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While Rajah Matanda did in fact have children, they were not born of his "legitimate wife". The unnamed author of the relacion, explaining the custom as he understood it, says: [ 8 ] There is a law among these natives [...] that however many wives a man has, among them all he regards one as his legitimate wife; and if, when he dies, he has no ...
Analogously, contemporary Rajah Ache was referred to as Rajah Matanda (Old Rajah), while Rajah Sulayman was sometimes referred to as Rajah Muda or Rajamora (Young Rajah). [1] [2] [3] [7] [6] Historians such as Dery and Scott explain that his given name was Bunaw, but they also continue to refer to him by his title, Lakandula or "the" Lakandula.
Rajah Matanda's mother (also unnamed in the Spanish accounts) then became the paramount ruler of the Maynila polity. In the meantime, Rajah Matanda, then simply known as the "Young Prince" Ache, [ 13 ] was raised alongside his cousin, who was ruler of Tondo, although not specifically named in the Spanish accounts.
He was in Cebu when he first heard about a well-supplied, fortified settlement to the north, and sent messages of friendship to its ruler, Rajah Matanda, whom he addressed as "King of Luzon." [1] In 1570, Legazpi put Martin de Goiti in command of an expedition north to Manila and tasked him with negotiating the establishment of a Spanish fort ...
[Testimonio de la Real sentencia librada en los autos sequidos por el Sr. Fiscal contra los desciendentes de los Regulos Lacandola, Raja Soliman y Ladia Matanda sobre la extension e inteligencia de las reservas de tributos que por diferentes Sres. Governadores se hand concedidio a los referidos con (roto) de la lista de los reservados ...
At the time, Rajah Matanda's mother (whose name was not mentioned in the accounts) served as the paramount ruler of the Maynila polity, taking over from Rajah Matanda's father (also unnamed in the accounts, assumed to be Salalila), [5] [93] who had died when Rajah Matanda was still very young. [79] Rajah Matanda, then simply known as the "Young ...
She served as Paramount ruler of Manila after the death of her husband. Her period of reign covered the youth of Rajah Matanda, including the time Ache spent as commander of the Bruneian navy. [10] Leila Menchanai [12] Puteri: 1485 (husband's reign) 1524 (husband's reign) Bolkiah
Rajah Siagu – Rajah of Butuan; Apo Noan – Chieftain of Mandani (present day Mandaue) in 1521; Rajah Sulayman – The heir apparent of the Kingdom of Luzon, was defeated by Martín de Goiti, a Spanish soldier commissioned by López de Legazpi to Manila. Rajah Tupas – Rajah of Cebu, conquered by Miguel López de Legazpi