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TIDORE
Tidore Island is a bit larger than Ternate. Frequent boats leave
Bastion to Rum, where there is a Sunday market. Tidore is dominated
by Kiematubu volcano. A paved road goes around most of the island,
but beyond the main tone of Soa Siu, the surface degenerates considerably.
The best views of Ternate are from Tidore's north coast.
HISTORY
Tidore is an island in the eastern Indonesia of Maluku Island, just
west of the larger island of Halmahera. In the pre-colonial era,
Tidore was a major regional political and economic power, and a
fierce rival of nearby Ternate, just to the north. The sultans of
Tidore ruled most of southern Halmahera, and, at times, controlled
Buru, Ambon and many of the islands off the coast of Papua. Tidore
established a loose alliance with the Spanish in the sixteenth century,
and Spain had several forts on the island. While there was much
mutual distrust between the Tidorese and the Spaniards, for Tidore
the Spanish presence was helpful in resisting incursions by their
enemy Ternate, as well as the Dutch forces that had a base on that
island.
As Spanish strength in the region diminished
before their eventual withdrawal from the region in 1663, Tidore
became one of the most independent kingdoms in the region, resisting
direct control by Dutch East India Company (VOC). Particularly under
Sultan Saifuddin (1657-1689), the Tidore court was skilled at using
Dutch payment for spices for gifts to strengthen traditional ties
with Tidore's traditional periphery. As a result he was widely respected
by many local populations, and had little need to call on the Dutch
for military help in governing the kingdom, as Ternate frequently
did.
Tidore remained an independent kingdom,
albeit with frequent Dutch interference, until the late eighteenth
century. Like Ternate, Tidore allowed the Dutch spice eradication
program (extirpative) to proceed in its territories. This program,
indeed to strengthen the Dutch spice monopoly by limiting production
to a few places, impoverished Tidore and weakened its control over
its periphery.
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