In 1456, Raja Kasim assumed the throne of Melaka after the
murder of
his half-brother Raja Ibrahim. This was a momentous turning point in
Melaka
history - a real palace revolution. The son of a Sumatran princess who
took a Hinduised title was murdered and replaced by his Muslim half
brother,
the son of a Tamil common woman. His Tamil Muslim uncle Tun Ali Sri
Nara
diraja was made Bendahara after the Malay Bendahara Sriwa Raja poisoned
himself - either in fear that he was no longer trusted by the ruler or
in anguish at the growing power of the New Guard. Raja Kasim adopted
the
title Sultan and called hinself Muzaffar Shah.
The small city state was now to become Sultanate and Empire.
Sultan
Muzaffar Shah married the daughter of the dead Bendahara Sriwa Raja,
Tun
Kudu. This was a shrewd move, for Tun Kudu's brother was Tun Perak - a
man deeply respected by the Sultan's Malay subjects and a man he knew
had
the charisma, ability and courage to build his Empire. To avoid unrest
and civil war, Muzaffar attempted to oust his tamil Bendahara and
replace
him with Tun Perak. Tun Ali had a heavy price for resignation - he
wanted
the Sultan's wife, Tun Kudu, in marriage. Tun Kudu made the ultimate
sacrifice,
divorced the Sultan and her brother was free to shape Melaka history
for
the next 40 years and serve as Bendahara under four Sultans.
Melaka very quickly mounted a series of military campaigns
that won
her Manjong, Selangor and Batu Pahat. Kampar and Indragiri in Sumatra
were
soon to become loyal vassals as well. Melaka's expanding power rattled
its much larger and more powerful Thai neighbours, who insisted Melaka
belonged to its vassal Kedah. The Thais launched massive attacks
against
the Malay upsturbs - won overland from its vassal State Pahang in 1445
and another by Sea in 1456. Both attacks were beaten back. n 1459,
Muzaffar's
son, Raja Abdullah, succeeded his father and assumed the title of
Sultan
Mansur Shah. He wanted to settle the Thai problem once and for all and
lau nched two attacked against the two Thai States of Kedah and Pahang.
Kedah fell quickly and he sent an expedition of over 200 ships against
Pahang. The Governor of Pahang, Maharaja Dewa Sura was captured and his
daughter taken captive to Melaka to become Mansur Shah's concubine.
It was during Mansur Shah's reign that Hang Tuah, the ultimate
Malay
hero and symbol of honour, courage and loyalty was made Laksamana or
Admiral.
Other States quickly fell in battle or become vassals - Johor and Muar
in the Peninsular, Jambi, Siak and (briefly) Pasai in Sumatra. Like its
Sri Vijayan predecessor, Melaka now firmly ruled much of the two
coasts,
guarding the vital Straits. Mansur Shah's reign was the peak of
Melaka's
meteoric rise to Empire and became the golden age of Malay folklore and
culture. It was recorded that by this time, Melaka alone, had 40,000
inhabitants,
including almost all the known races in the world.
In 1477, Mansur Shah died and his son Raja Hassan ( and a
nephew of
Tun Perak) became Sultan Alauddin Riayat Shah. He mysteriously died in
the prime of his life 11 years later, supposedly poisoned just as he
was
about to leave for pilgrimage to Mekah. We are now seeing a revival of
the Tamil Muslim revolution - with the Temenggung Tun Mutahir, the son
of the old former Bendahara Tun Ali, being the chief architect. Sultan
Alauddin's elder son and the rightful heir Munawar Shah was passed over
for his younger half brother, Mahmud, the son of the Temenggong's own
sister.
The grand old man of Melaka, Tun Perak, died in 1498, to be succeeded
by
his brother Tun Puteh. When he died shortly after, Tun Mutahir achieved
the victory he desired and became Bendahara - the real power in Melaka.
Melaka's State continued to flourish but the court was now thronged and
dominated by Tamil merchants, ready to buy their way to royal favour.
Thier
monopoly in trade made them despised by other traders and the Malay
chiefs
and common people hated the arrogant and greedy "Jawi Pekan"
strutting like rulers.
Then, on September 1st, 1509, a Portugese fleet under Admiral
Diego
Lopez De Sequeira sailed into Melaka harbour - the first European fleet
to have ever dropped anchor into Malay waters. That moment was to
become
a dramatic crossroads in the history of the Malay Peninsular and,
ultimately,
the fate of all eastern Asia.
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