Online Encyclopedia

BANTAM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 356 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BANTAM  , the westernmost residency of the

island of
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Java, Dutch East Indies, bounded W. by the Strait of Sunda, N. by the Java sea, E. by the residencies of
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Batavia and
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Preanger, and S. by the
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Indian Ocean . It also includes Princes Island and
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Dwars-in-den-weg (" right-in-the-way ") Island in Sunda Strait, as well as several smaller islands along the coasts . Bantam had a population in 1897 of 709,339, including 302 Europeans, 1959 Chinese and 89
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Arabs and other
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Asiatic foreigners . The natives are Sundanese, except in the
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northern or Serang division, where they are Javanese . The coast is low-lying and frequently marshy . The northern portion of the residency constitutes the most fertile portion, is generally flat with a hilly
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group in the
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middle, where the two inactive volcanoes, Karang and Pulosari, are found, while the north-western corner is occupied by the isolated Gede Mountain . The
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southern portion is covered by the Kendang (
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Malay for " range ") Mountains extending into the Preanger . The rivers are only navigable at their mouths . Various geysers and cold and warm
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sulphur springs are found in the centre of the residency, and on a ridge of the Karang Mountain is the large
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crater-lake Dano, a
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great
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part of which was drained by the government in 1835 for rice cultivation .
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Pulse (kachang), rice and coffee are the
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principal products of cultivation; but in the days of government culture
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sugar, indigo and especially pepper were also largely grown . The former considerable fishing and
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coasting trade was ruined by the eruption of Krakatoa in 1883, a large stretch of coast
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line and the seaport towns of Charingin and Anjer being destroyed by the inundation . The prosperity of the residency was further affected by a cattle plague in 1879, followed by a fever epidemic which carried off 50,000
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people, and except in the rice season there is a considerable emigration of natives .

Bantam contains five native regencies or territorial divisions, namely, Serang, Anjer, Pandeglang, Charingin, Lebak . The principal towns are Serang, the

capital of the residency, Chilegon, Pandeglang,
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Menes and Rangkas Betug . The chief
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town, Serang, is situated 22 M. from Bantam
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Bay on the high road from Batavia . The
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port of Serang is Karangantu, on Bantam Bay, and close by is the old ruined town of Bantam, once the capital of the
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kingdom of Bantam, and before the foundation of Batavia the principal commercial port of the Dutch East India
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Company . The ruins include the remains of the former pepper warehouses, the old factory, called Fort Speelwijk, belonging to the company, the fortified palace of the former sultans and a well-preserved mosque thought to have been built by the third
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Mahommedan ruler of Bantam about 1562-1576, and containing the tombs of various princes of Bantam . Before the Dutch
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conquest Bantam was a powerful Mahommedan state, whose
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sovereign extended his conquests in the neighbouring islands of
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Borneo and
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Sumatra . In 1595 the Dutch expelled the Portuguese and formed their first settlement . A
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British factory was established in 1603 and continued to exist till the staff was expelled in 1682 . In 1683 the Dutch reduced the sultan to vassalage, built the fort of Speelwijk and monopolized the port, which had previously been
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free to all corners; and for more than a century afterwards Bantam was one of the most important seats of commerce in the East Indies . In 1811 after Batavia had surrendered to the British, Bantam soon followed; but it was restored to the Dutch in 1814 . Two years later, however, they removed their chief settlement to the more elevated station of Serang, or Ceram, 7 M. inland, and in 1817 the ruin of Bantam was hastened by a fire . • For " Bantam " fowls see POULTRY .

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