Misplaced Pages

Muhammad Kudarat

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Sultan Muhammad Kudarat) This article is about a person. For other uses, see Sultan Kudarat (disambiguation).
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Muhammad Kudarat" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

7th Sultan of Maguindanao
Muhammad Dipatuan Kudarat
محمد دڤتوان كودرت‎
Bust at Rizal Park, Manila
7th Sultan of Maguindanao
Reign1619–1671
SuccessorSultan Saifuddin Dundang Tidulay
BornMuhammad Dipatuan Kudarat
1581
Maguindanao
Died1671 (aged 89–90)
Simuay, Maguindanao
HouseAl-'Aydarus
FatherSultan Laut Buisan
ReligionIslam

Muhammad Dipatuan Kudarat (or Muhammad di-Pertuan Kudrat; Jawi: محمد دڤتوان كودرت‎; 1581–1671) was the 7th Sultan of Maguindanao from 1619 to 1671.

He was a direct descendant of Shariff Kabungsuwan, a Malay-Arab noble from Johor who brought Islam to Mindanao between the 13th and 14th centuries. During his reign, he successfully fought off Spanish invasions and halted the spread of Catholicism on the island of Mindanao, much like the other Muslim rulers in the southern Philippines.

The Soccsksargen province of Sultan Kudarat is named after him, as is the municipality of Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanao, where his descendants, who bear the title of datu, engage in present-day politics.

Name and titles

In the name and titles of Sultan Muhammad Dipatuan Kudarat, Muhammad Dipatuan Kurlat in Maguindanaon or Muhammad di-Pertuan Kudrat in Malay, the Maguindanaon term Dipatuan is from the Malay title di-Pertuan which means "ruler" or "owner" and literally means "the one who has been made to rule".

The term Kudarat is ultimately from Arabic qudrat which means "power". This was sometimes pronounced as Kurlát in Maguindanao, following the regular sound changes from /d/ to /r/ and /r/ to /l/ for loanwords in the language, something that is also observed in other Philippine languages like Tagalog and Cebuano. This term is also present in Malay as kudrat.

Reign

In 1639, the Spaniards invaded the lands of the Maranaos. Kudarat hurried there to have a conference with the datus of Lake Lanao. He explained to them the effects of submitting to the Spaniards and appealed to Maranao pride and love of independence. In a matter of months, the Spaniards were forced to leave the lands of the Maranaos for safer parts towards Zamboanga, (Fort Pilar), and never ventured to inland Lanao again.

The famous speech of Sultan Kudarat is recorded by a Spanish ambassador to the Maguindanao Sultanate:

You men of the Lake! Forgetting your ancient liberty, have submitted to the Castilians. Such submission is sheer stupidity. You cannot realise to what your surrender binds you. You are selling yourselves into slavery to toil for the benefit of these foreigners. Look at the regions that have already submitted to them. Note how abject is the misery to which their peoples are now reduced. Behold the condition of the Tagalogs and of the Visayans whose chief men are trampled upon by the meanest Castilian. If you are of no better spirit than these, then you must expect similar treatment. You, like them, will be obliged to row in the galleys. Just as they do, you will have to toil at the shipbuilding and labor without ceasing on other public works. You can see for yourselves that you will experience the harshest treatment while thus employed. Be men. Let me aid you to resist. All the strength of my Sultanate, I promise you, shall be used in your defence! What matters it if the Castilians at first are successful? That means only the loss of a year's harvest. Do you think that too dear a price to pay for liberty?

True to the speech, the Maranao after offering patient defense, thereafter enjoyed 250 years of peace during the whole duration of Spanish withdrawal in the archipelago in 1899.

By the end of 1639, an understanding was also reached between Kudarat and Datu Maputi for a united front against the Spanish invaders. Datu Manakior, Datu of Tawlan, previously friendly with the Spaniards, at this time began to really suffer serious reverses in Mindanao with his European allies.

Gallery

  • Historical marker of Sultan Kudarat in Cotabato City Historical marker of Sultan Kudarat in Cotabato City

References

  1. Isaac, Donoso (2017). More Islamic Than We Admit: Insights Into Philippine cultural history. Vibal Foundation. p. 82. ISBN 978-971-97-0684-7. OCLC 1055270295.
  2. "Manobo".
  3. "The stupidity of submitting to Spanish sovereignty - Sultan Kudarat". The Kahimyang Project.

External links

Media related to Muhammad Kudarat at Wikimedia Commons

Biographies

Regnal titles
Preceded bySultan Laut Buisan Sultan of Maguindanao
1619–1671
Succeeded bySultan Dundang Tidulay
Preceded bySultan Mawallil Wasit Sultan of Sulu
as Sultan Nasir ud-Din II

1645–1648
Succeeded bySultan Salah ud-Din Bakhtiar
National symbols of the Philippines
Official
Unofficial
National heroes
Implied
Declared from national legislation
From proposed laws
Pre-colonial Philippine royalty of the Postclassical Era and the early modern period
Royalty of Luzon
Lakans, Datus and Rajahs of Tondo
Rajahs of Maynila
Lakans of Namayan
  • Tagkan
  • Palaba
  • Laboy
  • Kalamayin
  • Martin
Datus of the Madja-as
  • Puti
  • Sumakwel
  • Bangkaya
  • Balengkaka
  • Manduyog
  • Padojinog
  • Kabnayag
  • Lubay
  • Paiburong
Datus and Rajahs of Cebu
Rajahs of Butuan
  • Kiling
  • Bata Shaja
  • Siagu
  • Kolambu
Sultans of Maguindanao
Sultans of Sulu
Sultans of Buayan
  • Mamu
  • Budtul
  • Malang-sa-Inged
  • Silongan
  • Monkay
  • Baratamay
  • Maitum
  • Bangon
  • Bayao
  • Utto
  • Ali
Debatable, legend-based or disputed rulers are in italics.
Categories: