Kl A Brief History
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Transcript of Kl A Brief History
For everything, there is a beginning … Kuala Lumpur’s history began just over 150 years
ago when tin miners came to explore the banks of muddy confluence between the Gombak and Klang rivers
From these humble beginnings – predestined to be marred by bloody wars and feuds, natural disasters and makeovers, Kuala Lumpur has endured to become one of Asia’s leading cities and the city we see today
The history of Kuala Lumpur began when Raja Abdullah, a member of the Selangor Royal Family started opening up parts of the Klang Valley to tin prospectors
With the rise of the tin extraction industry, prospectors started pouring in to a new settlement on the banks of a “muddy confluence” between the Gombak and Klang rivers – creating the early foundation of the city (the city’s name comes from word Kuala meaning – ‘junction’ or ‘estuary’ and Lumpur meaning – ‘muddy’)
Cleaning the land caused mosquitoes to breed – and only small number of the early tin miners survived to see the thriving tin mining town becomes established
With more laborers to replace them, traders and merchants began establishing their businesses in the settlement, and the town was born
As the new town kept growing, the fragile peace between many of the interested parties did not last
Bitter rivalry between the triads and civil war between the Selangor princes erupted over the tin, leading to bloody feuds and wars
When Kapitan Yap Ah Loy, the third leader of the Chinese community was appointed by British, peace was again restored and under his competent leadership the sleepy mining town boomed into a commercial trading hub of every high importance
Kuala Lumpur was made the capital of Selangor due in large part to Kapitan Yap Ah Loy’s success and efficiency in maintaining the peace and a system of law and order
During another furious feud – Kuala Lumpur was burnt down and Kapitan Yap decided this time to rebuild the town using bricks and tiles, replacing the older dangerous atap or wooden houses
Also at this time Sir Frank Swettenham was appointed the Resident – General of Selangor and after Kapitan Yap’s death in 1885, he oversaw the growth of Kuala Lumpur as the town continued to prosper
With the completion of the first railway connecting the town to Port Klang in 1886, Kuala Lumpur’s growth was further boosted
In 1896 the Federated Malay Sates (FMS) which at the time only consisted of four states was incorporated and with Swettenham as the Resident-General, Kuala Lumpur was chosen to be the capital
The town continued to evolve becoming the classic epitome of British colonialism, with sharply uniformed white officers administrating the FMS
Unsurprisingly with the oppression of British imperialism, local nationalists were burning with their own dreams of independence
At the stroke of midnight on 31August 1957, amidst tens of thousands of people, the British Union Jack – which had stood waving in front of the Selangor Club, was finally lowered on Malaysian soil for the last time and Malaysia’s independence was ushered in
Malaysia’s independence was declared by the first Prime Minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj, in Stadium Merdeka, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site
With the nation’s newfound independence, Kuala Lumpur began moving towards greatest transformation
But, once again –as in the troubled past things came to halt when violent and bloody civil unrest exploded across the city as a result of racial tensions
The unrest sparked a state of emergency which continued for the next two years
These tensions finally subsided again after negotiations were made to bring the nation’s people together as one
Kuala Lumpur was conferred city status on February 1st 1972
And in 1974 Kuala Lumpur was declared a Federal Territory
During the last few decades, Kuala Lumpur has been witness to incredible social and economic growth – with significant increases to the population and major development throughout the city
Today, Kuala Lumpur‘s progress is perhaps best measured by the PETRONAS Twin Towers – one of the world’s tallest buildings standing admirably among the Kuala Lumpur skyline
KL-The Guide. (2009). Bluedale Publishing (M) Sdn. Bhd.
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