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The History of Java, v. 1-2

Chapter 72: EASTERN DISTRICTS.
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About This Book

An extensive study of Java combining political history, natural history, and cultural description, it surveys the island's physical geography, climate, resources, and indigenous institutions while documenting languages, religious practices, arts, and everyday customs. The author examines colonial administration and its effects, offers critical observations on governance, and reports on economic activities and social organization. Sections discuss antiquities, local laws and ceremonies, and summaries of flora and fauna based on contemporary inquiry, aiming to present both empirical observations and broader reflections on society and colonial interaction.

GENERAL ACCOUNT OF THE CULTIVATION AND POPULATION OF CHERIBON, 1815.
DI​­VI​­SIONS. SAWAH. VAL​­UE OF SAWAH. To​­tal Sawah in Cul​­ti​­va​­tion. To​­tal Val​­ue of Sawah. TE​­GAL. VAL​­UE OF TE​­GAL. To​­tal Quan​­ti​­ty of Te​­gal. To​­tal Val​­ue of Te​­gal. To​­tal Sawah and Te​­gal in Cul​­ti​­va​­tion. To​­tal Val​­ue of the Crop.
First Sort. Sec​­ond Sort. Third Sort. First Sort. Sec​­ond Sort. Third Sort. First Sort. Sec​­ond Sort. Third Sort. First Sort. Sec​­ond Sort. Third Sort.
Ju​­ngs. Ju​­ngs. Ju​­ngs. Ru​­pees. Ru​­pees. Ru​­pees. Ju​­ngs. Ru​­pees. Ju​­ngs. Ju​­ngs. Ju​­ngs. Ru​­pees. Ru​­pees. Ru​­pees. Ju​­ngs. Ru​­pees. Ju​­ngs. Ru​­pees.
Bengawan 820 1119 2587 87565 89529 138012 4527 315107 8 68 19 700 3676 77 4395 4605 319503
Cheribon 78 319 1318 8345 25544 70327 1716 104217 19 94 10 1543 5015 113 6569 1829 110786
Chiamis 231 352 24658 18815 583 43474 51 144 4089 7704 195 11794 779 55269
Chikaso 182 409 873 19435 32768 46607 1465 98811 138 30 7374 138 7404 1604 106216
Lingajati 431 315 429 46012 25242 22884 1175 94140 49 34 42 5304 2758 2276 126 10339 1302 94479
Gebang 70 140 567 7479 11216 30288 778 48984 20 27 1640 1456 47 3097 826 52082
Losari 3 8 600 320 713 32024 612 33057 9 3 759 197 13 957 625 34014
Kuningan 91 247 901 9718 19765 42768 1140 72252 15 341 1244 18208 356 19452 1497 91705
Telaga 101 195 338 10833 15643 18066 635 44542 1 22 648 148 1824 34593 672 36565 1308 81108
Sindangkasi 294 361 459 31440 28926 24521 1116 84888 19 302 1529 16126 321 17655 1437 102544
Raja Galu 289 377 591 30921 30211 31534 1258 92667 98 5274 98 5274 1357 97941
Panjalu 24 84 265 2663 6754 14181 375 23598 399 21298 399 21298 774 44897
Forest Districts 156 500 831 16646 40072 44320 1487 101039 ​— ​— ​— ​— ​— 39 ​— 39 1488 101079
Total 2770 4074 10111 296035 326383 534347 16867 1156776 50 197 2304 5481 16116 123236 2555 144838 19431 1291627
Ma​­les. Fe​­ma​­les. At​­tach​­ed to the Cul​­ti​­va​­tion of the Soil. Em​­ploy​­ed in oth​­er Av​­o​­ca​­tion. To​­tal Num​­ber of Buf​­fa​­loes. To​­tal Num​­ber of Hor​­ses. To​­tal Num​­ber of Plo​­ughs. JA​­VANS. CHI​­NESE
To­tal Ja​­vans. Ma​­les. Fe​­ma​­les. Class of Cul​­ti​­va​­tors. Em​­ploy​­ed in oth​­er Av​­o​­ca​­tion. To​­tal Num​­ber of Buf​­fa​­loes. To​­tal Num​­ber of Hor​­ses. To​­tal Num​­ber of Plo​­ughs. To­tal Chi​­nese. Ma​­les. Fe​­ma​­les. Class of Cul​­ti​­va​­tors. Em​­ploy​­ed in oth​­er Av​­o​­ca​­tion. To​­tal Num​­ber of Buf​­fa​­loes. To​­tal Num​­ber of Hor​­ses. To​­tal Num​­ber of Plo​­ughs.
To​­tal Pop​­u​­la​­tion 216001 105421 110550 132215 83889 48866 6623 17356 213658 99837 113821 132106 81659 42846 6489 17318 2343 109 2234 1093 1141 320 124 48

EASTERN DISTRICTS.

The Dutch, in acquiring these extensive and valuable provinces on the sea coast, were considered to have acquired the same right as had previously been enjoyed by the native sovereigns, and deemed it advisable to continue the long-established principles and forms of native government. In the same manner, therefore, as the emperors of Java were looked upon as the ultimate proprietors of the land in their dominions, the Dutch Company were considered as possessing the same right with respect to the provinces under their immediate administration; and the princes of Java having been in the habit of entrusting the government, police, and revenue of the different provinces to inferior chiefs, the same system was adhered to under the Dutch. The native system of drawing again the revenues of government from these inferior chieftains, by means of contributions in kind, in money, and by occasional fees and presents, was also maintained; a portion of the common class of inhabitants under the native government being assigned to the performance of different sorts of public works, transports for government, the repair of the roads, the construction of public buildings, the guarding of public stores, the loading and unloading of government vessels, the cutting of grass, the cutting of fire-wood, the keeping a police guard, and other offices, the same principle was adopted under the management of the Dutch, and as under the native form of administration a reward for these feudal services was granted, by the use of an assignment of rice fields allotted either to individuals or to certain classes of workmen, but withdrawn from them as soon as the public duty ceased to be performed, the same mode of remuneration was also adopted by the Dutch.

These principles of administration being combined with the mercantile interests of the Dutch Company, gave rise to certain contracts, which the native chiefs of the different districts (termed by the Dutch Regents) were compelled to enter into on their appointment, for the annual delivery to the Company, either without payment, which was called a contingent, or for a price far below that of the market, which was termed a forced delivery at a fixed price, of such quantity of rice, pepper, cotton, indigo, and other articles, as the market and present state of trade and commerce made most desirable; while the planting of coffee and the cutting of teak timber was always considered as a feudal service, for which, besides the use of a certain portion of rice fields, allotted to the individuals or villagers employed, a certain payment was made, about equivalent to the expenses of transportation to the government yards or storehouses.

The administration of the Eastern Districts, including Madúra, was vested in a governor and council for the north-east coast of Java. The governor was, at the same time, director of the Company's trade, and resided at Semárang. Subordinate to this government was that called Gezaghebber and council, established at Surabáya, the chief place of the east point of Java; while in the other principal districts along the coast, as at Tegal Pekalóngan, Japára, Jawána, &c. residents were fixed: no direct correspondence from the eastern part of the island was maintained with the government of Batavia, except by the governor, usually termed the governor of Java, or by the governor and council. Even the residents at the native courts of Súra Kérta and Yúgya Kérta, only communicated with government through him. By him the succession to the throne of the Susúnan and of the sultan was generally determined; the appointments of native chiefs and regents were made on his proposal; the Company's farms and duties for the Eastern Districts were sold by him; and though he had literally no salary whatever from the treasury of government, he was supposed to draw from his situation a yearly revenue of between three and four hundred thousand dollars. At the same time the correspondence with the Eastern Districts was neither very regular nor very expeditious, and the management of the Company's affairs in those districts was as much a mystery to the chief government at Batavia, as the governor of Semárang chose to make it.

This system continued, without any essential alteration, until after the arrival of Marshal Daendals in 1808.

Some of the contingents, such as indigo, cotton yarn, pepper, &c. to which, however, the regents had not without great reluctance submitted for many years, were then indeed partially abolished; but, on the other hand, all the peculations of the Dutch servants residing along the coast, who had for their own private emolument raised the deliveries, chiefly of rice, at some places to double, and at others to more than double the quantity legally assessed on the regents, at the same time paying for them at some places two-thirds, and at others only half the price assigned by the government, were at once transferred and confirmed to government, by a single decree, ordering, without previous inquiry or reserve, that all the produce which had been usually delivered to the respective residents along the coast, under whatever denomination, should, in the same quantities and with their surplus weight, be for the future delivered to government, and that no higher prices should be granted for the same than that which the residents used to pay.

Equally inconsistent and oppressive in its consequences was a measure by which, on the one hand, the wages of private labour and services were raised to an unusual price, while on the other, the public works, the public transports, and the plantations of coffee, were carried on either gratuitously or at the former inadequate rate. This regulation raised the price of all the first necessaries of life, and principally of rice, which the common classes of the inhabitants felt as a heavier grievance than any they had ever experienced from the former system. Till then, the colonial administration had always, as far as was consistent with their own monopoly and forced delivery of produce at fixed rates, taken particular care to keep down the price of rice and salt as much as possible.

But a measure, still more pernicious in its consequences, was that by which the native regents were each of them subjected to a contribution in hard cash, while at the same time the power of levying taxes on the inhabitants of these districts was left in their hands; a system which, in all cases, afforded them a pretext, and in many an apology, for the most vexatious oppression.

The commendation which is due to this administration is rather founded on those arrangements which had a tendency to prevent peculations in the inferior European servants in every department, and on the abolition of the subordinate governments of Semárang and Surabáya. Fixed salaries were allowed to the residents; they were prohibited from keeping private vessels, and from all trade in the products of their districts. The sale of the government farms and duties was made public, and in a great measure free from corruption, by which means they were immediately raised to more than three times the former amount: each branch of public expenditure and receipt was fixed and ascertained; new and practicable roads were established; the appointment of every native, from the first rank as low as a Demáng, was reserved to the government alone; the Javan custom of pawning the person for a small sum of money was prohibited; fees and presents were abolished. By such measures, a much more regular, active, pure, and efficient administration was established on Java than ever existed at any former period of the Dutch Company.

JAVA.

The following tables are abstracted from the detailed reports furnished during the course of the survey made by the British government. In some particulars they may be deficient and inaccurate, as sufficient time had not been given to complete the detailed survey of the country directed by the Revenue Instructions; but the general results may, for the most part, be depended upon.

GENERAL ACCOUNT OF THE CULTIVATION AND POPULATION OF TEGAL.
Names of Di​­vi​­sions. Cul​­ti​­vat​­ed Land. Saw​­ah. Teg​­al. Cof​­fee Gar​­dens. Es​­ti​­mat​­ed Pro​­duce. Es​­ti​­mat​­ed Val​­ue of Pro​­duce. To​­tal es​­ti​­mat​­ed Val​­ue.
Pari. Mai​­ze. Cof​­fee. Pari. Mai​­ze. Cof​­fee.
Ju​­ngs. Ju​­ngs. Ju​­ngs. Ju​­ngs. Amats. Amats. Pik​­uls. Ru​­pees. Ru​­pees. Ru​­pees. Java Ru​­pees.
Tegal 5920 5694 204 21 367198 16335 541 538557 6125 5198 549881
Brebes 3924 3371 394 159 152354 31520 2740 223453 11820 26305 261578
Pamalang 2817 2378 293 145 114820 23499 2551 168403 8812 24491 201707
Grand Total 12661 11443 891 325 634372 71354 5832 930413 26757 55994 1013166
Names of Di​­vi​­sions. To​­tal Pop​­u​­la​­tion. Mal​­es. Fe​­mal​­es. Cul​­ti​­va​­tors. Ho​­use​­hold​­ers not Cul​­ti​­va​­tors. Buf​­fa​­loes. Hor​­ses. Plo​­ughs. JAV​­ANS. CHI​­NESE and oth​­er FOR​­EIGN​­ERS.
To​­tal Num​­ber of Jav​­ans. Mal​­es. Fe​­mal​­es. Buf​­fa​­loes. Hor​­ses. Plo​­ughs. To​­tal Num​­ber of Chi​­nese. Mal​­es. Fe​­mal​­es. Buf​­fa​­loes. Hor​­ses. Plo​­ughs.
REMARKS: Average Value of a Jung of Cul​­ti​­vat​­ed Land, Java Rupees 79.
Tegal 123208 58185 65023 11693 7990 14689 1435 5685 121238 57224 64014 14663 1359 5682 1025 518 507 13 64 ​—
Brebes 24833 9354 15485 5546 1143 5313 747 2668 24230 9118 15111 5199 733 2602 583 220 363 91 12 43
Pamalang 30374 14000 16342 5547 1549 4172 491 1800 29978 13823 16123 4160 471 1794 396 177 219 22 20 6
Grand Total 178415 81539 96850 22786 10682 24174 2673 10153 175446 80165 95248 24022 2563 10078 2004 915 1089 126 96 49
GENERAL ACCOUNT OF THE CULTIVATION AND POPULATION OF PAKALONG'AN, 1815.
No. Na­mes of Dis​­tricts. Num​­ber of Vil​­lages. To​­tal Land. Land in Vil​­lages. Land not in​­clud​­ed in Vil​­lages. Cul​­ti​­vat​­ed Land. Sa​­wah. Te​­gal. Free Land. Cof​­fee Gro​­unds. Teak For​­ests. Gov​­ern​­ment Land. Land in use in Vil​­lages. Ca​­pa​­ble of be​­ing Cul​­ti​­vat​­ed. Un​­fit Land. Jun​­gle Land. Land not in use in Vil​­lages. Es​­ti​­mat​­ed Pro​­duce. Es​­ti​­mat​­ed Val​­ue of Pro​­duce. To​­tal Es​­ti​­mat​­ed Val​­ue.
Pa​­ri. Mai​­ze. Of Pa​­ri. Of Mai​­ze.
Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Ama​­ts. G. Ama​­ts. G. J. Ru​­pees. St. J. Ru​­pees. St. J. Ru​­pees. St.
1 Pa​­ka​­long'​an 1107 10765 ​— ​— 5474 ​— 4974 ​— 500 ​— 1657 ​— 235 ​— 50 ​— ​— 7416 ​— 235 ​— 114 ​— 3000 ​— 3114 ​— 149220 ​— 8000 ​— 238752 ​— 1600 ​— 240352 ​—
2 U­lu­ja­mi 247 2593 1 ​— ​— 1612 ​— 1608 3 3 1 261 2 ​— 3 3 ​— 1877 1 30 2 340 1 340 1 680 3 48025 12 43 5 116528 26 8 12 116537 8
3 Ba­tang 527 7970 ​— ​— ​— 2850 ​— 2750 ​— 100 ​— 1000 ​— 178 ​— 250 ​— ​— 4278 ​— 700 ​— 500 ​— 2500 ​— 3000 ​— 82500 ​— 1600 ​— 165000 ​— 500 ​— 165500 ​—
To­tal 1881 21328 1 ​— ​— 9936 ​— 9332 3 603 1 2918 2 413 ​— 303 3 ​— 13571 1 965 2 954 1 5840 1 6794 3 279745 12 9643 5 520280 26 2108 12 522389 8
No. Na­mes of Dis​­tricts. To­tal Pop­u­la­tion. Ma­les. Fe­ma­les. At­tach­ed to the Cul­ti­va­tion of the Soil. Em­ploy­ed in oth­er Av­o­ca­tions. To­tal Num­ber of Buf­fa­loes. To­tal Num­ber of Hor­ses. To­tal Num­ber of Plo­ughs. JA­VANS. CHI­NESE and oth­er For­eign­ers.
To­tal Ja­vans. Ma­les. Fe­ma­les. Class of Cul​­ti​­va​­tors. Em­ploy­ed in oth­er Av­o­ca­tions. Num­ber of Buf­fa­loes. Num­ber of Hor­ses. Num­ber of Plo­ughs. To­tal Chi­nese. Ma­les. Fe­ma­les. Class of Cul​­ti​­va​­tors. Em­ploy­ed in oth­er Av­o­ca­tions. Num­ber of Buf­fa­loes. Num­ber of Hor­ses. Num­ber of Plo­ughs.
REMARKS: Average Value of a Jung of cultivated land, 52 Rupees, 16 Stivers.
1 Pa​­ka​­long'​an 58432 25398 33034 14000 2928 7804 535 3000 57330 24730 32600 14600 2028 7800 510 3600 1102 ​— 300 668 434 4 25 ​—
2 U­lu­ja­mi 20278 9947 10331 4351 554 2469 126 1058 19968 9801 10167 4351 554 2469 119 1058 310 ​— 310 146 164 ​— 7 ​—
3 Ba­tang 36732 17842 18890 7810 423 6370 300 3270 36098 17476 18622 7800 250 6170 280 3220 634 10 73 366 268 200 20 50
To­tal 115442 53187 62255 26161 3905 16643 961 7328 113396 52007 61389 26751 2832 16439 909 7878 2046 10 783 1180 866 204 52 50
GENERAL ACCOUNT OF THE CULTIVATION AND POPULATION OF SEMARANG, 1815.
No. Na­mes of Divisions. Num​­ber of Vil​­lages. Land in Vil​­lages. Land not in​­clud​­ed in Vil​­lages. Cul​­ti​­vat​­ed Land. Sa​­wah. Te​­gal. Free Land. Cof​­fee Gro​­unds. Teak For​­ests. Gov​­ern​­ment Land. Land in use in Vil​­lages. Ca​­pa​­ble of be​­ing Cul​­ti​­vat​­ed. Un​­fit Land. Jun​­gle Land. Land not in use in Vil​­lages. Es​­ti​­mat​­ed Pro​­duce. Es​­ti​­mat​­ed Val​­ue of Pro​­duce. To​­tal Es​­ti​­mat​­ed Val​­ue.
Pa​­ri. Mai​­ze. Of Pa​­ri. Of Mai​­ze.
Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Jun​­gs. B. Ama​­ts. G. Ama​­ts. G. Ru​­pees. St. Ru​­pees. St. Ru​­pees. St.
1 Serondol 75 2818 1 1240 3 1343 1 1083 1 260 0 357 3 81 3 105 2 42 3 1931 0 309 3 231 2 346 0 887 1 33513 3 7260178 0 67026 9 4738 26 71765 5
2 Sing'en 201 14602 0 15291 1 5936 1 5816 2 119 3 937 1 0 7038 1 28 1 13940 0 268 2 177 3 215 3 662 0 161711 4 2974400 0 304547 21¼ 2127 21 306675 12¼
3 Grogol 52 682 0 692 0 607 2 606 2 1 0 70 1 0 0 2 2 680 1 ​— 1 3 ​— 1 3 18869 0 4000 0 38149 18 8 0 38157 18
4 Ugarang 87 1463 1 3385 0 795 3 681 1 114 2 200 3 59 3 41 3 17 2 1115 2 64 1 131 2 152 0 347 3 17040 10 2471530 0 34082 12 1680 1 35762 13
5 Ambarawa 131 5947 1 6117 2 1631 2 1395 3 235 3 391 3 107 3 2642 2 66 3 4840 1 347 3 239 2 519 3 1107 0 43691 15 5488924 0 87383 15 4236 17¾ 91620
6 Salatiga 126 3497 0 5964 2 1560 3 1201 3 359 0 391 2 26 2 124 1 46 2 2149 2 451 2 159 0 737 0 1347 2 34738 12½ 7757668 0 69477 5776 24½ 75254 2
7 Boyalali 61 3675 2 1636 1 2057 3 714 3 1343 0 270 2 14 0 5 0 7 2 2354 3 247 2 764 3 308 2 1320 3 18186 0 29389643 0 36372 0 19567 2 55939 2
8 Wedong 60 3945 1 2540 0 2344 3 2311 0 33 3 119 3 0 0 34 3 2499 1 377 0 90 0 979 0 1446 0 54683 7 540967 0 97899 16½ 491 24½ 98391 11
9 Demak 101 3353 0 3760 0 2354 3 2348 0 6 3 228 3 0 0 9 3 2593 1 352 0 25 2 382 1 759 3 56433 18 162000 0 87088 180 0 87268
10 Manjer 62 7661 0 7619 0 1498 1 1483 3 14 2 459 1 0 3221 1 1 2 5180 1 1321 2 103 2 1055 3 2480 3 37359 1 348870 0 45868 18¼ 184 46052 18¾
11 Sambung 87 2572 2 2560 0 1405 3 1394 3 11 0 201 3 0 2 2 6 3 1616 3 564 3 23 2 367 2 955 3 32894 15 ​— 49433 18 0 49451
12 Chankiran 34 799 1 2486 1 334 2 332 0 2 2 64 2 61 1 91 0 6 3 558 0 37 2 40 1 163 2 241 1 9332 7 45935 0 18670 21 57 1 18727 22
13 Limbangan 36 1090 3 5770 0 359 3 343 1 16 2 59 2 51 3 61 0 6 1 538 1 69 2 21 0 462 0 552 2 10401 8 240614 0 19876 0 348 21 20224 21
14 Kaliwungu 125 3816 3 6306 0 931 2 782 2 149 0 224 0 45 1 1062 3 29 1 2292 3 205 2 429 3 888 3 1524 0 23951 1 4021817 0 47902 3 3618 11 51520 14
15 Brebuan 95 1468 2 2500 0 789 3 740 3 49 0 179 0 19 3 419 1 6 2 1414 1 24 2 17 2 12 1 54 1 22788 3 590618 0 45576 9 676 26 46253 5
16 Kandal 97 1876 1 481 3 1085 2 1065 3 19 3 173 1 0 0 25 1 1284 0 1 28 2 563 2 592 1 29839 3 165325 0 59678 9 341 8 60019 17
17 Truko 88 1754 0 2268 0 963 1 948 1 15 0 116 2 12 1 144 3 18 2 1255 1 23 1 204 3 270 3 498 3 29745 15 183240 0 58670 11 265 24 58936 58
Totals 1518 61022 2 70618 1 26000 2 23249 3 3750 3 4446 0 480 0 14959 3 357 0 46243 1 4665 0 2690 0 7424 1 14779 1 635179 61645729 0 44316 28¼ 44316 28¼ 1212019