- Buni culture, 400 BC–500 AD
- Taruma Kingdom, 358–659
- Sunda Kingdom, 659–1527
Banten Sultanate, 1527–1619
Dutch East India Company, 1619–1800
Dutch East Indies, 1800–1942
Japanese East Indies, 1942–1945
Republic of Indonesia, 1945–1946
Dutch East Indies, 1946–1949
Republic of Indonesia, 1949–present
Jakarta is Indonesia's capital and largest city. Located on an estuary of the Ciliwung River, on the northwestern part of Java, the area has long sustained human settlement. Historical evidence from Jakarta dates back to the 4th century CE, when it was a Hindu settlement and port. The city has been sequentially claimed by the Indianized kingdom of Tarumanagara, the Hindu Sunda Kingdom, the Muslim Banten Sultanate, and by Dutch, Japanese, and Indonesian administrations.[1] The Dutch East Indies built up the area, before it was taken during World War II by the Empire of Japan and finally became independent as part of Indonesia.
Jakarta has been known by several names. It was called Sunda Kelapa during the Sunda Kingdom period and Jayakarta, Djajakarta, or Jacatra during the short period of the Banten Sultanate. Thereafter, Jakarta evolved in three stages. The "old city," close to the sea in the north, developed between 1619 and 1799 during the era of the VOC. The "new city" to the south evolved between 1809 and 1942 after the Dutch government took over control of Batavia from the failed VOC whose charter expired in 1799. The third was the development of modern Jakarta since the proclamation of independence in 1945. Under the Dutch, it was known as Batavia (1619–1945) and was later known as Djakarta (in Dutch) or Jakarta during the Japanese occupation and modern period.[2][3]
For a more detailed history of Jakarta before the proclamation of Indonesian independence, see Batavia, Dutch East Indies.