Dragon

Penang Chronicles Volume I

About Dragon

Nigel Barley, In the Footsteps of Stamford Raffles

“Deeply researched and beautifully written, Dragon convincingly evokes the East of the period”

Reading from Dragon

'The Nyonya Lady' pp.292-3
read by Juria Hartmans

…Rose Gan’s well-crafted narrative has clearly been written following extensive historical research. It is a rare example of the important country trade that existed alongside the East India Company –and increasingly independent of it. After finally burning the last of his Company bridges, the opportunity Francis Light is about to grasp is the unspoilt island of Pulau Pinang…”

Sue Paul, author of Jeopardy of Every Wind, the Biography of Thomas Bowery

Grave of James Scott, Old Protestant Cemetery, George Town

A few players:

James Scott (1746-1808) ‘ The Perfect Malay’

Born the Scottish Borders, a relative of Sir Walter Scott, joined the Navy aged 7 and served with Francis Light on HMS Arrogant during the Seven Years’ War; they became lifelong friends. In 1763 he joined the East India Company but did not enjoy the experience. Within a few years he had his own trading ship and operated as an independent trader out of Phuket.

Scott assimilated to the local culture to such an extent that Company officers mocked him as ‘the perfect Malay’. For many years Scott and Light ran a trading company out of Phuket; it was Scott’s notion that Penang would make an ideal British port, although Light originally favoured Phuket.

Scott played a significant role in the settlement of Penang, although he remained behind the scenes. When Light became the Superintendent, Scott became its leading merchant, acquiring a huge fortune, based on commerce, landowning and plantations. He helped many settlers by giving start-up loans but benefitted greatly, making as much money from lending and selling land as trade!

A vociferous critic of the Company, he often crossed swords with later governors who attempted to curb the power of merchants like Scott. He had ambitious plans to develop the south of the island on a site he named ‘Jamestown’. This project, into which he sank much of his money, failed. By the time of his death in 1808, his fortune had dwindled. No surviving image of Scott remains.

HMS Arrogant

HMS Arrogant

Heroine Sisters’ Monument Thalang, Phuket

Lady Chan c.1730-93

‘The Heroine Sister’

Lady Chan of the noble Ban Takkien clan was the daughter of Chom Rang, governor of Phuket (the island was then known as Jangsylan/ Ujang Salang/Thalang) and his Malay wife, Mahsia. Her second husband, Phaya Pimon also became governor of the island. During her lifetime, Chan wielded an extraordinary influence both in the mercantile and political worlds of the Straits, ruling as the de facto governor, the power behind the ‘throne’. She was a close friend of Francis Light for many years.

With her younger sister, Lady Mook, Chan defended Phuket against a Burmese invasion in 1786, taking a stand at the fort in Thalang manned only by women, children and old men. For this act of courageous defiance, King Rama I bestowed the honourable titles of ThaoThepkrassatri (Chan) and Thai Srisoonthorn (Mook), now the names of the main streets in Thalang in their memory. Mook’s daughter also became a concubine of the king and mother to one of his sons. Today the two women are honoured as ‘The Heroine Sisters’ with a monument and a festival held in their honour in March each year where famous actors react the story of her life.

Soliman c. 1757-1825 ‘The Foundling’

Ali Wallace

In Penang Chronicles, Soliman îs a Malay orphan boy adopted by Francis Light who goes on to become his mentor as he adjusts to life in the Straits. He is a largely invented character although based on a real person. In 1821 the scholar John Crawfurd, friend of Raffles and second governor of Singapore, met an old Malay sailor called Juragan Soliman (juragan= skipper) who was an experienced mariner with a wide knowledge of Siam and the Straits.

Although we have no knowledge of Light having such a companion, many famous Asia hands are known to have befriended locals who helped them negotiate the Malay world: Magellan and Enrique of Malacca; Raffles and Munshi Abdullah; Russell Wallace and Ali.

Soliman gives us a unique view on how the people of the Malay Straits perceive the tumultuous changes taking place in their world. He also gives us an insight into the struggle for identity of those whose life bridges two cultures.

Enrique of Malacca

Munshi Abdullah Kadir

Sultan Muhammad Jiwa c.1699-1778

Gold coin from the reign of Sultan Muhammad Jiwa

Islamic Seal bearing the stamp of ‘Kapitan Dewa Raja’ issued by the Sultan of Kedah, the Abode of Peace

Sultan Muhammad Jiwa Zainal Adilin II was the sultan of Kedah (Queddah in the novel) from 1723-1778 . Beset with the threat of coups both from within his family and court, he also faced danger from Kedah’s overlord Siam in the north and the encroachment of the Bugis from the south.

Sultan Muhammed was a shrewd ruler, a past master at the art of outmanoeuvring his many enemies. Impressed by Captain Light, he invited him to negotiate the establishment of a British port in Kedah in the hopes of securing British support to keep his enemies at bay. Although this proposal came to nothing it did not harm Light’s reputation with the sultan, who made him his senior merchant.

During his reign, Sultan Muhammed remained close to Light– whom he referred to as ‘my son’–even awarding him the honorific title of Dewa Raja Kapitan. Light and the sultan exchanged many letters in Jawi (Malay written in an Arabic- based script). Together they engaged in mutually beneficial commerce in weapons, opium, tin and rice.

Dragon promotional video

Media

Dragon launch Ubud Writers & Readers Festival 2021.

Covid made it virtual but we made the most of it with over 1000 views!

Newspaper Reviews:

The Star: November 26 2021

East Anglian Daily Times:

December 21 2021

Francis Light: The Suffolk Captain who left his mark on Asia

https://www.eadt.co.uk/lifestyle/21267990.francis-light-suffolk-captain-left-mark-asia/