Tidore, North Maluku Province, Maluku Islands, Indonesia

Geography | History | Administration

🇮🇩 Tidore (Kota Tidore Kepulauan, lit. "City of Tidore Islands") is a city, island, and archipelago in the Maluku Islands of eastern Indonesia, west of the larger island of Halmahera. Part of North Maluku Province, the city includes the island of Tidore (and smaller outlying islands) together with a large part of Halmahera Island to its east. In the pre-colonial era, the Sultanate of Tidore was a major regional political and economic power, and a fierce rival of nearby Ternate, just to the north.

Geography Tidore Island consists of a large stratovolcano which rises from the seafloor to an elevation of 1,730 m (5,676 ft) above sea level at the conical Mount Kie Matubu on the south end of the island. The northern side of the island contains a caldera, Sabale, with two smaller volcanic cones within it.

Soasio is Tidore's capital. It has its own port, Goto, and it lies on the eastern edge of the island. It has a mini bus terminal and a market. The sultan's palace was rebuilt with completion in 2010.

History Tidore was the centre of a spice-funded sultanate that arose in the 15th century. It spent much of its history in the shadow of Ternate, another sultanate with which it had a dualistic relationship.

Islam spread to Tidore around the late 15th century but Islamic influence in the area can be traced further back to the late 14th century.

The sultans of Tidore ruled most of southern Halmahera, and, at times, controlled Buru, East Ceram and many of the islands off the coast of New Guinea. Tidore established an alliance with the Spanish in the sixteenth century, and Spain had several forts on the island. There was mutual distrust between the Tidorese and the Spaniards but for the Tidorese the Spanish presence was helpful in resisting the incursions of the Ternateans and their ally, the Dutch, who had a fort on Ternate. For the Spanish, backing the Tidore state helped check the expansion of Dutch power that threatened their nearby Asia-Pacific interests, provided a useful base right next to the centre of Dutch power in the region and was a source of spices for trade.

Before the Spanish withdrawal from Tidore and Ternate in 1663, the Tidore sultanate, although nominally part of the Spanish East Indies, established itself as one of the strongest and most independent states in the region. After the Spanish withdrawal it continued to resist direct control by the Dutch East India Company (the VOC). Particularly under Sultan Saifuddin (r. 1657–1687), the Tidore court was skilled at using Dutch payment for spices for gifts to strengthen traditional ties with Tidore's traditional peripheral territories. As a result, he was widely respected by many local populations, and had little need to call on foreign military help for governing the kingdom, unlike Ternate which frequently relied upon Dutch military assistance.

Tidore long remained an independent state, albeit with growing Dutch interference, until the late eighteenth century. Like Ternate, Tidore allowed the Dutch spice eradication program (extirpatie) to proceed in its territories. This program, intended to strengthen the Dutch spice monopoly by limiting production to a few places, impoverished Tidore and weakened its control over its periphery.

In 1780 Tidore was forced to sign a treaty that reduced it to a Dutch vassal. The discontented Prince Nuku left Tidore and declared himself Sultan of the Papuan Islands. This was the beginning of a guerilla war which lasted for many years. The Papuans, south-east Halmaherans and east Ceramese sided with the rebellious Prince Nuku. The British sponsored Nuku as part of their campaign against the Dutch in the Moluccas. Captain Thomas Forrest was intimately connected with Nuku and represented the British as ambassador. Nuku could finally take Tidore in 1797 and helped the British to conquer Ternate in 1801. However, his successor Zainal Abidin was expelled by Dutch forces in 1806 and Tidore was firmly brought under colonial rule.

The sultanate was abolished in the Sukarno era and re-established in 1999 with the 36th sultan. Tidore was largely spared from the sectarian conflict of 1999 across the Maluku Islands.

Administration The island, together with two smaller islands (Maitara and Mare) and an adjacent section (called "Oba") of Halmahera Island, constitutes a municipality (kotamadya) within the province of North Maluku. The municipality covers an area of 1,703.32 square km (657.66 sq mi) and had a 2010 Census population of 90,530; the 2020 Census produced a total of 114,480 and the official estimate as at mid 2022 was 118,247.

It is divided into eight districts (kecamatan), of which four constitute the island of Tidore (including the two small islands) and the other four constitute the Oba area on the 'mainland' of Halmahera.

Asia/Jayapura/North_Maluku 
<b>Asia/Jayapura/North_Maluku</b>
Image: A. Rabin

Tidore has a population of over 118,247 people. Tidore also forms one of the centres of the wider North Maluku Province which has a population of over 1,299,177 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Tidore see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

Antipodal to Tidore is: -52.6,-0.683

Locations Near: Tidore 127.4,0.683333

🇮🇩 Ternate 127.367,0.767 d: 10  

🇮🇩 Bitung 125.183,1.433 d: 260.2  

🇮🇩 Manado 124.863,1.476 d: 295.5  

🇮🇩 Piru 128.19,-3.059 d: 425.3  

🇮🇩 Sorong 131.293,-0.867 d: 465.9  

🇮🇩 Gorontalo 123.067,0.533 d: 482.1  

🇮🇩 Gorontalo City 123.062,0.537 d: 482.6  

🇮🇩 Ambon 128.167,-3.7 d: 494.8  

🇮🇩 Marisa 121.933,0.45 d: 608.4  

🇵🇭 General Santos 125.168,6.114 d: 652.7  

Antipodal to: Tidore -52.6,-0.683

🇧🇷 Santana -51.85,-0.033 d: 19904.7  

🇧🇷 Macapá -51.05,0 d: 19826.7  

🇧🇷 Breves -50.467,-1.667 d: 19753.9  

🇧🇷 Altamira -52.209,-3.195 d: 19732.5  

🇧🇷 Santarém -54.717,-2.417 d: 19710.9  

🇧🇷 Cametá -49.483,-2.233 d: 19628.1  

🇧🇷 Abaetetuba -48.874,-1.729 d: 19584.8  

🇧🇷 Barcarena Nova -48.617,-1.5 d: 19563  

🇧🇷 Barcarena -48.618,-1.52 d: 19562.7  

🇧🇷 Belém -48.489,-1.453 d: 19550.1  

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