TRADITIONAL
KINGDOMS
History
in a Balinese Looking Glass
Most
of what we know about Bali's traditional kingdoms comes
from the Balinese themselves. Scores of masked dance
dramas, family chronicles and temple rituals focus on
great figures and events of the Balinese past. In such
accounts, the broad outline of Bali's history from the
12th up to the 18th centuries is an epic tale of the
coming of great men to power. These were the royal and
priestly founders of glorious dynasties - some mad,
some fearsome, some lazy and some proud - who together
with their retainers and family members determined the
fate of Bali's kingdoms, as well as shaping the situation
and status of the island's present-day inhabitants.
It
is possible to see the Balinese as both indifferent
to history and yet utterly obsessed by it. Indifferent
because they are not very interested in the "what
happened and why" that make up what we know as
history, while at the same time they are obsessed by
stories concerning their own illustrious ancestors.
Balinese
"history" is in fact a set of stories that
explain how their extended families came to be where
they are. Such stories may explain, for example, how
certain ancestors moved from an ancient court center
to a remote village, or how they were originally of
aristocratic stock although their descendants no longer
possess princely titles. In short, they provide evidence
of a continuing connection between the world of the
ancestors and present-day Bali.
Major
events are thus invariably seen in terms of the actions
of great men (and occasionally women), yet to view them
as mere individuals is deceptive. They are divine ancestors,
and as such their actions embody the fate of entire
corporate groups. Above all, they are responsible for
having created the society one finds in Bali today.
Each
family possesses its own genealogy that somehow fits
into the overall picture. Some focus on kings, their
followers or priests as key ancestors. Others see the
family history in terms of village leaders, blacksmiths
(powerful as makers of weapons and tools) or villagers
who resisted and escaped the advance of new rulers.
The
fact that such stories sometimes agree with one another
should not necessarily be taken as proof that this is
what really happened. There are many gaps, loose ends
and inconsistencies - often pointing to the fact that
generations of priests, princes and scribes have recast
these tales about the past to serve their own ends.
'Me stories must be retold, nevertheless, in order to
know what is open to dispute.
Ancestors
and origins
The
story begins in ancient Java, in the legendary kingdoms
of Kadiri and Majapahit where Javanese culture is regarded
(by Javanese, Balinese and Western scholars alike) as
having reached its apex. From these rich sources flowed
the great literature, art and court rituals of Hindu
Java, that were later transplanted to Bali.
One
of the prime reasons for holding such rituals was to
elevate Hindu-Javanese leaders to the status of god-like
kings who were in contact with the divine forces of
the cosmos. As these Javanese kingdoms expanded to take
over Bali, they brought with them their art, literature
and cosmology. At the same time, the Javanese also absorbed
vital elements of Balinese culture, eventually spreading
some of these throughout the archipelago and elsewhere
in Southeast Asia.
The
great Airlangga, descendant of Bali's illustrious King
Udayana, is said to have ascended the east Javanese
throne and to have founded the powerful kingdom of Kadiri
in the 11th century. Thus it was proper that his descendants
would later install priests and warriors from Java to
rule over Bali. Foremost among these was the son of
a priest, Kresna Kapakisan, who became the first king
of Gelgel (now in Klungkung Regency) in the mid-15th
century.
The
transition to Gelgel from a previous court center at
Samprangan (now in Gianyar Regency) was made by a cockfighting
member of the Kapakisan dynasty, who became embroiled
in a struggle for the throne and attempts to save the
kingdom from the mismanagement of his elder brother,
or so the account goes. There is little reason to doubt
this version of events, yet there are huge gaps in the
story of how power moved from Java to Gelgel in previous
centuries, and the relation of the Kapakisan line to
earlier kings appointed by the Javanese conquerors.
Bali's
"Golden Age"
Most
Balinese trace their ancestry back to a group of courtiers
clustering about the great King Baturenggong, a descendant
of Kapakisan, who is seen to have presided over a Balinese
"Golden Age" in the 16th century. Balinese
accounts describe him as: "A king of great authority,
a true lion of a man, who was wise in protecting his
subjects and attending to their needs, and an outstanding
warrior of great mystical power, always victorious in
war." European records do not mention him by name,
but attest to the wealth and influence of a Balinese
kingdom which at this time had a more centralized and
unified system of government than was the case in subsequent
centuries.
Of
equal if not greater importance in the collective Balinese
memory of this era is the super-priest Nirartha. He
is remembered for his great spiritual powers - a man
who could stop floods, control the energies of sexuality
through meditation, and write beautiful poetry to move
men's' souls. In the genealogies it was he who founded
the main line of Balinese high priests - those whose
worship is directed to Siwa, Lord of the Gods. His name
is associated with many of Bali's greatest temples,
and a corpus of literature produced by himself and his
followers.
In
Balinese eyes, the descendants of King Baturenggong
and Nirartha presided over a period of decline, even
though Baturenggong's son, Seganing, upheld some of
his father's greatness and, after the texts, fathered
the ancestors of Bali's key royal lines. Balinese sources
tell of the destruction of Gelgel by a rebellious chief
minister, Gusti Agung Maruti, who was distinguished
by possessing a tail and an over weaning thirst for
power. After his defeat by princes who established themselves
in the north and south of the island, new independent
kingdoms arose from the ashes of Gelgel. The Gelgel
dynasty itself survived, albeit in a much reduced state,
as the kingdom of Klungkung - maintaining some of its
moral and symbolic authority over the rest of the island,
but having direct control of only its immediate area.
Slave
trading and king-making
To
the outside world, as to later Balinese writers, the
period following Gelgel's Golden Age was one of chaos
- in which fractious kings ruled from courts scattered
about the island. This was not necessarily so in contemporary
Balinese terms, where the new states must have represented
a more dynamic way of conducting the affairs of state
and external trade. Bali became famous on the international
scene at this time as a source of slaves, savage fighters,
beautiful women and skilled craftsmen.
According
to traditional accounts, the fate and status of present-day
Balinese families was also largely determined at this
time. Kingdoms rose and fell with alarming rapidity,
clans split and were demoted or even enslaved, aspiring
princes waged war and organized lavish ceremonies. Such
human dramas were punctuated by a series of natural
disasters, such as earthquakes, epidemics and volcanic
eruptions.
Bali's
principal export throughout the 17th and 18th centuries
was slaves. Warfare and a revision of Bali's Hindu law
codes helped provide a steady supply of slaves to meet
an ever-increasing overseas demand. War captives, criminals
and debtors were sold abroad indiscriminately by Balinese
rulers, who maintained a monopoly on the export trade.
In north Bali, Europeans were even invited in to oversee
the trade, and the Dutch in particular purchased large
numbers of Balinese to serve as laborers, artisans and
concubines in their extensive network of trading ports
- especially their capital at Batavia (now Jakarta),
where Balinese slaves made up a sizeable portion of
the population. Balinese were even sent to South Africa,
where in the early 18th century they constituted up
to a quarter of the total number of slaves in that country.
Likewise,
Balinese wives and concubines were very much favored
by wealthy Chinese traders, for their industriousness
and beauty, and the fact that they had no aversion to
pork, unlike the Muslim Javanese. An early 19th-century
trader noted that Balinese women were among the most
expensive slaves, costing "30, 50 and even 70 Spanish
dollars, according to her physical qualities."
'Me same observer later comments that the Balinese "regard
deportation from their island as the worst possible
punishment. This attitude results from their strongly-held
conviction that their Gods have no influence outside
Bali and that no salvation is to be expected for those
who die elsewhere."
The
principal kingdoms, which emerged during this period,
were Buleleng in the north, Karangasem in the east and
Mengwi in the southwest. At various times, these realms
expanded to conquer parts of Bali's neighboring islands.
Mengwi and Buleleng moved westward into Java, where
they became embroiled in conflicts with and between
rival Muslim kingdoms. The Dutch came to play an ever
larger role in these conflicts, until eventually the
Javanese rulers discovered that they had mortgaged their
empires to the gin-drinking Europeans. The Balinese
were finally pushed out of eastern Java by combined
Dutch and Javanese forces.
In
the east, Karangasem conquered the neighboring island
of Lombok, and at one point even moved into the western
part of the next island, Sumbawa. It also annexed Buleleng,
and knocked at the gates of Bali's august, but largely
impotent central kingdom, Mungkung.
By
the beginning of the 19th century, the island's changeable
political landscape had stabilized to an extent, as
nine separate kingdoms consolidated their positions.
A massive eruption of Mt. Tambora on Sumbawa in 1815
- the largest eruption ever recorded proved to be a
catalyst. A tide of famine and disease swept Bali in
the wake of the eruption, shredding the traditional
fabric of Balinese society, and with it many of the
fragile political structures of the two previous centuries.
Paradoxically,
Tambora's devastating eruption brought in its aftermath
a period of unprecedented renewal and prosperity. Deep
layers of nutrient-rich ash from the volcano made Bali's
soils fertile beyond the wildest imaginings of earlier
Balinese rulers. Rice and other agricultural products
began to be exported in large quantities, at a time
when vociferous anti-slavery campaigns throughout Europe
were bringing an end to Bali's lucrative slave trade.
Two
other factors served to transform the island's political
and economic landscape. The first was a dramatic decrease
in warfare, as ruling families focused more and more
on internecine struggles and competing claims for dynastic
control, and the monopolies on duties, tolls and corves
labor that came with it. The second was the changing
nature of foreign trade, particularly with the founding
of Singapore as a British free trade port in 1819. To
Singapore went Bali's pigs, vegetable oils and rice.
Back came opium, Indian textiles and guns. Bali was
now integrated with world markets to a degree unknown
in the past, a fact that did not escape the ever-watchful
eyes of colonial Dutch administrators in Batavia.