Jambi was the site of the Srivijayan kingdom that engaged in trade throughout the Strait of Malacca and beyond. Jambi succeeded Palembang,
its southern economic and military rival, as the capital of the
kingdom. The movement of the capital to Jambi was partly induced by the
1025 raid by pirates from the Chola region of southern India, which destroyed much of Palembang.
In the early decades of the Dutch presence in the region (see Dutch East India Company in Indonesia,
when the Dutch were one of several traders competing with the British,
Chinese, Arabs, and Malays, the Jambi sultanate profited from trade in pepper
with the Dutch. This relationship declined by about 1770, and the
sultanate had little contact with the Dutch for about sixty years.[citation needed]
In 1833, minor conflicts with the Dutch (the Indonesian colonial possessions of which were now nationalised as the Dutch East Indies)
who were well established in Palembang, meant the Dutch increasingly
felt the need to control the actions of Jambi. They coerced Sultan
Facharudin to agree to greater Dutch presence in the region and control
over trade, although the sultanate remained nominally independent. In
1858 the Dutch, apparently concerned over the risk of competition for
control from other foreign powers, invaded Jambi with a force from their
capital Batavia.
They met little resistance, and Sultan Taha fled upriver, to the inland
regions of Jambi. The Dutch installed a puppet ruler, Nazarudin, in the
lower region, which included the capital city. For the next forty years
Taha maintained the upriver kingdom, and slowly reextended his
influence over the lower regions through political agreements and
marriage connections. In 1904, however, the Dutch were stronger and, as a
part of a larger campaign to consolidate control over the entire
archipelago, soldiers finally managed to capture and kill Taha, and in
1906, the entire area was brought under direct colonial management.
Following the death of Jambi sultan, Taha Saifuddin, on April 27,
1904 and the success of the Dutch controlled areas of the Sultanate of
Jambi, Jambi then set as the Residency and entry into the territory
Nederlandsch Indie. Jambi's first Resident OL Helfrich was appointed by
the Governor General of the Dutch Decree No. 20 dated May 4, 1906 and
his inauguration held on July 2, 1906.
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