Amangkurat II
became sultan in 1677 when his father Amangkurat I died in Tegal after being
expelled from Plered, his capital by Raden Trunajaya, a prince from Madura that
captured the court in 1677. Like his father, Amangkurat II was nearly helpless,
having fled without an army nor a treasury to build one. In an attempt to
regain his kingdom, he made substantial concessions to the Dutch East India
Company (VOC), who then went to war to reinstate him. For the Dutch, a stable
Mataram empire that was deeply indebted to them would help ensure continued
trade on favorable terms. They were willing to lend their military might to
keep the kingdom together. The multinational Dutch forces, consisting of
light-armed troops from Makasar and Ambon, in addition to heavily-equipped
European soldiers, first defeated Trunajaya in Kediri in November 1628, and
Trunajaya himself was captured in 1679 near Ngantang west of Malang. Then, in
1681, the alliance of VOC and Amangkurat II forced Pangeran Puger, his younger
brother, who styled himself Susuhunan ing Alaga when he seized the throne, to
relinquish it. Since the fallen Plered was considered inauspicious, Amangkurat
II moved the capital to Kartasura in the land of Pajang (the northern part of
the stretch of land between Mount Merapi and Mount Lawu, the southern part
being Mataram).
By providing
help in regaining his throne, the Dutch brought Amangkurat II under their tight
control. Amangkurat II was apparently unhappy with the situation, especially
the increasing Dutch control of the coast, but he was helpless in the face of a
crippling financial debt and the threat of Dutch military power. The king
engaged in a series of intrigues to try to weaken the Dutch position without
confronting them head on. For example, he tried to cooperate with other
kingdoms such as Cirebon and Johor, and the court sheltered people wanted by
the Dutch for attacking colonial offices or disrupting shipping, such as Untung
Surapati. In 1685, Batavia sent Captain Tack, the officer who captured
Trunojoyo, to capture Surapati and negotiate further details into the agreement
between VOC and Amangkurat II, but the king arranged a ruse in which he
pretended to help Tack. Tack was killed when pursuing Surapati in Kartasura,
but Batavia decided to do nothing since the situation in Batavia itself was far
from stable, such as the insurrection of Captain Jonker, native commander of
Ambonese settlement in Batavia, in 1689. Mainly due to this incident, by the
end of his reign, Amangkurat II was deeply distrusted by the Dutch, but Batavia
were similarly uninterested in provoking another costly war on Java.
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