Willem Anthony Engelbrecht, also known as Willem Anthonie Engelbrecht, was a Dutch jurist and colonial administrator. He was one of the originators of the so-called "Dutch Ethical Policy" in the Dutch East Indies.
Engelbrecht was one of the intellectual architects of the Dutch Ethical Policy, which eventually led to the independency of Indonesia. In his doctoral thesis, he stated that the Dutch should treat the Dutch indies as a state in its own right, but subordinated to the Netherlands. This opinion contradicted the general opinion, as expressed by the jurist H.A. Blume, that the Dutch Indies were just a subordinated colony. After completing his studies, Engelbrecht moved back to the Dutch East Indies to become a civil servant in the colonial administration. In 1862, he became a member of the Council of Justice at Semarang. He became the Council president in 1886, a function he occupied till 1891. In that year, Engelbrecht was appointed Director of the Department of Justice in the Dutch Indies. In this function he worked actively on the formation of the Dutch Indies as a state within the colonial empire of the Netherlands. In 1891, Governor-GeneralCornelis Pijnacker Hordijk assigned Engelbrecht with drafting a Governmental regulation on this issue. In 1893 Engelbrecht became a member of the so-called Raad van Nederlandsch-Indië, the de facto government of the colony. He served as Director of the Department of Justice. In 1897 Engelbrecht retired from government service. However, he stayed active in the initiative of organising law in the Dutch Indies. His drafts led to an entire reorganisation of the Dutch Indies laws in 1900. In 1907, Engelbrecht published this codification in the Nederlandsch-Indisch Wetboek. Over the years, Engelbrecht's code was re-edited several times and published in bigger and more complete editions. When Indonesia achieved independence in 1945, his work became the basis of its first legal code.
Family
Engelbrecht married Maria Annetta Emilie Canter Visscher in The Hague in 1862. The couple had one son, Johannes Frederik Engelbrecht, who became a member of Supreme Court of the Dutch Indies. Engelbrecht married Margaretha Pepfenhauser in 1877. They had six children. Two of them died at an early age. The others were: Adolphine Henriette Engelbrecht, Willem Bernard Engelbrecht, Nisette Cornelie Engelbrecht and Edwin Marie Louis Engelbrecht. Willem became a diplomat and Edwin a lawyer.
Main publications
W.A. Engelbrecht, Artikel 2 Reglement op het beleid der Regering van Nederlandsch-Indië, in verband met artikel 107, Regeringsreglement van Nederlandsch-Indië, en de Nederlandsche wetgeving op het Nederlanderschap. Leiden: Hazenberg 1862, 118p.
W.A. Engelbrecht, De Nederlandsch-Indische Wetboeken: de Grondwet voor het Koningrijk der Nederlanden, het Reglement op het beleid der Regering van Nederlandsch-Indië en andere wetten, wettelijke verordeningen en besluiten, met verwijzing naar de op elk artikel betrekking hebbende Nederlandsch-Indische, Nederlandsche en Fransche wetsbepalingen, Semarang: A. Bisschop 1890
Literature
D.G. Stibbe & C. Spat, Engelbrecht , in: Encyclopaedie van Nederlandsch-Indië vol. 5, 's-Gravenhage: Martinus Nijhoff 1927, p. 148.