Mads Johansen Lange | |
---|---|
Born | Rudkøbing, Denmark | 18 September 1807
Died | 13 May 1856 | (aged 48)
Resting place | Kuta, Bali, Indonesia (then Kotta) |
Other names | King of Bali |
Title | Knight of the Order of the Netherlands Lion |
Children | 3 |
Parents |
|
Relatives | Sultan Ibrahim, the Sultan of Johor (grandson) |
Awards | Danish gold medal of achievement |
Signature | |
Mads Johansen Lange, nicknamed the King of Bali (18 September 1807 in Rudkøbing, Denmark – 13 May 1856 in Kuta, Bali, Indonesia), was a Danish trader, entrepreneur, peace maker on Bali, knight of the Order of the Netherlands Lion, and recipient of the Danish gold medal of achievement. He was the son of Lorents Lange Pedersen[a] and Maren Lange, a merchant and a merchant's daughter, respectively.[1]
Lange travelled to the Dutch East Indies at an early age and settled on the island of Bali. Here he built a thriving commercial enterprise, exporting rice, spices and beef, and importing weapons and textiles. He maintained good relations with the local Rajas and mediated between them and the Dutch colonists with great success.
Lange died 48 years old, possibly because of poisoning. His business had been in decline by then, and even the joint efforts of his brother and nephew could not change this. The remains of the business were sold to a Chinese merchant. He had three children with two Balinese women (the Raja of Tabanan's daughter and a Chinese woman).[2] His daughter Cecilia married into Johore royalty and bore a son, Ibrahim, who became the Sultan of Johor. Lange is buried in Kotta (now 'Kuta').
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