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Muhammad Kilau bin Rasu [1] [2] (Jawi: محمد كيلاو بن راسو; 1866/67 – 16 August 1970) popularly known as 'Mat Kilau', or alternatively known as Mohamed bin Ibrahim or 'Mat Siam', [3] was a local chieftain and folk hero from Pahang, Malaysia, best known for his role in the Pahang Uprising (1891–1895) against the British Empire.
Ishak Haji Muhammad (14 November 1909 – 7 November 1991), better known as Pak Sako, was a Malaysian writer, active in the 1930s until the 1950s. He was a nationalist and his involvement began before independence and continued thereafter.
Finally, on the 31st of August 1778, attended by the Yang di-Pertuan Muda of Riau-Lingga, Raja of Mempawah, Raja of Landak, Raja of Kubu, and Sultan of Matan, Syarif Abdurrahman was crowned the Sultan of Pontianak with the title: Sultan Syarif Abdurrahman ibni Habib Husein Alkadrie. [3]
Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka. ISBN 983-62-2861-6. OCLC 29026780. Muhammad Faris Izzuwan, Adam, Ramlah binti, Samuri, Abdul Hakim bin & Fadzil, Muslimin bin (2004). Sejarah Tingkatan 3. Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka. ISBN 983-62-8285-8. Goh, Cheng Teik (1994). Malaysia: Beyond Communal Politics. Pelanduk Publications. ISBN 967-978-475-4
Mat Salleh Memorial near Tambunan, Sabah, Malaysia (demolished in 2015) The Mat Salleh memorial was opened in 1999 at the site where he was killed at Kampung Tibabar in Tambunan. [7] [12] [13]: p.194 It was demolished in 2015. The memorial, which resembled a fort, was surrounded by a garden.
Groups such as the Kesatuan Melayu Singapura, while advocating self- strengthening within the Malayan community, for instance by purchasing land for Malay reservations in 1928, or by pooling funds to send Malays to Oxford and Cambridge in order to ensure the continued preeminence of Malays in the administration of British Malaya, did not ...
Rosli Dhobi was born on 18 March 1932 at House No. 94, Kampung Pulo in Sibu, as the second child cum elder son in a washerman's family. His father, Dhobi bin Buang was an ethnic local Sibu Malay who had ancestral roots in Kalimantan, Indonesia and was a descendant of Raden ranked nobles.
Abdul Samad bin Mohamed Said (born 9 April 1935) [1] [2] is a Malaysian novelist and poet. In May 1976, he was named by Malaysia literature communities and many of the country's linguists as the Pejuang Sastera [Literary Exponent] receiving, within the following decade, the 1979 Southeast Asia Write Award and, in 1986, in appreciation of his continuous writings and contributions to the nation ...