The Transformation of Urban Structure after the Plantation
Establishment in East Sumatera 1863-1942
Edi
Sumarno
1
, Nina Karina
1
, Junita
Setiana Ginting
1
, Handoko
2
1
Departement of History, Faculty of Cultural Science, Universitas Sumatera Utara
2
Post Graduate Student of Departement of History, Faculty of Cultural Science, Universitas Sumatera Utara
Keywords: city, plantation, East Sumatera
Abstract: There were many "traditional port cities" in East Sumatera, such as Tanjung Pura in the Sultanate of Langkat,
Labuhan in the Sultanate of Deli, Rantau Panjang in the Sultanate of Serdang, Tanjung Beringin in the
Sultanate of Bedagai, Bandar Khalifah in the Sultanate of Padang, Tanjung Balai in the Sultanate of Asahan,
and Siak Sri Indrapura in the Sultanate of Siak. The location of the ports generally located on the riverbanks,
either large or small. These traditional cities underwent some changes after the plantation establishment, from
riverside cities to in the middle of plantations. New cities emerged after the plantation were formed or initiated
by the planters and Dutch colonial government in East Sumatra. The purpose of the establishment was to
make the cities the administrative center of the government and plantation. This paper discusses how the state
of the traditional cities before the plantation establishment and how the new cities emerged after the plantation
establishment in East Sumatra.
1 INTRODUCTION
The Malay urban structure in East Sumatra was
originally a port or Bandar area with a power
structure. Bandar or traditional ports lied on the
riverbanks. However, this structure changed when
plantations established in East Sumatra. The
economic development of plantations began to occur
since the last four decades of the 19th century where
many changes ensued in East Sumatra. The expansion
had turned the face of East Sumatra from a wilderness
into a plantation area, making this area as the most
developed areas outside Java, which was later known
as het dollar landsch (dollar land). These changes
were very influential on the pattern of life of local
residents; among them was the existence of new cities
which originally were only ordinary villages.
The strategically located villages at the crossroads
and were close to the train station would later be
transformed into new cities. The implications of these
changes were also very influential on the port as a
center of economic activity, government, and culture
of the local people. Port as a traditional city then lost
ground due to the construction of roads and railways.
This was due to economic activity shifting from the
river to the land which caused the traditional ports
were relatively less needed. From the description
above, this paper will discuss how the state of
traditional Malay urban structures prior to the
presence of plantations and the development of land
transport and the emergence of new cities that were
deliberately formed by the colonial government as the
center of the economy and the new government.
2 METHOD
The technique of collecting primary and secondary
data are conducted through observation or direct
survey to research object and searching supporting
data to libraries and institutions that were considered
to be the source of data, for example the National
Archives of the Republic of Indonesia; National
Library of Indonesia, North Sumatra Provincial
Library and Achives and Tengku Lukman Sinar
Library; this stage is
Sumarno, E., Karina, N., Ginting, J. and Handoko, .
The Transformation of Urban Structure after the Plantation Establishment in East Sumatera 1863-1942.
DOI: 10.5220/0010068711591162
In Proceedings of the International Conference of Science, Technology, Engineering, Environmental and Ramification Researches (ICOSTEERR 2018) - Research in Industry 4.0, pages
1159-1162
ISBN: 978-989-758-449-7
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
1159
conducted to collect archives, books, publications /
magazines and other materials related to
transportation and river. The data analysis method
applied is the historical and archaeological analysis
method that aims to study and explore facts or
experiences and developments of the past by trying
to draw conclusions and make interpretations of the
data from the events. The main data include data in
the form of archives, books, reports, and so forth
that most of which are still in Dutch. While
supporting data obtained from direct visits or field
observations by visiting the old cities and new cities
that emerged after the plantation establisment in
East Sumatera. After the data collection are
complete, the next step is to verify the data that have
been obtained and then interpret it into a complete
writing.
3 TRADITIONAL CITIES
BEFORE THE PLANTATION
IN EAST SUMATERA
The traditional cities in East Sumatra were generally
the Bandar or the port within which there was a
Malay power structure. The Malay powers that were
formed in East Sumatra prior to the Dutch colonial
entry were Langkat, Deli, Serdang, Asahan, and
several other small kingdoms. One of the busiest
traditional cities was Labuhan Deli, as the central
government of Sultanate of Deli. It also served as a
port city located half a mile downstream from the
river mouth (Veth, 1877). The name Labuhan
(berth) actually closely related to the name of the
Labuhan River which was a river to berth and which
also happened to be the other name of the Deli River
(Ratna, 2006). This kind of structure was identical
to the other traditional Malay kingdoms on Sumatra
Island. This system was formed due to the power in
the strategic areas or the downstream which were
the busy places to hold trade business. The traders
from upstream who wished to sell their agricultural
or forest goods would be charged with excise tax.
The traders from the opposite side who wished to
purchase the commodities would also be charged
with excise tax. These excise taxes helped
establishing the power which over time would form
the traditional Malay kingdom (Wells, 1993).
One of the references used to identify traditional
Malay cities in East Sumatra was a report from
Anderson (1823). In the report, there were
depictions or descriptions of every region he visited
including Deli, Serdang, Batubara, Asahan and
Bilah. Based on the descriptions, the structures of
the power center of the Malay Kingdom or the
traditional city of the Malay Kingdom were the
royal palaces, bandar or ports and densely
populated settlements (Anderson, 1840). In his
report, some of the areas he visited had been
categorized as traditional cities or Bandar such as
Labuhan in Deli, Tanjung Pura and Pangkalan
Bubun in Langkat, Rantau Panjang in Serdang,
Kampung Boga in Batubara, Kampung Balei
(Tanjung Balai) in Asahan, and some kampong
(villages) in southern Asahan which all had power
centers as well as Bandar or traditional ports
(Anseb, 1938).
4 THE EMERGENCE OF CITIES
AFTER THE PLANTATIONS
The first pioneer of plantation business in East
Sumatra was J. Nienhuys. His arrival to Deli after
hearing the story of the good quality and the large
profits of tobacco plants on the East Coast of
Sumatra. This information was obtained through a
Surabaya-born Arab named Sayid Abdullah Ibn
Umar Bilsagih (Said, 1977). During his first visit to
Sumatra, Nienhuys proved it by himself that
everything Sayid Abdullah had said about Deli
tobacco was true even though the amounts were too
small to be commodities. With the help of Sayid
Abdullah who gained the trust of the Sultan of Deli,
J. Nienhuys finally managed to get a land
concession to open a tobacco plantation in Deli. The
concession area for the first tobacco plantation was
located on the banks of the Deli River, which were
about 4,000 bouw. This concession was granted for
20 years. During the first 5 years, he was exempt
from tax but was required to pay 200 guilders per
year after (Kian, 1977).
Tobacco business initially failed and suffered
substantial losses, but Nienhuys insisted that Deli
land would bring huge profits, bigger than the losses
that he had been incurred. Its failure in
implementing the wholesale system and the
insistence of Van der Arend forced him to open
experimental plantation in the 75 ha of land he
rented in Tanjung Sepassai. He desperately needed
a lot of manpower for this experiment to work on
the vast land. The refusal of indigenous peasants
forced him to hire some of the Haji Jawa and their
followers from Penang Island. From this
experimental plantation, Nienhuys successfully
ICOSTEERR 2018 - International Conference of Science, Technology, Engineering, Environmental and Ramification Researches
1160
produced 25 bales of tobacco worth f 0.48 per
pound. His persistence was proved when the
tobacco were exported to Rotterdam and later
gained high appreciation.
After the contract with Haji Jawa ended
unsatisfactorily, Nienhuys later brought Chinese
coolies from Penang Island and 88 Chinese coolies
directly from China near the planting season of
1865. At the end of 1865, they managed to produce
189 bales of good quality tobacco worth f. 2.51 per
pound in spite of the fact that they did not have any
knowledge about tobacco planting. In 1868, the
production cost reached 30,000 guilders but he
could make 67,000 guilders. The following year he
paid 36,400 guilders and made 87,200 guilders.
Nienhuys had proven that tobacco produced in Deli
was a very profitable product in the European
trading market and made Deli the world's best cigar
ingredient (S.
In order to run a larger business, more capital is
needed. Therefore, in 1869, Nienhuys founded Deli
Maatschappij, the first limited liability company
operating in the Dutch East Indies. Furthermore, he
established Senembah Maatschappij in 1871 and by
the end of 1873, there had been 15 onderneming, 13
in Deli and 1 each in Langkat and Serdang.
Arendsburg Tabak Mij. and Deli Batavia
Maatschappij were later built in 1875 and 1877
respectively. This number continued to grow, until
it reached 86 onderneming in 1884; 44 in Deli, 20
in Langkat, 9 in Serdang, and 3 in Padang Bedagai.
The expansion of onderneming in some areas
certainly took up a large area and spread out in some
areas in East Sumatra. This was due to the fact that
there were many investors making investments in
the plantation business which caused an impact on
economic improvement marked by the
establishment of new cities (Volker, 1918).
The colonial government built new cities for the
administrative centers of government, economic
activity, and the buffer zones or centers of periphery
(the onderneming in the hinterland). The colonial
cities were usually built on crossroads of roads,
railways, and rivers. Medan, for instance, originated
from the construction of Deli Maatschappij office in
1880 on the banks of the Deli River near the railway
station and the highway leading to Belawan.
Starting from here, Medan later developed into a
major city in the Residency of East Sumatra. With
similar patterns, other colonial cities were built,
such as Binjai, Tebing Tinggi, Kisaran, Pematang
Siantar and Rantau Prapat, in addition to other small
cities like Lubuk Pakam, Sungai Rampah, Pancur
Batu, Bangun Purba, and so on.
The emergence of colonial cities in strategic
places, largely due to the construction of roads and
railways, had great implications for the existence of
traditional port cities. The cutting of the old
channels with rivers as the main mode of transport
resulted in the changes of trade routes. If prior to the
construction of roads and railways river became the
main alternative where all economic activities were
conducted, then afterwards its role was largely
taken over by land transport. In fact, the source of
income of the traditional rulers was their hegemony
over the river. As a result, economic profits were
dwindling and the roles of traditional rulers were
waning. Along with this, some traditional cities
suffered setbacks; some even moved their power
centers close to newly built colonial cities. Sultanate
of Deli, for instance, Labuhan in the downstream of
Deli River to the more upstream area of Medan
Putri, moved alongside the newly developed Medan
in 1887. Afterwards, Labuhan then lost ground
(Sinar, 1986).
Sultanate of Serdang also had to move his palace
from Rantau Panjang in the downstream of the Ular
River, not to Lubuk Pakam but to Galuh
Perbaungan, a more upstream place in 1886
(Syaifuddin, 2003). Along with this, the abandoned
Rantau Panjang also suffered a setback. Later, King
of Padang also had to move its power center from
Bandar Khalifah in the downstream to the upstream
of Padang River at Bandar Sakti, Tebing Tinggi,
where the administrative center of Padang Bedagai
onder-afdeling took place. The King of Bedagai had
to move his governance office to Firdaus, Sungai
Rampah, about 6 km to the upstream of Tanjung
Beringin in the late 1920s, although the palace
remained at the downstream of Tanjung Beringin.
The development of Tanjung Beringin port city was
then like "not going anywhere" (Edi Sumarno,
2006).
5 CONCLUSIONS
From the descriptions above, it can be concluded
that the construction of roads and railways in East
Sumatra as a part of the expansion of the plantation
economy, greatly affected the existence of
"traditional port cities" in East Sumatra. The
impacts might be different, but it was still due to the
construction of land transports. The "port cities"
The Transformation of Urban Structure after the Plantation Establishment in East Sumatera 1863-1942
1161
suffered setbacks in the places where land transports
were built and followed by the establishment of new
colonial cities. This pattern occurred on Labuhan as
the "traditional port city" of Sultanate of Deli,
Rantau Panjang as the "traditional port city" of
Sultanate of Serdang, Tanjung Beringin as the
"traditional port city" of Kingdom of Bedagai, and
Bandar Khalifah as the "traditional port city" of the
Kingdom of Padang. On the other hand, in places
where the development of land transports was
relatively small or even none at all, the rivers
remained as the main mode of transport, for instance
in Southern Asahan afdeling and all Bengkalis
afdeling. In this case, the traditional port cities
continued to survive. This pattern occurred to the
traditional port city of Labuhan Bilik in Labuhan
Batu onder-afdeling and Bagan Siapi-api,
Pekanbaru, Siak Sri Indrapura, and Bengkalis in
Bengkalis afdeling. A different pattern occurred in
Tanjung Balai and Tanjung Pura. These traditional
port cities survived despite the fact that land
transports had already reached both places. Tanjung
Balai kept being maintained by the Sultanate of
Asahan as its central government as it turned out
solely due to the fact that it was also the central
government of Asahan afdeling. As for Tanjung
Pura, it kept being maintained by the Sultanate of
Langkat for he objected to move it to Binjai. This
reluctance was most likely on account of Binjai was
not located on the same river as Tanjung Pura.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This article couldn’t have been possible thanks to
funding of “Penelitian DRPM skema Penelitian
Dasar” with the contract number
73/UN5.2.3.1/PPM/KP-DRPM/2018. We also
thanks to Lembaga Penelitian Universitas Sumatera
Utara which has accomodated this research. Besides
that, we also thanks to Arsip Nasional Republik
Indonesia becasue the sources of this article are
widely available there.
REFERENCES
Anseb, 1938, De Grond van Deli, Medan:
Varekamp & Co.
Anderson, John, 1840, Acheen and the Port on the
North and East Coast Sumatra, London: Wm.
H. Allen & Co. Leadenhall Street.
Anderson, John, 1971,Mission to East Coast of
Sumatera in 1823, Kuala
Lumpur/Singapore/New York/London:
Oxford University Press.
Broersma, R.,1992, Oostkust van Sumatra: De
Ontwikkeling van het Gewest, deel II, The
Hague: Charles Dixon Deventer.
Indera, 1996, “Pertumbuhan dan Perkembangan
Deli Spoorweg Maatschappij, 1883-1940”
Masters Dissertation, unpublished, Depok:
University of Indonesia.
Kathirittamby-Wells, J., “Hulu-hilir Unity and
Conflict: Malay Statecraft inEast Sumatra
before the Mid-Nineteenth Century”, in
Archipel, 1993.
Pelzer, Karl J., 1985, Planter and Peasant, Colonial
Policy and Agrarian Struggle in East Sumatra
1863-1947, (trans. J. Rumbo) Jakarta: Sinar
Harapan Press.
Ratna, “Labuhan Deli: Riwayatmu Dulu”, dalam
Jurnal Historisme, Ed. No. 22/Year XI/August
2006.
Said, Mohammad, 1977, Koeli Kontrak Tempoe
Doeloe: dengan Derita dan Kemarahannya,
Medan: Waspada.
Sinar, T. L., 1986, Sari Sejarah Serdang, Jilid 2,
Jakarta: Department of E & C.
Stoler, Ann Laura, 2005,Kapitalisme dan
Konfrontasi di Sabuk Perkebunan Sumatera
(1870 -1979), Yogyakarta: Karsa.
Sumarno, Edi, “Mundurnya Kota Pelabuhan
Tradisional di Sumatera Timur pada Periode
Kolonial” in Historisme Ed. NO.22/Year
XI/August 2006.
Syaifuddin, Wan, ed., 2003, Kronik Mahkota
Kesultanan Serdang, Medan: Yandira Agung.
Veth, P. J., “Het Lanschap Deli op Sumatra”,
TNAG, Deel II, 1877.
Volker, T.,1918, Van Oerbosch Tot Cultuurgebied:
Een Schetsvan de Beteekenis van de Tabak, de
Andere Cultures, en de Industrie ter Oostkust
van Sumatra, Medan, De Deli Planters
Vereeniging.
Wie, Thee Kian, 1977, Plantation Agriculture and
Export Growth an Economic History of East
Sumatra 1863-1942. Jakarta: National of
Institue of Economic and Social Research
(LEKNAS-LIPI
ICOSTEERR 2018 - International Conference of Science, Technology, Engineering, Environmental and Ramification Researches
1162