African mutinies in the Netherlands East Indies: a nineteenth-century colonial paradox

TitleAfrican mutinies in the Netherlands East Indies: a nineteenth-century colonial paradox
Publication TypeBook Chapter
Year of Publication2003
AuthorsW.M.J.van Kessel
EditorG.J. Abbink, M.E. de Bruijn, and K. van Walraven
Secondary TitleRethinking resistance : revolt and violence in African history
Pagination141 - 169
Date Published2003///
Publication Languageeng
Keywordsblack soldiers, colonial armies, colonization, Ghana, history, Indonesia, Netherlands, policy, rebellions, violence
Abstract

Between 1831 and 1872, the Dutch government recruited 3,000 Africans from the Gold Coast and Ashanti (Ghana) for service in the colonial army in the Netherlands East Indies. The majority of them were ex-slaves but were promised that their conditions of service would be the same as those of Europeans. With the 'equal treatment' clause, the Dutch government defended itself against British accusations that the recruitment operation amounted to a covert form of slave trading. While this policy made sense in the context of the precolonial relations prevailing in the Gold Coast, its merits were less obvious in the East Indies. The colonial army here was the instrument of empire building but mutinies among African troops stationed on Java and Sumatra caused it to rethink its policy concerning African soldiers. This chapter explores the background to these rebellions. Ref., sum. [Book abstract]

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/12877
Citation Key2290