The impact of World War I on British Malaya: the battle of Penang, 1914
The geographical location of World War I has also been strictly confined to Europe. Many have overlooked the facts that the war has spread geographically to other regions too, and battles have been fought outside of Europe. This paper is written to discuss, the impact of World War I on British Ma...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
2020
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Online Access: | http://journalarticle.ukm.my/16226/1/44874-144385-1-SM.pdf http://journalarticle.ukm.my/16226/ https://ejournal.ukm.my/ijwas/issue/view/1265 |
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Institution: | Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia |
Language: | English |
Summary: | The geographical location of World War I has also been strictly confined to Europe. Many have
overlooked the facts that the war has spread geographically to other regions too, and battles have
been fought outside of Europe. This paper is written to discuss, the impact of World War I on British
Malaya: the Battle of Penang. The German Ship SMS Emden attacked and ambushed the port of
Penang and sunk two Allies ships, a Russian protected cruiser the Zhemchug and French
destroyer Mousquet. This paper aims to confer on the details of the battle to illustrate that the war
itself is not confined to the border of Europe merely. It is important and of great values that shed
new lights on the geographical location of the war itself. The Battle of Penang was hardly
mentioned in any European nor have Malaysian textbooks, the battles and the heroes remained
unsung. This paper aims at shedding new light on the geographical location of the battle, the battle
itself and the effects of the battle directly and in directly to British Malaya and to the Great War
generally. Among the immediate impacts of the battle was the citizens residing in the colonies
started to questions British incompetence, this incompetency includes negligence of safety, and no
proper system of safety maintenance, the overconfident harbor masters that ignored all his
commanding officers instructions. A ship like SMS Emden could easily reduce the island of Penang
into rubbles, and the attack occurred when civilian had feared that it was coming. Due to this
incompetence the people of Penang were heavily traumatized, they for once have witnessed a
battle on their own backyard. The British Colony Officers were heavily criticized surprisingly by one
of their fellow Englishmen Reverend Cross. These criticisms were proven to have weight when
SMS Emden continued its raids up to the Bay of Bengal in India. There was also prolonged impact
of the war, after SMS Emden was destroyed in the Cocos Island by HMAS Sydney an Australian
Cruiser. All German survivors were taken as prisoners of war. In early 1915 one of them Julius
Lauterbach was taken as prisoner of war in Singapore, which is also a part of the British Malayan
Colony, where he instigated Indian Sepoys Guard mutiny and successfully escaped during the
course of the anarchy. In this paper I would be employing qualitative methods by consulting several
firsthand sources in order to successfully elucidate and illuminates the details of this forgotten
battle and its repercussions. |
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