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BANDA ISLANDS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 311 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BANDA ISLANDS  , a
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group of the Dutch East Indies, consisting of three chief and several lesser islands in the
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Banda Sea, south of Ceram, belonging to the residency of Amboyna . The main islands are
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Great Banda or Lontor; Banda Neira to its north; Gunong Api, west of Banda Neira;
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Wai or Ai still farther west, with Run on its south-west; Pisang, north of Gunong Api; and Suwangi, north-west again . The
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total
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land
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area is about 16 sq. m . A volcanic formation is apparent in Lontor, a sickle shaped island which, with Neira and Gunong Api, forms
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part of the circle of a
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crater . The arrangement is comparable with Santorin in the
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Aegean Sea . Gunong Api (Fire Mountain), 2200 ft. high, is an active
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volcano, and its eruptions and earthquakes have frequently brought destruction, as notably in 1852, when the damage was chiefly due to a huge
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wave of the sea . Banda, the chief
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town, on Neira, is a pleasant settlement, commanded by two Dutch forts of the early 17th century,
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Nassau and Belgica . The largest island, Lontor, was found too unhealthy to be the site of the
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principal settlement; but the
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climate of the islands generally, though hot, is not unhealthy . In the space between Lontor, Neira and Gunong Api there is a good harbour, with entrances on either side, which enable vessels to enter on either of the monsoons . Between Gunong Api and Neira there is a third channel, but it is navigable for small vessels only . The principal articles of commerce in the Banda group are nutmegs and mace . The nutmeg is indigenous .

The native

population having been cleared off by the Dutch, the plantations were worked by slaves and convicts till the emancipation of 1860 . The introduction of
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Malay and Chinese labourers subsequently took place . The plantations (perken) were originally held by the conquerors of the natives, the government monopolizing the produce at a fixed
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rate; but in 1873 the government monopoly was abolished . The production. amounts annually to nearly 1,500,000 lb of nutmegs, and 350,000 lb of mace . The nutmegs are grown, in accordance with natural conditions, under the shade of other trees, usually the canari . Jalti or jatti wood is cultivated on the small island of Rosingen . The total population of the islands is about 9500, of which some 7000 are descendants of the natives introduced as slaves from neighbouring islands, and are Christians or Mahommedans . The Banda Islands were discovered and annexed by the Portuguese Antonio D'Abreu in 1512; but in the beginning of the 17th century his countrymen were expelled by the Dutch . In 16o8 the
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British built a factory on Wai, which was demolished by the Dutch as soon as the
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English vessel
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left . Shortly after, however, Banda Neira and Lontor were resigned by the natives to the British, and in 1620 Run and Wai were added to their dominions; but in spite of
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treaties into which they had entered the Dutch attacked and expelled their British rivals . In 1654 they were compelled by Cromwell to restore Run, and to make satisfaction for the
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massacre of Amboyna; but the English settlers not being adequately supported from home, the island was retaken by the Dutch in 1664 . They remained in undisturbed possession until 1796, when the Banda Islands were taken by the British .

They were restored by the treaty of

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Amiens in the
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year 1800, again captured, and finally restored by the treaty of Paris concluded in 1814 .

End of Article: BANDA ISLANDS
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