The islands of the Banda Sea, with
the exception of Letti, Kisser, and Wetter, constitute
the Ceram sub-group or the Moluccan group; the principal
units are Buru, Amboyna, Great Banda, Ceram, Ceram
Laut, Goram, Kur, Babar, and Dama. The Matabela
Islands, the Tiandu Islands, the Ke Islands, and the
Tenimber Islands also belong to the Ceram sub-group.
We are only concerned with the Banda Islands, which
are eight in number, and consist of four central islands
in close proximity to one another, inclosing a little
inland sea, and four outlying islets. The central
islands are Lonthoir, or Great Banda, Banda Neira,
Gounong Api, which is an active volcano, and
Pisang. The remaining Banda Islands are Rozengain,
which lies about ten miles distant to the south-east
of Great Banda; Wai, at an equal distance to the west;
Rhun, about eight miles west by south from Wai; and
Suangi or Manukan, about seventeen miles north by
east from Rhun.
The Banda Islands are well known as
the principal centre of the cultivation of the nutmeg.
When the Dutch East India Company became the possessors
of the islands in the beginning of the seventeenth
century, they destroyed the nutmeg trees in all the
islands under their jurisdiction, with the exception
of those in Amboyna and the Banda Islands. By
doing so they hoped to maintain the high value of these
natural products.
The Banda Islands may have been visited
by Varthema, but our first reliable account of them
connects the discovery of them with an expedition
dispatched by order of Alfonso de Albuquerque from
Malacca. Shortly after Albuquerque had defeated
the Malays and taken possession of that city, he sent
three vessels, under the command of Antonio de Abreu,
to explore the Archipelago and to inaugurate a trade
with the islanders. A junk, commanded by a native
merchant captain, Ismael by name, preceded the other
vessels for the purpose of announcing their approaching
advent to the traders of the Archipelago, so that they
might have their spices ready for shipment. With
De Abreu went Francisco Serrao and Simao Affonso,
in command of two of the vessels. The pilots
were Luis Botim, Goncalo de Oliveira, and Francisco
Rodriguez or Roiz. Abreu left Malacca in November,
1511, at which season the westerly monsoon begins
to blow. He steered a south-easterly course, passed
through the Strait of Sabong, and having arrived at
the coast of Java, he cast anchor at Agaçai,
which Valentijn identifies with Gresik, near Sourabaya.
At Agaçai, Javan pilots were engaged for the voyage
thence to the Banda Islands. Banda was, however,
not the first port of call. The course was first
to Buru, and thence to Amboyna. Galvao relates
that Abreu landed at Guli Guli, which is in Ceram.
Barros, however, in his account of the voyage, makes
no mention of Ceram. At Amboyna the ship commanded
by Francisco Serrao, an Indian vessel which had been
captured at Goa, was burnt, for, says Barros, ‘she
was old,’ and the ship’s company was divided
between the two other ships, which then proceeded to
Lutatao, which is perhaps identical with Ortattan,
a trading station on the north coast of Great Banda.
Here Abreu obtained a cargo of nutmegs and mace and
of cloves, which had been brought hither from the Moluccas.
At Lutatao Abreu erected a pillar in token of annexation
to the dominions of the King of Portugal. He
had done this at Agaçai and in Amboyna also.
The return voyage to Malacca was marked
by disaster. A junk, which now was bought to
replace the Indian vessel, was wrecked, and the crew,
who had taken refuge on a small island, was attacked
by pirates. The pirates, however, were worsted
and their craft was captured. Serrao, who had
been in command of the junk, sailed in the pirate vessel
to Amboyna, and thence eventually reached Ternate,
where he remained at the invitation of Boleife, the
Sultan of that island. The junk, of which Ismael
was the skipper, was also wrecked near Tuban, but the
cargo, consisting of cloves, was recovered in 1513
from the Javans, who had taken possession of it.
Zoologically the Banda Islands lie
within Wallace’s Australian Region, and their
avifauna has a great affinity with that of Australia.
Wallace visited these islands in December 1857, May
1859, and April 1861, and collected eight species
of birds, namely, Rhipidura squamata, a fan-tailed
Flycatcher; Pachycephala phaeonota, a thickhead;
Myzomela boiei, a small scarlet-headed honey-eater;
Zosterops chloris, a white-eye; Pitta vigorsi,
one of the brightly-coloured ground thrushes of the
Malayan region; Halcyon chloris, a kingfisher
with a somewhat extensive range; Ptilopus xanthogaster,
a fruit-eating pigeon, and the nutmeg pigeon, Carpophaga
concinna. The islands were visited by the
members of the Challenger expedition in September
and October, 1874, but the only additional species
then obtained was Monarcha cinerascens, also
a Flycatcher.
These birds may be regarded as the
resident birds of the Banda Islands, but there are
others which are occasional visitants or migrants.
Indeed, in seas so full of islands, it is inevitable
that wanderers from other islands should occasionally
visit the group.
To those which I have already mentioned
there may therefore be added, as of less frequency,
the accipitrine bird, Astur polionotus, the
Hoary-backed Goshawk; the Passeres Edoliisoma dispar,
a Caterpillar Shrike, the skin of a male of which
from Great Banda is in the Leyden Museum, and Motacilla
melanope, the Grey Wagtail. Of picarian birds
there have been found Cuculus intermedius, the
Oriental Cuckoo; Eudynamis cyanocephala sub-species
everetti, a small form of the Koel, and Eurystomus
australis, the Australian Roller. Joao de
Barros, in his Asia, mentions the parrots of
the Banda Islands, and we find accordingly that
one of the Psittaci is recorded from Banda in
modern times, namely, Eos rubra, a red, or
rather a crimson lory. The ornithologist Mueller
saw many of these birds in Great Banda, on the Kanary
trees. Additional pigeons are the seed-eating
Chalcophaps chrysochlora and the fruit-eating
Ptilonopus wallacei, and finally there is one
gallinaceous bird which is probably resident, but the
shy and retiring habits of which have enabled it to
escape observation until recently. This is a
Scrub Fowl (Megapodius duperreyi).