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BRP Rajah Lakandula (PF-4) was originally an Edsall-class destroyer escort commissioned by the United States Navy as USS Camp (DE-251) in 1943. In 1956, she was converted to a radar picket ship and later served during the Vietnam War until being decommissioned in 1970. She was transferred to South Vietnam on 13 February 1971.
Lakandula's role as ruler of Tondo was then taken up by his grandnephew, and Rajah Soliman's adopted son, Agustin de Legazpi. [ 1 ] [ 6 ] : 192 Agustin de Legazpi, who was married to the cousin of Sultan Bolkiah , would lead Tondo as a territory under Spanish rule until he rose up against them in 1587–1588 Revolt of the Lakans , and was ...
Bunao Lakandula, Lakan of Tondo, he is the last ruler which possess the title of "Lakan". Birth: – Death:c. 1575 "Three years after" Legazpi and Rajah Matanda, who both died in 1572." [5]: 192 Reign: c. 1570s and earlier: Multiple firsthand accounts from the Legaspi Expedition (early 1570s); Spanish genealogical documents [19]
The Lakandula and Sulayman Revolt, also known as the Tagalog Revolt, was an uprising in 1574 by Lakandula and Rajah Sulayman in Tondo, Manila. The revolt occurred in the same year as the Chinese pirate Limahong attacked the palisaded yet poorly defended enclosure of Intramuros. Their revolt sadly failed with fatal injuries and deaths.
The chief who died at Bangkusay is sometimes identified as Rajah Sulayman of the Rajahnate of Maynila, Lakandula's contemporary. However, it is clear in the Spanish records that Rajah Sulayman was able to survive the battle by escaping to Pampanga and it was the nameless Kapampangan chief, identified as Tarik Sulayman, that fell in the battle. [8]
In communities which historically had strong political or trade connections with Indianized polities in Indonesia and Malaysia, the Paramount Ruler was called a Rajah. [4] Among the Subanon people of the Zamboanga Peninsula , a settlement's Datus answer to a Thimuay , and some Thimuays are sometimes additionally referred to as Thimuay Labi ...
Rajah Matanda (whose real name was recorded by the Legaspi expedition as Ache) and his nephew, Rajah Sulayman "Rajah Mura" or "Rajah Muda" (a Sanskrit title for a Prince), ruled the Muslim communities south of the Pasig River, including Maynila while Lakan Dula ruled non-Muslim Tondo north of the river.
Rajah and lakan: It is sometimes argued that since the titles "rajah" and "lakan" are roughly equivalent, the two should not be used together. Thus, referring to Lakandula as Rajah Lakandula is said to be the result of mistaking Lakandula to be the full proper name of the said king.