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Diponegoro was born on 11 November 1785 in Yogyakarta, and was the eldest son of Sultan Hamengkubuwono III of Yogyakarta. During his youth at the Yogyakarta court, major occurrences such as the dissolution of the VOC, the British invasion of Java, and the subsequent return to Dutch rule took place.
Diponegoro, Javanese leader in the 19th-century conflict known to the West as the Java War and to Indonesians as Diponegoro’s War (1825–30). During those five years Diponegoro’s military accomplishments severely crippled the Dutch and made him a national hero.
The struggle waged by Prince Diponegoro (1785–1855) of Yogyakarta, a city in central Java (now part of Indonesia), from 1825 to 1830 was one of the most important turning points in the political history of nineteenth-century Java, and of Javanese history as a whole.
The autobiographical chronicle of the Javanese nobleman, Indonesian national hero and Pan-Islamist, Prince Diponegoro (1785-1855) (literally 'The Light of the Country') of Yogyakarta - the Babad Diponegoro ('The Chronicle of Diponegoro') - written in exile in North Sulawesi (Celebes) in 1831-1832.
Prince Diponegoro, born Bendara Raden Mas Mustahar on 11 November 1785 in Yogyakarta, was the eldest son of Sultan Hamengkubuwono III. His early life was marked by significant events, including the dissolution of the VOC, the British invasion of Java, and the return to Dutch rule.
Prince Diponegoro, also known as Dipanegara and Dipa Negara, was a Javanese prince who opposed the Dutch colonial rule. The eldest son of the Yogyakarta Sultan ...
Diponegoro also composed manuscripts on Javanese history and wrote his autobiography, Babad Diponegoro, during his exile. His physical health deteriorated due to old age, and he died on 8 January 1855, at 69 years old.