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The Dutch East Indies, or Netherlands East Indies, (Dutch: Nederlands Indië) was the name of the colonies
under the administration of the Netherlands that later became Indonesia.
Starting in the early 1600s, the Dutch East India Company had grown to become the dominant power in the archipelago. After the
company was liquidated in 1799, and after a British interregnum during the Napoleonic Wars, the Dutch government took over administration until the
independence of Indonesia in 1949 following
the Indonesian National Revolution.
On January 11, 1942 Japan declared war on the Netherlands and invaded the Dutch East Indies. Sukarno proclaimed the East Indies independent in 1945, but the
Netherlands successfully tried to thwart it in two wars until UN and
other diplomatic pressure affected the outcome. These wars were euphemistically called "police actions" in an eventually
unsuccessful attempt to bypass UN restrictions.
The Dutch retained sovereignty over Dutch New Guinea, the west
side of the island of New Guinea until 1962, when US and UN diplomatic pressure again caused a
change.
The capital of the Dutch East Indies was Batavia, now known as Jakarta.
See also
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