Somewhere around 1363 C.E., a prince named Awang Alak Betatar converted to Islam, took the name Muhammad Shah, and stepped into history as the first sultan of Brunei. It was a quiet beginning for what would become one of the most consequential maritime powers in Southeast Asian history — a sultanate that would eventually project influence across Borneo, the Philippines, and far into the Pacific world.
What the evidence shows
- Sultanate of Brunei: Brunei’s official royal chronicle, the Silsilah Raja-raja Brunei, names Muhammad Shah as the first sultan and places the founding around 1363 C.E., though external scholarly sources urge caution — the earliest independent confirmation of an Islamic sultanate here comes from the late 14th to early 15th century.
- Muhammad Shah’s conversion: The traditional account holds that Awang Alak Betatar embraced Islam before taking the throne, linking Brunei’s political founding directly to its religious transformation — a pattern repeated across Maritime Southeast Asia as Islam spread through trade networks.
- Early Brunei’s regional standing: Chinese sources from the Song dynasty describe a powerful polity on western Borneo ruling 14 regions and commanding 100 warships, suggesting Brunei’s pre-sultanate roots were already substantial well before Muhammad Shah’s reign.
A kingdom with deep roots
Brunei did not appear from nowhere. Long before Muhammad Shah, the territory had complex political roots stretching back to refugees from the Funan kingdom of Cambodia, settlers connected to the Srivijaya empire, and centuries of active trade with China.
By the time of the Song dynasty, a state on western Borneo — called “Boni” in Chinese records — was described as large, powerful, and outward-looking. Its people grew rice on fertile land, fished, wove fabric, and maintained a capital of around 10,000 residents protected by wooden defenses. The royal palace was thatched with nipa palm leaves.
In 977 C.E., a Chinese merchant of Arab descent named Fairuz Shah arrived in Brunei for trade. The king welcomed him warmly and sent a royal delegation back to China carrying turtle shells, camphor, agarwood, sandalwood, and elephant tusks — the beginning of a sustained diplomatic relationship between Brunei and the Chinese imperial court. The Maritime Silk Road, sometimes called the spice road, ran directly through these waters, and Brunei sat on it.
Islam arrives on the Silk Road
The conversion of Awang Alak Betatar to Islam was not an isolated spiritual event. It was part of a broader wave of Islamization moving through Maritime Southeast Asia, carried by merchants, scholars, and diplomats along the same trade routes that brought Chinese porcelain and Indian textiles to Borneo’s shores.
This pattern — commerce and faith traveling together — reshaped the political culture of coastal Southeast Asia across the 14th and 15th centuries. Malacca, Demak, Ternate, and Tidore all followed similar trajectories: local rulers embraced Islam, formalized their authority through the vocabulary and institutions of Islamic governance, and gained new prestige and trade connections as a result.
For Brunei, this meant something specific. The sultanate Muhammad Shah established gave the polity a new institutional identity — one that could negotiate with Muslim traders from the Arabian Peninsula, South Asia, and the wider Malay world on shared terms.
A difficult early century
The early sultanate did not flourish immediately. In the 14th century, Brunei was a vassal of the Javanese Majapahit empire, paying an annual tribute of 40 kati of camphor. The Javanese manuscript Nagarakretagama, written by Prapanca in 1365 C.E., lists “Barune” among Majapahit’s subject states — a reminder that the sultanate’s sovereignty was constrained at its outset.
Worse followed. In 1369 C.E., the Sulu kingdom — once Brunei’s own subject — sacked the sultanate, carrying off enormous plunder including two precious pearls. Brunei was so weakened it had to be rescued by the Majapahit fleet. Historian Robert Nicholl called 1369 C.E. “the absolute nadir of Brunei’s fortunes.”
That Brunei survived this period, rebuilt, and eventually rose to become a significant regional power is itself remarkable. The institutional framework Muhammad Shah established — the sultanate, with its Islamic legal traditions, court culture, and diplomatic language — gave the kingdom a resilient structure to recover around.
Lasting impact
The Sultanate of Brunei Muhammad Shah founded would reach its greatest extent under Sultan Bolkiah, the fifth sultan, in the late 15th and early 16th centuries. By then, Brunei’s influence stretched across the coastal areas of northwest Borneo — present-day Brunei, Sarawak, and Sabah — into the Sulu Archipelago and the southern Philippines.
Brunei’s reach into Luzon was cemented through strategic marriages that linked the royal houses of Brunei, Sulu, and Maynila. The Muslim rajahs of Manila, including Rajah Matanda, were directly connected to Brunei’s royal lineage. This dynastic web helped spread Islam through the coastal communities of Luzon and Mindanao, shaping the religious geography of the Philippines in ways still visible today.
Malay — the language of Brunei’s court and commerce — became the lingua franca of Maritime Southeast Asia’s trade networks. Islamic legal and governance traditions spread alongside it. The Journal of Southeast Asian Studies and other scholarly outlets have documented how Brunei served as a key node in this diffusion, connecting the broader Islamic world to the Philippine archipelago.
The sultanate’s founding also preserved something older. Indigenous peoples — the Lun Bawang and Bisaya among them — were displaced as the sultanate consolidated its coastal hold, pushed into the interior of Borneo. Their presence there today is, in part, a legacy of the political changes Muhammad Shah’s sultanate set in motion.
Brunei itself never disappeared. It survived colonialism, British protectorate status, and the modern era, and remains a sovereign sultanate today — one of the oldest continuous monarchies in the world. The official history of Brunei traces an unbroken line from Muhammad Shah to the present sultan.
Blindspots and limits
The evidentiary record for Brunei’s early sultanate is thin. No indigenous written sources survive from this period, and the founding date of 1363 C.E. comes from Brunei’s own royal chronicle rather than independent contemporary documents — meaning scholars treat it as a credible tradition rather than a confirmed fact. The Nagarakretagama’s 1365 C.E. description of Brunei as a Majapahit vassal complicates any straightforward narrative of an independent sultanate already established by 1363 C.E. The full history of the pre-Islamic Boni polity, the peoples it absorbed or displaced, and the precise mechanisms of Muhammad Shah’s rise remain areas of active scholarly inquiry rather than settled history.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Bruneian Empire — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights recognized for 160 million hectares at COP30
- Ghana establishes marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Brunei
About this article
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