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KEDAI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 484 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KEDAI  .—This

state, on the west coast of the peninsula, lies between
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parallels 5° 20' and 6° 42' N., and is bounded, N. by Palit and Songkla, E. by Songkla and Raman, S. by Province Wellesley and
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Perak, and W. by the sea . The coast-
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line is 65 m. long, the greatest distance from north to south is try m. and the greatest breadth 46 m . Off the coast lies a
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group of islands, the largest of which is Langkawi, well peopled and forming a
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district of the state . The
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total
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area of Kedah is about 4000 sq. m . The
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land is low-lying and swampy near the coast except towards the south where the height known as Kedah Hill rises from the
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shore opposite Penang, flat and fertile farther inland, and mountainous towards the eastern border . The rivers are small, the Sungei Kedah, navigable for a few miles for vessels of 50 tons, and the S.M uda,which forms the boundary with Province Wellesley, being the only streams worthy of
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notice . The plains are formed of marine deposit, and in the mountains lime-stone and granite preponderate . The population is estimated at 220,000, of whom about too,000 are
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Malays, 50,000 Siamese and Samsams and 70,000 Chinese and Madrassis (Klings) . There are three towns of importance . Alor
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Star, the capital, on the Kedah
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river, to miles from the sea, in a flat, unhealthy, but fertile locality, is a well laid out
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town with good streets, many handsome public and 483 private buildings, and good wharfage for small vessels . The population is about 20,000, of whom more than
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half are Chinese, and the remainder government servants and retainers of the
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local aristocracy . Kuala Muda (pop. to,00n) and Kulim (pop .

8000) situated in the south, are unimposing collections of small

birch houses and thatched
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bamboo huts; the latter is the centre of the Kedah tin
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mining industry . The bulk of the population is scattered over the plains in small villages . A good road runs north from Alor Star to the border of the state, a distance of 40 miles, and other roads are being constructed . The state has 185 miles of telegraph line and 75 miles of telephone line . Mails are closed daily at Alor Star for Penang and there is a good
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internal postal service . The chief industry is rice cultivation . Coco-nut, betel-nut and fruit plantations are many, and the cultivation of rubber has recently been taken up with prospects of success . The estimated area under cultivation is about 300,000 acres . There are rice-mills at Alor Star and at Kuala Muda . The
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principal exports are rice, cattle and tin . The chief imports are cotton goods, provisions, hardware and raw
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silk . Accurate trade
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statistics are not available .

The ruler holds the

rank of sultan and is assisted in the government by a council and by the
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British adviser who since the state passed from Siamese to British
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protection in 1909, has replaced the officer formerly appointed by Siam . The sultan comes of a
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family long recognized by Siam as having hereditary right to the rulership . The penal and
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civil
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laws are administered in accordance with the precepts of Islamism, the official religion of the state . Though much has been done to improve the courts, justice is not easily obtain-able . A land
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registration
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system is in force but is in a state of confusion, though a land law passed in 1905 gives security of tenure over lands newly acquired . The mining laws are similar to those of Siam . In 1905 the Siamese government advanced two and a half million dollars to Kedah, to pay the debts of the state, which sum was refunded by the British Government on assuming the position of
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protector . The
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annual revenue is $1,000,000 and the
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expenditure about the same . Chief heads of revenue are opium and land tax . Many revenue monopolies, created in the past, have not yet expired; but for this the revenue would be greater than it is . There is no army . In 1906 the police service was reorganized under British
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officers, resulting in
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great improvement to this department .

The state is divided into a number of administrative districts under

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Malay officials . Each district comprises several mukim or parishes, the
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imam of which exercise both spiritual and temporal control . There are
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schools in the chief towns, but
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education has not yet been seriously undertaken . Kedah was founded by colonists from India in A.D . 1200, about which time the Siamese had subdued Nakhon Sri Tammarat and claimed the whole Malay Peninsula . When the rise of Malacca shook Siamese authority in the peninsula, Kedah oscillated between them, and on the
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conquest of Malacca by the Portuguese, fell to Siam, though the capital was raided and burnt by the Europeans . The ruler and his
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people were converted to
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Islam in the 15th century . In 1768, the Siamese
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kingdom being disorganized, the sultan of Kedah entered into
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direct
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political relations with the Hon . East India
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Company, leasing the island of Penang to the latter . Further
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treaties followed in 1791 and 1802, but in 1821 Siam reasserted her control, expelling the rebellious sultan after a sanguinary war . The sultan made several fruitless efforts to recover the state, and at length made full submission, when he was reinstated . In 1868 an agreement between Great Britain and Siam was substituted for the treaties of the East India Company with the sultan .

The

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present sultan succeeded in 1881, and for 14 years governed well, but in 1895 he began to contract debts and to leave the government to his minions . The result was
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chaos, and in 1905 the Siamese government had to intervene to avert a condition of bankruptcy, adjusting the finances and reorganizing the general administration to such effect that when, four years later, the state became a British dependency, a government was found established on a sound basis and requiring nothing but the presence of a
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firm and experienced officer as adviser to maintain its efficiency and assist its further advance . PERras (Palit).—This small state, consisting of the
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left
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bank drainage area of the Perlis River, lies between Setul and Kedah, which bound it on the N. and W. and on the E. respectively . It touches the sea only round the mouth of the river . The population is about to,000, Malays and Chinese . The chief town, Perlis, is situated about 12 M . Up the river . A good
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deal of tin is worked, and rice and pepper are grown and exported . In the early
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part of the 19th century Perlis was a district of Kedah, but during a period of disturbance in the latter state it established itself as a
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separate chiefdom . In 1897 Siam restored the nominal authority of Kedah, but the measure was not productive of good . In 1905 the Siamese government advanced a loan of $200,000 to Perlis, and appointed an
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English adviser to assist in the general administration . This
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money was refunded to Siam and the adviser relieved by a British officer when the state became British in
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July 1909 .

The condition of the state has improved, but the revenue, $8o,000, is not sufficient for the immediate needs of government . AUrxoRITIES.—Norman, The Far East (

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London, 1895) ; H . Clifford, in the
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Geographical Journal (London, 1896); Carter, The Kingdom of Siam (London, 1904); Graham, Reports on
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Kelantan (
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Bangkok, 1905-1909) ; Skeat and Blagden, Pagan Races of the Malay Peninsula (London, 1906) ; Hart, Reports on Kedah (
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Calcutta, 1907–1909) ; Graham, Kelantan, a Handbook (
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Glasgow, 1907) . (W . A .

End of Article: KEDAI
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KEDDAH (from Hindu Khedna, to chase)

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