James Brooke (1803–1868) was born in India and served as a cavalry lieutenant in the
Bengal Army during the
First Anglo-Burmese War, before retiring to England to recover from a serious wound. In 1833, he used an inheritance to purchase the schooner
Royalist and began trading in the Far East. In August 1839, Brooke arrived in
Kuching, Sarawak and assisted the
Sultan of Brunei in crushing a Malay rebellion. In 1841, the Sultan gave Brooke the governorship of Sarawak and the following year ceded complete sovereignty of Sarawak to Brooke, the first
White Rajah. Brooke reinstalled the Malay chiefs into their former positions to help him administer their people in the state, and was highly successful in suppressing the widespread piracy of the region. While Brooke was fighting pirates in Sumatra, his enemies were emboldened. Sharif Sahib gathered Arab adventurers along the Batang Lupar river and invited the Skrang Dayaks to meet him at the entrance of the Sadong River, gathering two hundred Dayak
bangkongs and Malay war boats. They raided along the coast, though Brooke returned to surprise one expedition and captured several war boats. Later, the H.M.S.
Dido arrived, accompanied by the company's steamer
Phlegethon. It was decided to begin operations by attacking the Arab sharifs in their strongholds on the Batang Lupar river and then the Dayaks on the Skrang River.
War between White Rajah and Ibans of Saribas According to the account of Captain Henry Keppel, on 4 June 1843, Brooke and Keppel organised a war expedition to attack the Iban Dayak of Saribas to take the land along the coast. OKP Dana Bayang's longhouse at Nanga Padeh was the strongest and most important, defended by two forts and a barrier of fallen trees that blocked the Batang Saribas River from being entered easily by their enemies. Brooke's forces took the longhouse and burnt on 11 June 1843. Dana Bayang, who was already old, had delegated the fighting to his three sons: Nanang, Luyoh, and Aji. Brooke's forces proceeded up the Saribas to Karangan Pinggai and on 14 June attacked the fort of Linggir Mali Lebu, a chief mentored by Dana Bayang. They then attacked the Sungai Rimbas river forts at Sungai Tawai belonging to chiefs Rekaya Antau "Linggang Neneri" and Rekaya Gun "Mangku Bumi". The defeated chiefs of Saribas and Linggi from Skrang went onboard Brooke's ship to sign the peace treaty of Saribas. The treaty forced them to stop headhunting ( in the
Iban language), but they refused to sign it. On 14 June 1843, Brooke's forces went up to Sungai Paku, the branch of the Saribas River and attacked Linggir Mali Lebu fort at Karangan Pinggai. On 17 June, Brooke's forces went up the Sungai Rimbas which is another branch of the Saribas River. They attacked the fort belonging to the Dayak Iban leader by the name Rekaya Antau "Linggang Neneri" and Rekaya Gun "Mangku Bumi" at Sungai Tawai. Later, James Brooke summoned the Iban Dayak chiefs Dana Bayang, Linggir Mali Lebu and one Linggi representing Libau Rentap of the Skrang to his ship to sign the peace treaty of Saribas. It would have forced them to stop headhunting. Although, they had surrendered during the fighting, they refused to sign it. == Battle of Batang Lupar and Undop ==