The “Perfect Map” of Widow Hiamtse: A Micro-Spatial History of Sugar Plantations in Early Modern Southeast Asia, 1685–1710
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Published:2021-12-06
Issue:
Volume:
Page:1-30
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ISSN:0020-8590
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Container-title:International Review of Social History
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Int Rev of Soc His
Abstract
Abstract
Not all early modern sugar plantations were in the Atlantic World. Indeed, far away from it, in the rural space surrounding the Dutch headquarters in Asia (the Ommelanden of Batavia (Jakarta)), over a hundred of them were thriving by the end of the seventeenth century. Together, they constituted a unique plantation society that followed Dutch land law, was operated by Javanese rural labour, and was managed by Chinese sugar entrepreneurs. Through archival work on a certain “perfect map” that belonged to a Chinese widow, this article explores how that plantation society took shape on the ground.
Funder
The Hulsewé-Wazniewski Stichting (Hulsewé-Wazniewski Foundation, HWS) for the advancement of teaching and research in the archaeology, art and material culture of China at Leiden University
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),History
Cited by
2 articles.
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