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  2. Balaputra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balaputra

    Balaputradewa was the maharaja of Srivijaya in the 9th century CE as well as the former head of the Sailendra dynasty. [1] He was the youngest son of the preceding Sailendran maharaja, Samaratunga , through marriage with Dewi Tara who was in turn the daughter of another maharaja, Dharmasetu of Srivijaya.

  3. Shailendra dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shailendra_dynasty

    Which means Samaratungga was the successor of Samaragrawira, and Balaputradewa that is also Samaragrawira's son, is Samaratungga's younger brother and ruled in Suvarnadvipa (Sumatra), and he is not Samaratungga's son. This version holds Balaputra that reign in Sumatra challenged the Pikatan-Pramodhawardhani legitimation in Java, arguing that ...

  4. Machmud Singgirei Rumagesan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machmud_Singgirei_Rumagesan

    Singgirei was succeeded by his son, after he died, there was a conflict of succession, hence Rustuty was asked to become the king. She rejected the Raja title and instead style herself as "Ratu Petuanan Tanah Rata Kokoda". [2] After she died, PYM. Arief Rumagesan, fifth grandchild of Singgirei, succeeded her as "Raja Petuanan Pikpik Sekar". [19]

  5. Mataram kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mataram_kingdom

    [5] [6] [7] In 851 an Arabic merchant named Sulaimaan recorded an event about Javanese Sailendras staging a surprise attack on the Khmers by approaching the capital from the river, after a sea crossing from Java. The young Khmer king was later punished by the Maharaja, and subsequently, the kingdom became a vassal of the Sailendra dynasty. [35]: 35

  6. List of monarchs of Java - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monarchs_of_Java

    This is a partial list of the identified hereditary rulers on the Indonesian island Java, and the adjacent island Madura.. Included are some states and rulers whose existence remain open to conjecture, due to inadequate historical evidence, while others are historically verifiable.

  7. Sultanate of Gowa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sultanate_of_Gowa

    [5] The Sultanate of Gowa's patronage of Islam caused it to try and encourage neighboring kingdoms to accept Islam, an offer which they refused. In response in 1611, the sultanate launched a series of campaigns, called locally the "Islamic wars", which resulted in all of southwest Sulawesi, including their rival Bone, being subjugated and ...

  8. Pandya dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandya_dynasty

    Everywhere within the conquered province of King Piyadasi (Ashoka), the beloved of the gods, as well as in the parts occupied by the faithful, such as Chola, Pandya, Satiyaputra, and Keralaputra, even as far as Tambapanni (Ceylon) and within the dominions the Greek (of which Antiochus generals are the rulers ) everywhere the heaven-beloved Raja ...

  9. Kahuripan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kahuripan

    Kahuripan (also spelled Kuripan) was an 11th-century Javanese Hindu-Buddhist kingdom with its capital located around the estuarine of Brantas River valley in East Java.The kingdom was short-lived, only spanning the period between 1019 and 1045, and Airlangga was the only raja of the kingdom, which was built out of the rubble of the Kingdom of Mataram after the Srivijaya invasion.