enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Batu Tarsilah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batu_Tarsilah

    The Salasilah Raja-Raja Brunei, originally authored by Datu Imam Yaakub and continued by Pehin Khatib Abdul Latif, was transcribed by Pehin Orang Kaya Di-Gadong Seri Lela Awang Aminuddin on 5 November 1841 with Omar Ali Saifuddin II's permission. It was later recopied by Abdul Ghaffar bin Abdul Mu'min from Sarawak in November 1936.

  3. Ibrahim Ali Omar Shah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibrahim_Ali_Omar_Shah

    The Salasilah Raja-Raja Brunei, 'Royal Genealogy of Brunei' have written stories about him, although some have added to and varied from the originals.In the genealogy version of Datu Imam Ya'akub and Khatif Haji Abdul Latif, Pengiran Raja Tengah Ibrahim Ali Omar Shah is the son of Sultan Muhammad Hasan and was crowned king of Sambas in addition to being the Sultan of Sarawak, is extensively ...

  4. List of sultans of Brunei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sultans_of_Brunei

    Instructed Datu Imam Yaakub to write the Salsilah Raja-Raja Berunai or the Genealogy of the Sultans of Brunei. (17) Husin Kamaluddin: 1737 1740 His decision to assume the throne once more stemmed from his belief that the lineage of Sultan Muhyiddin, who had supported Brunei during the civil war, deserved continuity in the crown.

  5. Ong Sum Ping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ong_Sum_Ping

    The only Malay source that mentions Ong Sum Ping, is the Salasilah Raja-Raja Brunei (Genealogy of the Brunei Kings). Ong Sum Ping and his variation counterparts are not mentioned in the Yuan (1279–1368) or Ming (1368–1644) dynasties' official Chinese sources. Yet Ong has been referred to in Borneo lore as, among other things, the admiral of ...

  6. Bolkiah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolkiah

    Raja Sambas then gave Ismail the title of Chief Ragam. The occurrence of Bolkiah in the Sarawakian Iban tradition indicates the extent of the story's effect on the native population of Borneo, which was formerly a colony of Brunei, even if the story differs from what is contained in the Salasilah Raja-Raja Brunei and other oral traditions. [31]

  7. Muhammad Shah of Brunei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Shah_of_Brunei

    The early history of Brunei is complex, characterised by discrepancies between Chinese sources and local Bruneian accounts such as the Salasilah Raja-Raja Brunei. Chinese records mention figures like Raja Ma-na-je-chia-na (Maharaja Karna) and his son Hsia Wang (Raja Kecil), aided by Ismail and Mahmud, ruling Brunei until 1425. In contrast, the ...

  8. Saiful Rijal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saiful_Rijal

    Pengiran Muda Saiful Rijal was the eldest son of Sultan Abdul Kahar, [7] therefore making him the successor to the throne after his father's abdication in 1530. [8] A significant statement from the Boxer Codex, likely written by a Tagalog merchant who lived in Brunei, describes Saiful Rijal as a cheerful and stout man, noting that he was fifty-eight years old in 1589.

  9. Abdul Jalilul Akbar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Jalilul_Akbar

    This could refer to Jalilul Alam, a name that appears in the list of titles for legitimate reigns in the Silsilah Raja-Raja Brunei. It was during the Dutchman's visit to Brunei, where the Dutch began establishing trading centers in the island of Borneo. [12] Sultan Abdul Jalilul Akbar passed away after ruling the sultanate for 61 years in 1659.