Sultanate of Sarawak | |||||||||
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1599–1641 | |||||||||
Flag | |||||||||
Capital | Santubong | ||||||||
Common languages | Classical Malay | ||||||||
Religion | Islam, local animism | ||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||
Sultan | |||||||||
• 1599–1641 | Sultan Ibrahim Ali Omar Shah | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
• The foundation of Sarawak | 1599 | ||||||||
• Assassination of Sultan Tengah | 1641 | ||||||||
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Today part of | Malaysia Indonesia |
History of Malaysia |
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Malaysia portal |
The Sultanate of Sarawak (Malay: كسلطانن ملايو سراوق دارالهنا, romanized: Kesultanan Sarawak) was a Malay kingdom, located in present-day Kuching Division, Sarawak. The kingdom was founded in 1599,[1] after the conquest of the preceding Santubong Kingdom and the later Sultanate of Brunei.[2]
The kingdom saw the reign of a sole sultan, Sultan Tengah, Prince of Brunei, known as Ibrahim Ali Omar Shah Ibni Sultan Muhammad Hassan of Sarawak.[3] The state established a close relationship with Brunei and Johor. It forged dynastic rules with the surrounding Malay kingdoms in western Borneo including the sultanates of Sambas, Sukadana and Tanjungpura-Matan.[4]
The sultanate was dissolved following Sultan Tengah's assassination in 1641, after 42 years of rule.[5] The administration of the territory was then replaced by the local Malay governors appointed from Brunei, reunifying the area into the Bruneian empire.
The historical significance of the Sarawak Sultanate, alongside neighboring Malay kingdoms such as Santubong (near Kuching), Sadong (near Samarahan), Saribas, Kalaka (both in Betong Division), Lingga and Banting (both in Sri Aman) collectively shaped the pre-Brooke Sarawakian history.[6][7]
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