
Contents
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‘Pearls for the Ears of the Mind’: Structure and Contents of Taj al-Salatin ‘Pearls for the Ears of the Mind’: Structure and Contents of Taj al-Salatin
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A Tale of Two Parrots: Readers and Envoys between South East Asia and the Dutch Republic A Tale of Two Parrots: Readers and Envoys between South East Asia and the Dutch Republic
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(Un) Common Ground: Mutual Trust, Conflicting Personalities (Un) Common Ground: Mutual Trust, Conflicting Personalities
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Conclusion: A Strange Creature in the Mirror Conclusion: A Strange Creature in the Mirror
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Bibliography Bibliography
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1 Provincializing Grotius: International Law and Empire in a Seventeenth-Century Malay Mirror
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Published:January 2017
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Abstract
Recent reinterpretations of Hugo Grotius focusing on his treatise De jure praedae see him as intellectually compromised by his efforts to provide legal support for the colonial ambitions of the Dutch Republic. This chapter attempts to ‘provincialize’ Grotius by viewing him in a contemporary non-European mirror, through a contextualized and comparative reading of the Malay treatise Taj al-Salatin [‘The Crown of All Kings’], composed in 1603 by Bukhari al-Jauhari in north Sumatra. It is argued that crucial aspects of Grotius’ theory were also dominant features of political thought in the Malay region, with mutually cherished notions of trust and contractual obligations. Conversely, the Southeast Asian perspective shows that Grotius’ proposition of the Dutch East India Company as a ‘corporate sovereign’ with international legal personality, and his distinction between the legal, religious, and political realms, must have been alien to his imagined Islamic readers in Southeast Asia.
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