Great Post Road

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Part of the Great Post Road in Kampung Cibabat, Cimahi City, West Java during colonial period.

The Great Post Road (Indonesian: Jalan Raya Pos or Dutch: De Grote Postweg),[1] is the name for the historical road that runs across Java that connects Anyer and Panarukan. It was built during the reign of governor-general of the Dutch East Indies Herman Willem Daendels (18081811).

Construction

Java Great Post Road, span from Anjer (Anyer) to Panaroecan (Panarukan).

La Grande Route, as Daendels called it, was a military road which was laid down under the order of King Lodewijk Napoleon who ruled the Kingdom of Holland at that time.[2] France was at war with England and the road was intended to ease military support, e.g. transfer of soldiers, in order to defend Java. Before the road was constructed, connections existed between Batavia Semarang and between Semarang Surabaya in 1750.[3] North-south connection between Semarang, Surakarta and Yogyakarta was also available at that time. However, these connection paths were not easily passable as heavy tropical rainfall frequently destroyed them.

Daendels faced difficult conditions in Dutch East Indies when he was starting the road construction. The financial situation in the colony was so tight that the minister of Colonial Affairs in The Hague sent him a letter emphasizing the difficult financial situation and the need to reduce expenditures.[2] English was surely a big threat, there were uprisings in Bantam and Cirebon, and some of Daendels opponents, who were alienated from him, took a negative side against him. Daendels then decided to use Javanese unpaid forced laborers to perform most of the heavy work, which resulted in thousands of deaths due to the difficult health challenges of the forests and marshes as well as the labor conditions.

Many of Daendels' opponents became historical sources of the harsh condition during the road construction. Major William Thorn wrote that about 12,000 natives have perished during the construction.[4] Nicolaus Engelhard, who was a governor over most of Java and who had to give up his position to Daendels, stated that 500 workers had died in Megamendung area nearby Buitenzorg (the present-day of Bogor), excluding the number of people who died as the result of illness. Furthermore Engelhard criticized Daendels of the thousand of casualties resulting from the road construction in the woods of Weleri in Pekalongan region.[5]

Extent

Today the Java Great Post Road consist the most parts of present Java North Coast Road (Indonesian: Jalan Pantura, abbreviation from "Pantai Utara"). However the original post road is runs through Preanger (Priangan, West Java) highland, from Meester Cornelis (Jatinegara) went south to Buitenzorg (Bogor), and went east to Cianjur, Bandung, Sumedang, and Cirebon. The current north coast road runs through coastal northern West Java which built later after the construction of Daendels' post road. It connects Bekasi, Karawang, Pamanukan, and Cirebon.The road originally ran from Anyer, present day Banten, but formerly West Java to Panarukan, East Java, but later was extended to Banyuwangi.[2] In its current form the Java main road extends through five provinces: Banten, DKI Jakarta, West Java, Central Java and East Java.

Cities

The Great Post Road runs through Bandung in 1938 (today Jalan Asia-Afrika)

The road initially served as the backbone of Java's transportation and logistic. It connects some of the largest cities in Java, including Anyer, Cilegon, Tangerang, Batavia, Meester Cornelis (today absorbed into Jakarta), Buitenzorg, Cianjur, Bandung, Sumedang, Cirebon, Tegal, Pekalongan, Semarang, Rembang, Tuban, Surabaya, Pasuruan, Probolinggo and Panarukan.

Media depiction

In 1996, the Dutch producer Pieter van Huystee produced the film De Groote Postweg (The Great Post Road).[6] This film was shown in several cinemas in the Netherlands, Italy and France. The Indonesian writer Pramoedya Ananta Toer did the narration for this film.

See also

References

  1. Encyclopædia Britannica: Herman Willem Daendels Access date 29 March 2009
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Peter Nas (2002). "Java and De Groote Postweg, La Grande Route, the Great Mail Road, Jalan Raya Pos" (PDF). In: Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 158 (4). pp. 707725. Retrieved 2007-10-25. 
  3. Th. Stevens (1991). "De Postweg van Daendels: Een vraagstuk". In F. Van Anrooy. In: Herman Willem Daendels 1762-1818: Geldersman - Patriot - Jacobijn - Generaal - Hereboer - Maarschalk - Governeur: Van Hattem naar St. George del Mina. pp. 7176. 
  4. William Thorm (1993). The Conquest of Java. originally 1815. Singapore: Periplus Editions. 
  5. Nicolaus Engelhard (1816). Overzicht van den staat der Nederlandsche Oost-Indische bezittingen, onder het bestuur van Gouverneur-Generaal Herman Willem Daendels enz. enz.; ter betere kennis en waardering van 's mans willekeurig en geweldadig bewind. 's Gravenhage: De Gebroeders van Cleef. 
  6. Jalan raya pos (1996) from the Internet Movie Database
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