Online Encyclopedia

BRUNEI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 682 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

BRUNEI  , a

state situated in the north-west of
See also:
Borneo . It has been so diminished in
See also:
area since the beginning of the 19th century as to have become in comparison with the other states of Borneo territorially insignificant . It formerly included the whole of
See also:
northern Borneo and
See also:
southern Palawan, and stretched down the west coast as far as Sambas . What remains of this once powerful sultanate is a triangular-shaped territory, the
See also:
base of the triangle being represented by 8o m. of coast-
See also:
line, and the two sides by the frontiers of
See also:
Sarawak . The area is calculated to be about 1700 sq. m . This
See also:
great reduction of the extent of the territory has been brought about by the cession on successive occasions of strips of territory to Sarawak and to the
See also:
British North Borneo
See also:
Company on condition of
See also:
annual payments of
See also:
money . In 1888 the state was placed under British
See also:
protection . On the 2nd of
See also:
January 1906 a treaty was made whereby the sultan of Brunei agreed to hand over the general administration of his state to a British
See also:
resident . The sultan Mahommed Jomal-ul-alam, born in 1889, succeeded his
See also:
father in May 1906 . He receives an allowance of 12,000 dollars a
See also:
year from state funds, and his two
See also:
principal ministers receive allowances of 6000 dollars a year each . The interior
See also:
people have for centuries been subject to petty oppression, and there is too much of the old spirit
See also:
left among the
See also:
Malays to avoid acrimonious dispute and
See also:
rebellion . The bulk of the inhabitants, who consist of Malays, Kadayans, Orang Bukits and a few Muruts, are to be found in and about the capital—also called Brunei—the population of the city being estimated at about 15,000, and the population of the whole territory being about 25,000 .

The city is prettily situated on the

See also:
river, with a background of cleared hills, and in the distance heights clothed with magnificent
See also:
forest . The dwelling-houses arebuilt over the river on slender piles obtained from the Nibong palm which resists the
See also:
action of the
See also:
water for several years . Though there are practically no exports and imports, there is a certain amount of inland commerce, the Brunei
See also:
Malay usually earning a living by trading with the interior tribes of Sarawak and British North Borneo . Some of them are skilled workers of brass, and the Brunei
See also:
women make very beautiful
See also:
cloth, interwoven and embroidered with gold thread .
See also:
Sago is worked in the important river-valleys of the Tutong and the Balait, but only a small quantity of rice is cultivated . The
See also:
history of this ancient and decaying sultanate is of some intere°st . Brunei, or, as it is called by the natives Bruni or Darul-Salam (city of peace), possesses a historic tablet of stone upon which, in A.H . 1221 (1804), was engraved in Malay characters the genealogy of the sovereigns who have ruled over the country . The
See also:
engraving was the
See also:
work of Datu Imaum Yakub, the high priest at the time, who received the genealogy from the lips of Merhoum Bongsu, otherwise Sultan Muadin, and Sultan Kemal-Udin, who ordered this record of their forefathers to be written . This stone tablet now stands on the tomb of Sultan Mahommed Jemal-ul-Alam at the
See also:
foot of Panggal hill, in the city of Brunei . The Selesilah, or
See also:
book of descent, is kept in the palace by the sultan . The other heirlooms, which are also kept in the sultan's palace, and which descend to each sultan in turn, are the " Nobab Nagara " (two royal drums) from Johore and Menang-Kabau, and the " Gunta Alamat " (hells); the gift of Sultan Bahkei of Johore or Malacca .

The first sultan of Brunei was Alak-ber-

Tata, who was probably of Bisaya stock, and governed the country before the introduction of
See also:
Islam, in the 15th century . He assumed the name of Mahommed on his conversion to Islam, which was brought about during a visit to the Malay peninsula . Brunei, at this time, was a dependency of Majapahit (
See also:
Java), and paid a yearly tribute of a
See also:
jar of areca juice obtained from the young green nuts of the areca palm, and of no monetary value . The
See also:
Hindu
See also:
kingdom of Menjapahit was destroyed by the Mahommedans in 1478, and Brunei is mentioned in the history of Java as one of the countries conquered by Adaya Mingrat, the general of Angka Wijaya . Sultan Mahommed's only child was a daughter . His
See also:
brother Akhmed married the daughter of Ong Chum Ping, a Chinese officer said to have been sent by his emperor to obtain a jewel from Mount Kinabalu in North Borneo,and was the successor of Sultan Mahommed in the
See also:
sovereignty of Brunei . He was succeeded by Sultan Berkat, an Arab sherif of high rank, from the country of Taif in
See also:
Arabia, who had married Sultan Akhmed's only child . Sultan Berkat built a mosque and enforced
See also:
Mahommedan law, and with the assistance of the Chinese built the stone wall, which is still in existence between the islands of Kaya Orang and Chermin, by sinking
See also:
forty junks filled with rock across the mouth of the Brunei river . This work was completed before the arrival of Pigafetta in 1521 . In the reign of Sultan Bulkeiah Magellan's
See also:
squadron anchored off the mouth of Brunei river in August 1521, and Pigafetta makes mention of the splendid court and the imperial magnificence of the Borneo capital . Sultan Bulkeiah was otherwise known as Nakoda Ragam; he was the greatest
See also:
warrior of Brunei and made military expeditions to Java, Malacca, Luzon and all the coasts of Borneo . His tomb, which is handsomely built of stone, is still to be seen in Brunei, and is constantly visited by Malays, who leave money and various articles on the tomb as offerings to his memory .

Others, again, come and take away anything they can find, which they keep as charms and mementoes . The Spaniards captured Brunei in 158o, the reigning sultan and his court retiring to Suai in the Baram

See also:
district . The invaders were compelled to evacuate the place, however, in consequence of the heavy losses they sustained in the numerous attempts made,for its recovery . The
See also:
golden age of Brunei was nevertheless at an end, and there is little more of importance to record . Disputed successions and
See also:
civil war, maladministration and the untrustworthiness of the Malay character, caused "a steady decline in prosperity . The East India Company started a factory in the
See also:
town in the 18th century, but commerce had already decayed and the establishment was abandoned . In the early
See also:
part of the 19th century Brunei was but a resort for pirates and a market for the slave trade . During the 'forties
See also:
Admiral (then Captain) Keppel and other
See also:
officers of the British
See also:
navy suppressed piracy in the neighbourhood . Sarawak was kanded over to
See also:
Raja Brooke, and, after the capture and temporary occupation of Brunei by
See also:
Sir Thomas Cochrane, Labuan was ceded to the British
See also:
empire . From this island it was possible to exercise a certain control over the townspeople, and a consul was stationed there to watch affairs . Nowadays the
See also:
political consequence of Brunei largely arises from the existence there of valuable seams of
See also:
coal, leased to the Sarawak government . (C .

End of Article: BRUNEI
[back]
ALFRED BRUNEAU (1857– )
[next]
ISAMBARD KINGDOM BRUNEL (1806-1859)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.