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Original Articles

Indonesians overseas – deep histories and the view from below

Pages 111-121 | Published online: 23 May 2012
 

Notes

1We are using ‘Indonesian’ here as a general term to describe the peoples who lived in the region that is today known as Indonesia. In specific historical documents, Indonesians were known by a number of loosely applied terms, such as ‘Javanese’ (which was used as a general term to include anyone from the Dutch East Indies), ‘Malays’ (another general term which included peoples both from the Dutch East Indies, British Malaya and Straits Settlements), ‘Macassans’ (usually reserved for people who sailed from the port of Makassar), and ‘Koepangers’ (initially used for people from the eastern islands who were recruited via the port of Kupang, Timor.

2The subject of new research by Pam Allen.

3Report to Governor-General Indochina on Javanese Contract Labour, 1909, p. 11, GGI 42591, Archives nationale d'outre-mer (ANOM), Aix-en-Provence.

4Telegram from Monguillot, 1 March 1928, GGI 42596, ANOM.

5 Brisbane Courier, 26 October Citation1885, p. 4.

6 Brisbane Courier, Javanese for Queensland. 24 September Citation1886, p. 6.

7‘Aliens at Queensland Mills, 1916’, Colonial Sugar Refining Company Papers, CSR 142/1479, Noel Butlin Archive Centre, Canberra.

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