Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Luis Cámara Dery says that by the time De Goiti arrived in 1570, Rajah Matanda had already ceded authority to his nephew and heir apparent, Rajah Sulayman, while still retaining considerable influence. [1] According to William Henry Scott, however, Rajah Sulayman was not proclaimed paramount ruler until Rajah Matanda's death in 1572. [2]
Rajah Ache (Matanda) Shared the role of paramount ruler of Maynila with Rajah Sulayman, as of the Spanish advent in the early 1570s. (b.) before 1521 [1] – (d.) August 1572 [1] Multiple firsthand accounts from the Magellan (1521) and Legaspi Expeditions (late 1560s to early 1570s); [1] Spanish genealogical documents [13]
Sultan Amir ud-Din: Paduka Sri Sultan Muhammad Jafar Sadiq Manamir Shahid Mupat (posthumously) 1736–1748 (in Sibugay, Buayan, Malabang) Sultan Muhammad Tahir ud-Din: Dipatuan Malinug Muhammad Shah Amir ud-Din 1733–1755: Sultan Raja Muda Muhammad Khair ud-Din: Pakir Maulana Kamsa Amir ud-Din Itamza Azim ud-Din Amir ul-M'umimin 1755–1780 ...
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 ...
Rajah Matanda or Rajah Ache: 1521 1571 Sulayman: Rajah Sulayman III, Rajah of Manila: 1571 1575 ... Sultan Kahar ud-Din Kuda: 1699: 1702 Sultan Bayan ul-Anwar: 1702: 1736
Testimony of the royal sentence delivered in the judicial proceedings by the prosecutor against the descendants of the rulers Lakan Dula, Raja Sulayman, and Raja Matanda on the extent and intelligence of the tax reserves that by different lord governors have been granted to those referred to (broken) from the list of reserved descendants of the ...
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), [5] who had died when Rajah Matanda was still very young. [80] Rajah Matanda, then simply known as the "Young Prince" Ache, [19] was ...
There, they defeated most of Rajah Sulayman's, Rajah Matanda, and Rajah Lakandula's tribes. The Spaniards marched their armies towards the Pasig River, and occupied the settlements in Manila on 6 June, 1570 and burned them. Guerrilla warfare broke out following the battle, which continued for about ten months.