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Marudu Bay
Malay: Teluk Marudu
Marudu Bay, seen from the east side at Kg. Mempakad.
Marudu Bay is located in Sabah
Marudu Bay
Marudu Bay
Location within Malaysia
Marudu Bay is located in Malaysia
Marudu Bay
Marudu Bay
Marudu Bay (Malaysia)
Location Kudat Division, Sabah, Malaysia
Coordinates 6°58′0″N 116°56′0″E / 6.96667°N 116.93333°E / 6.96667; 116.93333
Type Bay
Part of Sulu Sea
River sourcesSungai Bandau (Marudu River), Sungai Bintasan, Sungai Telaga, Sungai Taka, Sungai Taritipan, Sungai Tuaran, Sungai Kinarom
Max. length60 kilometres (37 mi)
Max. width15 kilometres (9.3 mi)
Surface area1,000 square kilometres (390 sq mi)
Average depth33 metres (108 ft)
Settlements Kudat, Kota Marudu
Location of Marudu Bay on the north coast of Sabah

Marudu Bay ( Malay: Teluk Marudu) is a large bay on the north coast of the island of Borneo. It is located in the state of Sabah, Malaysia and opens to the Sulu Sea. Administratively, it is a part of Kudat Division. Kota Marudu District is on the south side of the bay, Kudat District on the west and Pitas District on the east side.

Geography

The bay covers an area of approximately 1000 km2. Mangrove swamps are mainly found at the southern end of the bay around Kota Marudu. [1]

History

Marudu Bay had been in the overlapping spheres of interest of the Sultanate of Sulu and Bruneian Sultanate since the 18th century. Attempts to drive the Sultan of Sulu's followers out of the region failed. A punitive expedition by the " White Rajah" James Brooke in 1845 only succeeded in weakening the power of the Sultanate of Sulu in the region for a short time, despite naval support from Sir Thomas Cochrane. Although Syariff Usman, the Sultan's governor, was killed in this punitive expedition, his son Syariff Yassin [2] returned to Marudu Bay in 1870 and founded a trading post at the mouth of Tandik River. [3]

Shortly after his appointment, William Hood Treacher, the first governor of North Borneo under the North Borneo Chartered Company, moved the company's headquarters to a small bay in Marudu Bay that had just been discovered by Alfred Hart Everett. It was here in Kudat where North Borneo's first capital was located for two short years. [4]

In 1887, Count Geldes d'Elslov acquired extensive areas of land on Marudu Bay and began growing tobacco. From these beginnings emerged the London Borneo Tobacco Company. [5]

In 1892, the Filipino national hero José Rizal, together with like-minded people, planned to found an agricultural settlement at the mouth of Bengkoka River in Marudu Bay in order to escape the repression of the Spanish government. However, the idea of a patriotic enclave was never realized. [6]

British Borneo Exploration Syndicate Company Limited

In 1904, the British Borneo Exploration Syndicate Company Limited acquired the monopoly to exploit the mineral resources in the Marudu Bay area and began mining manganese. The company constructed a wharf, offices, and a 22-mile metre-gauge railway from the bay to the deposits. However, poor management resulted in the first (and only) ship's load of manganese being dumped overboard upon arrival in England as it turned out to be low-quality shale with low manganese content.

The company returned its mining rights to the Chartered Company in 1913. The narrow-gauge railway was dismantled. The route later served as a route to the rubber plantation of the Taritipan Rubber Estate, which had acquired the former mine site. The two locomotives became the property of the North Borneo Railway (now known as Sabah State Railway). The locomotive "Biliajong", built in 1905, was scrapped before 1914. The "Marudu" locomotive was used at Jesselton and survived both world wars. She was scrapped in 1954. [7]

Literature

  • K. G. Tregonning: A History Of Modern Sabah (North Borneo 1881–1963). 2nd edition. University of Malaya Press, Kuala Lumpur 1965, Reprint 1967.

References

  1. ^ United States Navy Publication 163, Chapter 10.78, prepared by the National Imagery and Mapping Agency (PDF; 630 kB)
  2. ^ Syariff Yassin was married to Sultan Jamal ul-Azam's sister. Jamal ul-Azam ruled the Sultanate of Sulu from 1862 to 1881.
  3. ^ James Warren: The Sulu Zone 1768–1898: The Dynamics of External Trade, Slavery and Ethnicity in the Transformation of a South East Asian Maritime State. Singapore Univ. Press, Singapore, 1981, S. 77–79, ISBN 978-9971-69-386-2
  4. ^ Tregonning, Page 49
  5. ^ Paul Darmstaedter: The geographical distribution and production of tobacco. Dissertation, Fr. A. Schmidt’sche Buchdruckerei, Hamburg 1896, p. 63; Marudu Bay is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.
  6. ^ Tregonning, Page 139
  7. ^ A. N. M. Garry: Overseas Industrial Locomotives - Chapter 5: Borneo. irsociety.co.uk; accessed on April 12, 2012.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marudu Bay
Malay: Teluk Marudu
Marudu Bay, seen from the east side at Kg. Mempakad.
Marudu Bay is located in Sabah
Marudu Bay
Marudu Bay
Location within Malaysia
Marudu Bay is located in Malaysia
Marudu Bay
Marudu Bay
Marudu Bay (Malaysia)
Location Kudat Division, Sabah, Malaysia
Coordinates 6°58′0″N 116°56′0″E / 6.96667°N 116.93333°E / 6.96667; 116.93333
Type Bay
Part of Sulu Sea
River sourcesSungai Bandau (Marudu River), Sungai Bintasan, Sungai Telaga, Sungai Taka, Sungai Taritipan, Sungai Tuaran, Sungai Kinarom
Max. length60 kilometres (37 mi)
Max. width15 kilometres (9.3 mi)
Surface area1,000 square kilometres (390 sq mi)
Average depth33 metres (108 ft)
Settlements Kudat, Kota Marudu
Location of Marudu Bay on the north coast of Sabah

Marudu Bay ( Malay: Teluk Marudu) is a large bay on the north coast of the island of Borneo. It is located in the state of Sabah, Malaysia and opens to the Sulu Sea. Administratively, it is a part of Kudat Division. Kota Marudu District is on the south side of the bay, Kudat District on the west and Pitas District on the east side.

Geography

The bay covers an area of approximately 1000 km2. Mangrove swamps are mainly found at the southern end of the bay around Kota Marudu. [1]

History

Marudu Bay had been in the overlapping spheres of interest of the Sultanate of Sulu and Bruneian Sultanate since the 18th century. Attempts to drive the Sultan of Sulu's followers out of the region failed. A punitive expedition by the " White Rajah" James Brooke in 1845 only succeeded in weakening the power of the Sultanate of Sulu in the region for a short time, despite naval support from Sir Thomas Cochrane. Although Syariff Usman, the Sultan's governor, was killed in this punitive expedition, his son Syariff Yassin [2] returned to Marudu Bay in 1870 and founded a trading post at the mouth of Tandik River. [3]

Shortly after his appointment, William Hood Treacher, the first governor of North Borneo under the North Borneo Chartered Company, moved the company's headquarters to a small bay in Marudu Bay that had just been discovered by Alfred Hart Everett. It was here in Kudat where North Borneo's first capital was located for two short years. [4]

In 1887, Count Geldes d'Elslov acquired extensive areas of land on Marudu Bay and began growing tobacco. From these beginnings emerged the London Borneo Tobacco Company. [5]

In 1892, the Filipino national hero José Rizal, together with like-minded people, planned to found an agricultural settlement at the mouth of Bengkoka River in Marudu Bay in order to escape the repression of the Spanish government. However, the idea of a patriotic enclave was never realized. [6]

British Borneo Exploration Syndicate Company Limited

In 1904, the British Borneo Exploration Syndicate Company Limited acquired the monopoly to exploit the mineral resources in the Marudu Bay area and began mining manganese. The company constructed a wharf, offices, and a 22-mile metre-gauge railway from the bay to the deposits. However, poor management resulted in the first (and only) ship's load of manganese being dumped overboard upon arrival in England as it turned out to be low-quality shale with low manganese content.

The company returned its mining rights to the Chartered Company in 1913. The narrow-gauge railway was dismantled. The route later served as a route to the rubber plantation of the Taritipan Rubber Estate, which had acquired the former mine site. The two locomotives became the property of the North Borneo Railway (now known as Sabah State Railway). The locomotive "Biliajong", built in 1905, was scrapped before 1914. The "Marudu" locomotive was used at Jesselton and survived both world wars. She was scrapped in 1954. [7]

Literature

  • K. G. Tregonning: A History Of Modern Sabah (North Borneo 1881–1963). 2nd edition. University of Malaya Press, Kuala Lumpur 1965, Reprint 1967.

References

  1. ^ United States Navy Publication 163, Chapter 10.78, prepared by the National Imagery and Mapping Agency (PDF; 630 kB)
  2. ^ Syariff Yassin was married to Sultan Jamal ul-Azam's sister. Jamal ul-Azam ruled the Sultanate of Sulu from 1862 to 1881.
  3. ^ James Warren: The Sulu Zone 1768–1898: The Dynamics of External Trade, Slavery and Ethnicity in the Transformation of a South East Asian Maritime State. Singapore Univ. Press, Singapore, 1981, S. 77–79, ISBN 978-9971-69-386-2
  4. ^ Tregonning, Page 49
  5. ^ Paul Darmstaedter: The geographical distribution and production of tobacco. Dissertation, Fr. A. Schmidt’sche Buchdruckerei, Hamburg 1896, p. 63; Marudu Bay is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.
  6. ^ Tregonning, Page 139
  7. ^ A. N. M. Garry: Overseas Industrial Locomotives - Chapter 5: Borneo. irsociety.co.uk; accessed on April 12, 2012.

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