Sultan Muwallil Wasit Bungsu Pengiran Shahbandar Maharaja Lela - Индекс потомака

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11/1 <?+?> Sultan Muwallil Wasit Bungsu Pengiran Shahbandar Maharaja Lela [Sultan Sulu]
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H.R.H. Sultan Mawallil Wasit (Rajah Bongsu) (1600-1640) 1600 - Spanish captain Juan Gallinato raided Jolo with two-hundred men

H.R.H. Sultan Mawallil Wasit (Rajah Bongsu) (1600-1640) 1600 - Spanish captain Juan Gallinato raided Jolo with two-hundred men - Panglima Abdullah of Talipao led an adventurous journey in seventy paraws that combed the southwestern coasts from Balanguingue in Tawi-Tawi to Samboangan; Abdulla likewise attacked Christian Iloilo and burned and ransacked it. December 31,1600 - Queen Elizabeth I of England granted the British East India Company trading privileges in Asia by virtue of Charter signed today; In 1609, King James I decreed to grant perpetuity to the Charter and, in 1688, King Charles II further granted sovereign right privileges that made repercussions in the 1878 Lease Agreement between the British East India Company and Sulu Sultan Kiram I. 1612 - Rajah Bongsu was installed sultan-de-facto of Sulu and named himself Sultan Mawallil Wasit; He appointed Brunei Datu Acheh as his aide-de-camp because of his skills in helping unite the Sulu leaders. [Kho] 1627 - Datu Acheh, on official business in May Nilad for the Sultanate, was intercepted by Manila Spaniards on his way home; In retaliation, Sultan Wasit led 2,000 Tausug warriors in raiding Spanish shipyards in Camarines south of May Nilad. [Ang mga Pilipino] 1628 - The Manila Spaniards returned the attack by organizing a raiding force of 200 Spanish officers and 1,600 Christian natives. 1629 - The Sultanate of Sulu sent anew another expedition under Datu Acheh to attack Spanish settlements in Camarines, Samar, Leyte and Bohol. March 17, 1630 - Spanish soldiers again attacked Jolo with 2,500 troops that saw the wounding of their commander Lorenzo de Olaso and retreated. 1631 - The Sulu warriors launched still another invasion, this time, targeted only on the Island of Leyte- the seat of Spanish power in the Visayas. 1632 - Maguindanaw Sultan Kudarat married the daughter of Sulu Sultan Wasit that cemented a stronger Two-Sultanate-Alliance. 1634 - The Two-Sultanate-Alliance mobilized a 1,500-warrior-contingent and attacked Spanish-controlled settlements in Dapitan, Leyte and Bohol. January 1635 - A Sulu Sultanate's captive named Fray Juan Batista Vilancio escaped Jolo and surfaced before Manila governor-general Don Juan Cerezo Salamanca who reported of a Moro power concentration in the Zamboanga peninsula by forces of the two Sultanates. Aprill 6,1635 - Spanish captain Juan de Chaves was ordered to beachhead the south and established a military garrison in Samboangan, he named Bagumbayan, and became the forerunner of Ciudad de Zamboanga; This garrison in Samboangan led to the beginning of the defeat of Kudarat’s feared admiral, Datu Tagal, who had raided several pueblos in the Visayas. June 23, 1635 - Salamanca next ordered a Jesuit-engineer-priest Melchor de Vera to lay a cornerstone for the construction of Real Fuerza de San Jose in Bagumbayan (present-day Fort Pilar). - After finishing his contract and on returning to Spain, he brought with him the impounded “Coat-of-Arms” of The Royal Sultanate of Sulu. 1636 - Datu Tagal, a brother of Kudarat, gathered a large fleet of Moro pirates from Mindanaw, Sulu, and North Borneo and looted the coastal islands of the Visayas. 1637 - Manila governor-general Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera personally led an expedition against Kudarat and Tagal and triumphed over his forces at Lamitan and Lian. January 4,1638 - deCorcuera again led a war expedition of eighty ships and 2,000 Spaniards to Jolo but was foiled by Sultan Wasit; however, due to an epidemic within his Acotta@ he and his datus were forced to seek refuge in Dungun Tawi-Tawi and the Spaniards freely occupied Jolo but again left in 1646 after a treaty of peace was signed between Malacanan and Sultan Nasir ud-Din. [Ang mga Pilipino sa Ating Kasaysayan] 1638-1640 - Records had it that Sulu Sultan Wasit=s many heroic battles during this period at Bud Datu in Jolo island against the Manila Spaniards were never lucidly recorded; It was Wasit who named this hill to honor the bravery and unconditional loyalty of his datus

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21/2 <1+1> Sultan Salahud Din Karamat [Sultan Sulu]
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H.R.H. Sultan Salah ud-Din (Karamat Baktiar) (1658-1663)

H.R.H. Sultan Salah ud-Din (Karamat Baktiar) (1658-1663) June 1658 - Brunei Sultan Abdul Hakkul Mubin awarded Sulu Sultan-de-facto Salah ud-Din Bakhtiar the northeast coast of Borneo, including Palawan, for helping settle a civil war dispute against Pengeran Bongsu Muhyuddin May 6,1662 - According to records, Manila governor-general Sabiniano Manrique de Lara issued an evacuation order for Real Fuerza de San Jose in Bagumbayan and called all troops to reinforce May Nilad for an imminent attack by Chinese pirate Cheng Ch=eng-kung (Koxinga), but the truth of the matter was they were driven away by Sulu warriors during these previous years and allowing the forces of Kudarat to sequester it in 1663 - Friction between the ruling royalties of Brunei and Sulu led Camucones Badjaos to shift their loyalty to the Sultan of Sulu [Kho]

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31/3 <2> Sultan Shahabud Din [Sultan Sulu]
* http://www.freewebs.com/julabbi_cairo12/Tarsilah%20Brunie%20II%20family%20tree.jpg

H.R.H. Sultans Sahab ud-Din & Mustafa Shafi’ ud-Din (1663-1704)

H.R.H. Sultans Sahab ud-Din & Mustafa Shafi’ ud-Din (1663-1704) 1663-1718 - According to historian C.A. Majul, this is a Period of Interrregnum in which Manila Spanish government abandoned all its settlement and pretensions in Mindanao and Sulu 1667 - Jesuit historian Francisco Combe wrote the first History of Mindanaw and Sulu covering the period from 1620 to1665 1673-1690 - The reign of Brunei Sultan Pengeran Bongsu Muhyuddin saw his hegemony breaking down that eventually phased out his Sultanate’s 150-year control of the Sulu and return royal powers back to the Sulu sultans 1699 - Melaka Sultan Mahmoud Shah was murdered in Kampar Sumatra ending the colorful Melaka Malay Sultanate 1701 - Sulu Sultan Mustafa Shaif ud-Din departed for a courtesy call to the new Sultanate of Maguindanaw in sixty-eight “paraws,” but unfortunately, guardsman Kutai misinterpreted it as an invasion who forced closed the Rio Grande in Kota Bato and embarrassed the Sulu royalties; A long and fierceful fight ensued. 1703 - Sulu Sultan Shaif bestowed Palawan upon Mindanaw Sultan Kudarat but which same piece of land was ceded anew to the Manila Spanish government in 1705


Sultan Shahab ud-Din 1685-1710

The son of Salah ud-Din. It was he who killed Sultan Kahar ud-Din Kuda of Maguindanao in 1702 and "ceded" Palawan to the Spanish government in 1705.
42/3 <2> Sultan Mustafa Shafiud Din [Sultan Sulu]
* http://www.freewebs.com/julabbi_cairo12/Tarsilah%20Brunie%20II%20family%20tree.jpg

H.R.H. Sultans Sahab ud-Din & Mustafa Shafi’ ud-Din (1663-1704)

H.R.H. Sultans Sahab ud-Din & Mustafa Shafi’ ud-Din (1663-1704) 1663-1718 - According to historian C.A. Majul, this is a Period of Interrregnum in which Manila Spanish government abandoned all its settlement and pretensions in Mindanao and Sulu 1667 - Jesuit historian Francisco Combe wrote the first History of Mindanaw and Sulu covering the period from 1620 to1665 1673-1690 - The reign of Brunei Sultan Pengeran Bongsu Muhyuddin saw his hegemony breaking down that eventually phased out his Sultanate’s 150-year control of the Sulu and return royal powers back to the Sulu sultans 1699 - Melaka Sultan Mahmoud Shah was murdered in Kampar Sumatra ending the colorful Melaka Malay Sultanate 1701 - Sulu Sultan Mustafa Shaif ud-Din departed for a courtesy call to the new Sultanate of Maguindanaw in sixty-eight “paraws,” but unfortunately, guardsman Kutai misinterpreted it as an invasion who forced closed the Rio Grande in Kota Bato and embarrassed the Sulu royalties; A long and fierceful fight ensued. 1703 - Sulu Sultan Shaif bestowed Palawan upon Mindanaw Sultan Kudarat but which same piece of land was ceded anew to the Manila Spanish government in 1705
53/3 <2> Sultan Badarud Din I [Sultan Sulu]
* http://www.freewebs.com/julabbi_cairo12/Tarsilah%20Brunie%20II%20family%20tree.jpg

H.R.H. Sultan Badar ud-Din I (1704-1734)

H.R.H. Sultan Badar ud-Din I (1704-1734) 1717 - Sulu Sultan Badar ud-Din sent an emissary to Imperial China to enlist her support for military assistance; A similar request was duplicated in 1733 1718-1772 Fifth Stage of Moro Wars (Majul) 1718 - Moro wars were resized when Manila governor-general Juan Antonio dela Torre Bustamante resolved to reconstruct Real Fuerza de San Jose in Bagumbayan, and added to each corner sides citadels embossing the names of Catholic saints San Luis, San Francisco Xavier, San Felipe, and San Fernando - The fort was renamed Real Fuerza del Pilar deZaragosa perpetuating the name of the Manila-Acapulco galleon ship that sunk off Guam early that year and also renamed Bagumbayan to Ciudad deZamboanga 1719 - Manila Spanish government dispatched a group of AChavacano-speaking@ Merdicans to Ciudad deZamboanga (The Merdicans originally were brought in from Ternate and Tidore in the Celebes in 1663) April 16,1719 - Don Fernando Bustillos Bustamante Rueda, senior maestro de campo in Ciudad deZamboanga, inaugurated Real Fuerza del Pilar de Zaragosa (better known as Fort Pilar to Jolo Christians and Moslems alike) December 08, 1720 - Fort Pilar was stormed by Butig Rajah Dalasi with an armada of one hundred “paraws”; He captured a local Jesuit priest and forced Manila Spanish government to give ransom payment in exchange for his freedom December 1720 - Sulu Sultan Badar directed Datu Bendahara and Datu Nakhuda to Batavia to renew an appeal for Dutch military assistance, and together with forces from the Sultanate of Maguindanaw, attacked Fort Pilar but was foiled 1721 - Manila governor-general Toribio Cosio sent Fray Antonio de Roxas to Ciudad deZamboanga to negotiate for the release of kidnapped Jesuit priest December 11,1726 - Sulu Sultan Badar signed with Manila Spanish government another peace treaty which provisions were unclear 1731 - By decree of a Ming emperor, the remaining 300 survivors of Sulu East King Paduka Batara, now christened as Chinese Wen and Ang families, were assimilated into mainstream Chinese society that made perpetually alive a Tausug bloodline in that part of the world - Manila governor-general F. Valdez y Timon sent Ignacio Iriberri to recapture Jolo with a regiment of 1,000-strong Spanish soldiers

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61/4 <3> Sultan Nasrud Din [Sultan Sulu]
* http://www.freewebs.com/julabbi_cairo12/Tarsilah%20Brunie%20II%20family%20tree.jpg H.R.H. Sultan Nassar ud-Din (1734-1735) December 6, 1734 - The 1726 peace treaty fell apart when the new Sulu Sultan Nasar ud-Din attempted to recapture Fort Pilar in Ciudad deZamboanga and to possess Taytay in Palawan. 1735 - Manila Spaniards struck back by invading Jolo that drove Sultan Nasar=s court to Dungun in Tawi-Tawi for the second time
72/4 <5> Sultan Azimmuddin I (Sultan Alimmuddin I) [Sultan Sulu]
Son of Badar ud-Din, he was known to the Spaniards and many Sulus as Alimuddin. His father proclaimed him ruler in Tawi-Tawi in 1735. In 1736, after a few intrigues had paved the way, a number of Datus asked Azim ud-Din to transfer his court from Dungun to Bauang (Jolo). But a political struggle in 1748 forced him to leave Jolo for Basilan and then Zamboanga. His younger brother, Datu Bantilan, was then proclaimed sultan. In the meantime, he went to Manila where he remained for sometime, including a few years of imprisonment. He returned an old man to Jolo in 1764. In the same year, on June 8, he was formally reinstated to the throne. In 1774, tired of affairs of state, he formally handed over the affairs of state to hisson Muhammad Israil. He had two periods of reign; 1735-1748 and 1764-1774.
83/4 <5+2> Sultan Bantilan Muhammad Muizzuddin (Datu Bantilan) [Sultan Sulu]
* http://www.freewebs.com/julabbi_cairo12/Tarsilah%20Brunie%20II%20family%20tree.jpg Known to Spanish officials and priests as Datu or Pangiran Bantilan. He was a younger brother of Azim ud-Din-I. Sultan Bantilan Muizzuddin heirs stand as "The Sulu Sultanate Second Heir-Apparent", which nowadays become the Maharajah Adinda families.
94/4 <5+2> Dayang Meria [Sultan Sulu]

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101/5 <7> Sultan Sharifuddin [Sultan Sulu]
112/5 <9> Datu Teteng (Datu Tating) [Sultan Sulu]

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121/6 <10> Sultan Alimuddin III (Sultan Azim ud-Din III) [Sultan Sulu]

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131/7 <12> Sultan Jamal ul-Kiram I [Sultan Sulu]

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141/8 <13> Sultan Muhammad Fadl (Pulalun) [Sultan Sulu]