The Vorstenlanden (Dutch for 'princely lands' or 'princely states', Japanese: , Hepburn: kōchi, Nihon-shiki/Kunrei-shiki: kooti, , , praja kajawèn) were four native, princely states on the island of Java in the colonial Dutch East Indies. They were nominally self-governing vassals under suzerainty of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Their political autonomy however became increasingly constrained by severe treaties and settlements. Two of these continue to exist as a princely territory within the current independent republic of Indonesia.
The Vorstenlanden (Dutch for 'princely lands' or 'princely states', Japanese: , Hepburn: kōchi, Nihon-shiki/Kunrei-shiki: kooti, , , praja kajawèn) were four native, princely states on the island of Java in the colonial Dutch East Indies. They were nominally self-governing vassals under suzerainty of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Their political autonomy however became increasingly constrained by severe treaties and settlements. Two of these continue to exist as a princely territory within the current independent republic of Indonesia.
The four Javanese princely states were: Surakarta, a sunanate to the north Yogyakarta, the sultanate to the south Mangkunegaran, a duchy or principality to the east Pakualaman, a small duchy or principality largely enclosed within the area of the Sultanate of Yogyakarta These princely territories were successor states to the Mataram Sultanate and originated in civil wars and wars of succession within the Javanese nobility. The susuhunan of Surakarta represented the direct line of succession; the other three rulers represented cadet branches.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).