Crown Colony of Labuan
Crown Colony of Labuan | |||||
Pulau Labuan 纳闽 |
|||||
Colony of the United Kingdom | |||||
|
|||||
|
|||||
Anthem God Save the King/Queen |
|||||
|
|||||
Capital | Victoria | ||||
Languages | |||||
Government |
|
||||
Monarch | |||||
• | 1837–1901 | Queen Victoria | |||
• | 1936–1952 | George VI | |||
First Governor | |||||
• | 1847–1852 | James Brooke | |||
Historical era | British Empire | ||||
• | Establishment of the colony | 1848 | |||
• | Transferred to North Borneo | 1890 | |||
• | Incorporated into Straits Settlements | 1907 | |||
• | Separated as a standalone colony | 1912 | |||
• | Japanese occupation | 1941 | |||
• | Labuan to North Borneo Crown | 15 July 1946 | |||
• | Federation | 16 September 1963 | |||
Area | Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). | ||||
Currency |
|
||||
Today part of | Malaysia |
Labuan, made up of the main Labuan Island and six smaller islands (Burung Island, Daat Island, Kuraman Island, Papan Island, Rusukan Kecil Island, and Rusukan Besar Island), first became a Crown colony in 1848. Since 15th, Labuan was under the rule of Brunei became the shelter for the ships from storms and pirate attacks. Later on in 1846, Labuan was officially handed over to British by Raja Muda Hasim on 18 December 1846 and was declared as a free trade port.
In 1890, it came to be administered by the British North Borneo Company. It was reverted to British government rule in 1904. Then, on 1 January 1907, it joined the Straits Settlements and had been administered from Singapore, the capital of the Straits Settlements, until 1912. In 1912, Labuan was made a separate Crown colony again.
During World War II, Labuan was occupied by Japan from December 1941 to June 1945 and governed as part of the Northern Borneo military unit by the Japanese 37th Army. Labuan was renamed Maida Island (Pulau Maida, 前田島 Maeda-shima) after Marquis Toshinari Maeda, the first commander of Japanese forces in northern Borneo. The liberation of Borneo began on 10 June 1945 when the Allied Forces under the command of General McArthur landed at Labuan with a convoy of 100 ships. The 9th Australian Division launched an attack supported by massive air and sea bombardments that resulted in the surrender of the Japanese. On 9 September 1945, General Masao Baba, commander of Japanese military, surrendered at the Layang-layang beach before Major General George F. Wooten, commander of Australian 9th Division. Labuan assumed its former name and was under British military administration along with the rest of the Straits Settlements, then joined to the Crown Colony of North Borneo, on 15 July 1946, which in turn became a part of Malaysia as the state of Sabah on 16 September 1963.
Labuan was later separated from Sabah, becoming a Federal Territory, administered by the federal government, on 16 April 1984.
Timeline
- 1500 Under Brunei Empire.
- 1848 Made a Crown colony.
- 1890 Incorporated into the territory of the British North Borneo Company which in 1881 had taken over land previously part of Brunei.
- 1906 The boundaries of the Straits Settlements were extended to include the Colony of Labuan.
- 1907 Became part of the Straits Settlements.
- 1912 Labuan became a separate Crown colony.
- 1946 Labuan returned to the Crown Colony of North Borneo.
- 1963 Became part of Sabah and Malaysia.
- 1984 Ceded to Federal Government by Sabah and made into Federal Territory.
External links
- Official Portal Labuan Co. http://www.pl.gov.my/history-of-labuan
- EngvarB from October 2015
- Use dmy dates from October 2015
- Former country articles using status text with Colony or Exile
- Former countries in Southeast Asia
- Former British colonies
- States and territories established in 1848
- States and territories disestablished in 1946
- Pages using infobox former country with unknown parameters
- Pages using infobox country or infobox former country with the symbol caption or type parameters
- Unclassified articles missing geocoordinate data
- British Borneo
- Japanese military occupations
- British North Borneo
- History of Brunei
- History of Sabah
- Former countries in Bruneian history
- Former countries in Malaysian history
- History of North Borneo
- Labuan
- 1848 establishments in the British Empire