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Coordinates: 6°08′05″S 106°48′48″E / 6.1347°S 106.8133°E / -6.1347; 106.8133
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[[File:Jakarta_History_Museum_March_2015.JPG|thumb|right|Fatahillah Square, the restored 18th-century water pump, and the [[Jakarta History Museum]].]]
{{unreferenced|date=August 2015}}
'''Fatahillah Square''' (Indonesian: '''Taman Fatahillah''') is the historical center of the old [[Batavia, Dutch East Indies|Batavia]]. The square is located at the center of [[Kota Tua Jakarta|Jakarta Old Town]]. Today the square is a tourist area home to the [[Jakarta History Museum]], [[Wayang Museum]] and [[Fine Art and Ceramics Museum]] in [[Kota, Jakarta|Kota]], [[Jakarta]].


==History==
===Pre-1632 layout===
From the beginning of its foundation, Batavia was a well-planned Dutch forted city.{{sfn|de Haan|1922|p=46-7}} The square that would become Fatahillah Square was first recorded in c.1627 as ''Nieuwe Markt'' (Dutch "New Marketplace"). At that time the mouth of the river [[Ciliwung]] (named then as ''Groote Rivier'', "Big River") meandered toward the west-side of the square, giving the square a riverfront quality. The square was only half the size of the present square, the eastern half of the present square was occupied by shophouses. Shophouses also flanked the square at the north side, while the first [[Jakarta History Museum|City Hall of Batavia]] was built to the south of the square, center to the north-south axis of the Prinsenstraat (now Jalan Cengkeh), proof of urban planning in the forted city.{{sfn|Bollee, Kaart van Batavia 1667}} The name ''Stadhuisplein'' was probably given immediately to the square following the completion of the city hall.

===Post-1632 layout===
[[File:Batavia - Townhall 1770.jpg|thumb|Drawing of the former city hall ({{lang-nl|stadhuis}}) and New Church of Holland (Nieuwe Hollandse Kerk) in [[Batavia, Dutch East Indies]] by Danish painter [[Johannes Rach]], late 18th century]]
[[File:Batavia - Townhall 1770.jpg|thumb|Drawing of the former city hall ({{lang-nl|stadhuis}}) and New Church of Holland (Nieuwe Hollandse Kerk) in [[Batavia, Dutch East Indies]] by Danish painter [[Johannes Rach]], late 18th century]]
In 1632, Batavia underwent a major restructuration. To strengthen the defense system, governor-general [[Jacques Specx]] (1629-1632) redesigned Batavia with an outer city wall, defended by a system of outer and inner moat. The inner city was planned following a grid-like planning and crisscrossed with a network of canals.{{sfn|Cribb|Kahin|2004|463}} To accommodate the grid-like layout, the Groote Rivier was normalized into a straight north-to-south waterway. The shop houses at the eastern side of the square were also demolished. With the normalization of the Groote Rivier and the demolition of the east shop houses, the square became completely enclosed with buildings. The Prinsestraat (present Jalan Cengkeh), which in the beginning formed the street that leads to the [[Batavia Castle|Castle]], were established as an urban center, connecting the Castle south gate with the [[Jakarta History Museum|City Hall]], forming an impressive vista on the seat of government.{{sfn|de Haan|1922|p=46-7}} Beginning from the year up until around late 18th-century, the Stadhuisplein was flanked with the City Hall to the south, a [[List of church buildings in Indonesia|church]] to the east, some shop houses to the north, and the [[Kota_Tua_Jakarta#List_of_street_names|Tijgersgracht]] to the east.{{sfn|Petrus Conradi, Plan der stad en 't Kasteel Batavia 1770}}
[[File:Ondel-Ondel Fatahillah Square.JPG|thumb|[[Ondel-ondel]] performance at Fatahillah Square]]
[[File:Jakarta Indonesia Post-office-at-Fathillah-Square-01.jpg|thumb|[[Kota Post Office]] at Fatahillah Square in 2015]]
[[File:Museum fatahillah.jpg|thumb|[[Jakarta History Museum]] (also known as Museum Fatahillah or Batavia Museum) is in the former Stadthuis (City Hall)]]
'''Fatahillah Square''' (Indonesian: Taman Fatahillah), formerly '''Batavia City Square''' (Dutch: '''Stadhuisplein'''), is home to the [[Jakarta History Museum]], [[Wayang Museum]] (puppetry) and [[Fine Art and Ceramics Museum]] in [[Kota, Jakarta|Kota]], [[Jakarta]] along the east bank of the [[Ciliwung River]]. The plaza is named for Indonesian national hero [[Fatahillah]].


In 1635, a Chinese clothing bazaar occupied the northwest part of the square. This bazaar was demolished in the early 18th-century.{{sfn|Bollee, Kaart van Batavia 1667}} The location of the clothing bazaar corresponds more or less with the area in front of present Cafe Batavia.

===Modern period===
[[File:COLLECTIE_TROPENMUSEUM_Het_gebouw_van_de_Raad_van_Justitie_aan_het_Stadhuisplein_Batavia_TMnr_60016063.jpg|thumb|right|The merging of the Stadhuisplein with the front courtyard of the Palais van Justitie (now the [[Museum of Fine Arts and Ceramics|Ceramic Museum]] in the 19th-century.]]
In late 19th century, the Stadhuisplein was traversed with a [[Trams in Jakarta|tramline]], passing diagonally from Binnen Nieuwpoortstraat at the south (now Jalan Pintu Besar Utara), to Prinsenstraat (now Jalan Cengkeh) at the north.{{sfn|Weperen, Stads-kaart van Batavia 1931}} C. 1870, with the elimination of the Tijgersgracht and the completion of the Palais van Justitie (now [[Museum of Fine Arts and Ceramics (Jakarta)|Fine Arts and Ceramics Museum]]), the total area of the Stadhuisplein expanded slightly to the east.{{sfn|Top. Bureau, Kaart van Batavia en Omstreken 1897}} This layout of the square will be the final layout of the square.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the northeast shop houses were demolished to make way for the ''Post- en telegraaf kantoor aan het Stadhuisplein'' (now [[Kota Post Office]]). Demolition of these shophouses incited controversy among the architects and academics. Both [[Hendrik Petrus Berlage|Berlage]] and [[Thomas Karsten|Karsten]], noted Dutch architects, cited the addition of the building as destroying the traditional city structure of the Old Town.{{sfn|Indische Literaire Wandelingen - Jakarta}}

===Post-colonial period===
[[File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Bussen en taxi's op Taman Fatahillah TMnr 20018032.jpg|thumb|Buses and taxis at Taman Fatahillah.]]
The name ''Stadhuisplein'' lingered until nationalization of street names in Indonesia when the name was changed into Taman Fatahillah ("Fatahillah Square") after [[Fatahillah]], a pre-Dutch 16th-century commander of the [[Sultanate of Demak]] who recaptured the port city from the Portuguese.{{sfn|Bollee, Kaart van Batavia 1667}}

In the year 1970, restoration of the square and a couple of landmark in the [[Kota Tua Jakarta|Old Town]] was done by the governor [[Ali Sadikin]]. The former city hall was made a [[Jakarta History Museum|history museum]] in 1974. Also in that year, the 18th-century artesian water pump was restored in the middle of the square.{{sfn|de Vletter|Voskuil|van Diessen|1997|pp=122}}

==Present==
[[File:Ondel-Ondel Fatahillah Square.JPG|thumb|[[Ondel-ondel]] performance at Fatahillah Square]]
Together with the [[Kota Tua Jakarta]], Fatahillah Square is a car-free area.


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist|30em}}


==Works cited==
{{commons category|Fatahillah Square}}
{{refbegin}}
*{{cite book |last1=Cribb |first1=R.B. |last2=Kahin |first2=Audrey |title=Historical Dictionary of Indonesia |date=2004 |place= |publisher=Scarecrow Press, Inc. 2nd edition |accessdate=May 6, 2016 |isbn=9780810849358 |ref=harv}}
*{{cite book |last=de Haan |first=F. |title=Oud Batavia |volume=1 |date=1922 |place=Batavia |publisher=G. Kolff & Co, Koninklijk Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen |accessdate=2015-10-07}}
*{{cite book |last1=de Vletter |first1=M.E. |last2=Voskuil |first2=R.P.G.A. |last3=van Diessen |first3=J.R. |date=May 1997 |title=Batavia/Djakarta/Jakarta Beeld van een metamorfose |url= |location=Purmerend |publisher=Asia Maior|isbn=9074861091 |access-date=}}
*{{cite web |url=http://www.indischeliterairewandelingen.nl/index.php/wandelingen/158-jakarta-2-stadhuisplein-stationsplein#meer-informatie-3 |title=Indische Literaire Wandelingen - Jakarta, Stadhuisplein, Stationsplein |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date= |website=Indische Literaire Wandelingen |publisher=Indische Literaire Wandelingen |access-date=Mary 24, 2016 |ref={{sfnref|Indische Literaire Wandelingen - Jakarta}}}}
*{{cite map |ref={{sfnRef|Smulders, Kaart van Batavia 1860}} |publisher= |title=Kaart van Batavia - een Omstreken met inbegrip van de Reede en omliggende Eiland |url= |trans_title=Map of Batavia - including the surrounding islands |language=Dutch |edition='s Gravenhage |year=1860 |cartography=J. Smulders |scale=1:12500 |series= |page= |section= |inset= |accessdate=12 October 2015 |isbn= |id= |archiveurl= |archivedate=}}
*{{cite map |ref={{sfnRef|Bollee, Kaart van Batavia 1667}} |publisher=G.B. Hooyer and J.W. Yzerman |title=Kaart van het Kasteel en de Stad Batavia in het Jaar 1667 |url= |trans_title=Map of the Castle and the City Batavia in year 1667 |language=Dutch |edition=Den Haag |year=1919 |cartography=J.J. Bollee |scale=50 rhijnlandsche roeden |series= |page= |section= |inset= |accessdate=2011-09-08 |isbn= |id= |archiveurl= |archivedate=}}
*{{cite map |ref={{sfnRef|Top. Bureau, Kaart van Batavia en Omstreken 1897}} |publisher= |title=Kaart van Batavia en Omstreken |url=http://media-kitlv.nl/all-media/indeling/detail/form/advanced/start/11?q_searchfield=batavia+kaart |trans_title=Map of Batavia and Surrounding |language=Dutch |edition=Batavia |year=1897 |cartography=Topografische Bureau |scale=1:20000 |series= |page= |section= |inset= |accessdate=February 14, 2016 |isbn= |id= |archiveurl= |archivedate=}}
*{{cite map |ref={{sfnRef|Petrus Conradi, Plan der stad en 't Kasteel Batavia 1770}} |publisher= |title=Plan der stad en 't Kasteel Batavia |url=http://media-kitlv.nl/all-media/indeling/detail/form/advanced/start/90?q_searchfield=batavia+kaart |trans_title=Plan of the City and Castle Batavia |language=Dutch |edition=Amsterdam |year=1770 |cartography=Petrus Conradi |scale=160 rhijnlandsche roeden |series= |page= |section= |inset= |accessdate=February 14, 2016 |isbn= |id= |archiveurl= |archivedate=}}
*{{cite map |ref={{sfnRef|Tresling & Co., Platte Grond van Batavia 1890}} |publisher=Visser & Co. |title=Platte Grond van Batavia |url=http://media-kitlv.nl/all-media/indeling/detail/form/advanced/start/53?q_searchfield=batavia+kaart |trans_title=Map of Batavia |language=Dutch |edition=Amsterdam |year=1890 |cartography=Tresling & Co. |scale= |series= |page= |section= |inset= |accessdate=February 14, 2016 |isbn= |id= |archiveurl= |archivedate=}}
*{{cite map |ref={{sfnRef|Weperen, Stads-kaart van Batavia 1931}} |publisher=Reproductiebedrijf Topografische Dienst |title=Stads-kaart van Batavia |url=http://media-kitlv.nl/all-media/indeling/detail/form/advanced?q_search_signatuur=D+E+20%2C3+%40+f |trans_title=City Map of Batavia |language=Dutch |edition=Den Haag |year=1931 |cartography=A. van Weperen |scale=1:15000 |series= |page= |section= |inset= |accessdate=2011-09-08 |isbn= |id= |archiveurl= |archivedate=}}
*{{cite map |ref={{sfnRef|Stadskaart van de Gemeente Batavia 1918}} |publisher= |title=Stadskaart van de Gemeente Batavia |url=http://media-kitlv.nl/all-media/indeling/detail/form/advanced/start/43?q_searchfield=batavia+kaart |trans_title=City Map of the Municipality of Batavia |language=Dutch |edition=Den Haag |year=1918 |cartography= |scale=1:10000 |series= |page= |section= |inset= |accessdate=February 8, 2016 |isbn= |id= |archiveurl= |archivedate=}}
{{refend}}


{{coord|-6.1347|106.8133|type:landmark_region:ID|display=title}}
{{coord|-6.1347|106.8133|type:landmark_region:ID|display=title}}
{{commons|Stadhuisplein (Batavia)}}

{{commons|Fatahillah Square}}
[[Category:Squares in Jakarta]]
[[:Category:Squares in Jakarta]]

Revision as of 09:33, 22 August 2018

Fatahillah Square, the restored 18th-century water pump, and the Jakarta History Museum.

Fatahillah Square (Indonesian: Taman Fatahillah) is the historical center of the old Batavia. The square is located at the center of Jakarta Old Town. Today the square is a tourist area home to the Jakarta History Museum, Wayang Museum and Fine Art and Ceramics Museum in Kota, Jakarta.

History

Pre-1632 layout

From the beginning of its foundation, Batavia was a well-planned Dutch forted city.[1] The square that would become Fatahillah Square was first recorded in c.1627 as Nieuwe Markt (Dutch "New Marketplace"). At that time the mouth of the river Ciliwung (named then as Groote Rivier, "Big River") meandered toward the west-side of the square, giving the square a riverfront quality. The square was only half the size of the present square, the eastern half of the present square was occupied by shophouses. Shophouses also flanked the square at the north side, while the first City Hall of Batavia was built to the south of the square, center to the north-south axis of the Prinsenstraat (now Jalan Cengkeh), proof of urban planning in the forted city.[2] The name Stadhuisplein was probably given immediately to the square following the completion of the city hall.

Post-1632 layout

Drawing of the former city hall (Dutch: stadhuis) and New Church of Holland (Nieuwe Hollandse Kerk) in Batavia, Dutch East Indies by Danish painter Johannes Rach, late 18th century

In 1632, Batavia underwent a major restructuration. To strengthen the defense system, governor-general Jacques Specx (1629-1632) redesigned Batavia with an outer city wall, defended by a system of outer and inner moat. The inner city was planned following a grid-like planning and crisscrossed with a network of canals.[3] To accommodate the grid-like layout, the Groote Rivier was normalized into a straight north-to-south waterway. The shop houses at the eastern side of the square were also demolished. With the normalization of the Groote Rivier and the demolition of the east shop houses, the square became completely enclosed with buildings. The Prinsestraat (present Jalan Cengkeh), which in the beginning formed the street that leads to the Castle, were established as an urban center, connecting the Castle south gate with the City Hall, forming an impressive vista on the seat of government.[1] Beginning from the year up until around late 18th-century, the Stadhuisplein was flanked with the City Hall to the south, a church to the east, some shop houses to the north, and the Tijgersgracht to the east.[4]

In 1635, a Chinese clothing bazaar occupied the northwest part of the square. This bazaar was demolished in the early 18th-century.[2] The location of the clothing bazaar corresponds more or less with the area in front of present Cafe Batavia.

Modern period

The merging of the Stadhuisplein with the front courtyard of the Palais van Justitie (now the Ceramic Museum in the 19th-century.

In late 19th century, the Stadhuisplein was traversed with a tramline, passing diagonally from Binnen Nieuwpoortstraat at the south (now Jalan Pintu Besar Utara), to Prinsenstraat (now Jalan Cengkeh) at the north.[5] C. 1870, with the elimination of the Tijgersgracht and the completion of the Palais van Justitie (now Fine Arts and Ceramics Museum), the total area of the Stadhuisplein expanded slightly to the east.[6] This layout of the square will be the final layout of the square.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the northeast shop houses were demolished to make way for the Post- en telegraaf kantoor aan het Stadhuisplein (now Kota Post Office). Demolition of these shophouses incited controversy among the architects and academics. Both Berlage and Karsten, noted Dutch architects, cited the addition of the building as destroying the traditional city structure of the Old Town.[7]

Post-colonial period

Buses and taxis at Taman Fatahillah.

The name Stadhuisplein lingered until nationalization of street names in Indonesia when the name was changed into Taman Fatahillah ("Fatahillah Square") after Fatahillah, a pre-Dutch 16th-century commander of the Sultanate of Demak who recaptured the port city from the Portuguese.[2]

In the year 1970, restoration of the square and a couple of landmark in the Old Town was done by the governor Ali Sadikin. The former city hall was made a history museum in 1974. Also in that year, the 18th-century artesian water pump was restored in the middle of the square.[8]

Present

Ondel-ondel performance at Fatahillah Square

Together with the Kota Tua Jakarta, Fatahillah Square is a car-free area.

References

Works cited

  • Cribb, R.B.; Kahin, Audrey (2004). Historical Dictionary of Indonesia. Scarecrow Press, Inc. 2nd edition. ISBN 9780810849358. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • de Haan, F. (1922). Oud Batavia. Vol. 1. Batavia: G. Kolff & Co, Koninklijk Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  • de Vletter, M.E.; Voskuil, R.P.G.A.; van Diessen, J.R. (May 1997). Batavia/Djakarta/Jakarta Beeld van een metamorfose. Purmerend: Asia Maior. ISBN 9074861091.
  • "Indische Literaire Wandelingen - Jakarta, Stadhuisplein, Stationsplein". Indische Literaire Wandelingen. Indische Literaire Wandelingen. Retrieved Mary 24, 2016. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  • Kaart van Batavia - een Omstreken met inbegrip van de Reede en omliggende Eiland (Map) ('s Gravenhage ed.). 1:12500 (in Dutch). Cartography by J. Smulders. 1860. {{cite map}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  • Kaart van het Kasteel en de Stad Batavia in het Jaar 1667 (Map) (Den Haag ed.). 50 rhijnlandsche roeden (in Dutch). Cartography by J.J. Bollee. G.B. Hooyer and J.W. Yzerman. 1919. {{cite map}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  • Kaart van Batavia en Omstreken (Map) (Batavia ed.). 1:20000 (in Dutch). Cartography by Topografische Bureau. 1897. Retrieved February 14, 2016. {{cite map}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  • Plan der stad en 't Kasteel Batavia (Map) (Amsterdam ed.). 160 rhijnlandsche roeden (in Dutch). Cartography by Petrus Conradi. 1770. Retrieved February 14, 2016. {{cite map}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  • Platte Grond van Batavia (Map) (Amsterdam ed.) (in Dutch). Cartography by Tresling & Co. Visser & Co. 1890. Retrieved February 14, 2016. {{cite map}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  • Stads-kaart van Batavia (Map) (Den Haag ed.). 1:15000 (in Dutch). Cartography by A. van Weperen. Reproductiebedrijf Topografische Dienst. 1931. Retrieved 2011-09-08. {{cite map}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  • Stadskaart van de Gemeente Batavia (Map) (Den Haag ed.). 1:10000 (in Dutch). 1918. Retrieved February 8, 2016. {{cite map}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)

6°08′05″S 106°48′48″E / 6.1347°S 106.8133°E / -6.1347; 106.8133

Category:Squares in Jakarta