Gotfried Coenraad Ernst van Daalen
Gotfried Coenraad Ernst van Daalen | |
---|---|
Frits van Daalen | |
Born |
23 March 1863 Makassar, Dutch East Indies |
Died |
22 February 1930 (aged 66) The Hague, Netherlands |
Allegiance | Netherlands |
Service/branch | KNIL |
Rank | Lt.General, Commander of the KNIL. |
Commands held | Aceh War |
Gotfried Coenraad Ernst "Frits" van Daalen (23 March 1863 – 22 February 1930) was an Indo (Eurasian) Lieutenant General of the Royal Dutch East Indies Army who served in the Dutch East Indies.
Biography
Van Daalen was named after his Dutch father Gotfried Coenraad Ernst (Frits) van Daalen (born in 's-Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands 23 July 1836 and died in Surabaya, 13 May 1889), also a famous, decorated KNIL officer and veteran of the Aceh War, who was discharged from service as a consequence of a scandal where he saw fit to publicly offend the Governor-General of the colony.
As a young officer in the rank of Lieutenant and Captain Van Daalen was awarded several prestigious military distinctions for proven bravery. He first became Knight of the Military William Order in 1890, was awarded the Honorary Sabre by the Dutch monarch in 1897, followed by becoming an Officer of the Military Willem Order in 1898.[1]
Although notorious due to his controversial approach during the final phases of the protracted Aceh War and his consequent conflicts with both Van Heutsz and Snouck Hurgronje, he was appointed Governor of Aceh between 1905 and 1908.[2]
He was eventually promoted to the highest rank of Luitenant-generaal in 1909 and became Commander of the KNIL in 1910, before retiring and repatriating in 1914.
The Van Daalen Campaign Controversy
Van Daalen's "Gajo-, Alas-, and Batak Campaign" of the Aceh War in 1904 is mostly remembered for his hard crack down of the last Acehnese and Batak pockets of resistance. Van Daalen's force included 10 European officers, 13 European non-commissioned officers and 208 Javanese and Ambonese military police officers (Dutch: Marechaussee). Particularly the battle at Koetö Réh stood out, as the rebels refused to surrender and the death toll of 561 fighters included 189 women and 59 children.
Through the Dutch press many confronting stories and images of brutal warfare in Aceh reached the colonial metropole and shocked Dutch public opinion. Heavy critique from the Dutch House of Representatives called for an investigation into the alleged atrocities and damaged the KNIL's overall prestige. In the heated debate Van Daalen himself was compared to the Iron Duke of Alba, a notoriously harsh and cruel ruler from Dutch national history. Although absolved from any crimes, Van Daalen's reputation remained stained and all his subsequent promotions were therefore contentious.
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Van Daalen (second from the left) and four of his senior officers during the "Gajo-, Alas-, and Batak Campaign", 1904.
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The notorious picture of the Koetö Réh rebel stronghold after the KNIL troops destroyed it, that swayed Dutch public opinion against Van Daalen's hard approach during the final stages of the Aceh War.
References
External links
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