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Lombok is an island in West Nusa Tenggara province, Indonesia. It
forms part of the chain of the Lesser Sunda Islands, with the Lombok
Strait separating it from Bali to the west and the Alas Strait
between it and Sumbawa to the east. It is roughly circular, with a
"tail" to the southwest, about 70 km across and a total area of
about 4,725 km² (1,825 sq mi). The provincial capital and largest
city on the island is Mataram.
The island has a population of 4,363,756 people (2008), 2,084,364 of
these are female and 2,279,392 are male. The population is Sasak,
Balinese, Tionghoa-peranakan (Chinese Indonesians), Sumbawa people,
Flores people, and Arab Indonesian.
Little is known about the Lombok before the seventeenth century.
Before this time it was made up of numerous competing and feuding
petty states each of which were presided over by a Sasak 'prince'.
This disunity was taken advantage of by the neighbouring Balinese
who took control of western Lombok in the early seventeenth century.
The Makassarese meanwhile invaded eastern Lombok from their colonies
in neighbouring Sumbawa. The Dutch had first visited Lombok in 1674
and the Dutch East India Company concluded it's first treaty with
the Sasak Princess of Lombok. The Balinese had managed to take over
the whole island by 1750, but Balinese infighting resulted in the
island being split into four feuding Balinese kingdoms. In 1838, the
Mataram kingdom brought its rivals under control.
Relations between the Sasak and Balinese in western Lombok were
largely harmonious and intermarriage was common. In the island's
east, however, relations were less cordial and the Balinese
maintained control from garrisoned forts. While Sasak village
government remained in place, the village head became little more
than a tax collector for the Balinese. Villagers became a kind of
serf and Sasak aristocracy lost much of its power and land holdings.
Dutch intervention in Lombok and Karangasem against the Balinese in
1894.
During one of the many Sasak peasant rebellions against the
Balinese, Sasak chiefs sent envoys to the Dutch in Bali and invited
them to rule Lombok. In June 1894, the governor general of the Dutch
East Indies, Van der Wijck, signed a treaty with Sasak rebels in
eastern Lombok. He sent a large army to Lombok and the Balinese raja
capitulated to Dutch demands.(see Dutch intervention in Lombok) The
younger princes however overruled the raja and attacked and routed
the Dutch. The Dutch counterattacked overrunning Mataram and the
raja surrendered. The entire island was annexed to the Netherlands
East Indies in 1895. The Dutch ruled over Lombok's 500,000 people
with a force of no more than 250 by cultivating the support of the
Balinese and Sasak aristocracy. While the period was one of
deprivation for the Sasak, they Dutch are remembered as liberators
from Balinese hegemony.
Following Indonesian independence from the Dutch, the Balinese and
Sasak aristocracy continued to dominate Lombok. In 1958, the island
was incorporated into the province of West Nusa Tenggara with
Mataram becoming the provincial capital. Mass killings of communists
occurred across the island following the abortive coup attempt in
Jakarta and Central Java. During President Suharto's New Order
administration, Lombok experienced a degree of stability and
development but not to the extent of the boom and wealth in Java and
Bali. Crop failures led to famine in 1966 and food shortages in
1973. The national government's transmigrasi program moved a lot of
people out of Lombok. The 1980s saw external developers and
speculators instigate a nascent tourism boom although local's share
of earnings was limited. Indonesia's political and economic crises
of the late 1990s hit Lombok hard. In January 2000, riots broke out
across Mataram with Christians and ethnic Chinese the main victims,
with alleged agents provocateurs from outside Lombok. Tourism
slumped, but in recent years has seen a renewed growth