Speelwijk Fort and Cemeteries
This
fortress is sited in the north west of Surosowan, Pamarican village.
Fort Speelwijk was built in 1682 by VOC and expanded in 1685 and
1731 to control the activities of the Banten kingdom and protect
the Dutch interests at Banten. Situated not so far from Chinese
temple Avalokiteshvara, this fortress directly facing to the sea.
From this point, the Dutch troopers was watching and guarding the
fort from pirates and local heroes. Inside the fortress, there's
an Old Dutch cemetery. One of the buried bodies is a man who was
born in Bergen-op-Zoom in 17th century. The Ruin of fortress implies
that it was a great fortress in Banten, height about 5 meters and
length of each side of 80 meters; also the canal for defense surrounded
it. It has four bastions that still stand sturdily.
In 1659 a treaty between Banten and the Dutch, by then a trading
company known for short as VOC, gave a tract of land free to the
Cloggiest and it was here they built their stone defenses. At that
time the sea was much closer than today, now fishing boats are just
visible bobbing lazily on the tide from the battlements. In 1682
after a brief conflict the Dutch kicked the English traders out
of 'their' turf and licking their wounds, they settled on the godforsaken
Bengkulu on the west coast of Sumatra where they proceeded to drink
vast quantities of alcohol and really piss off their head office
in London.
Just outside the fort to the east are some tombs of those who never
made it home. Like can be seen in Jakarta, Bogor, Penang and Melaka
the silent tombs tell the story of western endeavors in the east
and it is to the credit of the host countries that these burial
places have often been spared the bulldozer. The ruin of Speelwijk
fort is also stayed at the northwest of the tomb of the third king
of Banten kingdom, Maulana Yusuf, who ruled in the 1570s. Since
1985, local archaeological finds have been displayed in the Banten
Site Museum on Mesjid Banten Lama Street. |