The
Lombok War
In
1894 the Dutch landed an elaborate military expedition in Lombok
and sent an ultimatum to the Lombok Radia, who was under the influence
of Gusti Gede Djilantik, Radja of Karangasem, a friend of the
Dutch. The terms of the ultimatum were accepted and the Radja
agreed to pay a " war indemnity " of one million guilders.
Conferences
were held between the Balinese and the Sasaks, and everybody seemed
satisfied. The army remained in the capital for a few weeks giving
military demonstrations while waiting for the payment of the indemnity.
Soon there were rumors of dissension between the old Radja and
the princes, and the Balinese began to appear less friendly; the
camps were no longer visited by the princes, and one day the women
did not even come to market. This was the signal for the Dutch
to prepare for the defence.
That
night they were attacked by fierce rifle-fire through holes made
in the thick walls of the palaces and houses around the Dutch
encampments. Orchestras played continuously and all night the
great alarm-drums were beaten. The Dutch returned the fire as
well as they could in the darkness, trying to demolish the stone
walls of the palace, but without much success. Captain W. Cool,
an eyewitness, relates: " The noise was deafening and bullets
were falling fast around us. . . . Added to all this was the ear-splitting
sound of the tomtoms and the war cries of the Balinese as an accompaniment
to the hammering and boring of the walls." Every bivouac
was besieged by an invisible foe. On the dawn of the third day
the army retreated towards the sea, leaving nearly one hundred
dead and three hundred wounded. Among the dead was General Van
Ham, second in command.
A
regiment was taken prisoner and was marched along the lines of
Balinese soldiers; Captain Cool tells us that " they were
all armed, yet they maintained a respectful attitude. Not an offensive
word was said or a threatening hand raised." The starving
prisoners were fed with white rice and drinks of orange and coconut
water. The wounded were provided with fresh bandages. After a
sojourn in the palace they were released with a letter from the
Crown Prince stating that he was releasing the prisoners as a
gesture of friendship and as proof that he wished to end hostilities.
But the letter was ignored by the commander-inchief, and at the
seashore the decimated army erected new fortifications protected
by the warships at anchor.
When
the news of the defeat reached Java and Holland, the press flared
up with indignation against " the sinister treachery of the
Balinese. Immediately large reinforcements of men and heavy artillery
were sent from Java. New fortifications were built and the Sasaks
were forced to fight against the Balinese. The offensive was started
against the capital, the army advancing cautiously, bombarding
the villages along the way, and burning them to the ground after
the Sasaks had looted them. Mataram and Cakra Negara, the two
residences of the princes, were shelled and the Dutch succeeded
in blowing up their arsenals and rice stores. The city of Mataram
was captured first. Men and women, caught unawares, stabbed themselves
rather than fall into the bands of the soldiers. Once occupied,
Mataram was ordered razed to the ground. Every wall was laid low
and all the trees chopped down. The work of destruction took over
a month.
Next came the attack on Cakra Negara, the last important city
of the Balinese in
Lombok. They defended it tenaciously, but could not long resist
the effects of artillery, and every palace and house that showed
resistance was soon in flames. The Crown Prince, Anak Agung Ketut,
the greatest enemy of the Dutch, was killed. The city was taken,
the old Radja captured and exiled to Batavia, where he soon died
of a broken heart. Thus ended Balinese rule in Lombok. The new
conquest cost the Dutch 214 dead and 476 wounded, besides 746
who died of sickness and fatigue.