Sarawak have only lately ceased to speak
of "the days of the Hindus,"[8] there is nothing startling
in the statement that the kings of Poli were Buddhist.Whatever
Poli may or may not have been, there is little question that Puni, 45
days from Java, 40 from Palembang, 30 from Champa, in each case
taking the wind to be fair, was Bruni. The Chinese, who have neither
B nor double consonants in their impoverished language, still call
the Bornean capital Puni. Groeneveldt says that the Chinese consider
Puni to have been on the west coast of Borneo. This state is
mentioned several times in the annals of the Sung dynasty, which,
though only ruling over Southern China, had a complete monopoly[9] of
the ocean trade for three centuries (960 to 1279 A.D.). Puni was at
that time a town of some 10,000 inhabitants, protected by a stockade
of timber. The king's palace, like the houses of modern Bruni, was
thatched with palm leaves, the cottages of the people with grass.
Warriors carried spears and protected themselves with copper armour.
When any native died, his corpse was exposed in the jungle, and once
a year for seven years sacrifices were made to the departed spirit.
Bamboos and palm leaves, thrown away after every meal, sufficed for
crockery. The products of the country, or at least such as were sent
as tribute, were camphor, tortoiseshell, and ivory.[10]In
the year 977, we are told, Hianzta, king of Puni, sent envoys to
China, who presented tribute with the following words: "May the
emperor live thousands and tens of thousands of years, and may he not
disapprove of the poor civilities of my little country." The
envoys presented a letter from the king. This was written on' what
looked like the very thin bark of a tree; it was glossy, slightly
green, several feet long, and somewhat broader than one inch; the
characters in which it was written were small, and had to be read
horizontally. In all these particulars the letter resembled the books
of magic which are still written by the Battas of inland Sumatra.[11]
The message ran: "The king of Puni, called Hianzta, prostrates
himself before the most august emperor, and hopes that the emperor
may live ten thousands of years. I have now sent envoys to carry
tribute; I knew before that there was an emperor, but I had no means
of communication. Recently there was a merchant called Pu Lu, whose
ship arrived at the mouth of my river; I sent a man to invite him to
my place, and he told me that he came from China. The people of my
country were much delighted at this, and preparing a ship, asked this
stranger to guide them to the court. The envoys I have sent only wish
to see Your Majesty in peace, and I intend to send people with
tribute every year. But when I do so I fear that my ships may
occasionally be blown to Champa, and I therefore hope Your Majesty
will send an edict to that country with orders that, if a ship of
Hianzta arrives there, it must not be detained. My country has no
other articles,[12] and I pray Your Majesty not to be angry with me."
The envoys were entertained and sent home with presents. In 1082
A.D., a hundred years later, Sri Maja, king of Puni, sent tribute
again, but the promise of yearly homage was not kept. Gradually the
Sung dynasty declined in power, and East Indian potentates became
less humble.In
the thirteenth and the early part of the fourteenth centuries Bruni
owed allegiance alternately to two powers much younger than herself,
Majapahit in Java, and Malacca on the west coast of the Malay
Peninsula. Both these states were founded in the thirteenth
century.[13] Majapahit, originally only one of several Javan
kingdoms, rapidly acquired strength and subjugated her neighbours and
the nearest portions of the islands around. Malacca, formed when the
Malay colony of Singapore was overwhelmed by Javanese, became the
great commercial depot of the Straits and the chief centre of
Mohammedanism in the Archipelago. The two powers therefore stood for
two faiths and two cultures: Majapahit for Brahminism and Hindu
influence, Malacca for Islam and the more practical civilisation of
Arabia.In
the earliest years of the fourteenth century Bruni was a dependency
of Majapahit, but seems to have recovered its independence during the
minority of the Javan king. It is to this time that the tradition of
the Kapuas Malays ascribes the arrival of the Kayans in Borneo.[14]
Then Angka Wijaya extended the power of Majapahit over Palembang in
Sumatra, Timor, Ternate, Luzon, and the coasts of Borneo. Over
Banjermasin he set his natural son. In 1368 Javanese soldiers drove
from Bruni the Sulu marauders who had sacked the town. A few years
later the ungrateful king transferred his allegiance to China, and
not long afterwards, with calculating humility, paid tribute[15] to
Mansur Shah, who had succeeded to the throne of Malacca in 1374 A.D.An
extraordinary incident occurred at the beginning of the fifteenth
century, which again — and for the last time — draws our
attention to the Chinese court. The great Mongol conquerors, Genghis
and Kublai Khan, had little to do with the Malay Archipelago, though
the latter sent an unsuccessful expedition against Java in 1292. But
the Ming emperors, who were of Chinese blood, came to power in 1368
and soon developed the maritime influence of the empire. For a few
years there was a continual stream of East Indian embassies. During
the last twenty years of the century, however, these became more
rare, and in 1405 the Chinese emperor found it necessary to send a
trusted eunuch, by name Cheng Ho, to visit the vassal states in the
south. This man made several journeys, travelling as far as the
shores of Africa, and his mission bore immediate fruit. Among others,
Maraja Kali, king of Puni, although Cheng Ho does not appear to have
called on him in person, sent tribute in 1405; and so pleased was he
with the embroidered silk presented to him and his wife in return,
that he visited the Son of Heaven three years later. Landing in
Fukien, he was escorted by a eunuch to the Chinese capital amid
scenes of great rejoicing. The emperor received him in audience,
allowing him the honours of a noble of the first rank, and loaded him
with gifts. The same year, having accomplished his one great ambition
of "seeing the face of the Son of Heaven," this humbled
monarch died in the imperial city, leaving his son Hiawang to succeed
to the throne of Puni. Having induced the emperor to stop the yearly
tribute of forty katties of camphor paid by Puni to Java, and having
agreed to send tribute to China every three years, Hiawang returned
home to take up the reins of government. Between 1410 and 1425 he
paid tribute six times, besides revisiting the Chinese Court; but
afterwards little Puni seems to have again ignored her powerful
suzerain.It
is probable that the Chinese colony in North Borneo which gave its
name to the lofty mountain Kina Balu (Chinese widow) and to the Kina
Batangan, the chief river which flows from it, was founded about this
time. Several old writers seem to refer to this event, and local
traditions of the settlement still survive. The Brunis and Idaans (a
people in the north not unlike the Bisayas) have legends differing in
detail to the effect that the Chinese came to seize the great jewel
of the Kina Balu dragon, but afterwards quarrelled about the booty
and separated, some remaining behind. The Idaans consider themselves
the descendants of these settlers, but that can only be true in a
very limited sense. Both country and people, however, show traces of
Chinese influence.There
is good evidence that the Chinese influence and immigration were not
confined to Bruni and the northern end of the island. In south-west
Borneo there are traces of very extensive washings of alluvial
gravels for gold and diamonds. These operations were being conducted
by Chinese when Europeans first came to the country; and the extent
of the old workings implies that they had been continued through many
centuries. Hindu-Javan influence also was not confined to the court
of Bruni, for in many parts of the southern half of Borneo traces of
it survive in the custom of burning the dead, in low relief carvings
of bulls on stone, and in various gold ornaments of Hindu character.The
faith of Islam and the arrival of Europeans have profoundly affected
the manners and politics of the East Indies, and now it is difficult
to picture the state of affairs when King Hiawang revisited China to
pay homage to the Emperor. In 1521, within a hundred years of that
event, Pigafetta, the chronicler of Magellan's great exploit, was
calling on the "Moorish" king of Bruni, in the course of
the first voyage round the world. The change had come. Of the two new
influences, so potent for good and evil, Mohammedanism made its
appearance first. The struggle for religious supremacy ended in the
complete victory of the Prophet's followers in 1478, when Majapahit
was utterly destroyed, thirty years before the capture of Malacca by
the Portuguese.How
early the Arab doctrines were taught in Bruni is impossible to state
with any precision. Local tradition ascribes their introduction to
the renowned Alak ber Tata, afterwards known as Sultan Mohammed. Like
most of his subjects this warrior was a Bisaya, and in early life he
was not a Mohammedan, not indeed a civilised potentate at all, to
judge by conventional standards; for the chief mark of his royal
dignity was an immense chawat, or loin-cloth, carried as he walked by
eighty men, forty in front and forty behind. He is the earliest
monarch of whom the present Brunis have any knowledge, a fact to be
accounted for partly by the brilliance of his exploits, partly by the
introduction about that time of Arabic writing. After much fighting
he subdued the people of Igan,[16] Kalaka, Seribas, Sadong,
Semarahan, and Sarawak,[17] and compelled them to pay tribute. He
stopped the annual payment to Majapahit of one jar of pinang juice, a
useless commodity though troublesome to collect. During his reign the
Muruts were brought under Bruni rule by peaceful measures,[18] and
the Chinese colony was kept in good humour by the marriage of the
Bruni king's brother and successor to the daughter of one of the
principal Chinamen.Alak
ber Tata is said to have gone to Johore,[19] where he was
converted[20] to Islam, given[21] the daughter of Sultan Bakhei and
the title of Sultan, and was confirmed in his claim to rule over
Sarawak and his other conquests.[22]Sultan
Mohammed was succeeded by his brother Akhmad, son-in-law of the
Chinese chief, and he was in turn succeeded by an Arab from Taif who
had married his daughter. Thus the present royal house of Bruni is
derived from three sources — Arab, Bisaya, and Chinese. The
coronation ceremony as still maintained affords an interesting
confirmation of this account. On that occasion the principal minister
wears a turban and Haji outfit, the two next in rank are dressed in
Chinese and Hindu fashion, while the fourth wears a chawat over his
trousers to represent the Bisayas; and each of these ministers
declares the Sultan to be divinely appointed. Then after the
demonstration of loyalty the two gongs — one from Menangkabau, the
other from Johore — are beaten, and the Moslem high priest
proclaims the Sultan and preaches a sermon, declaring him to be a
descendant of Sri Turi Buana, the Palembang chief who founded the
early kingdom of Singapore in 1160 A.D., who reigned in that island
for forty-eight years, and whose descendants became the royal family
of Malacca.The
Arab Sultan who succeeded Akhmed assumed the name Berkat and ruled
the country with vigour. He built a mosque and converted many of his
subjects, so that from his reign Bruni may be considered a Mohammedan
town. To defend the capital he sank forty junks filled with stone in
the river, and thus formed the breakwater which still bars the
entrance to large ships. This work rose above the water level, and in
former times bristled with cannon. Sultan Berkat was succeeded by his
son Suleiman, whose reign was of little consequence.Neglecting
Suleiman, we come now to the most heroic figure in Bruni history,
Sultan Bulkiah, better known by his earlier name, Nakoda Ragam. The
prowess of this prince has been celebrated in prose and verse. He
journeyed to distant lands, and conquered the Sulu islands and
eastern Borneo. Over the throne of Sambas he set a weak-minded
brother of his own. He even sent an expedition to Manila, and on the
second attempt seized that place. Tribute poured into his coffers
from all sides. His wife was a Javanese princess, who brought many
people to Bruni. These intermarried with the Bisayas, and from them
it is said are sprung the Kadayans, a quiet agricultural folk,
skilled in various arts, but rendered timid by continual oppression.
Some have settled recently in the British colony of Labuan, and
others in Sarawak round the river Sibuti, where they have become
loyal subjects of the Rajah of Sarawak.Nakoda
Ragam's capital at Buang Tawa was on dry land, but when he died,
killed accidentally by his wife's bodkin, the nobles quarrelled among
themselves, and some of them founded the present pile-built town of
Bruni. It was to this Malay capital and court that Pigafetta paid his
visit in 1521 with the surviving companions of Magellan. His is the
first good account from European sources of the place which he called
Bornei, and whose latitude he estimated with an error of less than
ten miles.[23]It
is easy to see from Pigafetta's narrative[24] that at the date of his
visit the effects of Nakoda Ragam's exploits had not evaporated. The
splendour of the Court and the large population the city is said to
have contained were presumably the result of the conquests he had
made in neighbouring islands. The king, like the princes of Malacca
before the conquest, had his elephants, and he and his courtiers were
clothed in Chinese satins and Indian brocades. He was in possession
of artillery, and the appearance and ceremonial of his court was
imposing.From
this time onwards the power of Bruni has continuously declined.
Recurrent civil wars invited the occasional interventions of the
Portuguese and of the Spanish governors of the Philippines, which,
although they did not result in the subjugation of the Malay power,
nevertheless sapped its strength.The
interest of the later history of Borneo lies in the successive
attempts,[25] many of them fruitless, made by Dutch and English to
gain a footing on the island. The Dutch arrived off Bruni in the year
1600, and ten days afterwards were glad to leave with what pepper
they had obtained in the interval, the commander judging the place
nothing better than a nest of rogues. The Dutch did not press the
acquaintance, but started factories at Sambas, where they monopolised
the trade. In 1685 an English captain named Cowley arrived in Bruni;
but the English showed as little inclination as the Dutch to take up
the commerce which the Portuguese had abandoned.At
Banjermasin, on the southern coast, more progress was made. The Dutch
arrived there before their English rivals, but were soon compelled by
intrigues to withdraw. In 1704[26] the English factors on the Chinese
island of Chusan, expelled by the imperial authorities and
subsequently driven from Pulo Condar off the Cochin China coast by a
mutiny, arrived at Banjermasin. They had every reason to be gratified
with the prospects at that port; for they could sell the native
pepper to the Chinese at three times the cost price. But their bitter
experiences in the China seas had not taught them wisdom; they soon
fell out with the Javanese Sultan, whose hospitality they were
enjoying, and after some bloody struggles were obliged to withdraw
from this part of the island.In
1747 the Dutch East India Company, which in 1705 had obtained a firm
footing in Java, and in 1745 had established its authority over all
the north-eastern coast of that island, extorted a monopoly of trade
at Banjermasin and set up a factory. Nearly forty years later[27]
(1785), the reigning prince having rendered himself odious to his
subjects, the country was invaded by 3000 natives of Celebes. These
were expelled by the Dutch, who dethroned the Sultan, placing his
younger brother on the throne; and he, in reward for their services,
ceded to them his entire dominions, consenting to hold them as a
vassal. This is the treaty under which the Dutch claim the
sovereignty of Banjermasin and whatever was once dependent on it. In
this way the Dutch got a hold on the country which they have never
relaxed; and, after the interval during which their possessions in
the East Indies were administered by England,[28] they strengthened
that hold gradually, year by year, till now two-thirds or more of the
island is under their flag and feels the benefits of their rule. If
there are still any districts of this large area where Dutch
influence has even now barely made itself felt, they will not long
remain in their isolation; for the Controleurs are extending their
influence even into the most remote corners of the territory.To
turn again to the north-western coast and the doings of Englishmen,
in 1763 the Sultan of Sulu ceded to the East India Company the
territory in Borneo which had been given him when he killed the
usurper Abdul Mubin in Bruni. In 1773 a small settlement was formed
on the island of Balambangan, north of Bruni; and in the following
year the Sultan of Bruni agreed to give this settlement a monopoly of
the pepper trade in return for protection from piracy. In the next
year, however, Balambangan was surprised and captured by the Sulus.
It was reoccupied for a few months in 1803, and then finally
forsaken.Towards
the end of the eighteenth century the Malays of Bruni, Sulu, and
Mindanao, with native followers and allies, inspired we may suppose
by the example of their European visitors, took to piracy — not
that they had not engaged in such business before, but that they now
prosecuted an old trade with renewed vigour. English traders still
tried to pay occasional visits, but after the loss of the MAY in
1788, the SUSANNA in 1803, and the COMMERCE in 1806, with the murder
of the crews, the Admiralty warned merchants that it was CERTAIN
DESTRUCTION to go up river to Bruni. For forty years this intimation
was left on British charts, and British seamen followed the
humiliating counsel. Not until the early forties was peace restored,
after an event of the most romantic and improbable kind, the
accession of an English gentleman to the throne of Sarawak.Of
this incident, so fateful for the future of the western side of
Borneo, it must suffice to say here that James Brooke, a young
Englishman, having resigned his commission in the army of the British
East India Company, invested his fortune in a yacht of 140 tons, with
which he set sail in 1838 for the eastern Archipelago. His bold but
vague design was to establish peace, prosperity, and just government
in some part of that troubled area, whose beauties he had admired and
whose misfortunes he had deplored on the occasion of an earlier
voyage to the China seas. When at Singapore, he heard that the Malays
of Sarawak, a district forming the southern extremity of the
Sultanate of Bruni, had rebelled against the Bruni nobles, and had in
vain appealed to the Dutch Governor-general at Batavia for
deliverance from their oppressors. Under the nominal authority of the
Sultan, these Bruni nobles, many of whom were of Arab descent, had
brought all the north-western part of Borneo to a state of chronic
rebellion. They had taught the Sea Dayaks of the Batang Lupar and
neighbouring rivers to join them in their piratical excursions, and,
being to some extent dependent upon their aid, were compelled to
treat them with some consideration; but all other communities were
treated by them with a rapacity and cruelty which was causing a rapid
depopulation and the return to jungle of much cultivated land.Brooke
sailed for Sarawak in August 1839, and found the country torn by
internal conflicts. The Sultan had recently sent Muda Hasim, his
uncle and heir-presumptive to the throne of Bruni, to restore order;
but this weak though amiable noble had found himself quite incapable
of coping with the situation. Brooke spent some time surveying the
coast and studying the people and country, and gained the confidence
of Muda Hasim. After an excursion to Celebes, Brooke sailed for a
second visit to Sarawak just a year after the first, and found the
state of the country going from bad to worse. Muda Hasim besought him
to take command of his forces and to suppress the rebellion. Brooke
consented, and soon secured the submission of the rebel leaders on
the condition that he (Brooke), and not any Bruni noble, should be
the governor and Rajah of Sarawak. Muda Hasim had offered to secure
his appointment to this office as an inducement to him to undertake
the operations against the rebels; Brooke therefore felt himself
justified in granting these terms. And when later Muda Hasim, no
longer threatened with disgrace and failure, showed himself
disinclined to carry out this arrangement, Brooke, feeling himself
bound by his agreement with the rebel leaders, whose lives he had
with difficulty preserved from the vengeance of the Bruni nobles,
insisted upon it with some show of force; and on September 24, 1841,
he was proclaimed Rajah and governor of Sarawak amid the rejoicings
of the populace. Muda Hasim, as representative of the Sultan, signed
the document which conferred this title and authority; but since he
was not in any proper sense Rajah of Sarawak, which in fact was not a
raj, but a district hitherto ruled or misruled by Bruni governors not
bearing the title of Rajah, this transaction cannot properly be
described as an abdication by Muda Hasim in favour of Brooke. Brooke
accordingly felt that it was desirable to secure from the Sultan
himself a formal recognition of his authority and title. To this end
he visited the Sultan in the year 1842, and obtained from him the
desired confirmation of the action of his agent Muda Hasim. The way
in which the raj of Sarawak has since been extended, until it now
comprises a territory of nearly 60,000 square miles (approximately
equal to the area of England and Wales), will be briefly described in
a later chapter (XXII.).The
northern end of Borneo had long been a hunting-ground for slaves for
the nobles of Bruni and Sulu, whose Sultans claimed but did not
exercise the right to rule over it. In 1877 Mr. Alfred Dent, a
Shanghai merchant, induced the two Sultans to resign to him their
sovereign rights over this territory in return for a money payment.
The British North Borneo Company, which was formed for the commercial
development of it, necessarily undertook the task of pacification and
administration. In 1881 the company was granted a royal charter by
the British Government; and it now administers with success and a
fair prospect of continued commercial profit a territory which, with
the exception of a small area about the town of Bruni, includes all
of the island that had not been brought under the Dutch or Sarawak
flag. In 1888 Sarawak and British North Borneo were formally brought
under the protection of the British Government; but the territories
remained under the rule of the Rajah and of the company respectively,
except in regard to their foreign relations. In the year 1906 the
Sultan of Bruni placed himself and his capital, together with the
small territory over which he still retained undivided authority,
under the protection of the British Government; and thus was
completed the passing of the island of Borneo under European control.