Manhattan 400 years before
Manhattan 400 years before

Manhattan 400 years before

This project chronicles the aftermath of centuries-long colonization and exploitation in Banda, a remote archipelago dotted the vast sea in eastern Indonesia. Comprised of ten small islands which rarely appear on most maps, Banda was the setting of some earliest European ventures in Asia and played an important role in global economic history. It was here too the English established their first colony overseas: an island named Rhun which later surrendered to the Dutch in exchange for Manhattan.

Banda was once famed for its nutmeg production, an aromatic spice prized as flavoring, medicinal, and preservative agent during the middle ages. Grown only in Banda back then, nutmeg commanded astronomical prices in Europe and awarded outrageous profits to anyone who controlled its supply. Finding Banda, and the rest of neighboring Spice Islands, was the main drive behind Europe’s Age of Discovery. But it was for the islanders’ misery. The Dutch, that succeeded ruling Banda after slaughtering almost its entire population, practiced trade monopoly and forced labor that went through a lengthy and most definitive process of experimentation. Banda was a perfect example of European domination.

Now that nutmeg’s glorious days are long gone, Banda is largely a backwater. This series shows the present state of Banda by underlining the legacy of its colonized past which exists in many forms: historical sites, architectures, traditions, rituals, and the daily life of Bandanese. While the tales regarding the late spice trade and its great influence towards the awakening of global economy are widely admired—and sometimes dramatized—the narratives regarding its human consequences are often overlooked.

This long-term project is a collaboration between Muhammad Fadli and writer Fatris MF. Progress is regularly published by chapters in a bilingual (English and Indonesian) multimedia website thebandajournal.org 

Banda Islands map circa 1753 by Jacobus van der Schley, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, the Dutch National Library.
Banda Islands map circa 1753 by Jacobus van der Schley, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, the Dutch National Library.
 View of the main part of Banda Islands from the outlying Ay Island. Before the coming of Europeans, Banda was regularly visited by Arab, Chinese, Indian, and Malay traders looking for nutmeg.
 Various collection from Museum 'Rumah Budaya Banda Naira'Beberapa koleksi di Museum Rumah Budaya Banda Naira.

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