What is it about?
This chapter explains one of the Dutch East India Company's (VOC) earliest allies in the Malay world, namely the Kingdom of Johor. In selecting the title 'Left Holding the Bag', the author seeks to present the case chiefly from the vantage point of this polity. He concentrates on two factions which, according to period materials of largely European provenance, broadly shaped decision-making at the royal court. Raja Bongsu, who chiefly handled Johor's foreign relations and other affairs of state was 'saddened' by the conclusion of the truce and the cessation of hostilities with the Iberian powers it entailed. As a result, he and his faction at the court felt abandoned by their Dutch allies, especially in their on-going hostilities with Portuguese Melaka. These developments within the Johor royal court also form the immediate historical backdrop to the genesis and revision of the Sejarah Melayu or 'Malay Annals' around 1612-15.
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Why is it important?
This article examines how the Dutch East India Company (VOC) engaged with the Malay kingdom of Johor-Riau in the first two decades of the 17th century
Perspectives
This article places the genesis of the Sejarah Melayu, or Malay Annals, in the context of events in early 17th century Johor.
Dr Peter Borschberg
National University of Singapore
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This page is a summary of: Left ‘Holding the Bag’: The Johor-voc Alliance and the Twelve Years Truce (1606–1613), January 2014, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/9789004274921_007.
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