British Empire established its first colony in the Malay Peninsula in 1786, with the lease of the island of Penang to the Sultan of Kedah. In 1824, the British took control of Malacca following the Anglo-Dutch treaty in 1824 which divided the Malay Archipelago between Britain and the Netherlands, with Malaya in the British zone. In 1826, Britain established the crown colony of the Straits Settlements, uniting its four possessions in Malaya: Penang, Malacca, Singapore and the island of Labuan. The Straits Settlements were initially administered under the East Company in Calcutta, before first Penang, and later Singapore became the administrative centre of the crown colony until 1867.
The early years of independence were marred by the conflict with Indonesia (Konfrontasi) over the formation of Malaysia, Singapore's eventual exit in 1965, and racial strife in the form of race riots in 1969. The Philippines also made an active claim on Sabah in that period based upon the Sultanate of Brunei's cession of its north-east territories to the Sulu Sultanate in 1704. The claim is still ongoing.
Malaysia has diplomatic relations with many countries but does not recognize the State of Israel. As such, no traveler with a Malaysian passport can enter Israel.
My grade for this category is 5.
Nice article, from here we could know more about Malaysian history. Keep up the good work...
ReplyDeleteNice article. good to know about history of malaysia.
ReplyDeleteYes, I have been to malacca before and it's a great place full of historical substance.
ReplyDeleteThe history of Malaysia is too interesting.I got so many information about the history of this country.
ReplyDelete