Construction Sultan Agung (1613–1645) built the previous court complex at
Karta and moved the capital there in the first decade of his reign. The decision to move to a new capital might have been made during his reign in 1634 when a fire in Karta killed "many people of the court". In 1644,
Sultan Agung started building an artificial lake in an area which became known as Plered. He died two years later and was succeeded by his son
Amangkurat I. In 1647, shortly after taking the throne, Amangkurat built his royal residence near the lake and moved the court there. In contrast to Karta, which was made of wood, the royal compound at Plered was built of brick. Amangkurat continued to expand this complex up to 1666.
Fall of Plered during the Trunajaya rebellion In 1677, during the
Trunajaya rebellion, Plered was taken by the rebel forces, consisting of
Madurese troops, as well as
Javanese forces from East Java and the central northern coast, led by
Raden Kajoran. The defenders, led by Amangkurat's four eldest sons, offered an ineffective defense and were defeated. Consequently, Amangkurat and the royal family fled the court, and soon after the rebels entered the complex and plundered it. The rebels also took the royal treasury of at least 300,000
Spanish reals. According to a man claiming to have witnessed the fall of Plered,
Sp. Rl. 300,000 was taken to Trunajaya's capital in
Kediri, while Amangkurat II (son and successor of Amangkurat I) later said that Sp. Rl. 150,000 was taken to Kediri while Sp. Rl. 200,000 remained in Plered with Trunajaya's local commander. During the retreat, Amangkurat I died near
Tegal and was succeeded by his son,
Amangkurat II. Another son,
Pangeran Puger occupied Plered after the rebels left and made a rival claim to the kingdom. Unable to take Plered from his brother, Amangkurat moved his capital to the newly built
Kartasura in 1680.
During Diponegoro War Although abandoned as a capital, Plered played another role during the
Java War or the Diponegoro War (1825–1830) between the Dutch and the Javanese forces under
Prince Diponegoro. Diponegoro occupied Plered in 1825 and kept his weapons and livestock there. He used it as a base to attack convoys supplying the nearby
Imogiri held by the Dutch. In April 1826, the Dutch under General Van Geen attacked Plered. Diponegoro did not engage in combat and withdrew to the west. Van Geen entered Plered and took the weapons and livestock kept there as booty. Lacking forces to keep the town, he subsequently withdrew to
Yogyakarta. Subsequently, Diponegoro reoccupied the town and fortified it. In June 1826, Dutch forces with a strong contingent of
Madurese auxiliaries besieged the town. On 9 June, the besiegers detonated a mine under the ramparts, causing a breach through which they attacked. After a day of "bloody fighting", the attackers completely occupied Plered. This battle was Diponegoro's first major defeat in the war. The Dutch left a garrison of 700 men, and there was no further attempt from Diponegoro to retake it.
Decline Following the Diponegoro War, the town's decline accelerated and when
G. P. Rouffaer drew a map in 1889, it was already in ruins. == Layout ==