Djajadiningrat family


The Djajadiningrat family was a high-ranking priyayi family in colonial Indonesia, whose members often served as Regents of Serang in Banten, Dutch East Indies. Noted for their western outlook and loyalty to the Dutch authorities during the colonial period, the family nonetheless fought on both sides of the Indonesian Revolution.

History

The family is of Baduy and Bantenese extraction. According to Nina Consuelo Epton, the family's oral history recounts that in the middle of the seventeenth century, their ancestor, the renegade son of a Baduy chieftain, sought shelter at the court of the Sultan of Banten. He was subsequently admitted into the inner circle of the Sultan's court and was allowed to marry one of the Sultan's daughters, thereby becoming the founder of the Djajadiningrat family.
, Netherlands
Later marriages into the Javanese reigning dynasties further cemented the Djajadiningrat family's hold on power, as was shown by the career of R. T. A. Natadiningrat and his eldest son, R. T. Sutadiningrat, who both ruled in succession as Regents of Serang. The latter was succeeded by his younger brother, the progressive Raden Bagus Djajawinata.
In the late nineteenth century, the family benefited from the patronage of the Dutch scholar and educator Snouck Hurgronje. Hurgronje, who believed in coopting the Indonesian elite by giving their children a Dutch education, ensured the admission to the prestigious of the brothers Achmad and Hossein Djajadiningrat, sons of Raden Bagus Djajawinata. Achmad, the elder son, went on to succeed his father as Regent of Serang, then of Batavia, and served as a member of both the Volksraad and the Raad van Indië. Hoessein, the younger son, completed his PhD at Leiden University in 1913, and became a distinguished scholar of Sundanese, Bantense, Malay and Islamic studies.
The family, like most other native Sundanese and Bantense families, originally had no surname; the Dutch-educated Achmad Djajadiningrat adopted the surname 'Djajadiningrat' in the late nineteenth century. Other prominent members of the family include Achmad Djajadiningrat's son, Idrus Nasir Djajadiningrat, and the latter's cousin Maria Ulfah Santoso, both of whom were important figures in the Indonesian Revolution. The media tycoons and Svida Alisjahbana are the daughter and granddaughter respectively of Hisnat Djajadiningrat.