Sultanate of Malacca
The Sultanate of Malacca ( Malay Kesultanan Melayu Melaka ) was a sultanate on the southern Malay Peninsula and the opposite part of Sumatra . It was an important regional maritime power and a center of Islam , the activities of which stretched across the Malay Archipelago . The Sultan's court was in the city of Malacca .
history
Sultans of Malacca | |
sultan | Term of office |
---|---|
Iskandar Shah ( Parameswara ) |
1400-1414 |
Megat Iskandar Shah | 1414-1424 |
Muhammad Shah | 1424-1444 |
Abu Syahid | 1444-1446 |
Muzaffar Shah | 1445-1459 |
Mansur Shah | 1459-1477 |
Alauddin Riayat Shah | 1477-1488 |
Mahmud Shah | 1488-1511 |
Ahmad Shah | 1511-1513 |
Mahmud Shah (again) | 1513-1528 |
The mythical hero Hang Tuah , the Malaysian national hero, is believed to have lived in the Sultanate of Malacca in the 15th century.
Malacca was initially a Hindu kingdom before it was Islamized around 1402 by Parameswara (1344–1414), Sultan of the Kingdom of Singapura ( Kerajaan Singapura in Malay ), or a prince from Srivijaya according to Portuguese sources such as the Suma Oriental . From Malacca, Islam continued to spread to the Malay Archipelago . In 1511 the Portuguese conquered the seat of government with the city of Malacca, after which the sultanate fell apart. While Malacca remained a colonial center of the Portuguese in East Asia for 130 years, various smaller sultanates such as Johor and Perak emerged on the Malay Peninsula . In 1641 the Dutch conquered the Portuguese Malacca. It marked the beginning of the decline of the Portuguese colonial empire in Southeast Asia and the rise of the Dutch East Indies colony . What remained in Malacca was a Portuguese Creole language that is still spoken today. In 1824 Malacca fell to the English.
See also
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Abdur-Rahman et al. (2011). Historical Review of Classical Hadith Literature in Malay Peninsula. International Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences, 11 (2), 1-6 ( Online 1 , 2 ) [Cheah Boon Kheng (ed.) (1998) Sejarah Melayu. Malaysia: The Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society]
Coordinates: 2 ° 11 ′ 20 " N , 102 ° 23 ′ 4" E