Pieter Erberveld
Pieter Erberveld (ca. 1660 – April 14, 1722) was an Eurasian resident of Batavia, Dutch East Indies (now Jakarta), the headquarters of the VOC in Asia, during the 17th and early 18th centuries who was accused of plotting a rebellion with Javanese for January 1, 1722, but was captured and executed, and a monument erected where his house had stood.
Although he is often described as half-Javanese, or half-Dutch, Pieter Erberveld was the son a German (Westfalian) father, a tanner of hides, and Siamese Christian mother.[1] He was born around 1660 in the Siamese kingdom of Ayuthya. When his father moved the family to Batavia, he had them all baptized in November 1671.[2] Erberveld was among the more wealthy residents of Batavia, although he was not a VOC employee. In the early 18th century, he had a dispute with the VOC authorities about his inheritance, which may have played a role in later events. In 1721, he was accused of plotting a rebellion with thousands of Javanese, with the goal of establishing an Islamic state, but was arrested at his residence with a small number of people, tortured, and executed.
The monument which was erected on the site of his residence featured a concrete or plaster skull on a spike (which was rumored to be real), and carried a plaque stating that no one should ever build or plant on this site again.[3] This monument remained in its original location on the Jacatraweg until the Japanese demolished it in early 1942, as one of their efforts to rid Indonesia of the Dutch and the colonial atmosphere, but even Japanese visitors had been regularly taken to visit the monument in prewar years.[4] After the war, the monument was rebuilt, before being moved again to the Taman Prasasti Museum in Tanah Abang.
Pieter Erberveld was locally relatively well known, and is sometimes referred to as Pangeran Pecah Kulit (broken skin prince) either because of the means of his death (drawing and quartering) or more likely from the local area's nickname, derived from the presence of a tannery in the area. Numerous stories about Erberveld have circulated in Indonesian society since at least 1888, including a novel published in 1924 by Tio Ie Soei and one version of the story about his was made into a TV drama in the 1980s.[5]
The spelling of Pieter Erberveld varies in different sources, including Pieter Erbervelt and Pieter Elberveld.
References
- ↑ Horton, William Bradley (October 2003). "Pieter Elberveld: The Modern Adventure of an Eighteenth-Century Indonesian Hero". Indonesia 76: 147–198.
- ↑ Jean Gelman Taylor, Indonesia: Peoples and Histories, Yale University Press, 2003
- ↑ Heuken, Adolf (1982). Historical Sites of Jakarta. Jakarta: Yayasan Cipta Loka Caraka.
- ↑ Yamamoto, Mayumi (April 2004). "Spell of the Rebel, Monumental Apprehensions: Japanese Discourses On Pieter Erberveld". Indonesia 77: 109–143.
- ↑ Horton, William Bradley (October 2003). "Pieter Elberveld: The Modern Adventure of an Eighteenth-Century Indonesian Hero". Indonesia 76: 147–198.
Further reading
- Heuken, Adolf (1982). Historical Sights of Jakarta (Yayasan Cipta Loka Caraka).
- Horton, William Bradley. (2003). "Pieter Elberveld: The Modern Adventure of an Eighteenth-Century Indonesian Hero," Indonesia 76 (October): 147-198.
- Roo, L. W. G. de (1866). "De Conspiratie van 1721," Tijdschrift voor Indisch Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, vol. XV.
- Taylor, Jean Gelman. The Social World of Batavia: Europeans and Eurasians in Colonial Indonesia (University of Wisconsin Press, 2nd ed. 2009)
- Yamamoto, Mayumi (2004). "Spell of the Rebel, Monumental Apprehensions: Japanese Discourses On Pieter Erberveld," Indonesia 77 (April): 109-143.
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