Salahuddin of Aceh

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Salahuddin
Sulṭān of Acèh Darussalam
Reign 1530 – 1537/1539
Predecessor Ali Mughayat Syah
Successor Alauddin al-Kahar
Died 25 November 1548(1548-11-25)
Father Ali Mughayat Syah

Sultan Salahuddin (died 25 November 1548) was the second sultan of Aceh, reigning from 1530 to c. 1537 or 1539. He was the eldest son of Sultan Ali Mughayat Syah, the founder of Aceh's power. He led a short and weak rule before being supplanted by his ambitious younger brother Alauddin al-Kahar.

Accession

Salahuddin succeeded his father on the latter's death in August 1530. Sultan Ali Mughayar Syah was allegedly poisoned by his wife, Sitt Hur, but there is no indication of Salahuddin being involved in this.[1] According to the Hikayat Aceh, his mother had a strong hand in the government. She appointed an Agha as regent of the kingdom with the title Raja Bungsu. The sultan himself is described as an inept figure who did not care much about the governance. His brother Alauddin served as his deputy in Samudra Pasai which had been conquered by their father in 1524. There he gained a power base that would soon have dire consequences for the sultan.[2]

Salahuddin's father sultan Ali had been engaged in a mortal combat against the Portuguese in Melaka. Hostilities paused temporarily after his death. However, in September 1537 an Acehnese fleet appeared before Melaka, carrying a standing regiment of circa 3,000 men. The Acehnese landed successfully but could not invest the fortress. After some ferocious fighting they had to withdraw with great losses after two days.[3] Since the expedition is not mentioned in the local chronicles we can not be sure that Salahuddin was still the ruler at this time. From the account of Fernão Mendes Pinto it appears that his brother "Alaradim" (Alauddin) was already on the throne by 1539. The much later chronicle Bustanus Salatin (c. 1640) alleges that Salahuddin lived for nine years after his deposition until his death in 1548. It is thus somewhat unclear whether he was deposed before or after the launch of an unsuccessful attack on Melaka. Hoesein Djajadiningrat believed that the coup came first and the attack was led by Alauddin al-Kahar,[4] while Denys Lombard places the coup two years after the attack, which he believes was led by Salahuddin himself.[5]

Deposed from the sultanate

What is clear is the way that Salahuddin's reign ended. Alauddin arrived to the capital from Samudra Pasai with an entourage of 200 men, ostensibly to visit his father's grave. When he arrived he found that conditions at the court were just as bad as he heard, and decided to stage a coup. He dispatched four trusted retainers to supposedly return to Samudra. However, at Peudada they turned back and reached the gate of the palace compound in the night. They told the palace guards that Samudra had been unexpectedly attacked by soldiers from Aru (approximately the later Deli). At the noise Raja Bungsu came outside and was taken along on the elephant of Alauddin. They went to Kota Batu where Alauddin's men promptly murdered the regent. Sultan Salahuddin and the queen mother were then put in confinement.[6] Alauddin al-Kahar took the throne and led a successful reign until 1571. According to the inscription on his grave, Salahuddin died on 25 November 1548.[7]

Notes

  1. Kalus & Guillot (2013), pp. 233-4.
  2. Iskandar (1958), p. 52.
  3. Hadi (2004), p. 23.
  4. Djajadiningrat (1911), p. 153.
  5. Denys Lombard, Le Sultanat d'Atjéh au temps d'Iskandar Muda, 1607–1636. Paris: École Française d'Extrême-Orient, 1967. Cited in Ricklefs (1994), p. 33.
  6. Iskandar (1958), pp. 52-3.
  7. Encyclopaedie (1917), p. 74.

References

  • Djajadiningrat, Hoesein (1911) 'Critisch overzicht van de in Maleische werken vervatte gegevens over de geschiedenis van het Soeltanaat van Atjeh, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, 65, pp. 135–265.
  • Encyclopaedie van Nederlandsch Indië, Vol. 1 (1917). 's-Gravenhage & Leiden: M. Nijhoff & Brill.
  • Hadi, Amirul (2004) Islam and State in Sumatra: A Study of Seventeenth-Century Aceh. Leiden: Brill.
  • Iskandar, Teuku (1958) De Hikajat Atjeh. 's-Gravenhage: M. Nijhoff.
  • Kalus, Ludvik & Clause Guillot (2013) 'La principauté de Daya, mi-XVe-mi-XVIe siècle', Archipel 85, pp. 201-36.
  • Ricklefs, Merle C. (1994) A History of Modern Indonesia Since c. 1300, 2nd ed. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Preceded by Sulṭān of Acèh Darussalam
1530–1537/9
Succeeded by
Alauddin al-Kahar