Browse transcripts » National Archives / Archives South Holland
archive access 1.04.02, inventory number 3497, page 30

Summary (also from the previous page)

On 14 February 1777, a report was made about Chinese people living under Touban and Lassuw who were allowed to obtain wood partly through purchase and partly through exchange for opium. The Chinese from Rembang and Padjangkoengang bought and traded their woodworks in the same way wherever they could get them, even from the forest people of the Blandong. This practice should be tolerated with a blind eye, as long as it did not go too far, because it provided a means of living for those people and this tolerance was the greatest protection for the Blandong. The population size and number of villages there should always be considered the main point. Through this wood trade in the mentioned districts under Rembang, a good quantity of opium was also sold annually. The sale of opium would necessarily have to decrease or stop as soon as the Chinese could no longer obtain woodworks from the forest people along the coasts for transport to Batavia. Besides this, stopping that trade would greatly depopulate the coasts along Java from Toeban to Padjangkoengang. The forest Javanese would be forced to leave with their buffaloes from the Company's territory, where they were only kept because of the profits from their woodworks, and go to Blora, Djipang and other places where more rice was available and it was easier to make a living. The Chinese would also leave for elsewhere, which would cause the small trade as well as the building of vessels for it to either stop or at least decrease. The Company's taxes and income would then suffer. The writer confirmed the statements of residents Domis van Hogendorp and Keijzer mentioned above. In answer to the question whether the transport of such a large quantity of woodworks by private individuals was harmful to the Company, the writer respectfully stated that the transport of wood from Grissee from the sultan's district Djipang did not harm the Company, and that from Joana and occasionally from Japara, Samarang, Paccalongang and Tagal was not harmful either, but rather served to preserve the forests and to allow the forest people a small living. This was the case when the transport did not extend to heavy wood but only to light wood that could be cut from old, unsuitable trees that prevented the growth of others by overshadowing them. The woodworks that were exported in larger quantities and of greater weight at Touban, Lassum, Rembang and Padjangkoengang were partly bought in Keijzer's district Blora.

Use text coordinates

Transcription

den 14=e Februarij 1777.
is, en de Chineesen ook om naar elders te vertrekken, waar door
den smallen handel zoo wel, als den aanbouw van vaar„
„tuigen daar toe, zoo niet stille staan, dan ten minsten
verminderen zal, ook vervolgens 's compagnies pagten en
Jnkomsten lijden zullen;
En ons met de opgaven den Residenten Domis van Hogen„
„dorp en Keijzer voormeld, zoo verre wij die hier boven
overgenomen hebben Confirmeerende, zij het ons geoor„
„looft, op uwer Hoog Edelheeden vraage, of den vervoer van
zoo een groote quantiteit Houtwerken door particulieren niet
hinderlijk is voor de compagnie! nog in eerbied, en met
submissie aan Hoogst-derzelver beter weeten, te avanceeren:
Dat den overvoer van Hout van grissee uit sulthans
district Djipang, de compagnie niet schaad, en die van
Joana, en even min nu en dan ook van Japara, sama„
„rang, paccalongang en Tagal niet nadeelig is, maar
eerder strekt tot concervatie van de Bosschen; en om
de Bosch-volkeren een kleen bestaan te laaten, als dien
vervoer zich niet Extendeerd tot zwaar, maar alleen tot
Ligt en zulk hout, dat uit oude, onbequaame en Boomen
kan worden gekapt, die andere drukkende den wasdom beletten;
Dat de Houtwerken dewelke in grooter quantiteit en van
meerder zwaarte, te Touban, Lassum, Reanbang en padjan„
„koengang worden uitgevoerd, deels in keijzer district Blora
gekoept,
C

GLOBALISE

Source citation

National Archives / Archives South Holland, archive number 1.04.02, Inventaris van het archief van de Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie (VOC), 1602-1795 (1811), inventory number 3497, Heren Zeventien en kamer Amsterdam, INGEKOMEN STUKKEN UIT INDIË, Overgekomen brieven en papieren, Overgekomen brieven en papieren uit Indië aan de Heren XVII en de kamer Amsterdam, Overgekomen brieven en papieren uit Indië aan de Heren XVII en de kamer Amsterdam, 1778. Zevenentwintigste boek: Batavia's ingekomen brievenboek, deel VII: Java's Oostkust



Go to the next page (31)  Go to the previous page (29) New search

Scan + Transcription


Click on the image to enlarge it and see the transcription next to it

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

The transcription was made by computer via automatic handwriting recognition.
The summary is created by the computer based on a language model.
Both artificial intelligence tasks are not perfect, but often more than sufficient so that the historical document becomes understandable.

Find your ancestors and publish your family tree on Genealogy Online via https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/