The
oldest human inhabitant archaeological findings in the region were
unearthed in Anyer (the western coast of Java) with evidence of bronze
and iron metallurgical culture dating to the first millennium AD. The
prehistoric Buni (near present-day Bekasi) clay pottery were later
developed with evidence found in Anyer to Cirebon. Artefacts (dated from
400 BC - AD 100) such as food and drink containers were found mostly as
burial gifts. There is also archeological evidence in Batujaya
Archaeological Site dating from the 2nd century,[citation needed] and
according to Dr Tony Djubiantono, the head of Bandung Archeology Agency,
Jiwa Temple in Batujaya, Karawang, West Java was also built around this
time.
The
earliest known recorded history is from the former Tarumanagara kingdom
where seven fourth century stones are inscribed in Wengi letters (used
in the Indian Pallava period) and in Sanskrit describing the kings of
the kingdom Tarumanagara. Records of Tarumanegara's administration
lasted until the sixth century, which coincides with the attack of
Srivijaya as stated in the Kota Kapur inscription (AD 686).
The Sunda kingdom subsequently became the ruling power of the region, as recorded on the Kebon Kopi II inscription (AD 932).
An
Ulama, Sunan Gunung Jati, settled in Banten Girang, with the intention
of spreading the world of Islam in the pagan town. In the meantime, the
Sultanate of Demak in central Java grew to an immediate threat against
the Sunda kingdom. To defend against the threat, Prabu Surawisesa
Jayaperkosa signed a treaty (known as the Luso Sundanese Treaty) with
the Portuguese in 1512. In return, the Portuguese was granted an
accession to build fortresses and warehouses in the area, as well as
trading agreement with the kingdom. This first international treaty of
West Java with the Europeans was commemorated by the placement of the
Padrao stone monument at the riverbank of the Ciliwung River in 1522.
Although
the treaty with Portuguese had been established, it could not come to
realization. Sunda Kalapa harbour fell under the alliance of the
Sultanate of Demak and the Sultanate of Cirebon (former vassal state of
Sunda kingdom) in 1524 after their troops under Paletehan alias Fadillah
Khan had conquered the city. In 1524/1525, their troops under Sunan
Gunung Jati also seized the port of Banten and established the Sultanate
of Banten which was affiliating with the Sultanate of Demak. The war
between the Sunda kingdom with Demak and Cirebon sultanates then
continued for five years until a peace treaty were made in 1531 between
King Surawisesa and Sunan Gunung Jati. From 1567 to 1579, under the last
king Raja Mulya, alias Prabu Surya Kencana, Sunda kingdom declined
essentially under the pressure from the Sultanate of Banten. After 1576,
the kingdom could not maintain its capital at Pakuan Pajajaran (the
present-day Bogor) and gradually the Sultanate of Banten took over the
former Sunda kingdom's region. The Mataram Sultanate from central Java
also seized the Priangan region, the southeastern part of the kingdom.
In
the sixteenth century, the Dutch and the British trading companies
established their trading ships in West Java after the falldown of
Sultanate of Banten. For the next three hundred years, West Java fell
under the Dutch East Indies' administration. West Java was officially
declared as a province of Indonesia in 1950, referring to a statement
from Staatblad number 378. On October 17, 2000, as part of nationwide
political decentralization, Banten was separated from West Java and made
into a new province. There have been recent proposals to rename the
province Pasundan ("Province of the Sundanese") after the historical
name for West Java.
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