DIPONEGORO
Diponegoro
Karya : Marshella Wijaya
Pangeran
Dipo Negoro, (Indonesian: pangeran, “prince”)also called Raden Mas Ontowirjo,
(born c.1785, Jogjakarta,
Java [Indonesia]—died January 8, 1855, Makassar,
Celebes), Javanese leader
in the 19th-century conflict known to the West as the Java War and
to Indonesians as Dipo Negoro’s War (1825–30). During those five years Dipo
Negoro’s military accomplishments severely crippled the Dutch and earned for
him a prominent place in the Indonesian nationalist pantheon of heroes.
The sultanate of Jogjakarta was
created February 13, 1755, by a Dutch treaty that dismembered the once-powerful
Javanese kingdom of Mataram. Although Dipo Negoro was the eldest son of the
third ruler of Jogjakarta, Sultan Amangku Buwono III, he was passed over for
the succession in 1814 on the death of his father in favour of a son whose
mother was of higher rank, but he was promised the throne should his half
brother predecease him. He was a deeply religious person who throughout that
period lived in meditative seclusion, and historians disagree on whether he
wanted the throne or whether he spurned it in favour of a contemplative life.
There is no doubt, however, that
during the 1820s Dipo Negoro came into conflict with Dutch officials and by
1825 emerged as the leader of disaffected aristocrats in the Jogjakarta region.
The Java War itself was triggered by a series of draconian land reforms that
undercut the economic position of the Javanese aristocrats.
There were mystical overtones to the conflict as well, drawn from
traditional Javanese and from Muslim sources. Dipo Negoro clearly was cast in
the role of the Javanese ratu adil (“just
prince”) come to save his people, but the struggle was also seen as a
Muslim jihād (“holy war”) against the infidel Dutch. The
outbreak of the war was accompanied by reports of revelations and prophecies
and miraculous events.
Dipo Negoro had a strong following in the Jogjakarta region and
launched a guerrilla war that was quite successful for nearly three years. In
late 1828, however, Dutch forces won a major victory that proved the turning
point in the war. Under Gen. H. Merkus de Kock, the Dutch proceeded to
develop a system of small, mutually protecting outposts linked by good roads
that enabled them to quell the natives’ guerrilla
warfare. In 1830 Dipo Negoro agreed to meet with Dutch
representatives for peace negotiations, but during the meeting he was arrested.
He died in exile
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