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Tok Janggut marched on Pasir Puteh town (where the Indian troops had gone after burning down Jeram) on 25 June 1915, with 1,000 of his followers, armed with guns and traditional weaponry. [2]: 62 Even though the rebel forces outnumbered their enemy, the Indian troops were much better-equipped. Many of Tok Janggut's followers fled, and he ...
Tok Janggut, along with other influential local leaders would instigate the peasants to rebel against the land tax which was deemed to be too punitive onto the peasants. Sergeant Che Wan would eventually be stabbed to death after a heated argument with Tok Janggut and this would then officially start the Kelantan Rebellion in 1915.
Name Age Division/unit Circumstance 1915-04-29: Sgt: Che Wan Bin Sulaiman — Pasir Puteh: Stabbed to death by Tok Janggut, whose real name was Haji Hassan bin Panglima Mat Munas, a religious teacher from Pasir Puteh, Kelantan, who was one of the first nationalists in Malaya, where they arrested him for failing to pay the government tax.
The Sultan was very impressed to see the white sand shining along the riverbanks. Hence in 1911, the Sultan declared the name of this place as Pasir Puteh, which meant white sand. This is the place where a Kelantan warrior, Tok Janggut, raised an army of Malay warriors to oppose the introduction of taxation in Kelantan. [2]
Haji Mohd Hassan bin Munas, a resistor of colonial British Malaya famously known as Tok Janggut. [12] Katip Sumat, Cham–Kelantanese Malay cleric and war leader. Mohd Badhri Mohd Radzi, Malaysian footballer. Mohd Daudsu Jamaluddin, Malaysian footballer. Mohd Farisham Ismail, Malaysian footballer. Mohd Khairul Izuan Rosli, Malaysian footballer.
KD Tok Janggut France Malaysia: 0+(5) [5] Originally 6 ships planned but 1 cancelled in 2023. Armament: [6] 1 × Bofors 57 mm gun; 2 × MSI DS30M 30 mm cannon; 16 × VL MICA in Sylver VLS; 8 × Naval Strike Missile SSM [7] 2 × triple J+S torpedo launcher; Lekiu: Frigate: KD Jebat
Malay rebel leader Tok Janggut and an army of Malay warriors attempted a siege on the Malaysian territory of Pasir Puteh in Kelantan, Malaysia after proclaiming it to be independent from British colonial rule. The siege ended in a battle with colonial forces where Janggut was killed, effectively ending the rebellion. [129]
Malay tribal leader Tok Janggut resisted arrest in his home village for tax evasion, as part of his protest against British colonial rule in Kelantan, Malaysia. In a resulting riot between locals and colonial, Janggut was alleged to have stabbed one of the arresting officers to death.