Makassar - Ujung Pandang
HISTORY OF THE MAKASSAR CITY
The beginning of the city and city of Makassar was at the mouth of the Tallo River with a small commercial port in the area at the end of the 15th century. Portuguese sources report that the town of Tallo was originally under the Siang Kingdom around Pangkajene. In the mid-16th century, Tallo united with another small kingdom called Gowa, and began to break away from the Siang kingdom, even attacking and conquering the surrounding kingdoms. As a result of the increasingly intensive agricultural activities in the upper reaches of the Tallo river, resulting in the shallowing of the Tallo river, so that the city was moved to the mouth of the Jeneberang river, this is where the development of power in the palace area took place by the Gowa-Tallo nobles who then built defenses.
As a result of the increasingly intensive agricultural activities in the upper reaches of the Tallo river, the Tallo river became shallower, so the city was moved to the mouth of the Jeneberang river. This is where the development of the power of the palace area took place by the Gowa-Tallo nobles who then built the Somba Opu fort defense, which a hundred years later became the core area. Makassar city . During the reign of King Gowa That period was the peak of the glory of the Gowa Kingdom, but then the Bungaya agreement brought the Gowa Kingdom to the beginning of its collapse. Makassar's main export commodity is rice, which can be exchanged for spices from Maluku and manufactured goods from the Middle East, India and China in the West Archipelago.
Portuguese merchants as well as local lontara records show the important role of Malay merchants in based on the exchange of agricultural products for imported goods. By conquering the surrounding small kingdoms, which were generally agricultural based, Makassar controlled a relatively large agricultural area and also tried to persuade merchants in the surrounding kingdoms to move to Makassar, so that trading activities became increasingly concentrated in the new trading port of Makassar. In just a century, Makassar has become one of the world's leading commercial cities, inhabited by more than 100,000 people (the 20th largest city in the world). At that time the population of Amsterdam, which was a cosmopolitan and multicultural city, had only reached around 60,000 people. The rapid development of the city of Makassar is thanks to its connection with changes in the order international trade at that time. The main center of the trade network in Malacca, conquered by Portugal in 1511, as well as North Java, was increasingly reduced following the defeat of its navy at the hands of Portugal and its annexation to the kingdom of Mataram. Even when Malacca was taken over by the Dutch Trading Company (VOC) in 1641, many Portuguese traders also moved to Makassar. Until the mid-17th century, Makassar attempted to spread its power to most of Eastern Indonesia by conquering Selayar Island and its surroundings, the Wolio kingdoms in Buton, Bima in Sumbawa, Banggai and Gorontalo in Eastern and Northern Sulawesi and entering into agreements with other kingdoms. kingdoms in Seram and other islands in Maluku. Internationally, as an important part of the Islamic world, the Sultan of Makassar established trade relations
Makassar maintained close trade and diplomatic relations with the kingdoms of Banten and Aceh in Western Indonesia, Golconda in India and the Otoman Empire in the Middle East. Makassar's relationship with the Islamic world began with the presence of Abdul Ma'mur Khatib Tunggal or Dato 'Ri Bandang who came from Minangkabau, West Sumatra who arrived in Tallo (now Makassar) in September 1605. He converted the XIVth King of Gowa I - MANGNGARANGI DAENG MANRABIA with the title SULTAN ALAUDDIN (ruled 1593-1639), and with Mangkubumi I - MALLINGKAANG DAENG MANYONRI KARAENG KATANGKA who was also King of Tallo. These two kings began to embrace Islam in South Sulawesi. On November 9, 1607, precisely Friday, the first Friday prayer was held at the Tallo Mosque and it was officially declared that the people of the Gowa-Tallo Kingdom had converted to Islam, at the same time converted to Islam, at the same time, Friday prayers were held at the Mangallekana Mosque in Somba Opu. This date has subsequently been celebrated as the Anniversary of the City of Makassar since 2000, previously the anniversary of the city of Makassar was celebrated on April 1 every year. The Makassar aristocrats and their people actively participated in international trade networks, and interaction with the cosmopolitan city community led to a "creative renaissance" which made Bandar Makassar one of the leading scientific centers of its time. Collections of books and maps, at that time were still rare in Europe, but in Makassar many have been collected. Makassar had one of the largest scientific libraries in the world , and the sultans did not hesitate to order the most up-to-date items from all corners of the earth , including the largest globe and binoculars of their time , which were specially ordered from Europe. The ambition of the leaders of the Gowa-Tallo Kingdom to further expand their territory and the competition between Bandar Makassar and the Dutch Trading Company (VOC) ended in the most devastating and fierce war the Company had ever fought. Bugis troops, the Dutch and their allies from Ternate, Buton and Maluku required three years of military operations throughout Eastern Indonesia. Only in 1669 were they finally able to level the city of Makassar and its largest fortress, Somba Opu. For South Sulawesi, the fall of Makassar at the hands of the federation was a turning point which meant that Bandar Niaga Makassar became VOC territory, and several articles of the peace agreement strictly restricted shipping activities between the islands of Gowa-Tallo and its allies. Makassar Port was closed to foreign traders, so the merchant community moved to other ports. In the first few decades after the destruction of the city of Makassar, the remaining residents built a new settlement to the north of the former Ujung Pandang Fort, a defensive fort on the northern edge of the old city. In 1673 it was reorganized by the VOC as a center of defense and government, given the new name Fort Rotterdam, and the 'new city' that began growing around it is called 'Vlaardingen'. The settlement was much smaller than the destroyed Kota Raya Makassar. In the first decade after the war , the entire area was inhabited by no more than 2,000 people , by the middle of the 18th century that number had increased to around 5,000 people , half of whom were slaves . During the time it was controlled by the VOC, Makassar became a forgotten city, and the colonial invaders in the 19th century were unable to conquer the South Sulawesi peninsula, which until the beginning of the 20th century still consisted of dozens of small kingdoms that were independent of foreign governments, and often had to defend themselves against military attacks carried out by these kingdoms. Thus, the 'Company City' only functioned as a security post on the northern route of the spice trade without a hinterland and its shape was not even a 'city', but an agglomeration of villages on the coast around Fort Rotterdam. At first, the main rice trading activity in Bandar Dunia was the marketing of slaves and supplying rice to VOC ships and exchanging it for spices in Maluku. In the 30s of the 18th century, the port of Makassar was opened to Chinese merchant ships. The commodities sought by Chinese merchants in Sulawesi were generally sea and forest products such as sea cucumbers, turtle scales, shells, bird's nests and sandalwood, so they were not considered a subscription and competition for the established monopoly on buying and selling spices and cloth. VOC. In contrast, Chinese merchandise, especially porcelain and silk fabrics, was sold at
especially porcelain and silk cloth, which the merchants sold at cheaper prices in Makassar than foreign traders could get in China itself. The existence of this new market has encouraged the maritime activities of residents of the city and Makassar area again. Especially the residents of the islands in the Spermonde area began to specialize themselves as searchers for sea cucumbers, the main commodity sought by Chinese traders, by exploring the entire Eastern Region of the archipelago. Since the mid-18th century, Sulawesi fishermen and sailors have routinely sailed to the northern coast of Australia, opening dozens of sea cucumber processing sites for three to four months. Until now, marine products are still one of the main sources of livelihood for the residents of the islands within the Makassar City area. After the Dutch East Indies Colonial Government replaced the bankrupt VOC trading company at the end of the 18th century, Makassar was revived by making it a free port in 1846
.jpg)

No comments:
Post a Comment