By Josiah C. Ang, PM
Source: Jolo and Sulu
The seat of The Royal Sultanate of Sulu is in Astana Putih,
Tausug for “White Palace,” located some two kilometers southwest of the Spanish
Walled City of Jolo, in Umbul Duwa at the present municipality of Indanan in
Jolo Island. Jolo is the capital town of the Province of Sulu that is within
the present geographical jurisdiction of the Republic of the Philippines.
THE ERA OF H.M.H. THE ROYAL SULTANATE OF SULU
1450 AD - A Johore-born Arab adventurer, Shari'ful Hashem
Syed Abu Bak=r, arrived in Sulu from Melaka; He married Param Isuli, daughter
of Raja Baguinda, and founded The Royal Sultanate of Sulu in 1457; He declared
himself H.R.H. Paduka Maulana Mahasari Sharif Sultan Hashem Abu Bak=r, Sultan
of Sulu, of the Saudi House of Hashemite in Hadramaut, where most Tausug and
Yakan believed prophet Mohammad's genealogy is traced.
1451 AD - By this time, the Melakan Sultanate had become a
leading center of Islam in southeast Asia, and as a time-tested protege of the
Ming dynasty, Yung Lo sent away his daughter Hang Li-po and a cortege of
five-hundred Mandarin ladies as A gift to Melakan Sultan Mansor Shah in 1459;
in turn, Shah conceived "Bukit Cina" as a permanent residential court
for his esteemed visitors.
H.R.H. Sultan Syed Hashem Abu Bak'r (1457-1480)
1470 AD - Muslim conquest of the Madjapahit Empire.
1473-1521 AD - Golden age rule of Nakhoda Ragam Sultan
Bulkeiah=s Sultanate of Brunei that expanded her hegemony to include North
Borneo, Sarawak, Indonesia Balabac, Banggi, and Palawan in Archipelago San
Lazaro (present-day Philippines) and the new Royal Sultanate of Sulu
H.R.H. Sultan Kamal ud-Din (1480-1519)
1509 AD - A Bengali Putih and Diego Lopez deSequeira with a
squadron of five Portuguese battle ships established the first White settlement
in Melaka (Ferdinand Magellan was said to be a member of this expedition).
1511 AD - Portuguese privateer Alfonso deAlbuquerque
captured Melaka from deSequeira and reported of Muslim trading vessels from
Sulu anchored in that Malay port.
1512 AD - Unnamed Portuguese sailors effected a brief
landing on Mindanaw.
H.R.H. Sultans Amir ul-Umara, Mu'izzul Mutawa Din & Nasir
ud-Din (1519-1579)
1520 AD - Jesuit historian Francisco Combe reported of an
unnamed Muslim Sharif who tried to spread Islam to Jolo but died at Bud
Tumangtangis; His magnificent tomb was comparable to those in Makkah, but
unfortunately in the years following, Manila Spaniards burned it to the ground.
1521 AD - Antonio Pigafetta deVicenza, the Italian
chronicler of Ferdinand Magellan, was said to have visited Brunei Sultan
Bulkeiah's court around this time; While crusing along the Bornean coast, fellow
Spaniards captured Rajah Matanda of May Nilad, grandson of then reigning Brunei
Sultan and nephew to Brunei Raja Muda (Rajah Suleiman to Filipinos). [Rajah
Suleiman was himself a son-in-law of Brunei Sultan Abdul Kahar and this
incident could have made unfortunate misgivings of his view of White men as he
was to meet them again in the Battle of May Nilad in 1570].
March 16, 1521 AD - Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan,
a.k.a. Fernao Magalhaes and Fernando de Magallanes, discovered Archipelago San
Lazaro (present-day Samar Island) arriving on five vessels that included
Trinidad (Magellan, skipper), San Antonio (Juan deCartagena), Concepcion
(Gaspar deQuesada), Victoria (Luis deMondoza), and Santiago (Juan Serrano) and
a total of two-hundred-sixty-four crew members.
- Magellan and his men then erected a wooden cross as
testimony to their "discovery" of and claim for the Spanish Crown the
Archipelago San Lazaro, named after this feast day of of Saint Lazarus (March
16).
March 18, 1521 AD - Magellan, including his wife's cousin
Duarte Barbosa, cosmographer Andres de San Martin, and Pigafetta landed on an
uninhabited island known as Homonhon where friendly natives from neighboring
islands brought food and Atuba and together they feasted for one day.
March 24, 1521 - Moving southeast, Magellan weighed anchor
for Masawa on Mindanaw Island where Masawa Rajah Kolambu was entertaining his
visiting brother, Rajah Siagu of Butuan; The two Rajahs caused the first
traditional blood compact of foreign visitors in which the visiting dignitary
would drink each other's blood mixed with the native wine, Atuba.
- Mindanaw folklore mentioned a Pernao Magalhao to have
founded this Manobo-tribeland where Rajah Siagu
was already ruling chief; Magalhao may have also Atouched at
Sulu for we find Pigafetta describing the King of
Jolo.
April 06, 1521 - Magellan's ship-chaplain Pedro deValderrama
celebrated the first Roman Catholic mass on Philippine soil at Masawa (some
claims Limasawa in Leyte as the rightful place) which fortunately fell on
Easter Sunday of Jubilation.
- Masawa Rajah Kolambu piloted Magellan to Cebu island where
Cebu Rajah Humabon received them and
sealed yet another blood compact.
April 13,1521 - Cebu Rajah Humabon, his family, and 800
Sugboanons converted to Roman Catholicism before
Magellan and his party and immediately declared the
"enemies of the church" the growing Muslimin community on Mactan
island headed by Kaliph Pulaka (Lapu-Lapu to Filipinos).
April 27, 1521 - Magellan, with forty-eight men in full
armor, ploughed ashore Mactan island but were stopped by poisoned arrows from
men of Lapu-Lapu; The encounter is now known in Philippine history as the
Battle of Mactan.
June 9, 1522 - Juan Sebastian del Cano, navigating
Magellan=s only remaining vessel La Victoria with eighteen men and
533-hundredweight-cloves on board, successfully returned to Sevilla in Spain
via the Tidorein Maluka (present-day Moluccas); Juan Sebastian del Cano was
assigned in world history as the first man to have ever
completed the circumnavigation of the globe.
1523-1542 - Three other expeditions from Mexico attempted to
reach the Philippines via the route taken by Magellan (Barbosa, de Loaisa,
& de Saavedra) but never made it.
November 1, 1542 - Don Antonio de Mendoza, viceroy of Nueva
Espana (present-day Mexico), sent six ships from Navida Mexico under Ruy Lopez
deVillalobos that reached Sarangani islands in 1543 and named his
"discovery" Las Islas Felipinas to honor the son of King Charles of
Spain, Felipe II.
- deVillalobos sent for captain Bernardo delaTorre to survey
the coast of Kota Bato but died there and his crew were captured in Sarangani
by the Portuguese navy stationed in Maluka.
November 21, 1564 - Another Nueva Espana viceroy, Don Luis
de Velasco, commissioned 54-year-old Basque adelantado Miguel Lopez deLegaspi,
to subjugate Islas Felipinas after five unsuccessful attempts.
1565-1663 Fourth Stage of Moro Wars (Majul)
February 1565 - Legaspi arrived in Samar island on his
flagship Capitana piloted by seasoned navigator-priest Andres Urdaneta who was
earlier with the 1525 expedition of Fray Garcia Jofre deLoaiza [Crivelli].
April 1565 - Mooring southward to Bohol, Legaspi executed
the traditional blood compact with Bohol Rajah Sikatuna and Rajah Sigala to
show his sincerity of mission.
May 1565 - Legaspi effected the first Spanish settlement at
Cebu with the aid of the two Bohol Rajahs after a brief combat with remnants of
the Humabon-Lapulapu warriors that were later incorporated into his mercenary
forces.
1568-1648 - The Spanish-Dutch War that started as an
internal agitation within the Holy Roman Empire extended to the Far East for
the control of the spice trade ending in the Peace of Westphalia in 1648; This
war despoiled Portugal of all its East India possessions and severely affected
the tranquility of Moroland.
1569 - Brunei Sultan Saif ul-Raijal zealously campaigned for
Quranic reading excellence among his other subjects in Sarawak, North Borneo,
Palawan, and Sulu.
- Future Brunei Sultan Muhammad Hasan, whose firstborn,
Rajah Bongsu Adapati of Sulu, became Sulu Sultan Mawallil Wasit, married the
sister of Sultan Saiful-Raijal [Kho].
1570 - For lack of food supplies, Legaspi, who by now was
appointed governor-general of the new Spanish colony, moved his seat to Capiz
in Panay island; Hearing of good reports about May Nilad, with its excellent
seaport and fertile boondocks, Legaspi sent for his grandson, Juan deSalcedo
and forty-five able men to explore the area, unfortunately, accomplished little
because of fierce resistance from forces loyal to Rajah Suleiman.
May 24, 1570 - Legaspi then sent marshall Martin Goiti, with
seven-hundred Sugbuano mercenaries and 130 Spanish officers, to Lusong and
stormed the May Nilad-fortress of Rajah Suleiman that left the Brunei Raja Muda
with a disarrayed town, a hundred compatriots killed, and about eighty taken
into captivity.
- Rajah Suleiman was at this time in Lusong to promote the
Quranic reading program of Brunei Sultan Raijal; Three
other fellow Brunei royalties were in May Nilad as his
adjutants that included Rajah Nicoy, Rajah Kanduli, and Rajah Lakandula, a
direct descendant of Alexander the Great, legend says.
May 1571 - Legaspi himself led another invasion with
twenty-seven vessels, two-hundred-eighty Spaniards and several hundred Visayan
mercenaries.
June 3, 1571 - Rajah Suleiman fought fiercely but succumbed
to the guns and cannons of Legaspi; Some three hundred warriors loyal to the
Brunei Raja Muda perished.
- According to Nichol, Rajah Suleiman fled this bloody
encounter and Brunei Annals confirmed a Raja Muda [no doubt Rajah Suleiman] to
have died on this day in Brunei Darussalam after returning from a battle with
the Spaniards.
June 24, 1571 - Legaspi founded May Nilad and ordered the Moro
captives to built a Spanish-style walled city he called "Intra-Moros"
along Ilog Pasig that became Spain=s first major structure in Asia.
August 21, 1572 - Legaspi died in this Intra-Moros
walled-city which is now known as Intramuros.
1574 - According to Medina Historia, a Brunei fleet of
one-hundred galleys and one-hundred Aparaws,@ manned by 8,000 warriors,
attacked May Nilad to requite Rajah Suleiman=s death but in time left after an
evidential Spanish reinforcement from Iloilo. [Nichol]
November 1574 - Chinese warlord Lin Tao Kien (Lim A-hong to
Filipinos) attacked May Nilad but was forced by Spanish navy to retreat to
Lingayen gulf where he finally settled and built his outpost at Sual.
- Jolo folklore reported of a ALimahong who set sail by the
Sulu Sea, even weighing anchor at Tanjung, before this foiled attack on May
Nilad.
March11, 1576 - Juan deSalcedo successfully explored the
island of Lusong but died of fever at age twenty-seven.
1577 - Manila governor-general Francisco deSande sent a
letter to Brunei Sultan Saif ul-Raijal to stop sending Muslim missionaries to
southern Philippines.
- Brunei Annals reported of Manila Spaniards attacks on
Brunei Darussalam who loosely controlled it for three years to even out Sultan
Raijal's belligerent Islamic expansion to Sulu. [www.aseanfocus.com]
H.R.H. Sultans Muhammed ul-Halim (Pangiran Budiman)
(1558-1585)
June,1578 - deSande dispatched captain Esteban Rodriguez de
Figueroa, together with Jesuit priest Juan del Campo and Coadjutor Gaspar
Gomez, to Jolo and, for the first time a European soul set foot on Sulu’s
immortal soil; The visit was not long as a compromise negotiation was reached
between deFigueroa’s invaders and the Tausug leaders that forced the Sulu
Sultan-de-facto Mohammed ul-Halim Pangiran Buddiman to pay Sulu Sea pearls as
regular tribute.
1579 - Because of this successful trip, Manila Spanish
government gave deFigueroa the sole right to colonize
Mindanaw; another captain Juan Arce deSadornil conducted a
brief but disastrous campaign against the Moros of North Borneo and Sulu.
December 1579 - Sir Francis Drake, tracing Magellan=s
circum-navigational route westward, was careened on some islands north of
Celebes Sea that cartographers believed were the Sulu archipelago group.
H.R.H. Sultan Batara Shah Tangah (Pangiran Tindig)
(1585-1600)
1593 - The first permanent Catholic mission in the Moroland
was established by the Jesuits in Samboangan (Sama
word for Sabuan, Adocking point) at Caldera bay (present-day
Recodo).
1596 - Manila Spaniards made another war expedition to Jolo
but was quashed by Rajah Bongsu, Adapati of Sulu (son of Brunei Sultan Muhammad
Hassan from his Butuan wife). [Kho]
November 1596 - Manila Spanish government sent Juan
Ronquillo to build fortified military garrison in Tampakan to thwart Moro raids
but abandoned it the following year in order to reposition itself to Caldera
bay in Zamboanga Peninsula.
1598 - Another war expedition trial was dispatched to Jolo,
however, the Manila Spaniards experienced severe
drawback and returned to Manila leaving nothing to show for
the visit.
H.R.H. Sultan Mawallil Wasit (Rajah Bongsu) (1600-1640)
1600 - Spanish captain Juan Gallinato raided Jolo with
two-hundred men
- Panglima Abdullah of Talipao led an adventurous journey in
seventy paraws that combed the southwestern coasts
from Balanguingue in Tawi-Tawi to Samboangan; Abdulla
likewise attacked Christian Iloilo and burned and ransacked it.
December 31,1600 - Queen Elizabeth I of England granted the
British East India Company trading privileges in Asia by virtue of Charter
signed today; In 1609, King James I decreed to grant perpetuity to the Charter
and, in 1688, King Charles II further granted sovereign right privileges that
made repercussions in the 1878 Lease Agreement between the British East India
Company and Sulu Sultan Kiram I.
1612 - Rajah Bongsu was installed sultan-de-facto of Sulu
and named himself Sultan Mawallil Wasit; He appointed
Brunei Datu Acheh as his aide-de-camp because of his skills
in helping unite the Sulu leaders. [Kho]
1627 - Datu Acheh, on official business in May Nilad for the
Sultanate, was intercepted by Manila Spaniards on his
way home; In retaliation, Sultan Wasit led 2,000 Tausug warriors
in raiding Spanish shipyards in Camarines south of May Nilad. [Ang mga
Pilipino]
1628 - The Manila Spaniards returned the attack by
organizing a raiding force of 200 Spanish officers and 1,600
Christian natives.
1629 - The Sultanate of Sulu sent anew another expedition
under Datu Acheh to attack Spanish settlements in
Camarines, Samar, Leyte and Bohol.
March 17, 1630 - Spanish soldiers again attacked Jolo with
2,500 troops that saw the wounding of their commander Lorenzo de Olaso and
retreated.
1631 - The Sulu warriors launched still another invasion,
this time, targeted only on the Island of Leyte- the seat of
Spanish power in the Visayas.
1632 - Maguindanaw Sultan Kudarat married the daughter of
Sulu Sultan Wasit that cemented a stronger Two-Sultanate-Alliance.
1634 - The Two-Sultanate-Alliance mobilized a
1,500-warrior-contingent and attacked Spanish-controlled settlements in
Dapitan, Leyte and Bohol.
January 1635 - A Sulu Sultanate's captive named Fray Juan
Batista Vilancio escaped Jolo and surfaced before Manila governor-general Don
Juan Cerezo Salamanca who reported of a Moro power concentration in the
Zamboanga peninsula by forces of the two Sultanates.
Aprill 6,1635 - Spanish captain Juan de Chaves was ordered
to beachhead the south and established a military garrison in Samboangan, he
named Bagumbayan, and became the forerunner of Ciudad de Zamboanga; This
garrison in Samboangan led to the beginning of the defeat of Kudarat’s feared
admiral, Datu Tagal, who had raided several pueblos in the Visayas.
June 23, 1635 - Salamanca next ordered a
Jesuit-engineer-priest Melchor de Vera to lay a cornerstone for the
construction of Real Fuerza de San Jose in Bagumbayan (present-day Fort Pilar).
- After finishing his contract and on returning to Spain, he
brought with him the impounded “Coat-of-Arms” of The Royal Sultanate of Sulu.
1636 - Datu Tagal, a brother of Kudarat, gathered a large
fleet of Moro pirates from Mindanaw, Sulu, and North
Borneo and looted the coastal islands of the Visayas.
1637 - Manila governor-general Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera
personally led an expedition against Kudarat and Tagal and triumphed over his
forces at Lamitan and Lian.
January 4,1638 - deCorcuera again led a war expedition of
eighty ships and 2,000 Spaniards to Jolo but was foiled by Sultan Wasit;
however, due to an epidemic within his Acotta@ he and his datus were forced to
seek refuge in Dungun Tawi-Tawi and the Spaniards freely occupied Jolo but
again left in 1646 after a treaty of peace was signed between Malacanan and
Sultan Nasir ud-Din. [Ang mga Pilipino sa Ating Kasaysayan]
1638-1640 - Records had it that Sulu Sultan Wasit=s many
heroic battles during this period at Bud Datu in Jolo island against the Manila
Spaniards were never lucidly recorded; It was Wasit who named this hill to
honor the bravery and unconditional loyalty of his datus.
H.R.H. Sultan Nasir ud-Din (1640-1658)
1640 - In Pulangi Valley in Kota Bato, the lower valley (Si
Ilud) controlled by Sultan Kudarat and the upper valley (Si Raya) controlled by
Rajah Buhayen together with the turf of Rajah Buhisan around Lake Lanao (the
Ranao Sultanates confederation) were merged to form the Sultanate of Maguindanaw
March 25,1644 - Sulu Sultan Wasit dispatched his son
Pangiran Salikula to bombard Jolo and Real Fuerza de San Jose in Bagumbayan
with help from Dutch navy stationed in Batavia (present-day Indonesia) that
droved deCorcuera
1645 - Wasit’s persistent raids wiped out the whole Spanish
garrison in Jolo
April 14,1646 - The Manila Spanish government signed a peace
treaty with Sulu Sultan-de-facto Nasir ud-Din recognizing, among others, his
sovereign rights to extend up to the Tawi-Tawi Group as far as Tup-Tup and
Balabac islands.
- A second batch of Jesuit priests were sent to Jolo during
this period and start the permanent rooting of Roman Catholicism in Sulu [Sulu
Zone, Kho]
1648 - The Treaty of Munster was signed between Spain and
Netherlands to respect each other=s territories; Spain to
withdraw from Maluka and the Dutch from the Zamboanga
Peninsula [Sulu Zone, Kho]
1649 - Under the direct command of Sultan Nasir the Spanish
garrison in Jolo was finally exterminated
H.R.H. Sultan Salah ud-Din (Karamat Baktiar) (1658-1663)
June 1658 - Brunei Sultan Abdul Hakkul Mubin awarded Sulu
Sultan-de-facto Salah ud-Din Bakhtiar the northeast coast of Borneo, including
Palawan, for helping settle a civil war dispute against Pengeran Bongsu
Muhyuddin
May 6,1662 - According to records, Manila governor-general
Sabiniano Manrique de Lara issued an evacuation order for Real Fuerza de San
Jose in Bagumbayan and called all troops to reinforce May Nilad for an imminent
attack by Chinese pirate Cheng Ch=eng-kung (Koxinga), but the truth of the
matter was they were driven away by Sulu warriors during these previous years
and allowing the forces of Kudarat to sequester it in 1663
- Friction between the ruling royalties of Brunei and Sulu
led Camucones Badjaos to shift their loyalty to the Sultan of Sulu [Kho]
H.R.H. Sultans Sahab ud-Din & Mustafa Shafi’ ud-Din
(1663-1704)
1663-1718 - According to historian C.A. Majul, this is a
Period of Interrregnum in which Manila Spanish government abandoned all its
settlement and pretensions in Mindanao and Sulu
1667 - Jesuit historian Francisco Combe wrote the first
History of Mindanaw and Sulu covering the period from 1620 to1665
1673-1690 - The reign of Brunei Sultan Pengeran Bongsu
Muhyuddin saw his hegemony breaking down that eventually phased out his
Sultanate’s 150-year control of the Sulu and return royal powers back to the
Sulu sultans
1699 - Melaka Sultan Mahmoud Shah was murdered in Kampar
Sumatra ending the colorful Melaka Malay Sultanate
1701 - Sulu Sultan Mustafa Shaif ud-Din departed for a
courtesy call to the new Sultanate of Maguindanaw in
sixty-eight “paraws,” but unfortunately, guardsman Kutai
misinterpreted it as an invasion who forced closed the Rio Grande in Kota Bato
and embarrassed the Sulu royalties; A long and fierceful fight ensued.
1703 - Sulu Sultan Shaif bestowed Palawan upon Mindanaw
Sultan Kudarat but which same piece of land was ceded anew to the Manila
Spanish government in 1705
H.R.H. Sultan Badar ud-Din I (1704-1734)
1717 - Sulu Sultan Badar ud-Din sent an emissary to Imperial
China to enlist her support for military assistance; A
similar request was duplicated in 1733
1718-1772 Fifth Stage of Moro Wars (Majul)
1718 - Moro wars were resized when Manila governor-general
Juan Antonio dela Torre Bustamante resolved to
reconstruct Real Fuerza de San Jose in Bagumbayan, and added
to each corner sides citadels embossing the names of Catholic saints San Luis,
San Francisco Xavier, San Felipe, and San Fernando
- The fort was renamed Real Fuerza del Pilar deZaragosa
perpetuating the name of the Manila-Acapulco galleon ship that sunk off Guam
early that year and also renamed Bagumbayan to Ciudad deZamboanga
1719 - Manila Spanish government dispatched a group of
AChavacano-speaking@ Merdicans to Ciudad
deZamboanga (The Merdicans originally were brought in from
Ternate and Tidore in the Celebes in 1663)
April 16,1719 - Don Fernando Bustillos Bustamante Rueda,
senior maestro de campo in Ciudad deZamboanga, inaugurated Real Fuerza del
Pilar de Zaragosa (better known as Fort Pilar to Jolo Christians and Moslems
alike)
December 08, 1720 - Fort Pilar was stormed by Butig Rajah
Dalasi with an armada of one hundred “paraws”; He captured a local Jesuit
priest and forced Manila Spanish government to give ransom payment in exchange
for his freedom
December 1720 - Sulu Sultan Badar directed Datu Bendahara
and Datu Nakhuda to Batavia to renew an appeal for Dutch military assistance,
and together with forces from the Sultanate of Maguindanaw, attacked Fort Pilar
but was foiled
1721 - Manila governor-general Toribio Cosio sent Fray
Antonio de Roxas to Ciudad deZamboanga to negotiate for the release of
kidnapped Jesuit priest
December 11,1726 - Sulu Sultan Badar signed with Manila
Spanish government another peace treaty which provisions were unclear
1731 - By decree of a Ming emperor, the remaining 300
survivors of Sulu East King Paduka Batara, now christened as Chinese Wen and
Ang families, were assimilated into mainstream Chinese society that made
perpetually alive a Tausug bloodline in that part of the world
- Manila governor-general F. Valdez y Timon sent Ignacio
Iriberri to recapture Jolo with a regiment of 1,000-strong
Spanish soldiers
H.R.H. Sultan Nassar ud-Din (1734-1735)
December 6, 1734 - The 1726 peace treaty fell apart when the
new Sulu Sultan Nasar ud-Din attempted to recapture Fort Pilar in Ciudad
deZamboanga and to possess Taytay in Palawan.
1735 - Manila Spaniards struck back by invading Jolo that
drove Sultan Nasar=s court to Dungun in Tawi-Tawi for the second time.
H.R.H. Sultan Mohammad Alim ud-Din I (Amir ul-Mumimin/King
Ferdinand I) (1735-1748)
1735 - Sulu Annals remembered Sultan Alim I as one who had
revised the Sulu Code of Laws and prepared a
Tausug-Arabic vocabulary manual for use by his Court=s
religious imams and aleems.
February 1, 1737 - Sultan Alim I signed a bilateral alliance
treaty with Manila governor-general F. Valdez y Tamon that provided for
permanent peace in the region;
- King Philip V of Spain sent a delegation of Jesuit priests
to Jolo to spread Roman Catholicism; Sultan Alim ud-Din
befriended these “haram” which which displeased his brother
Bantilan, the Rajah Muda and seized powers from him
- Sultan Alim I sought the help of Ciudad deZamboanga
governor Abando who in turn transferred him to the care of F. Valdez y Tamon in
Manila
- Plant scientist M. de Tremegon, under the dictates of M.
Poivre of the Isle of France, explored Jolo for spice plants.
H.R.H. Sultan Muiz ud-Din (Rajah Muda Bantilan) (1748-1763)
1748 - In the absence of Sultan Alim I, Rajah Muda Bantilan
ascended the throne and named himself Sultan Muiz
ud-Din and abrogated the 1737 peace treaty.
1749 - Meanwhile in Malacanang, now under governor-general
Arrechderra, exiled Sultan Alim I was made a Roman Catholic and conferred the
Christian title of King Ferdinand I of Sulu.
- To cast away the shame put upon the Sulu Sultanate, Sultan
Alim I’s daughter Fatima sought for his release in exchange for sixty Spaniards
held prisoners in Jolo.
1750 - Sultan Muiz led roaring raids against the Spanish
settlements in the whole of Visayas [Ang mga Pilipino].
- Brunei Sultan Omar Ali Saif ud-Dein similarly ordered
attacks on Manila.
April 29,1750 - After being reinstated as Sultan by
Malacanang, he was arrested on his way back to Jolo under the orders of
governor-geneal Zacarias.
July 12,1751 - Sultan Alim ud-Din was returned to the care
of the Zamboanga governor after fifteen years of exile in
Fort Santiago.
December 21,1751 - A furious Manila governor-general F.
Valdez y Tamon issued a decree that ordered: (1) The extermination of all Moros
with fire and sword; (2) The destruction of all their crops and desolate their
lands; (3) Make Moro captives; (4) Recover Christian slaves; and (5) Exempt all
Christians from payment of any taxes and tributes while engaged in the
termination of these Moros.
1754 - Three Jesuit priests led by Fray Jose Ducos engaged
themselves in an evangelistic mission to Jolo and established a Catholic
congregation.
- For the first time Ajihad was exercised by the Sultan of
Mindanaw upon the Maestro de Campo of Real Fuerza del Pilar de Zaragosa in
Zamboanga for seizing his goods without due notice.
March 3,1754 - The Manila Spanish government signed another
peace treaty with Sultan Muiz ud-Din.
1755 - A Manila Spanish contingent of 1,900 men led by
captains Simeon Valdez and Pedro Gastambide was sent to Jolo to avenge for the
raids carried out by self-proclaimed Sultan Muiz ud-Din.
1761 - Alexander Dalrymple, Madras representative of the
British East India Company, concluded an agreement with self-proclaimed Sultan
Muiz ud-Din that permitted him to set up a trading post in Balembangan island
in Kudat North Borneo, a territory of the Sultanate of Sulu
H.R.H. Sultan Alim ud-Din (Amir ul-Mumimin) (1763-1773, 2nd
Ascension)
1763 - Dalrymple maliciously renamed Balembangan island and
hoisted the British flag to the ire of Sultan Muiz ud-Din
- Madras British East India Company sent another officer,
John Herbert, to build a settlement in Balembangan but
which plan was abandoned in 1775
- British soldiers invaded and successfully captured May
Nilad
- The British restored an exiled Sulu Sultan Alim ud-Din I
to his throne in Jolo
- As gesture of gratitude, Sulu Sultan Alim ud-Din I leased
his dominion in North Borneo to a British company for
exclusive trading privileges and signed a mutual defense
pact with the British Crown that included the establishment of a military base
in Sulu
1769 - Sultan Alim ud-Din I ordered the continuous foraging
of Visayas and Luzon, even raiding Malate, just outside of Spanish Intramuros,
and carried off thousands of captives to be sold in the slave markets of
Batavia, Malaka, and Tamasek
1771 - Sultan Alim ud-Din declared a jihad against the
Manila Spaniards for having unlawfully detained him on his
way home from May Nilad at Real Fuerza del Pilar de Zaragosa
in Zamboanga
H.R.H. Sultan Isirail (1773-1778)
1775 - Datu Tating in twenty vessels with 4,000 pirates
assaulted the British military base in Sulu and carted away booty amounting to
US$1,000,000 including an enormous supply of war materials
H.R.H. Sultans Alim ud-Din II, Sarap ud-Din & Alim
ud-Din III (1778-1808)
1796 - Spanish admiral Jose Alava was sent from Madrid with
the most powerful naval fleet to combat Moro piratical attacks in the Sulu Sea
1798 - Real Fuerza del Pilar de Zaragosa in Ciudad
deZamboanga was bombarded by the British navy coming from its military base in
Sulu
1803 - Lord Arthur Wellesley, governor-general of India,
ordered Robert J. Fraquhar to turn Balembangan island in
Borneo into a military station, however, for lack of
logistics, abandoned it in November 1805
1805 - The British government withdrew her military base in
Sulu
H.R.H. Sultans Ali ud-Din & Shakir ul-Lah (1808-1823)
1821 - ALas Islas Felipinas@ was now directly administered
from Madrid after Mexico won her independence from Spain
H.R.H. Sultan Jamal ul-Kiram I (1823-1844)
1824 - Spanish captain Alonso Morgado commanded frigate
AMarina Sutil@ that fought the Moro pirates in the Sulu Sea
- The Manila Spanish treasury decreed that all Islas
Felipinas provinces, excepting Mindanaw and Sulu, be required to pay ADonativo
deZamboanga, an annual tax-payment of one ganta of rice or one half real
1831 - Ciudad de Zamboanga was declared a free port
1836 - American trader G.W. Earl sailed to Jolo to barter
guns, powder, and rifles in exchange for Sulu’s tortoise shells and Palawan’s
birds nests
February 5,1842 - American captain Charles Wilkes landed in
Jolo and signed the first-ever US-documented peace & trade treaty with
Sultan Jamal ul-Kiram I
April 23,1843 - France signed a AMost-Favored Nation@ treaty
with Sultan Jaml ul-Kiram I including negotiating to buy Basilan island for its
commercial and naval base, however, the US$1Million asking price left the deal
invalidate [Orosa, Kho]
H.R.H. Sultan Mohammad Pulalun (1844-1862)
1844 - Manila governor-general Narciso Claveria led another
war expedition to Jolo
October1844 - Macao-based French admiral Cecille attempted
to double-cross Sultan Pulalun and sent for captain Guerin on a frigate Sabine
to reconnaissance Basilan. In their clumsiness, ensign Meynard and four other
sailors were captured by the Yakans including one fatally killed. Embarrased,
the French blockaded Basilan and blamed Datu Usak for depredations made against
them
January 13, 1845 - Datu Usuk declared Atotal independence
viz-a-viz Spain
Februrary 20,1845 - Sulu Sultan Pulalun ceded Basilan to
France in exchange for 500,000 francs which was payable in September but the
French navy under Cecille instead took it by force and attacked Basilan on
February 27 and destroyed all its croplands that angered the Yakans.
June 30,1845 - The French cabinet approved the annexation of
Basilan but was reversed by King Phillipe in deference of Spain whose House of
Bourbons/Orleans his wife is a part of.
December 1, 1845 - English traveler William Edwards narrated
in his Diary of Ahis tongue cut out of (my) mouth on my passage home from the
coast of China, to Liverpool by Ilanun pirates who gathered slaves and sold
them in Sumatra and Java . . .
Balani pirates, who were based in Jolo, attacked Spanish
vessels using 60-seater-corocoro fitted with outriggers and powered by either
sail or oar with displacements of 81 tones.
1846 - By winning the 1844 battle, the Sultan prized the
Manila Spaniards the towns of Sibuguey and Bisungan in the Zamboanga Peninsula
1848 - Claveria ordered the attack on Balanni pirates in
Tonguil Sulu with powerful gunboats Magallanes, El Cano, and Reina de Castilla
acquired from Madrid and started the decline of the Sulu Sultanate sea power
November 21,1849 - Claveria issued CATALOGO ALFABETICO DE
APELLIDOS and ordered its use and systematic distribution by native Filipinos
throughout the colony but was never introduced to subjects of Sulu Sultanate
1850 - Spanish Gov.Gen. Juan Urbiztondo successfully
completed the destruction of the pirate stronghold on Tongkil island
February 28, 1851 - Urbiztondo raided Jolo and destroyed the
whole town by fire and confiscated 112 pieces of artillery
- Jesuits fathers Ibanez, Zamora, Sanchez, Lopez, and
Montiel lost their lives during this fiery raid
April 19, 1851 - Sultan Mohammad Pulalun signed a treaty
with the Spanish Crown that provided for the turning over of his sovereign
rights although Saleeby noted that the words Aturning over its sovereignty was
never mentioned in the Tausug version of the treaty
April 30, 1851 - As a consequence of the April 19, 1851
Treaty, Sultan Pulalun negotiated with Urbiztondo forSpain to pay US$1,500
annually to the Court of the Sulu Sultanate and abolish all sorts of taxes
& tributes on his subjects
- In Manila, fray Roman Martines Vigil justified the Spanish
raids in Jolo as Ajust wars@ which position he was able to raise 20
Million-pesos from Chinese capitalists to further these wars
1852 - Spanish Queen Isabella II ordered the Jesuits to take
charge of all Catholic missions in Mindanaw and Sulu
1858 - Moro pirates attacked Real Fuerza del Pilar de
Zaragosa in Zamboanga in the hope of possessing the fort
1860 - The Donativo deZamboanga was abolished
- Manila Spanish government closed Jolo to foreign vessels
and guarded its port with eighteen steam boats in an attempt to control piracy
in Sulu.
- Balanni and Ilanun pirates were destroyed by a joint
Spanish-British naval forces patrolling the Sulu-China-Celebes Seas triangle
1862 - Gallant Catholic Jesuits opened missions in Tetuan
(Zamboanga) and Isabela (Basilan) to supplement Spanish conquests with military
might
H.R.H. Sultan Jamal ul-Alam (1863-1881)
1864 - A German sea captain employed by the Labuan German
Trading Company named Herman Leopold Schuck
called on the port of Jolo for provisions and to repair
sails of his barque, the Queen of the Seas; made a courtesy call on Sulu Sultan
Jamal ul-Alam and promised to supply M-71 Mauser infantry rifles, opium, and
slaves.
1865 - North Borneo American consul Claude Lee Moses
obtained a 10-year-lease on North Borneo from Sultan
Jamal ul-Alam, however, Moses sold his rights to a
British-registered American Trading Company owned by J.W. Torrey, T.B. Harris,
et. al. This American company in turn sold the same to the Austrian consul in
Hongkong, Baron von Overbeck, for whom he contracted the Dent Brothers, through
Alfred Dent, to finance its expansion plans.
1872 - Schuck sent a letter of Sultan Jamal ul-Alam to
German chancellor Otto von Bismarch, together with gifts of
pearls and pearl shells, seeking Germany’s protection. In
exchange, the Sultanate was willing to cede Bongao to Germany as a coaling
station for her Far East Imperial Fleet.
- Cabesang Benito with sixty-seven other inmates bolted Fort
Pilar in Ciudad deZamboanga killing one Spanish officer and four sentinels that
frustrated Zamboanga governor Juan Mas Ozaeta.
- Iranun corsair Alejo Alvarez of Sibuguey, together with
Spanish colonel Melanio Enriquez, were engaged by governor Ozaeta to clear Fort
Pilar
- Manila Spanish government awarded Ciudad de Zamboanga the
royal title of ALeal y Valiente Villa@ for clearing Fort Pilar and made a son
of Alejo Alvarez, Vicente, a deputy in Malacanang.
- Vicente Alvarez subsequently became a peace negotiator for
Malacanang with the Sulu Sultanate in whose ability Sultan Jamal ul-Alam was
also please and bestoed in him the title of Datu Tumanggung; Alvarez later
joined the army of Philippine Insurrection leader Emilio Aguinaldo and became a
general.
January 1, 1874 - The Charter of the British East India
Company was canceled and the company dissolved when the East India Stock
Dividend Redemption Act came into effect.
Februayr 21, 1876 - Admiral Jose Malcampo led a contingent
of 9,000 Spaniards, including hundreds of priests and nuns, in 11 transports,
11 gunboats, and 11 steam boats to Aannex@ Jolo but failed this mission when
Sultan Jamal ul-Alam declared a jihad on them and ordered his loyal subjects to
use Aparrang sabbil@as a last recourse to regain control of Jolo.
- Successful in temporarily penetrating Jolo, Malcampo then
appointed Capt. Pascual Cervera to set up a garrison and serve as the first
Spanish military governor; He served from March 1876 to December1876 followed
by Brig.Gen. Jose Paulin (December 1876-April 1877) and Col Carlos Martinez
(Sept 1877-Feb 1880).
1877 - Brunei Annals recorded Sultan Abdul Momin to have
signed a treaty leasing North Borneo to the British Crown which was
inconsistent with Sulu history that a similar act was also concluded on January
22, 1878
March.1877 - The Sulu Protocol was signed between Spain,
England, and Germany that recognized Spain=s rights over Sulu and, in
consideration for the said lease of North Borneo, ended European hostilities in
the area
1878 - Manila Spaniards built the Walled City of Jolo which
was fortified by two outer forts they named Picesa de
Asturias and Torre dela Reina including three inner forts
called Puerta Blockaus, Puerta Espana, and Puerta Alfonso XII; Also included
were lancerias which were guarded by twelve Spanish soldiers commanded by a
lieutenant
January 22,1878 - In exchange for US$5,000, Sultan Jamal
ul-Alam leased North Borneo to the Hong Kong-based British trading company of
Baron Gustavos von Overbeck and Alfred Dent and conferred upon Overbeck the
title Datu Bendahara, Raja of Sandakan [K.B. Tregoning, A History of Modern
Sabah/Agoncillo history of the Filipino People]
July 22, 1878 - Sultan Jamal ul-Alam signed a treaty with
the Spanish Crown making whole of Sulu a protectorate of Spain yet retained her
autonomy and the privilege to fly own flag thus saved Jolo from further
destruction. [Majul Muslim in the Philipppines/Kho]
- Sultan Jamal ul-Alam moved the seat of the Sultanate to
Darul Maimbung
1880 - Spanish Col. Rafael Gonzales deRivera assumed the
governorship of Jolo and dispatched the 6th Regiment to Siasi and Bongao
islands
H.R.H. Sultan Badar ud-Din II (1881-1886)
1881 - An accomplished negotiator, pacifist, and master of
Arabic language and the Koran, Hajji Butu Abdulbaqui
Rasul was appointed the first and only prime minister of the
Royal Sultanate of Sulu
November 1, 1881 - The British Crown awarded Alfred Dent a
provisional Charter to form the British North Borneo Provisional Association,
Ltd.
- Brunei Sultan Abdul Momin awarded Sarawak to an English
adventurer named Sir Charles Brooke who later became known as the White Rajah
1882 - The holdings, assets, and Royal Charter of the BNB
Provisional Association, Ltd. were bequeathed and
transferred to the British North Borneo Chartered Company
with Sir Rutherford Alcock serving as first president and Alfred Dent as
managing director; BNBCC served the British Crown for sixty years until 1945
when the latter finally took over
1883 - Manila Spanish government established a customs house
in Ciudad de Zamboanga to clear goods coming into the Sultanate of Sulu but, on
the insistence of the British, Jolo was declared a free port and trade
continued
July 22, 1883 - Sulu Annals reported three unnamed A juramentado
who succeeded in penetrating Jolo town plaza and massacred Lts. Pedro Bordas
and Caledonio Manrique, and Dr. Juan Dominguez in the name of Allah; The word
Ajuramentado was coined by Spanish colonel Juan Arolas after witnessing several
such acts while serving duty in Jolo garrison.
1884 - Sultan Badar ud-Din II built Masjid Jammi Tulay
Mosque in Jolo.
1886 - The Crown of the Sultanate was disputed between Rajah
Muda Amir ul-Kiram of Maimbung and Datu Ali
ud-Din of Patikul but the Spanish Manila government involved
herself in the power struggle and chose Palawan Datu Harun al-Rashid as its
candidate.
H.R.H. Sultan Harun al-Rashid (1886-1893)
September 24, 1886 - Datu Harun al-Rashid was crowned Sultan
of Sulu by the Manila governor-general Juan Terrero in a Christian investiture
in Malacanang
1887 - Terrero paid a courtesy call on Sulu Sultan al-Rashid
in Jolo
April 16, 1887 - Immediately after said visit, spanish
colonel Juan Arolas was instructed to capture Darul Maimbung, seat of the Sulu
Sultanate, for the Spanish Crown
1888 - Brunei Sultan brought the rump of his territories
under the British Crown; North Borneo became a British
Protectorate; Brunei became a British protected state.
H.R.H. Sultan Jamal ul-Kiram I (Amir ul-Kiram/King Jubilado
dePalawan) (1893-1936)
1893 - Sultan Harun al-Rashid abdicated his throne to cousin
Rajah Muda Amir ul -Kiram for his failure to save Darul Maimbung that placed
the Manila Spanish government plans in shambles
- Rajah Muda Amir ul-Kiram transferred the seat of the
Sultanate to Palawan and briefly named himself King Jubilado de Palawan (he was
to be known later as Sultan Jamal ul-Kiram I)
- Fray Jose Cavelleria sailed round the island of Basilan
whose revered ruler was King Taguima, a cousin of
Mindanaw Sultan Kudarat
December 30, 1896 - La Liga Filipina founder Dr. Jose P.
Rizal was executed by the Spaniards at Bagumbayan in Manila
September 21, 1897 - Around 1:17pm an earthquake hit the
Sulu Sea about the area of Zamboanga and Basilan that was as destructive as the
Krakatoa quake
- During its final calm, a woman in white clothes with hands
lifted up, was allegedly seen by thousands of spectators in Ciudad de Zamboanga
by the Basilan Strait as if to order the impendent Atsunami@ to halt; This
action, according to legend, saved Ciudad de Zamboanga from full-size
destruction and made this lady a revered saint of Fort Pilar
February 25, 1898 - Commodore George Dewey, commander of the
U.S. Asiatic Squadron, received a secret cable from Navy assistant secretary
Theodore Roosevelt to proceed to Manila
April 22, 1898 - U.S. president William McKinley signed the
Volunteer Army Act that activated the First Volunteer Cavalry (the “Rough
Riders”), and appointed Theodore Roosevelt, a lieutenant-colonel, its first
commander
April 23, 1898 - Manila governor-general Basilio Augustin y
Davila issued a proclamation announcing the defeat of Spain in the Battle of
San Juan and the approach of commodore Dewey from Hongkong
May 1, 1898 - Dewey secured Manila after the defeat of
Spanish Admiral Patricio Montojo y Parasan at the Battle of Manila Bay; This
feat led the U.S. Congress to promote Dewey to Rear Admiral on May 10, 1898 and
again to Navy Admiral on March 13, 1899
June 12, 1898 - Filipino Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo declared
Philippine independence from Spain in Kawit Cavite with U.S. army artillery
commander Col. L.M. Johnson as the only American official to witness the
occasion.
June 23, 1898 - Aguinaldo declared a Revolutionary Congress
in Malolos Bulacan
June 30, 1898 - Arrival in Cavite of the first installment
of 2,500 U.S. Volunteer Cavalry troops under Gen. Thomas M. Anderson that included
the 14th infantry, 1st California, and 2nd Oregon; Also with the troops were
military hardware of 400-ton-ammunition for Dewey=s three ships (City of
Peking, City of Sydney, and Australia)
July 25, 1898 - Arrival of Gen. Wesley Merritt to assume overall
command of the U.S. expeditionary forces in the
Philippines
August 14, 1898 - Occupation of Manila by U.S. forces under
Merritt
August 22, 1898 - Gen. Elwell Otis replaced Merritt as
overall commander of U.S. expeditionary forces in the Philippines
October 26, 1898 - U.S. president McKinley instructed the
his peace commission to annex the Philippine Islands after conferring with
Presbyterian advisers
November 21, 1898 - U.S. peace commissioners presented an
ultimatum to the Spanish Crown for the signing the Treaty of Paris
- During negotiations, U.S. State Secretary William R Day,
“recommended a payment of $25million taking into account the defeated
adversary's bankruptcy and loss of colonial revenues . . . if necessary was
prepared to leave Mindanao and Sulu to Spain,” while Whitelaw Ried on the other
hand, “wanted to take all the Philippines, basing his policy on the principle
of indemnity. If compromise becomes necessary, he proposed to leave Mindanao
and the Sulus to Spain in return for the Ladrones and the Carolines” (clear
indicators that Sulu should have not been part of Spain's ceased territories)
THE AMERICAN BENEVOLENT ASSIMILATION
December 10, 1898 - Treaty of Paris was signed in Washington
DC between the United States and Spain
December 21, 1898 - McKinley issued a proclamation calling
for a Philippine colonial policy of benevolent assimilation
December 31, 1898 - McKinley instructed his War Department
to extend military governance to the entire Philippine Islands
Januart 4, 1899 - Otis issued a proclamation declaring the
Philippines Islands under the sovereign and complete control of the United
States of America
January 23, 1899 - Aguinaldo proclaimed the establishment of
the First Philippine Republic at Malolos Bulacan and declared himself president
April 1899 - HRH Sultan Jamal ul-Kiram I (may his soul rest
in peace), the last and truly sovereign-reigning sultan of The Royal Sultanate
of Sulu, died in his peace at his Astana Putih in Darul Maimbung, Lupah Sug,
Bangsamoro.
[This Historical Time-line is envisioned to portray The
Royal Sultanate of Sulu as a free, independent, and sovereign nation separated
from Las Islas Felipinas that had been constantly attacked by Western colonists
and subdued by various tactics that, between 1565 and 1898 alone, 333 years in
all, only eleven assaults were successfully made from Fort Santiago in Manila
by the Spanish Audiencia forces. These war expeditions exclude earlier attempts
made by Buddhist Srivijaya, Hindu Madjapahit, and Chinese Ming Empires, and by
the British, French, German, and Portuguese armies and navies. In all these
long struggles, the Spanish Walled City of Jolo was the only part of the
territory of the Royal Sultanate of Sulu that was taken and garrisoned by
Spanish war freaks for about 31 years only compared with the Mabarakat Panghu
Tausug of four-hundred-fifteen years.
This is the Bangsa Moro struggle, they ought to be free like
the free peoples of the world! Wassalam.]
References:
Bara, Hannibal. History of the Muslim in the Philippines,
NCCA, 1999
Cabel, O.A. Local Governance and Public Administration: The
Sulu Experience, 1990
Che Man, W.K. Muslim Separatism: The Moros of Southern
Philippines and the Malays of Southern Thailand, Quezon City:
AdM U Press, 1990
Criveli, Camillus. Catholic Encyclopedia, XV, Robert
Appleton Co, 1912
Gowing, P.G. Mandate in Moroland, American Government of
Muslim Filipinos, 1899-1920
Gowing, P.G. and Robert McAmis. The Muslim Filipinos: Their
History, Society, and Contemporary Problems, Manila: La
Solidaridad Publishing House, 1974.
Kho, Madge. Chronology of Moro Resistance
<http://pweb.netcom.com>
Majul, Cesar A. Muslim in the Philippines, Quezon City: UP
Press, 1973
Montemayor, M.S. Saga of a German Sea Captain, Manila
Bulletin, 08.30.2000
Orosa, Sixto Y. The Sulu Archipelago and Its People, NY:
World Book Co., 1970
Saleeby, N. History of Sulu, Manila: Bureau of Printing,
1966
Tan, Samuel K. The Filipino Muslim Armed Struggle,
1900-1972, Makati: Filipinas Foundation, 1977
Tregoning, K.B. A History of Modern Sabah, 1881-1963
Hurley, Vic. Swish of the Kris, 1997 http://www.bakbakan.com
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