BRUNEI |
BRIEF HISTORY
The early history of Brunei and its ruling dynasty is
clouded in mystery, due not only to the paucity of records but also to attempts
to construct an official Islamic version of history which blots out anything
else. The officially published Royal genealogies are often at variance with
verifiable foreign sources at certain periods in history, as well as with the
national epic poem, the Syair Awang Semaun. Although parts of the latter have
come to light, publication of the full text remains prohibited because it does
not always confirm the published official texts.
According to the official version of events, Brunei was
founded by a band of fourteen saudara (brothers and first cousins), who
eventually settled in the Brunei river near the present capital and chose one
of their number as the first ruler. Some known versions of the Syair Awang
Semaun state that they were all the sons of Dewa Amas of Kayangan, a part
supernatural being who descended to earth at Ulu Limbang in an egg. Discovered
by the Sang Aji, he was married to that ruler's daughter by whom he fathered
one son. He travelled to thirteen settlements in the region in search of an
auspicious ox. At each of the villages, he fathered thirteen (or twenty-two) other
sons by thirteen different aboriginal wives, daughters of the local penghulu.
Official accounts attempt to Islamise his origins but several elements of the
story clearly emanate from the Hindu concept of the cosmic egg, hiranyagarbha.
The Islamised Silsilah Raja-Raja Brunei also mentions a ruler named Sang Aji.
However, it is clear from the histories of other states in the region that Sang
Aji is actually the title used by Hindu rulers in the region, not necessarily
the name of any particular ruler.
The first ruler chosen by the saudara to rule the newly
founded state was Awang Alak Betatar, the son of Dewa Amas and the Sang Aji's
daughter. He was not necessarily the eldest among them, but chosen to rule
because of his fitness to do so. The official account states that he journeyed
to Johor, embraced Islam, married the daughter of a Sultan "Bahkei"
of Johor and received the title of Sultan Muhammad Shah from him. Alas, these
events are dated to 1363 AD, some 150 years or so before the sultanate of Johor
came into existence. Neither the Malay Annals, nor other records, show any
connection between the Johor and Brunei dynasties, nor do they make mention of
any Sultan "Bahkei". The earliest mention of any marriage connection
with Brunei is in the sultanate of Pahang, an offshoot of the Malacca-Johor
dynasty, much later in the sixteenth century.
Excavations unearthed near the capital suggest that the
Chinese may have controlled, or at least traded in the area as early as 835 AD.
Camphor and pepper seem to have been prized objects of trade. Brunei hard
camphor had a wholesale value equivalent to its own weight in silver. The
kingdom was undoubtedly a very wealthy and cultured one. Ming dynasty accounts
give detailed information about visits and tribute missions by rulers of P'o-ni
during the late fourteenth and early fifteenth century. Their names and titles
suggest either Hindu or Buddhist influence, not Islamic. The texts confirm that
the state was tributary to the Hindu Javanese Majapahit Empire, but sought and
received Chinese protection in 1408. Modern Bruneian writers make valiant
attempts at trying to reconcile the official Islamised version of history with
Western and Chinese sources. The Sinosized Sanskrit names are transliterated in
such a way as to accord with Islamic names. Any names that cannot be arranged,
are simply omitted from the Malay versions altogether. However, as one
historian has shown by detailed references to Imperial banquet records, the
kings who visited the Chinese court ate pork. One Brunei historian, confronted
with the difficulty of this evidence, simply turns the tables and says that the
historian concerned found the very opposite.
Islamic tombs have been found and dated to 1264, 1432 and
1499, and a letter from the ruler of P'o-ni to the Emperor of China dates from
1371 and is written in Arabic script. However, none of them has any
inscriptions, names or indications that they belonged to rulers or members of
the Royal family. As late as 1514 the Captain-General of Malacca reported that
although the merchants of Brunei were Muslim, their king remained a pagan. The
Temenggong of Malacca at that time was a Brunei Muslim and seems to have
confirmed this information. In the following year, the Portuguese
Superintendent of the Spice Trade reported that it was "not long
since" the King had become a Muslim. Thus dating the conversion to ca 1515
not 1363. Such a date would also tally with mention of the part played by the
Johore sultanate, established after 1511, in the conversion of the ruler.
Pinafetta, the Italian chronicler of the Magellan mission,
visited Brunei in July 1521. He reported that there were two large towns on
either side of the Brunei River. Each town with its own king, one a Muslim
ruler and the other pagan. Later, in April 1578, the Spanish invaders who
entered the mosque found "a block of marble containing painted and gilded
pictures of idols", which they then looted. The paucity of Royal tombs and
engraved headstones is also remarkable, until one realises that as Hindus or
Buddhists they would have been cremated, not buried. It is obvious from this
that contemporary foreign records do not corroborate the official chronology.
The ruler of Brunei probably did not convert to Islam until ca. 1515. For a
considerable period thereafter, a significant portion of the population,
perhaps including a rival branch of the Royal Family, may have adhered to the
old religion.
Chinese, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish sources from the
fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries frequently tell of the wealth and power
of the sultanate. By at least the fifteenth century, the Brunei sultan
controlled virtually the whole of the coastal regions along the northern
coastline of Borneo, Sulu, parts of Mindanao and even Luzon, in the
Philippines. This wealth and power naturally brought European traders, of whom
the Portuguese were content to trade. The Spanish, however, established
themselves in Luzon. Proximity, religious differences, and trading aims soon
caused friction between Brunei and Spain. Skirmishes turned to hostility and
eventually war.
The Spanish invaded Brunei in 1577 and again in 1578, when
they occupied and annexed the capital and its outlying parts to the Spanish
crown. However, they were compelled to withdraw within a year and Sultan 'Abdu'l
Kahar resumed control of the kingdom. Not long afterwards, a fractious civil
war of succession erupted, continuing for several years. A resolution only
emerged once the sultan of Sulu, in the Philippines, intervened in support of
one of the parties and tipped the balance of power in his favour. The fractious
civil war had been bad enough, driving away trade and compelling people to
emigrate elsewhere. However, the price of that help turned out to be enormously
high. The victorious sultan also had to surrender a large slice of territory on
the Northeast coast of Borneo to his saviour. Thereafter, the sultanate fell
into a slow, long and steady decline.
By the middle of the nineteenth century, the chief means of
income were piracy and cattle raiding. As income had declined, taxation had
increased to the point of extortion. This in turn drove more people away and
encouraged rebellion in the provinces of the empire. It was not long before the
session of territory became the main legitimate means of earning income. The
remaining coastal regions and inland tracts of North Borneo were ceded to
European adventurers and commercial interests. In the vast eastern territories,
Sir James Brooke became first a vassal then independent Rajah of Sarawak. He
embarked on a long process of annexation or seizure of provinces until at last,
his territories encroached almost to Brunei town itself, and he made himself
master of most of the Northern coast. Britain, needing a convenient coaling
station, annexed the island of Labuan and its dependencies. By the late
nineteenth century, the sultanate had shrunk to little more than Brunei
water-town and the immediate hinterland.
An agreement with the British on 17th September 1888 halted
the process of the shrinking sultanate up to a point and established a degree
of protection. Alas, not enough to prevent the Brookes from encouraging a
rebellion and wresting yet another slice of the sultanate, cutting the
remaining territory in two. A new agreement with the British on 3rd December
1905 established a full protectorate, and prevented any further encroachment.
The UK became responsible for defence and external affairs and appointed a
permanent local Resident to advise the Sultan. Although this advice extended to
the finer points of modern administration, the raising of revenue and fiscal
control, interference in the internal administration of the sultanate was
forbidden. Thereafter, attempts were made to develop the country but progress
was painfully slow. Extremely limited resources and meagre revenues, resulted
in just a few Malay schools being established, the creation of a police force,
and departments of customs, lands and posts.
Exploration for oil had begun as early as 1911 at Labi and
Bukit Puan, then shifted to Tutong in 1923, until final success at Seria in
1929. The discovery of oil came like manna from heaven, assuring the sultanate
with a future as the wealthiest country in the world, for its size. Gradually,
government revenues began to rise, then escalate rapidly. For a decade or more,
surpluses were being built because the speed of growth exceeded the ability to
administer controlled spending. The once impoverished sultanate became a net
lender to the government of the Straits Settlements in the 1930s.
Japan occupied Brunei during the Second World War, helping
itself to all the resources of the country. By the end of the war, the
sultanate was in near ruin. Heavy fighting for control over Brunei Town saw
much of it bombed out of existence. Food, materials and equipment were scarce
until the late 1940s. The resumption of civilian rule after Japan's defeat
witnessed a gradual loosening of Imperial controls. An amendment to the
protectorate agreement on 29th September 1959, introduced the first written
Constitution, ended the residential system and established an elected
legislature with modern ministerial government.
Although there had been hopes during the late 1950's and early
1960's that Brunei would join Malaysia, the Sultan consistently remained aloof
from all overtures. The sultanate advanced rapidly as oil production expanded
and revenues increased during the 1960's. This brought unwelcome interest from
Indonesia, already engaged in "confrontation" with Malaysia with the
aim of annexing the resource rich states of Sarawak and Sabah. President
Sukarno supported a left wing inspired rural insurrection against the Brunei
government. Although flying in police units from British North Borneo and
Gurkhas from Malaya swiftly put this down, a hidden jungle campaign continued
throughout Borneo for several subsequent years. British troops led by a Gurkha
contingent together with the Brunei police and the new Royal Brunei Malay Regiment,
saw-off these erstwhile "liberators". Unfortunately, the experience
proved a watershed for democratic reform. The experiment with democracy was
ended and the legislature dissolved.
Sultan Omar 'Ali Saif ud-din, the architect of the modern
revival of Brunei's fortunes, abdicated in favour of his eldest son in 1967.
However, as in the sultanate of old, the Begawan Sultan as he was known after
his abdication, continued to wield considerable power and influence until his
death. His son, Sultan Hassan al-Bolkiah, only gradually emerged from his
father's guidance in the 1980's. Nevertheless, the two Sultans negotiated
complete internal self-government on 23rd November 1971. The British would have
preferred to see the sultanate join Malaysia or else become independent, but
neither sultan were keen to see them go quite yet. The sultanate somewhat
reluctantly agreed to full independence and became a full member of the
Commonwealth on 1st January 1984. Since then, Sultan Hassan has led his nation
into the forefront of regional and Islamic states. His people enjoy a standard
of living, educational, health and other benefits, unrivalled almost anywhere
on the planet. The former Brunei Town, renamed Bandar Seri Begawan in honour of
his revered father, has changed out of all recognition from the sleepy
water-town of old. It now boasts some magnificent buildings and monuments of
world architectural merit. In recent years, the experiment in democracy that
had been abandoned after the rebellion of 1960, has been revived. The Asian
financial crisis of the 1990's has long passed, and the recent sharp rise in
world oil prices has returned the sultanate to a period of economic boom.
STYLES & TITLES:
he Sovereign: Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Sri
Baginda Sultan dan Yang di-Pertuan Negara Brunei Dar us-Salam, i.e. Sultan and
Yang di-Pertuan of the State of Brunei Dar us-Salam, with the style of His
Majesty.
Royal Consort: Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Sri
Baginda Raja Istri, i.e. Raja Istri, with the style of Her Majesty.
Junior Consort: Duli Yang Teramat Mulia Pangiran Istri, i.e.
Princess with the style of Her Royal Highness.
Heir Apparent: Duli Yang Teramat Mulia Duli Paduka Sri
Pangiran Muda Mahkota, i.e. Crown Prince with the style of His Royal Highness.
Younger sons and grandsons of the Sovereign, in the male
line: Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Sri Duli Pangiran Muda, i.e. Prince with the
style of His Royal Highness.
Daughters and granddaughters of the Sovereign, in the male
line: Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Sri Duli Pangiran Anak Putri, i.e. Princess
with the style of Her Royal Highness.
Grandsons of the Sovereign, being the sons of daughters:
Yang Amat Mulia Duli Pangiran Anak, unless their father's hold a senior Vizier
title.
Granddaughters of the Sovereign, being the daughters of
daughters: Yang Amat Mulia Duli Pangiran Anak, unless their father's hold a
senior Vizier title.
RULES OF SUCCESSION:
Male primogeniture amongst the legitimate heirs and
successors of Sultan Hashim Jalal ul-Alam. The sons of Royal wives take
precedence over the sons of commoners.
ORDERS & DECORATIONS:
Please see link below.
GLOSSARY:
al-Haj: honorific used after the name for both males and
females who have made the 'Haj', pilgrimage, to Mecca.
al-Marhum: the honoured deceased, prefixed to the titles of
sovereigns and people of very high rank.
Astana (or istana):
palace.
Awang: style of address originally used for lesser nobles
but now used as an equivalent for Mister (Mr).
Awangawang (or awang2): aristocrats.
Awangku: title of an unmarried son of a Pangiran.
Berkat: blessed.
Brunei: derived from Sanskrit Varunai meaning Sea people.
Cheteria: the third rank of official, after Vizier.
Dar us-Salam: 'Abode of Peace'.
Dato (also Datu or Datuk): part of the title for non-nobles,
now also used for certain higher classes of the Orders of Chivalry, equivalent
to Knight Commander.
Dayang: female of equivalent of Awang. Originally a title
used for lesser nobles but now used as an equivalent for "Miss".
Dayangku: female equivalent of Y.M. Awangku, title used for
unmarried daughters of a Pangiran, retained after marriage if the husband is a
commoner.
Duli Paduka Sri Pangiran Muda Mahkota: Crown Prince.
Duli Pangiran Bendahara Paduka Sri Maharaja Permaisuara: the
full style for the highest Vizier title, usually held by a senior member of the
Royal family.
Duli Pangiran di-Gadong Sahib ul-Mal ul-Mulk ul-Adli: the
full style for one of the senior Vizier titles, frequently held by members of
the Royal family. Vacant 1900-1968.
Duli Pangiran Pemancha Sahib ul-Rai' wa ul-Mushuarat: the
full style for one of the senior Vizier titles, frequently held by members of
the Royal family. Sometimes translated as Minister for Home Affairs.
Duli Pangiran Shahbandar Sahib ul-Bandar Bait ul-Karib: the
full style for one of the Vizier titles of the second rank, frequently held by
members of the Royal family. Sometimes translated as minister for trade and
commerce.
Haji: honorific used before the name for males who have made
the pilgrimage, to Mecca.
Hajjah: honorific used before the name for females who have
made the pilgrimage, to Mecca.
Hulun: slave.
ibni (ibnu): son of, used for persons of high rank only.
Istana: Palace
Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Sri Maulana Sultan: the
full style of the Sultan.
Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Sri Raja Istri: the full
style of the chief Royal wife of the Sultan.
Mentri (or Menteri): Minister.
Mentri Besar (or Menteri Besar): Chief Minister.
Orang (or urang): person, man.
Orang Kaya: literally "rich man", part of a title
for non-nobles.
Paduka Sri Pangiran Anak Putri: style used for the daughters
of a Sultan born of Royal wives.
Pehin: a non-noble official of high rank.
Pangiran (or Pangiran): title of married male descendants in
the male line of a Sultan or great nobleman, or for any female descendant in
the male line who has married a man of that rank.
Pangiran Anak: Prince or Princess, used for all daughters
and all sons of Sultans by lesser wives, the sons of a Sultan's daughter, as
well as the children of Viziers.
Pangiran Anak Istri: Princess Consort, a title used for the
senior and royal wives of a Pangiran Muda.
Pangiran Muda: Prince, used for the (gahara) sons of the
Sultan, Pangiran Bendahara, and the eldest gahara son of the Pangiran
di-Gadong.
Mentri (or Mantri): minister, ranking below vizier.
Pangiran Laila Cheteria Sahib ul-Nabala: one of the Vizier
titles of the third rank, frequently held by members of the Royal family.
Pangiran Maharaja Adinda: the full style for one of the
Vizier titles of the second rank, frequently held by members of the Royal
family.
Pangiran Maharaja Laila Sahib ul-Kahar: the full style for
one of the Vizier titles of the second rank, frequently held by members of the
Royal family. Sometimes translated as Admiral.
Pangiran Paduka Tuan: the full style for one of the Vizier
titles of the second rank, frequently held by members of the Royal family.
Pangiran Perdana Cheteria Sahib ul-Nabala: one of the Vizier
titles of the third rank, frequently held by members of the Royal family.
Pangiranpangiran (or pangiran2): nobles.
Persatuan Melayu Brunei: Brunei Malay Youth Association.
Pingat: medal
Puan Yang Terutama (P.Y.T.): Her Excellency.
Raja Istri: 'royal wife' or 'the ruler's wife', the usual
tile for the senior wife and consort of the Brunei sovereign.
Raja Raja batas: high nobility.
Sri Paduka Duli Pangiran Temenggong Sahib ul-Bahar: the full
style for the second highest Vizier titles, usually held by a senior member of
the Royal family. Sometimes translated as Commander-in-Chief. Vacant 1885-1967.
Tuan Yang Terutama (T.Y.T.): His Excellency.
Vizier (or Wazir): the four highest noble officials, ranking
immediately after the Sultan.
Yang di-Pertuan: (he) who is Lord, i.e. sovereign ruler.
Yang Amat Mulia (Y.A.M.): the style used for the daughter of
a Sultan by a senior wife, the children of a Sultan by his junior wives, the children
of the Pangiran Shahbandar, Maharaja Laila, Paduka Tuan, Maharaja Adinda,
Cheteria Besar, Cheteria Pengalasan and Cheteria Damit.
Yang Teramat Mulia (Y.T.M.): the style used for the children
of a Sultan by a Royal wife, the children of the Sri Paduka Duli Pangiran
Bendahara, the di-Gadong, the Pemancha and the Temenggong.
SOURCES:
Y.B. Pehin Orang Kaya Amar Diraja Sri Utama (Dr) Awang Haji
Mohd. Jamil Al-Sufri bin Begawan Pehin Udana Khatib Dato Sri Paduka Awang Haji
Umar. Syair Rakis, Karangan al-Marhum Pangiran Shahbandar Pangiran Md. Saleh
ibnu Pangiran Sharmayuda. Pusat Sejarah, Brunei, 1983.
Bastin and Winks (comp.). "The early Malacca and Brunei
Sultanates [selections]", Malaysia: Selected Historical Readings (1979).
Carrie C. Brown. "Two Ming texts concerning King
Ma-na-je-chia-na of P'o-ni", The Brunei Museum Journal, 1974.
D.E. Brown. "Brunei: The Structure and History of a
Bornean Malay Sultanate". Monograph of the Brunei Museum Journal, Volume
2, Number 2, The Brunei Museum, Brunei, 1970.
Simon Francis. Pictures of the Palace, travellers' accounts
of the Brunei of Sultan 'Abdu'l Momin and Sultan Hashim between 1881 and 1906.
Centre for South East-Asian Studies, University of Hull, Hull, 1993.
W.P. Groenveld. "Notes on the Malay Archipelago and
Malacca compiled from Chinese sources", Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch
Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen, XXXIX (1880), p. 111.
A. V. M. Horton. Negara Brunei Darussalam: A Biographical
Dictionary (1846-1998). Fourth Edition in two volumes. AVM Horton, Bordesley,
Worcs. 1990.
Hasan Kulit and Awang Yahya bin Haji Mohamad. Daulat.
Jabatan Pusat Sejarah Kementerian Kebudayaan dan Sukan Bandar Seri Begawan,
1992.
Hugh Low. "Selesilah (Book of Descent) of the Rajas of
Brunei", Journal of the Malay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, No. 5,
June 1880, pp.1-36.
Matassim Haji Jibah. "Pangiran Indira Mahkota
Shahbandar Muhammad Saleh and James Brooke in the History of Brunei",
Brunei History Journal, 1979.
Allen R. Maxwell. "Accessing the Epic Status of the
Brunei Malay Sya'ir Awang Simawn. Paper presented at Tenth International
Conference on Linguistics. 17-20 January 2006. Puerto Princessa, Palawan,
Philippines.
Allen R. Maxwell. "Who is Awang Simawn?"in From
Buckfast to Borneo: Essays Presented to Father Robert Maxwll on the 85th
Anniversary of his birth 27 March 1995. Centre for South-East Asian Studies,
University of Hull, England, pp. 178-206.
Robert Nicholl. European Sources for the History of the
Sultanate of Brunei in the Sixteenth Century. Brunei Museum, Brunei Town, 1975.
Robert Nicholl. "Notes on some controversial issue in
Brunei History", Archipel, Etudes interdisciplinaires sur le monde
insulindien. Centre National dela Recherche Scientifique, 1980, pp. 25-41.
Pehin Orang Kaya Amar Diraja Dato Sri Utama (Dr) Haji Awang
Muhammad Jamil al-Sufri. Tarsilah Brunei, Sejarah Awal dan Perkembangan Islam.
Jabatan Pusat Sejarah Kementerian Kebudayaan Belia dan Sukan, Bandar Seri
Begawan, 1990
D. S. Ranjit Singh. Brunei 1839-1983: the problems of
political survival. Singapore, Oxford University Press (1984).
D.S. Ranjit Singh and J.S. Sidhu. Historical Dictionary of
Brunei Darussalam. Scarecrow Press, Lanham, Md. (1997).
P.L. Amin Sweeney. "Silsilah Raja-Raja Brunei",
", Journal of the Malay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, No. 41 (2),
December 1998.
W. H. Treacher. "The Genealogy of the Royal Family of
Brunei", Journal of the Malay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, No. 15,
June 1880.
BRUNEI 2 BRUNEI
3 BRUNEI 4 BRUNEI 5 BRUNEI 6
BRUNEI 7 BRUNEI
8 BRUNEI 9 BRUNEI 10 BRUNEI 11
BRUNEI 12 BRUNEI
13 ORDERS & DECORATIONS HOME
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