
THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE RELATIONS WITH THE NUSANTARA (SPICE ISLANDS)
Author(s) -
Meirison Meirison,
Zulvia Trinova,
Yelmi Eri Firdaus
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
majalah ilmiah tabuah
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2614-7793
pISSN - 1410-1343
DOI - 10.37108/tabuah.v24i2.313
Subject(s) - turkish , ottoman empire , portuguese , diplomacy , government (linguistics) , interpretation (philosophy) , diplomatic history , history , political science , politics , colonialism , ancient history , law , international relations , philosophy , linguistics , computer science , programming language
I feel the need to divide that into two categories; formal relationships and informal relationships. In this case, formal relations are based on politics and military, that is, relationships that were built in the 16th century. The farther away the year, the more cryptic the sources will be. But since the 1530s, Acehnese envoys began to appear in Istanbul, and they were involved in Aceh-Ottoman cooperation. They came to ask for military assistance to fight Portuguese colonialism in the region. By conducting literature study, verification, and interpretation, the author returns to the description of a brief history through the sources written when the Ottoman Turks were still standing. In Muhamad Farid Beik's work, which tells the Ottoman Turkish Government sent a complete fleet to the Archipelago complete with the crew and others. This means that formal relations were established before 1530 AD. After that, there had been diplomatic and military relations between the two sultanates. Turkish cannons that were brought to Aceh are still in the Dutch museum. The relationship between the Ottoman Turks and the Nusantara was not only based on benefit but also based on panic Islamism in facing the same enemy, namely the Portuguese colonialists. When Indonesia faced the Dutch, the Ottoman Turks still provided informal assistance through volunteers due to Western pressure, mainly the British.