Indonesians hold virtually exclusive control of the …

Years: 1540 - 1683

Indonesians hold virtually exclusive control of the spice trade, and decisive power in the extensive exchange of luxury and bulk goods that accompanies it, until the challenge of direct traders from Europe (first the Portuguese and Spanish at the beginning of the sixteenth century, then the Dutch, English, and others at the end of it) and renewed interest from the Chinese (after the Ming government relaxed prohibitions on private overseas trade in the mid-sixteenth century).

Over a period of about two hundred and fifty years, however, they will gradually lose their commercial primacy and, in some cases, much of their political independence.

This crucial process is far too complex to be understood simply as a struggle between East and West, or Christianity and Islam, or "modern" and "traditional" technology.

Europeans not only war vigorously among themselves, but they routinely ally themselves with local powers, many of them Muslim, and become participants in local rivalries; they also frequently find that their weaponry does not give them obvious superiority over indigenous powers, who purchase both light and heavy firearms and sometimes, as in Java well into the eighteenth century, are able to manufacture serviceable copies of European models.

Europeans find their position fluctuates as a result of a multitude of factors, some of them well beyond their control.

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