Jakarta
- Other Names: Batavia
Jakarta, on the island of Java, is the capital of the modern state of Indonesia. In the early modern period, the city was known as Batavia, and was the center of the Dutch East Indies, and the headquarters of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) operations in the region.
Batavia was one of a number of cities in Southeast Asia which was home to a sizable Japanese community in the late 16th to early 17th centuries. Unlike most of the other Southeast Asian Japantowns, however, which were populated largely by merchants and adventurers, Batavia's Japanese population were largely mercenaries and craftsmen hired explicitly by the VOC to help build the city and/or to work for the Company otherwise.
Despite the eventual Dutch dominance over Portuguese, Spanish, or English involvement in the region, the VOC was continually far outstripped by Chinese merchant activity in the region. The volume of trade conducted by Chinese merchants at Batavia alone exceeded that by Dutch merchants throughout the entirety of the region.[1]
References
- Geoffrey Gunn, History Without Borders: The Making of an Asian World Region, 1000-1800, Hong Kong University Press (2011), 233-234.
- ↑ Marius Jansen, China in the Tokugawa World, Harvard University Press (1992), 24.