Tun Habib Abdul Majid

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Dato' Bendahara Seri Maharaja Tun Habib Abdul Majidbin Tun Muhammad Ali bin Tun Dagang @ Sayyid Zainal Abidin bin Sayyid Abdullah III bin Sayyid Syekh bin Sayyid Abdullah II bin Sayyid Abu Bakar II bin Sayyid Abdullah I Al-Aydrus bin Sayyid Abu Bakar I bin Sayyid Abdul Rahman As-Sappaf bin Sayyid Muhammad Mauli Ad-Dawilah bin Sayyid Ali II bin Sayyid Alawi III bin Sayyid Muhammad Al-Faqih Al-Muqaddam bin Sayyid Ali I bin Sayyid Muhammad Shahib Mirbath bin Sayyid Ali Khali Qosam bin Sayyid Alawi II bin Sayyid Muhammad bin Sayyid Alawi I bin Sayyid Ubaidillah bin Sayyid Ahmad Al-Muhajir bin Sayyid Isa Naqib Al-Rumi bin Sayyid Muhammad An-Naqib bin Sayyid Ali Al-Uraidhi bin Sayyid Jafar As-Sadiq bin Sayyid Muhammad Al-Baqir bin Ali Zainal Abidin bin Husain bin Ali bin Abi Talib dan Fatimah Az-Zahrah binti Nabi Muhammad SAW (1637 [1] – 27 July 1697) [2] was the 19th [3] Bendahara of the Johor Sultanate during the late 17th century. [4] The Johor Sultanate under Sultan Mahmud Shah II (who belonged to the Malacca-Johor royal family) saw a gradual decline of royal authority during Tun Habib's tenure as the Bendahara of Johor. Internal challenges within the Sultanate faced by Tun Habib consolidated his power as the Bendahara, in which case the Bendahara monopolised legitimate authority over the Johor Sultanate by the 1690s. [5] After his death, Tun Habib's descendants spanned throughout the Johor Sultanate and established ruling houses in Riau-Lingga, Johor, Pahang and Terengganu. [6]

Contents

Bendahara of Johor

Power struggles

Little was known of Tun Habib's early life except that he was the son of the Maharaja Sri Diraja of Johor, [7] and that he was jostling for power and recognition with his rival, Laksamana Tun Abdul Jamil during the reign of Sultan Abdul Jalil Shah III. [8]

In 1677, Sultan Ibrahim Shah appointed Tun Habib as the Bendahara of Johor and was assumed the title of "Bendahara Seri Maharaja" the following year. [9] Nevertheless, his authority was quickly overshadowed by the more powerful and experienced Laksamana (who assumed the title of Paduka Raja Laksamana), Tun Abdul Jamil. [10] Tun Abdul Jamil, seeking the advantage of having an inexperienced Sultan, quickly established his power centre at Riau and overshadowed the Sultan's authority and proclaimed himself Regent. He stopped paying tributes to the Sultan even before Sultan Ibrahim Shah's death in 1685, and appointed filled the top ranks with his family members. Naturally, these appointments earned the wrath of many chiefs and top ministers, including Tun Habib himself. The Laksamana, unable to withhold the tremendous opposition from Tun Habib and his allies, fled to Terengganu in 1688 where he was shortly killed after that. [11] Shortly after Tun Abdul Jamil's expulsion, Tun Habib went over to Riau and took the young ruler, Sultan Mahmud Shah II back to Johor. [12]

Later career

The death of Tun Abdul Jamil allowed Tun Habib to reassert his position as the Bendahara once more. Tun Habib's return saw the position of the Bendahara in a more powerful position, given that the ruler was deemed too young and inexperienced to exert effective control over Johor's affairs. At least on the ceremonial side, Tun Habib swore allegiance to the young Sultan even as he wielded sole effective authority over the kingdom. In April 1691, a Dutch mercenary fleet visited Johor to seek for trade agreements with Tun Habib, to which he steadfastly turned down by citing that he was not to sign any agreements on his own accord until the Sultan reaches maturity of age. [13]

Tun Habib was also reportedly well-loved and respected among his subjects and often worked closely with his ministers (Orang Kaya). Shortly after he regained power, Tun Habib relocated the Johor Empire's capital to Kota Tinggi. [10] He also took charge of state affairs by proxy in Terengganu, at that time a sparsely populated state. [14] Sultan Mahmud was given more opportunities to participate in state roles under Tun Habib, although it was the latter who wielded the actual control over the Sultanate's affairs. [15] Tun Habib later died in Padang Saujana, Kota Tinggi in 1697, where he was buried. [16] His oldest son, Abdul Jalil, succeeded him as the 20th Bendahara of Johor but usurped the throne from Sultan Mahmud Shah II just two years later in 1699 and took the title Sultan Abdul Jalil IV. [12] His 5th son, Zainal Abidin, who was living in Pattani, came down to Terengganu and became its first Sultan. [17]

Family

Ancestry

Tun Habib's mother was of Malay ethnicity; while his father was of mixed ancestry. His great-grandfather, Sayyid Abdullah Al-Aidrus, was a Hadhrami Arab immigrant who settled in Aceh. His son, Sayyid Zainal Abidin, migrated to Johor and married the granddaughter of Tun Sri Lanang by his son, Tun Jenal, [18] the 5th Bendahara of Sekudai. [19] It was from this union that the Maharaja Sri Diraja, the Dato Pasir Diraja (Sayyid Ja'afar) and Putri Bakal were born. Putri Bakal was believed to have later married Sultan Mahmud Shah II. [20]

The name "Habib" was a local Acehnese variant of the "Sayyid", an honorific title used by descendants of the Prophet Muhammad. However, in lieu of terse relations between Aceh with its neighbours in the 16th century, Tun Habib's name revealed his Acehnese heritage served to raise suspicions when it came to political matters. His descendants gave up the use of "Habib" in their names. [21]

Descendants

Tun Habib had several sons by different wives, all of whom rose to influential positions. He had at least six sons: Tun (Habib) Abdul Jalil, Tun Abdullah, Tun Abdul Jamal, Tun Mas Anum, Tun Zainal Abidin and Tun Mas Jiwa were all later appointed as Bendaharas. Among these sons, Tun Abdul Jalil and Tun Zainal Abidin later established their own independent ruling houses in Johor-Riau and Terengganu respectively. [22]

  • House of Bendahara (Johor): Based in Johor, this branch was headed by Sultan Hussein Shah until his death in 1824, although the Temenggong wielded more actual authority than the Sultan, largely because of a lack of legitimate recognition among the Malay nobles. [29] Hussein Shah's successor, Ali, while he managed to get hold of the royal seal to claim legitimacy to his rule, [30] was quickly overshadowed by the more powerful Temenggong. Under British pressure, he was forced to cede soveriginity rights over Johor (except Muar) to Temenggong Daeng Ibrahim in 1855. Sultan Ali died in 1877. [31]
  • House of Riau-Lingga: This branch was based in Lingga and headed by Sultan Abdul Rahman, who was supported by the Bugis nobles. [32] He later died in 1832 and was succeeded by his son, Muhammad Shah [33] and subsequently his grandson, Mahmud Muzaffar Shah in 1841. [34] Sultan Mahmud Muzaffar Shah was deposed in 1857 by the Dutch, [35] [36] which was also supported by the Bugis nobles. [37] [38] In his later years, he began to claim recognition as the legitimate ruler of the Johor-Riau empire. [39] This royal house lasted until 3 February 1911, when the Dutch assumed full control over Riau and Lingga. [38]

See also

Notes

  1. Deraman, Aziz, Peradaban Melayu Timur Laut, pg 1288
  2. Ibrahim, Negeri Yang Sembilan: Daerah Kecil Pesaka Adat Warisan Kerajaan Berdaulat (1995), pg 137
  3. Ali, Wan Ramli Wan Mohamad, Pengakuan Tengku Ali: mengapa saya diturunkan dari takhta Terengganu?, pg 3
  4. Winstedt, A History of Malaya (1935), pg 147
  5. Suwannathat-Pian, Thai-Malay Relations: Traditional Intra-regional Relations from the Seventeenth to the Early Twentieth Centuries, pg 39
  6. Abdul Jalal, Noor Rahim, Isa, Peterana Kasih: Antologi Puisi, pg 12
  7. Winstedt, A History of Johore, pg 195
  8. Reid, Anthony, Southeast Asia in the Early Modern Era: Trade, Power, and Belief, pg 138
  9. Institut Tadbiran Awam Negara, Malaysia Kita, pg 344
  10. 1 2 Turnbull, Constance Mary, A Short History of Malaysia, Singapore, and Brunei, pg 66
  11. Bastin, Winks, Malaysia: Selected Historical Readings, pg 76
  12. 1 2 Pusat Penelitian Arkeologi Nasional (Indonesia), Pertemuan Ilmiah Arkeologi IV, Cipanas 3-9 Maret 1986, pg 283
  13. Reid, Castles, Pre-colonial State Systems in Southeast Asia: The Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Bali-Lombok, South Celebes, pg 5
  14. Goneng, Growing Up in Trengganu, pg 138-9
  15. Andaya, The Kingdom of Johor, 1641-1728: A Study of Economic and Political Developments in the Straits of Malacca, pg 198
  16. Ali, Hooker, Andaya, The Precious Gift: Tuhfat Al-nafis, pg 314
  17. Information Malaysia (1990), pg 714
  18. "Jenal" is also spelled variously as "Jinal" or "Jinak". Winstedt, A History of Johore, pg 189, 194
  19. (Tun) Suzana (Tun) Othman, Institusi Bendahara; Permata Melayu yang hilang: Dinasti Bendahara Johor-Pahang, pg 181
  20. 1 2 Winstedt, A History of Johore, pg 59-60, 195
  21. Winstedt, R.O., Bendaharas and Temenggungs, pg 51
  22. (Tun) Suzana (Tun) Othman, Institusi Bendahara; Permata Melayu yang Hilang: Dinasti Bendahara Johor-Pahang, pg 41
  23. Trocki, Singapore: Wealth, Power and the Culture of Control, pg 82
  24. Trocki, Prince of Pirates: The Temenggongs and the Development of Johor and Singapore, 1784-1885, pg 97
  25. Buckley, An Anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore: From the foundation of the settlement under the Honourable the East India Company on February 6th, 1819, to the transfer to the Colonial Office as part of the colonial possessions of the Crown on April 1st, 1867 ...It is amusing to find the assertion that the Sultan of Lingga (who had, by means of the Dutch, taken away half of the territory of Johore from the authority of his elder brother) had been prejudiced by the treaty of 1824 which secured Rhio to him...
  26. Winstedt, A History of Johore (1365–1941), pg 95
  27. Original facsimile of the letter may be seen in Perang Bendehara Pahang 1857-1863, Menelusi Peranan British, (Tun) Suzana (Tun) Othman, page 222
  28. Tate, The Making of Modern South-East Asia, pg 134 .....Timmerman Thyssen, expressing his amazement at a fate which separated father from son, brother from brother, and friend from friend. He also declared that he continued to recognize Sultan Abdul Rahamn of Riau as his overlord, and his seal diplomatically styled him as the representative of the late Sultan Mahmud! In the same year he refused to allow the British flag to be flown in Pahang. Later, as the situation became clearer, Bendahara Ali modified his attitude and apparently accorded his recognition to Sultan Husain as well, and in 1841 Husain's son and heir asked to come to Pahang to be installed as the new sultan by the Bendahara. In 1853 the Bendahara felt sufficiently sure of his position to have himself proclaimed as an independent ruler, although the fiction of Johore's sovereignty was allowed to continue up till 1864. (NB: Johor was by then under the effective control of the Temenggong, later Sultan Abu Bakar of Johor.)
  29. Kratoska, South East Asia, Colonial History, pg 247 In the south, Sultan Hussein of Johore had no authority among the Malay rulers, although one section of the European merchants of Singapore saw in him a useful tool for intrigue. The Sultan of Rhio was forbidden by the Dutch to interfere in the peninsula, and this political vacuum encouraged the bid for independence by the subordinate chiefs, the temenggong of Johore and the Bendahara of Pahang.
  30. Reid, Anthony, An Indonesian Frontier: Acehnese and Other Histories of Sumatra, pg 252
  31. 1 2 3 Trocki, Prince of Pirates: The Temenggongs and the Development of Johor and Singapore, 1784-1885, pg 22-3
  32. Bastin, Winks, Malaysia: Selected Historical Readings, pg 132 Though in 1818 Major Farquhar had signed a treaty with the Underking of Riau by virtue of powers granted him by 'Abdu'r- Rahman Sultan of Johor, Pahang and dependencies, and though in his letter suggesting the Carimons (Karimun) for a port he had again referred to 'Abdu'r-Rahman as emperor, he now conveniently remembered that the potentate had deprecated being called ruler of the Johor empire and had declared that he was Sultan of Lingga only. So aware that under Dutch surveillance neither Sultan 'Abdu'r-Rahman of Lingga nor the Underking at Riau would be able to convey any rights at Singapore to the British,...
  33. Jessy, History of South-East Asia, 1824-1965, pg 145
  34. Trocki, Prince of Pirates: The Temenggongs and the Development of Johor and Singapore, 1784-1885, pg 97
  35. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society (1937), pg 210
  36. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society (1936) ...Mahmud Muzaffar Shah, deposed by the Dutch from the throne of Lingga, appeared in Pahang in 1858, claiming to be the lawful ruler of that State and of Johor, as his ancestors had been before his deposition.
  37. Barnard, Contesting Malayness: Malay Identity Across Boundaries, pg 121 ...Reading historical sources, we are told that the Bugis in the nineteenth century associated very much with the colonial government and helped toget rid of the troublesome Malay Sultan Mahmud in 1857. .....Obviously there were tensions between them, most clearly reflected when the Malay Sultan Mahmud was deposed with the support of the Bugis in 1857.
  38. 1 2 Turnbull, A Short History of Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei, pg 122 After the Pahang civil war the Malay chiefs ceased to acknowledge the suzerainty of Riau-Lingga even formally. While the royal house of Lingga lasted until 1911, neither Bendahara Wan Ahmad nor his rival Temenggong Abu Bakar, applied to the sultan to confirm their titles.
  39. Jessy, History of South-East Asia, 1824-1965, pg 61, "...to Sultan Mahmud Muzaffar Shah of Riau-Lingga in the early 1860s, in spite of the latter's laying claim to the whole of the old Johore-Riau empire.
  40. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society (1936), pg 162

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References

Further reading