a state in Malaysia, in the northern part of the island of Kalimantan; borders on Indonesia. Area, 76,100 sq km. Population, 655,300 (1970). The capital is Kota Kinabalu (population, 42,000), and the chief port is Sandakan.
Most of Sabah is mountainous; Mount Kinabalu, with an elevation of 4,101 m, is the highest point on Kalimantan. Moist subequatorial forests are the dominant vegetation. The population is concentrated in the coastal regions and river valleys.
Agriculture is the primary economic activity. Large capitalist plantations, chiefly British, and small farms, chiefly Chinese, exist side by side with a patriarchal-communal form of agriculture; slash-and-burn farming still persists. Basic crops occupy 3.4 percent of Sabah’s total area. Rubber-bearing plants cover 106,000 hectares, including 33,000 ha on plantations, and coconut palms cover 53,000 ha. Oil palms, cacao, coffee, and abaca are also raised. The main food crop is rice (43,000 ha). Fishing produces an annual yield of 35,000 tons. Since the 1960’s, logging, carried on by Japanese and other foreign companies, has acquired considerable importance. Sabah also has sawmills and enterprises for the primary processing of agricultural products.
Sabah has 154 km of railroads (1969) and 2,737 km of vehicular roads, including 496 km of paved roads. Sandakan, Tawao, Kota Kinabalu, and Labuan are seaports. Sabah exports rubber, timber, coconut oil, palm oil, and fish. It also has tourism.
F. A. TRINICH
Until the mid-19th century, the territory of Sabah belonged to the sultans of Brunei and Sulu. In 1877 and 1878, it was “acquired” by Overbeck, the Austro-Hungarian consul in Hong Kong, and by the British trader Dent. All rights to the territory of Sabah—called North Borneo—subsequently passed to a British trade syndicate, which in 1881 was chartered as the British North Borneo (Chartered) Company and proceeded to govern the territory. In 1888, North Borneo became a British protectorate; in 1946, it became a colony.
In 1963, North Borneo was included in the Federation of Malaysia as the state of Sabah. In 1961 the Philippines advanced claims to part of Sabah.