Murder and Mayhem in Seventeeenth-Century Cambodia: Anthony van Diemen vs. King Ramadhipati I
Alfons van der Kraan

ISBN 978-974-9511-62-6
2009. 80 pp, 15x23cm.
Baht 395, USD 22.00

Murder and Mayhem in Seventeenth-Century Cambodia tells the fascinating story of the origins, course, and consequences of the conflict in the 1630s and ’40s between Cambodia and the Dutch East India Company (VOC), a confrontation that has the dubious distinction of being history’s first between a mainland Southeast Asian state and a European power. Apart from its appeal as an extraordinary tale in its own right, this historical narrative affords a rare glimpse into a largely unknown period in Cambodian history, namely, the period between the fall of Angkor in the mid-fifteenth century and the arrival of the French in the late nineteenth century.

Based for the most part on unpublished Dutch archival sources, this monograph examines the relations between Cambodia and the Dutch East India Company over the years 1636 to 1645. It considers what led Anthony van Diemen, the newly appointed Dutch Governor-General at Batavia (present-day Jakarta), in 1636, to establish a new trading post in Cambodia and the concurrent rise to power of King Ramadhipati I. It examines the deterioration of relations between the king and Van Diemen and the circumstances that may have led the king to order the wholesale massacre of the Dutch embassy to Cambodia. The book recounts the preparations for the punitive 1644 military expedition in alliance with Siam and narrates the course of the expedition. Based on a rare contemporary map drawn on Japanese rice paper, it reconstructs the battle of June 12, 1644, at Phnom Penh. In closing, the author speculates on what might have happened if Van Diemen had not died prematurely in 1645.

About the Author

Alfons van der Kraan was born in the Netherlands and educated there, in Canada, and in Australia. He specializes in the economic history of Southeast Asia and has been a lecturer at the Australian National University, at Murdoch University in Perth, and, currently, at the University of New England, Australia. He has published widely on the economic history of Indonesia, especially that of the islands of Java, Bali, and Lombok.

What others are saying

“This is a nice, old-fashioned history book about kings, ships, great men and, most of all, blood. Its subject is a hitherto unknown incident in the murky history of Cambodia in the 17th century. But its significance and interest is much larger. Alfons van der Kraan claims it was the first confrontation between European might and local rulers in mainland Southeast Asia. It marks the point where European inquisitiveness about Asia turned to downright arrogance.” —Chris Baker, Bangkok Post, February 16, 2009. Read More ...