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Topic 12.7History (2028+) HL36 flashcards

The emergence of independent states in Southeast Asia (1900–1990)

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Card 1 of 3612.7.1
12.7.1
Question

What was the Cultivation System (1830)?

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All Flashcards in Topic 12.7

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12.7.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What was the Cultivation System (1830)?

Answer

A Dutch policy forcing Javanese villages to devote part of their land or labour to growing government-designated export crops (sugar, coffee, indigo) instead of food.

Card 2concept
Question

Why did the Cultivation System matter economically for the Netherlands?

Answer

It funded a large share of the Dutch state budget in the mid-1800s and helped pay off Dutch national debt, at significant cost to Javanese farmers.

Card 3example
Question

What triggered Dutch reform pressure in 1899?

Answer

Conrad van Deventer's essay arguing the Netherlands owed Java a 'debt of honour' for wealth extracted through the Cultivation System.

Card 4concept
Question

What were the 'three pillars' of the 1901 Ethical Policy?

Answer

Irrigation, migration (transmigrasi), and education — aimed at improving Indonesian welfare and repaying the 'debt of honour'.

Card 5comparison
Question

What is a key criticism of the Ethical Policy?

Answer

Education and welfare gains reached only a small elite, while the plantation economy expanded, and transmigration often served colonial labour needs as much as migrants' welfare.

Card 6definition
Question

What was a 'coolie contract'?

Answer

A labour agreement binding plantation workers to an employer, often with harsh penal sanctions, common on Sumatra's rubber and tobacco estates.

Card 7example
Question

Who founded Budi Utomo and when?

Answer

Javanese medical students led by Dr Sutomo founded Budi Utomo in 1908 in Batavia — often called the first modern Indonesian organisation.

Card 8concept
Question

What kind of organisation was Budi Utomo?

Answer

An elite, mainly Javanese, cultural and educational association, not a mass movement and not demanding independence.

Card 9process
Question

How did Sarekat Islam originate and grow?

Answer

It began as Sarekat Dagang Islam, a Muslim traders' association, then was reorganised in 1912 under Tjokroaminoto into Sarekat Islam, a mass movement using Islamic identity to unite Indonesians across ethnic lines.

Card 10comparison
Question

Compare Budi Utomo and Sarekat Islam.

Answer

Budi Utomo (1908): small, elite, Javanese, cultural focus. Sarekat Islam (1912): large, mass-based, cross-ethnic, built on Islamic identity.

Card 11process
Question

How did education and print culture foster Indonesian identity?

Answer

Ethical Policy schools created literacy among a new elite, and a growing vernacular press in Malay let Indonesians debate politics and imagine a shared identity beyond their own island or village.

Card 12concept
Question

What is the historiographical debate about Budi Utomo and Sarekat Islam?

Answer

Some argue they were mainly regional/religious/class-based, not yet true nationalism; others argue they were the essential first stage that made later, more radical independence movements possible.

12.7.212 cards

Card 13definition
Question

When was the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) founded, and on what base?

Answer

1920 — the first mass Indonesian nationalist organisation, built on plantation workers, railway employees and the urban poor.

Card 14process
Question

What happened in the PKI revolts of 1926–27?

Answer

Local PKI branches rose up in West Java (Nov 1926) and West Sumatra (Jan 1927) without full national leadership backing; Dutch forces crushed both within weeks.

Card 15example
Question

What was the Dutch response to the 1926–27 revolts?

Answer

About 13,000 arrests and roughly 1,300 exiles, many sent to the remote Boven-Digoel camp in Dutch New Guinea.

Card 16concept
Question

Who founded the PNI, and when?

Answer

Sukarno, in 1927 — after the PKI's crushed revolts left a gap for a new, broader nationalist movement.

Card 17comparison
Question

How did the PNI's approach differ from the PKI's?

Answer

The PNI united people across class and religion around one national identity; the PKI was rooted in class struggle among workers.

Card 18example
Question

What was 'Indonesia Accuses!'?

Answer

Sukarno's 1930 defence speech at his Bandung trial, which turned his prosecution into nationalist propaganda and made him a hero even while imprisoned.

Card 19definition
Question

When did the Dutch East Indies fall to Japan?

Answer

8 March 1942 — the Dutch colonial army surrendered within weeks of the Japanese invasion.

Card 20concept
Question

Why did the 1942 Dutch surrender matter so much for nationalism?

Answer

It shattered the myth of European invincibility that Dutch rule had rested on for decades — Indonesians saw an Asian army defeat their colonial rulers.

Card 21definition
Question

What was romusha?

Answer

Forced labour conscripted by Japan (several hundred thousand to over a million Indonesians) to build roads, railways and airfields, often under brutal conditions.

Card 22definition
Question

What was PETA and when was it formed?

Answer

Pembela Tanah Air ('Defenders of the Homeland'), formed by Japan in October 1943 — an Indonesian militia that trained around 35,000+ young Indonesians in modern warfare.

Card 23comparison
Question

How did Japanese occupation both exploit and mobilise Indonesians?

Answer

Exploited: romusha forced labour, rice requisitioning causing famine. Mobilised: released Sukarno/Hatta as figureheads, formed PETA, promoted Indonesian language and youth groups.

Card 24example
Question

What happened on 17 August 1945?

Answer

Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta declared Indonesian independence, two days after Japan's surrender to the Allies and before the Dutch could reclaim the colony.

12.7.312 cards

Card 25definition
Question

What is the Proclamation of Indonesian Independence?

Answer

A short statement read by Sukarno (with Hatta) on 17 August 1945, declaring Indonesia independent within days of Japan's surrender in WWII.

Card 26process
Question

Why did the pemuda kidnap Sukarno and Hatta on 16 August 1945?

Answer

To pressure them into declaring independence immediately, fearing delay would let the Allies restore Dutch colonial rule.

Card 27definition
Question

What was the Indonesian National Revolution?

Answer

The 1945–49 struggle — combining armed resistance and diplomacy — that forced the Dutch to accept Indonesian independence.

Card 28example
Question

What happened at the Battle of Surabaya (November 1945)?

Answer

Indonesian militias and civilians resisted British-Indian troops for three weeks, showing mass commitment to independence despite being poorly armed.

Card 29concept
Question

Name the two major diplomatic agreements between Republicans and the Dutch, 1946–48.

Answer

The Linggadjati Agreement (1946) and the Renville Agreement (1948) — both saw territorial concessions in exchange for recognition, later broken by Dutch offensives.

Card 30process
Question

Why did the second Dutch 'police action' (December 1948) backfire?

Answer

It captured Sukarno and Hatta but triggered international condemnation; the US threatened to cut Marshall Plan aid, forcing the Dutch to negotiate seriously.

Card 31concept
Question

What happened on 27 December 1949?

Answer

The Round Table Conference concluded with the Netherlands formally transferring sovereignty to Indonesia, though Dutch New Guinea remained under Dutch control.

Card 32example
Question

What was the Darul Islam revolt?

Answer

An Islamist rebellion beginning in 1948 in West Java, seeking an Islamic state rather than Sukarno's secular republic.

Card 33example
Question

What were the PRRI/Permesta revolts (1957–58)?

Answer

Rebellions in Sumatra and Sulawesi driven by outer-island resentment of Javanese political and economic dominance, covertly supported by the US.

Card 34definition
Question

What is 'Guided Democracy'?

Answer

Sukarno's system from 1957–59 that replaced parliamentary rule with centralised presidential authority, justified as necessary for stability but also concentrating power in Sukarno himself.

Card 35comparison
Question

Compare armed struggle and diplomacy in winning Indonesian independence.

Answer

Armed struggle (Surabaya, guerrilla war) proved Dutch rule was too costly to sustain; diplomacy (Linggadjati, Renville, UN/US pressure) converted that fact into internationally recognised sovereignty — neither alone was sufficient.

Card 36concept
Question

What structural problem did the new Indonesian state face after 1949?

Answer

Unifying a vast archipelago of 17,000 islands with hundreds of ethnic groups, a Java-dominated government, weak administration, and severe economic difficulties.

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