12
SOUTHEAST ASIA: MALAYSIA

Southeast Asia: Malaysia

  • Upload
    kitra

  • View
    50

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Southeast Asia: Malaysia. Pre-history. 10,000 years ago - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Southeast Asia: Malaysia

SOUTHEAST ASIA: MALAYSIA

Page 2: Southeast Asia: Malaysia

PRE-HISTORY 10,000 years ago

Anthropologists believe aboriginal Proto-Malays migrated from southwest China, eventually traveling to Indonesia, Sumatra and Borneo. Proto-Malays have been found to be ethnically related to people in Sumatra, Java and parts of the Philippines.

300 BC Arrival of Deutero-Malays, descended partly from

Cham people of the Mekong Delta. They push the Proto-Malays into the north and become direct ancestors of today’s ethnic Malays.

100 BC Commerce begins with China and India, establishing

ports in Malaysia along essential trade routes and bringing foreign influence.

Page 3: Southeast Asia: Malaysia

PRE-HISTORY 0-400 AD

Buddhism and Hinduism arrive from India and are adopted; Sanksrit becomes the writing system.

600-1200 AD Much of Malay peninsula ruled by maharajas of

the trade-based Srivijaya empire, which enhances the area’s vital role in regional trade. Srijijaya Empire: controlled the seas bordering

Southeast Asia from AD 600 – 1300. Controlled the Strait of Malacca and Sunda Strait, used heavily for ancient trade routes, and taxed traders who passed through.

Page 4: Southeast Asia: Malaysia
Page 5: Southeast Asia: Malaysia

PRE-HISTORY 1200-1300

Islam is gradually introduced by Arab and Indian traders, and is first adopted by the Malay elite.

Early 1400s Port of Malacca founded by renegade prince Iskander Shah,

purported to be a descendent of Alexander the Great, and who soon converts to Islam.

According to a popular legend, Parameswara was resting under a tree near a river during a hunt, when one of his dogs cornered a mouse deer. In self-defence, the mouse deer pushed the dog into the river. Impressed by the courage of the deer, and taking it as a propitious omen of the weak overcoming the powerful, Parameswara decided then and there to found an empire on that very spot. He named it 'Melaka' after the tree where he had just taken shelter at, the Melaka tree.

1405 Visiting Chinese admiral offers to protect Malacca against

invading Siamese; support allows Malacca to expand influence over much of peninsula. Malacca and other Malaysian sultanates dominates China-India sea trade over next 100 years as Mongol armies close land route to the West; Malay becomes official language and Malacca becomes important Islamic center.

Page 6: Southeast Asia: Malaysia
Page 7: Southeast Asia: Malaysia

COLONIAL RULE 1511

Portugal makes first European colonial claim on Malaysia, capturing Malacca.

1641 Dutch East India Company and local allies push

Portuguese from Malacca. Dutch East India Company: was a chartered company established in 1602, when the

States General of the Netherlands granted it a 21-year monopoly to carry out colonial activities in Asia. It is often considered to have been the first multinational corporation in the world and it was the first company to issue stock. It was also arguably the first megacorporation, possessing quasi-governmental powers, including the ability to wage war, imprison and execute convicts, negotiate treaties, coin money, and establish colonies.

1700s Now known as Malaya, its trading ports gain more economic clout as

British trade with China expands. Mining of tin and gold brings influx of Arab, Indian and Chinese immigrants who soon control business.

Page 8: Southeast Asia: Malaysia
Page 9: Southeast Asia: Malaysia

COLONIAL RULE Late 1700s-1800s

Britain establishes colonies and trading ports on Malay peninsula; Penang is leased to the British East India Company.

1824 Anglo-Dutch Treaty sets boundaries between British Malaya

and the Netherlands East Indies, which is present-day Indonesia.

1857 Modern-day Kuala Lumpur is founded as a trading post for

immigrant miners, and becomes capital of Federated Malay States in 1896.

Late 1800s to 1941 Profits pour in due to wartime demand for tin and rubber;

Britain builds strong naval presence to counter Japanese expansion.

Page 10: Southeast Asia: Malaysia
Page 11: Southeast Asia: Malaysia

WORLD WAR II (AND BEYOND) 1941

Japan bombs Singapore and Kota Bharu in Kelatan. Unprepared and outmanned for a land assault, British forces are routed and Singapore falls in February 1942.

1942 to 1945 During Japanese occupation, exports are stripped, nationalism grows, and ethnic tensions

between Malays, Chinese and Indians are exacerbated. Japan’s so-called sook ching (purification through suffering) campaign leads to the death of 80,000 ethnic Chinese in Malaya and Singapore.

1945 After US drops atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, British forces regain control of Malaya.

1946 United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) is founded by Onn bin Jaafar, chief minister of

Johore. The nationalist group seeks independence from Britain, but will only tolerate a state dominated by ethnic Malays.

1948-1960 Influenced by Cold War politics, ethnic Chinese communist guerrillas maintain insurgency in

jungle areas. Known as the Malayan Emergency, the uprising is eventually suppressed by British and Commonwealth forces.

1957 Federation of Malaya becomes independent from Britain.

1963 British colonies of Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore join Federation of Malaya to form the Federation

of Malaysia. 1965

Singapore is expelled from Malaysia over political and racial concerns.