Sunan Gunungjati (1448–1580) was one
of the Wali Songo,
or Nine Apostles of Islam. He founded the Sultanate of
Bantam, as well as the port town of Cirebon
on the north coast of Java.
He was born Syarif Hidayatullah
in AD 1448: the child of a dynastic union between Syarif Abdullah Maulana Huda,
an Egyptian
of Hashemite
descent, and Nyai Rara Santang, daughter of the infamous Prabu Siliwangi, Rajah of Sunda.
As such, Syarif Hidayatullah could claim descent, on his paternal side, from
the Islamic prophet Mohammed, through his daughter, Fatima; and on his mother's
side, from the god-kings of Hindu Sunda.
There
is much historical uncertainty as to his early life and later career in the
Indonesian Archipelago. Some say that he was born in Pasai, one of the earliest
centres of Islam in Southeast Asia; whilst others say that he was born in Pajajaran,
capital of his maternal grandfather's Kingdom of Sunda. He is reported to have
married a sister of Trenggono, Sultan of Demak, and to have led military
expeditions for Demark against Sunda. As Fatahillah - so the story goes - he defeated the Portuguese at
their base in Sunda Kelapa, and renamed it Jayakarta
in 1527. To this day, his victory over the Portuguese is commemorated as the
official anniversary of the founding of Jakarta. The many conflicting stories
about Sunan Gunungjati led some scholars to conclude that he might be a
conflation of more than one historical figure.












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