- Hussein Shah of Johor
Sultan Hussein Shah was the seventeenth
Sultan of Johor . He ruled Johor from 1819 to 1835. In the dispute regarding the succession to the throne ofJohor following his father's death, Hussein Shah allowed a British settlement inSingapore to wrest the throne from his brother, Tengku Abdul Rahman, with the help of the British.ingapore and the British
In 1818, Sir
Stamford Raffles was appointed as the governor ofBencoolen on westernSumatra . However, he was convinced that the British needed to establish a new base inSoutheast Asia in order to compete with the Dutch. Though many in theBritish East India Company opposed such idea, Raffles managed to convinceLord Hastings of the Company, then Governor General ofBritish India , to side with him. With the governor general's consent, he and his expedition set out to search for a new base. cite web | title = Singapore - Founding and Early Years | url = http://countrystudies.us/singapore/4.htm | publisher = U.S. Library of Congress | accessdate = 2006-07-18 ]Raffles' expedition arrived in Singapore on
January 29 ,1819 . He discovered a small Malay settlement at the mouth ofSingapore River headed by aTemenggung (governor) of Johor. Though the island was nominally ruled by the sultanate, the political situation there was extremely murky. The current sultan, Tengku Abdul Rahman, was under the influence of the Dutch and the Bugis. Hence, he would never agree to a British base inSingapore .However, Tengku Abdul Rahman was ruler only because his older brother, Tengku Hussein or Tengku Long, had been away in Pahang getting married when their father died in 1812. According to Malay tradition, a person has to be by the dying sultan's side in order to be considered as the new ruler. Predictably, the older brother was not happy with the development. Furthermore, the Temenggung preferred Tengku Hussein (Hussein Shah upon accession to the throne) to the younger brother.
Upon learning of these Johor political tensions, Raffles made a deal with Hussein Shah. Their agreement stated that the British would acknowledge Hussein Shah as the legitimate ruler of Johor, and thus Tengku Hussein and the Temenggung would receive a yearly stipend from the British. In return, Tengku Hussein would allow Raffles to establish a trading post in Singapore. This treaty was ratified on
February 6 , 1819. [cite web| title = 1819 - The February Documents | publisher =Ministry of Defence (Singapore) | date = 1997-02-07 | accessdate = 2006-07-18 | author = Jenny Ng | url = http://www.mindef.gov.sg/imindef/about_us/history/the_early_years/v01n02b_history.html] [cite web| title = Milestones in Singapore's Legal History | publisher =Supreme Court, Singapore | accessdate = 2006-07-18 | url = http://app.supremecourt.gov.sg/default.aspx?pgID=39l]With the Temenggung's help, Raffles managed to smuggle Hussein Shah, then living in exile on one of the Riau Islands, back into Singapore.
The Dutch were extremely displeased with Raffles' action. Tensions between the Dutch and British over Singapore persisted until 1824, when they signed the Anglo-Dutch Treaty. Under the terms of that treaty, the Dutch officially withdrew their opposition to the British presence in Singapore. [cite web | title = Establishment of Singapore | url = http://www.spm.org.sg/exhibition/kings_queens/index.html | publisher = Singapore Philatelic Museum ] The treaty also divided the Sultanate of Johor into modern Johor and the new Sultanate of
Riau .In the newly-formed Johor, although Hussein Shah was the sultan, it was the Temenggung who wielded real authority. The Bugis, on the other hand, controlled Riau under the auspices of the Dutch.
Death
He moved to
Malacca in 1834 and died in poverty in the town ofTengkera a year later.ee also
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Founding of modern Singapore
*Istana Kampong Glam
* http://infopedia.nlb.gov.sg/articles/SIP_3_2004-12-14.htmlReferences
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