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Muhammad Mangundiprojo
Indonesian revolutionary

Muhammad Mangundiprojo

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Intro
Indonesian revolutionary
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Sragen, Central Java, Indonesia
Place of death
Bandar Lampung, Lampung, Indonesia
Age
83 years
Awards
National Hero of Indonesia
 
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Major General (Retired) Muhammad Mangundiprojo was a 20th-century Indonesian soldier, revolutionary, and civil servant. Born in Sragen Regency on the island of Java, Mangundiprojo joined a nationalist group during the Second World War. He later fought against the return of Dutch colonial authority to Indonesia, and later went on to become a politician. He died in Bandar Lampung in 1988.

Biography

Muhammad Mangundiprojo was born on 5 January 1905 in the Javanese province (which are referred to as regencies) of Sragen. At the time, Java and many other Indonesian armies constituted the Dutch East Indies, a colonial possession ruled by the Netherlands. Mangoendiprodjo's family had a history of fighting against the Dutch; his great grandfather had served the Sultanate of Demark and had fought alongside Diponegoro, a 19th-century Javanese noble whom had opposed Dutch rule in the Java War.

During his formative years, Mangundiprojo chose to pursue the career of becoming a civil servant in the Dutch colonial government. In 1926, he graduated from a Dutch-operated university on Java and planned to join the Municipal Police. However, he instead became a prosecutor in the Jombang Regency.

During World War II, the Japanese army invaded and occupied Java in 1942. The Japanese dismantled much of the island's colonial infrastructure and chose to support nationalist movements which would oppose the return of Dutch authorities. On such effort was PETA, which Mangundiprojo joined in 1944. Before being deployed, he received a military education Surabaya; he was then given command of a unit in the Sidoarjo Regency in East Java. When the war ended in 1945, many of the PETA units were disarmed. However, many soldiers and officers, including Mangundiprojo, maintained their military training and discipline.

With the war over, the Dutch government sought to regain control over its former colony in Indonesia, which had declared itself independent from the Netherlands on 17 August 1945. On 26 October, British soldiers and men from the Netherlands Indies Civil Administration landed in Surabaya to occupy the city, which had recently been evacuated by the Japanese garrison. This act caused tensions to flair between the British and the local Indonesians, many of whom now considered themselves to be citizens of an independent Indonesia. Violence soon began, and soon former members of PETA, including Mangundiprojo, began to fight against the British forces. A ceasefire was called on 29 October, and local resistance leader Oerip Soemohardjo selected Mangundiprojo to work with the British to ensure the ceasefire was maintained. While touring the city with British brigadier Aubertin Walter Sothern Mallaby, the British officer attempted to secure the safe return of a group of Indian soldiers whom had been surrounded by a crowd of independence supporters. The situation escalated when Mangundiprojo was briefly captured by the Indian soldiers, and in the confusion Mallaby was killed by a member of the crowd while the brigadier sheltered in his car. His death provoked a reprisal by the British, starting the battle of Battle of Surabaya. Mangundiprojo fought during the battle against the British. During the later Indonesian war of Independence, Mangundiprojo played a role in seizing a large sum of money that the Dutch colonial authorities were keeping in a bank.

After the war of Independence, Mangundiprojo joined the Indonesian civil service. He served as the Regent of Ponorogo from 1951 to 1955.

Mangundiprojo died in Bandar Lampung in 1988. In 2014, he was posthumously named as a National Hero of Indonesia.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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