Early history in the
Kinabatangan District of northern Borneo, photographed by
Martin Johnson China and other early kingdoms in the
Malay Archipelago, such as the northern area of the
Malay Peninsula and Po-Ni in western
Borneo, have long been connected. The first recorded movement of people from
China into present-day Malaysia was the 1292 arrival of
Mongol expeditionary forces under
Kublai Khan in Borneo in 1292 in preparation for their
invasion of Java the following year. Many of Khan's Chinese followers settled on the island with Chinese traders after the campaign, establishing an enclave along the
Kinabatangan River. Their arrival was welcomed by the
indigenous people, who benefited from the jars, beads, silk, and pottery brought to the island by the Chinese. under the
Yongle Emperor in 1415 Chinese explorer and sailor
Zheng He commanded
several expeditions to south-east Asia between 1405 and 1430; during his third voyage, Zheng also visited
Malacca. His companion and translator,
Ma Huan, described Malacca in his
Yingya Shenglan. Formerly part of Thailand, Malacca was founded after convoys from the Ming Dynasty developed a city and the area's chief was crowned king. During his fourth imperial-fleet visit, Ma wrote that the local king had just
converted to Islam and dressed like an
Arab. The last edition of
Mingshi, one of the official Chinese
Twenty-Four Histories, mentioned a pre-established Chinese settlement in the area. Mentions in other records exist, especially after trade contacts were established with the
Nanyang region. According to
Hai Yü (
Words about the Sea), written by Huang Zhong and published in 1537, the lifestyle of the Chinese community in Malacca differed from that of the local
Malays. This close relationship was maintained during the Islamisation of the Malacca and
Brunei kingdoms, whose
thalassocracy once covered much of present-day Malaysia. Both the Muslim sultanates pledged protection to the Chinese dynasties from further conquest by the neighbouring Javanese
Majapahit or the Siamese
Ayutthaya. This relationship resulted in
interethnic marriage between the sultanate's royal family and the Chinese envoy and representatives. Zheng He's arrival encouraged the
spread of Islam in the Malay Archipelago and aided the growth of the
Chinese Muslim population from the Eastern Chinese coastal towns of
Fujian and
Canton, with many of their traders arriving in the coastal towns of present-day Malaysia and
Indonesia by the early 15th century. In addition to the early settlements in Kinabatangan and Malacca, two more old Chinese settlements are located in
Terengganu and the
Penang Island as part of trade networks with their respective areas.
Colonial era (1500–1900) (Chinese Hill) in
Malacca, one of Malaysia's oldest Chinese cemeteries Although many Chinese traders avoided
Portuguese Malacca after its
1511 conquest, the flow of emigrants from China continued. The
Zhengde Emperor retaliated against the Portuguese for their activities in Malacca during the
Ming dynasty after the arrival of their fleet in Canton. The Chinese emperor was reluctant to help the deposed Malaccan ruler reclaim his position, however, since the dynasty foreign policy was changing to maintain friendly relations with the Portuguese. His successor, the
Jiajing Emperor, changed the attitude of the Ming court by executing two government officials and reaffirming the importance of Malaccan issues in major policy decisions. Some Chinese, including those from Fujian (defying Ming-Dynasty regulation for the sake of trade), informed the Portuguese of the trade route between
Guangdong and Siam. Since the local Malaccan Chinese were not treated favourably by the Portuguese, they and most overseas Chinese refused to cooperate with them. Through the Portuguese administration in Malacca, Chinese Muslims sided with other Islamic traders against the latter by providing ships and
human capital. Negotiations were later held in Guangdong between Chinese officials and Portuguese envoys about Malaccan issues, with Malacca remaining under Portuguese control. 's "
Captain China" with his followers in
Selangor, June 1874 After the 1641
Dutch takeover of Malacca, many local Malaccan Chinese were hired to construct Dutch buildings. The Dutch found the Chinese industrious, and encouraged their participation in the colony's economic life; the Dutch also established a settlement in
Perak in 1650 through an earlier treaty with
Aceh and suggested that Alauddin, the 17th Sultan of Perak, allow the Chinese to develop
tin mines. This facilitated Alauddin's plan to request more Chinese workers from Malacca, and the sultan promised to punish any official guilty of mistreating the Chinese. With the sultan consent, the Chinese played a leading role in the tin-mining industry. The
Fourth Anglo-Dutch War in 1780 adversely affected the tin trade, however, and many Chinese miners left. Early Chinese settlements in Malacca and several areas along the archipelago's coasts notwithstanding, most mass Chinese migration to Malaysia occurred after the founding of British settlements in
Malaya and
Borneo during the early 19th century. Ng Boo Bee with British officials in
Perak in 1904 A 1786 British settlement in Penang and another in
Singapore in 1819 triggered a mass emigration from China to the Malay Peninsula. After the establishment of British rule in
Labuan in 1846, more ethnic Chinese (primarily
Hakka, and many from Singapore) arrived in
British Borneo. The migration continued through the first few years of the
North Borneo Chartered Company. Chinese migration to Labuan and North Borneo was largely confined to the
agricultural sector; migration to the
Raj of Sarawak was largely restricted to the mining and agricultural sectors. Rajah
Charles Brooke of Sarawak promoted the migration of Chinese and
Dayak people to interior
Sarawak to develop the region. This resulted in the establishment of an administrative center and
bazaar by the 19th century, primarily in Sarawak's
First, Second, and Third Divisions. Rajah Charles invited Chinese
black-pepper growers from Singapore to settle in
Kuching in 1876, and they were later joined by local Chinese miners and others from neighbouring
Dutch Borneo. With the introduction of pepper to the kingdom, pepper cultivation in Sarawak's First Division Kuching-Serian region was dominated by the Hakka;
Fuzhou and
Cantonese people dominated cultivation in the Third Division Sarikei-Binatang region, making Sarawak the world's second-largest pepper producer. After the British gained control of the four states of Perak,
Selangor,
Negeri Sembilan and
Pahang, nearly two million Chinese immigrated to Perak and Selangor. pulled by a Chinese
coolie in
Kuching around 1919 After the discovery of
tin deposits in
British Malaya, many Chinese immigrants worked in the tin-mining industry. As tin mines opened in Perak, many Chinese in neighbouring Penang became wealthy. Many Chinese tin-mining communities were established in the Malay Peninsula by the 1870s, particularly in
Ipoh (
Kinta Valley),
Taiping,
Seremban and
Kuala Lumpur (
Klang Valley). Each of the mining communities was governed by a
Kapitan Cina, with duties and privileges similar to those in
Johor's
Kangchu system. Chinese migration sprang from poverty in rural China and employment opportunities in the British colonies or
protectorates, and an estimated five million Chinese had immigrated by the 19th century. Despite economic prosperity after immigration, the new Chinese communities split into a number of
secret societies. This exacerbated political unrest among the Malay aristocracy, which enlisted help from the secret societies. Contemporary local Malay politics was characterised as anarchy and civil war between people from similar backgrounds, prompting alliances between senior Malay political leaders and officials from China and Europe who were protecting their investments.
Divided nationalism and turbulence (1900–1945) fundraising meeting in
Ipoh for the
Second Guangzhou Uprising, Civil wars and other conflicts among the indigenous ethnic groups ended when the British gained control of Malaya and the northern island of
Borneo by the 1900s. However, none of the Malay kingdoms fell under colonial rule. Their related entities were politically and economically stable. Economic prosperity was fueled by British
capital and Chinese and Indian work forces who expanded and supplied tin and
rubber production. Before the 1911
Xinhai Revolution which overthrew the
Qing dynasty in China,
Tongmenghui leader
Sun Yat-sen raised funds and organisational support from overseas Chinese communities (primarily in
French Indochina, the
Dutch East Indies,
the Philippines,
Siam, British Singapore, Malaya and Borneo) and began
Nanyang organising activities in
Saigon,
Hanoi,
Pontianak,
Manila,
Bangkok, Singapore and
George Town. Competition arose among three groups, with each group targeting overseas Chinese (particularly in Malaya and Singapore) for support. One group was a pro-Qing elite who targeted wealthy Chinese; the other two were reformists and revolutionaries who advocated
constitutional reforms, the introduction of a
parliamentary system, and the overthrow of Qing and Manchu influence on a modern Chinese nation. during the
Malayan Campaign, After the revolution which established the
Republic of China, branches of the
Kuomintang emerged in British Malaya. Kuomintang activities in British Borneo were coordinated by the Democratic Party of North Borneo, consisting of Chinese-educated
towkays. Patriotism among Chinese immigrant communities focused on China. British colonial authorities initially did not object to Kuomintang membership. A communist movement developed among overseas Chinese by 1925 with the establishment of the
South Seas Communist Party in Singapore, followed by the
Indochinese Communist Party,
Communist Party of Malaya,
Communist Party of Burma and
Communist Party of Siam; the movement also maintained relations with the earlier, Southeast Asian
Communist Party of Indonesia. The Communist Party of Malaya followed the general communist policy of opposing
Western democracies before
World War II, increasing propaganda against the Malayan government and the colonial government of Singapore in 1940. (MPAJA) guerrillas during their disbandment ceremony in
Kuala Lumpur after the end of World War II At the beginning of the Sino-Japanese conflict and the Japanese occupation of
Malaya and
British Borneo, Kuomintang activities were ended. When the
Chinese Communist Party (under
Mao Zedong) reached an agreement with the Kuomintang government (under
Chiang Kai-shek) to put aside their differences and rally against Japanese aggression in July 1940, pro-independence sentiment led to bans on the Kuomintang and other Chinese organizations in Malaya. Since the conflict with
Japan also involved the British, Chiang Kai-shek urged Kuomintang members to fight alongside them; in return, British colonial authorities lifted their ban of Chinese associations (including the Kuomintang and the Chinese communist movement). This, and British recognition of the Communist Party of Malaya, resulted in the formation of the
guerrilla Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA) in 1941. The MPAJA (primarily consisting of ethnic Chinese in Malaya) waged a guerrilla war against the
Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) with 10,000 men in eight battalions, and contacted the British
Force 136. Local Kuomintang revolts, such as the
Jesselton uprising in British Borneo, were suppressed by the
Kenpeitai. Much Chinese underground anti-Japanese activity in North Borneo was part of the Nanyang Chinese National Salvation Movement, led by
Tan Kah Kee; in Sarawak, activities were coordinated by the Sarawak Anti-Fascist League. The MPAJA was disbanded after the 1945
Allied victory in the Pacific, and many of its leaders were commended by the British. It began to massacre perceived collaborators (primarily Malay) after it was disbanded, however, sparking a Malay backlash. The MPAJA also targeted British posts, with several
grenade attacks on British troops. In North Borneo, the Chinese co-operated with the British and pledged loyalty to King
George VI when the
Crown Colony of North Borneo was formed after the war.
Postwar unrest and social integration (1946–1962) With the MPAJA renamed as the
Malayan National Liberation Army (MNLA), communist insurgents used guerrilla tactics in the jungles, sabotaged transportation networks and attacked British plantations (assassinating several European plantation owners). British intelligence estimated MNLA support at about 500,000, out of a total Chinese population of 3.12 million; battling the insurgents was difficult, since most hid in inaccessible jungles. With the 18 June 1948 declaration of the
Malayan Emergency, the early government response was chaotic; its primary aim was to guard important economic targets. Most Malayan Chinese opposed the MNLA. The 1950
Briggs Plan, devised by British general
Harold Briggs, intended to isolate the Chinese population from the insurgents. Independence was promised, and supported by the Malays; the Chinese population feared being treated as second-class citizens in an independent Malaya. In addition to new villages, the plan included labour reorganisation, the deployment of troops throughout Malaya, and cooperation between the police, the army, and intelligence. Under the resettlement scheme, more than 700,000 rural Chinese communities were relocated in 582 new government settlements. After British high commissioner
Henry Gurney died in a 1951 ambush,
Gerald Templer was appointed as the new high commissioner for Malaya by
Winston Churchill the following year; Templer preferred
winning hearts and minds to military measures against the insurgents. As part of his campaign, Templer incentivised rebel surrender and used strict
curfews and tight control of food supplies in involved areas to flush them out. Crops grown by insurgents were sprayed with
herbicides and
defoliants, and restrictions were lifted in areas free of insurgents by elevating them to "white status". In the
Batang Kali massacre, 24 unarmed Malaysian civilians suspected of providing aid to the MNLA were shot by a
Scots Guard division in late 1948. , Selangor during the 1950s According to
Chin Peng, the success of Templer's campaign was primarily due to the Briggs Plan's resettlement programme; Gurney also introduced a quasi-ministerial system, with a bill to increase the number of non-Malays eligible for citizenship after independence. After the 1949
Chinese Communist Revolution, foreign missionaries in China were forced to leave; Templer invited them to Malaya to provide
spiritual healing, medical education and welfare measures to residents of the new government villages. By September 1952, every person born in Malaya (including 1.2 million Chinese) was granted full citizenship. during the 1950s When the
Federation of Malaya gained independence from the British in 1957, there was still an insurgency. Chinese communists who surrendered were given a choice of repatriation to China or declaring loyalty to the elected government of Malaya and renouncing communist ideology. The anti-communist campaign continued until 1960, when the Malayan government declared the end of its
state of emergency after Chin Peng demobilized his forces and left his hide-out in southern
Thailand for
Beijing via
North Vietnam. At a meeting of Chin and
Deng Xiaoping in Beijing, China urged the Communist Party of Malaya to continue their armed struggle. The establishment of a communist government in
mainland China affected Chinese youth in Sarawak, who organized the pro-Beijing Sarawak Overseas Chinese Democratic Youth League (later the Sarawak Advanced Youth Association, which sparked the 1960
communist insurgency in Sarawak. Malaysia's economy continued to prosper, dependent on tin and rubber industries dominated by a Chinese and Indian workforce.
Struggle for equality in "Malaysian Malaysia" (1963–1965) Early in 1961, when Prime Minister
Tunku Abdul Rahman outlined a "Grand Malaysian Alliance" of the British protectorate of
Brunei and the crown colonies of North Borneo,
Sarawak and
Singapore, Singapore Prime Minister
Lee Kuan Yew supported the proposal. Lee's
People's Action Party (PAP) rallied for the equality of all Malaysians, regardless of "class, skin colour or creed", known as "
Malaysian Malaysia", in a multi-ethnic society without
Malayisation. Although Lee was seen by Malay extremists in the
United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) and the
Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), as opposed to
Ketuanan Melayu after the 1963 formation of Malaysia, he had adopted
Malay as Singapore's national language and appointed Malay
Yusof Ishak as
Yang di-Pertuan Negara. The
Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA), led by
Tan Cheng Lock and part of the
Malaysian Alliance Party, refused to join the struggle for equality. The MCA feared that equality would disrupt an agreement between the
United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) and the
Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC) in which Malays were politically dominant and the Chinese controlled the country's economy;
Malaysian Indians played a smaller economic role, with the Malays promising to share future political power with the other two groups. After two years as part of the federation and the enactment of
Article 153 of the Constitution of Malaysia, Lee was joined by the Malay Peninsula's
United Democratic Party and
People's Progressive Party and Sarawak's
United Peoples' Party and Machinda Party in the
Malaysian Solidarity Convention to campaign for equality. In a June 1965 speech at the MSC meeting in Singapore, Lee said: Lee's call for a re-alignment of forces between those who wanted a "true Malaysian nation" and those who preferred a country led by a component of the Alliance Party, and his criticism of Malays advocating Malay dominance, led to bitter
PAP–UMNO relations and the
1964 race riots in Singapore; Singapore was later
expelled from the federation in August 1965, and became its own sovereign nation.
Communist insurgencies and racial clashes (1965–1990) The struggle for equality continued with the
Democratic Action Party (DAP), which succeeded the PAP in 1965. Many Malaysian Chinese began to view the Malaysian Chinese Association as more concerned with business and economic interests than social factors, although Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman considered the MCA the sole legitimate representative of the federation's Chinese community. In 1968, communists supported by China began
a new insurgency from their stronghold in southern Thailand.
The following year, the MCA was challenged by the DAP and the
Malaysian People's Movement Party (GERAKAN). Of its 33 parliamentary seats contested in the election, the MCA retained 13 and lost control of the
Penang state government to GERAKAN; Chinese-Malay tensions culminated in the
13 May incident. Other clashes were also ethnic in nature. In the aftermath of the riots, Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman blamed the communists rather than racial issues and said that the
Vietnam War in their neighbour was "not simply a civil war but
communist-ideology expansion". The Malaysian government introduced several policy initiatives in security and development, a neighbourhood-watch program and the
People's Volunteer Corps. The Communist Party of Malaya split into two factions during the early 1970s: a
revolutionary wing in 1970 and a
Marxist–Leninist wing in 1974.
Kuala Lumpur and Beijing established
diplomatic relations in 1974; China ended its aid to the factions, prompting their 1983 merger into the
Malaysian Communist Party before their surrender to Thai authorities four years later and the
1989 peace agreement ending the insurgency. A Chinese communist insurgency in Sarawak, supported by neighbouring Indonesia, ended with peace negotiations in 1990.
1990 to present decorations in
George Town, Penang , a
Chinatown in Malaysia's capital of
Kuala Lumpur, at night Issues between the Malaysian Chinese and the Malays remain unresolved. The failure of
Malaysia's social contract has led to a strong
Chinese identity, in contrast to the Chinese communities in neighbouring
Indonesia,
the Philippines,
Singapore,
Thailand and
Vietnam. After the 1969 racial clashes, the
Malaysian New Economic Policy favouring the Malays from 1971 to 1990 increased
Bumiputera economic control by 60 percent. Malaysian Chinese remain the business sector's dominant players;
equity ownership doubled from 22.8 percent in 1969 to 45.5 percent in 1990, and nearly all of
Malaysia's richest people are Chinese. Since Malaysian Chinese manage the country's economy, most (75.8 percent in 1991) live in urban areas. They generally do not speak Malay among themselves; this contrasts with earlier Chinese communities such as the Straits-born Chinese of Baba-Nyonya, Kelantanese and Terengganuan
Peranakans,
Penangite Hokkien and Sabah
Sino-natives, who mingled with local Malay and other indigenous peoples. Chinese in
East Malaysia in Sabah and Sarawak, particularly in small inland towns, interact more closely with the indigenous communities. Integration issues in present-day Malaysia are largely inherited from Malayan racial politics, in which ethnic communities consolidated into a single political community. Malaysia's contemporary
educational and social policies has created a Chinese
brain drain to
developed countries, especially
Singapore. The country has experienced a slight wave of
Mandarin-speaking immigrants from
northeastern China and a smaller number of
Vietnamese immigrants, however, with local men marrying women from China and
Vietnam. == Origins and social demographics ==