Ha jaman sin Majapahit Empayar makusug pa ha tahun 1330-1400.
Vic Hurley Swish of the Kris: The Story of the Moros.
“From about 1330, the brilliant-winged praos of the invading Javanese Empire of Majapahit touched the shores of Sulu for a period of seventy years, to sail off eventually on the northeast monsoon and return no more. The blues seas of Sulu ran red with the blood of the invader and the invaded, but the kris prevailed and the Moros (Tausug) clung to their island homes.”
Ha jaman sin Majapahit Empayar, in Brunei ha babaan sin Majapahit ha masa yadtu namunu' pa Sulu ha tahun 1363. Naraug in Sulu (Lupa' Sug) sampay na pa pamarinta sin manga Tausug ha North Borneo iban Luzon Visayas nalugus timaalluk ha pamarinta hi Raja Awang Alak Batatar daing ha Brunei. Pagabut tahun 1368 namaus in Sulu namunu' pa Brunei siyunug diya'pugan sin Tausug sampay pa bangka'bangka' nila. In Raja Awang nahinang paguy pa Tumasik (Singapore @ Old Johor) timapuk ampa siya simud Islam.
Amuini in data syair manunjuki in Tausug namarinta ha Silam (North Borneo), Manila iban Sug naraug biyunu' sin gagandilan Raja Awang Alak Batatar.
"Assessing the Epic Status of the Brunei Malay Sya’ir Awang Simawn:
Place Names and Toponyms.
Allen R. Maxwell
- 33. The Forces Travel, Damang Sari Attacks Silam, Jarambak Gets Datu Gadang to Submit.
- 34. Simawn Orders Datu Gadang to the Suluk of Manila to Announce He Will Attack If They Do Not Submit.
- 35. Simawn, Jarambak and Damang Sari Arrive at Suluk Where Datu Kilan Submits to Hawang Halak Batatar.
- 36. Simawn and Damang Sari Send Datu Gadang to Manila where the Bandar Submits to Hawang Halak Batatar.
- 37. Datu Gadang Returns With Prestations to Pay Homage to Simawn; Damang Sari Orders Everything Take Back to Hawang Halak Batatar.
- 38. Damang Sari Goes to Silam to Receive Tribute."
Wang Zhenping "Song-Ming Records on the Pre-colonial History of the Philippines":
"Power relations among chiefdoms in Southeast Asia were not static. A chieftain had to guard his territories against threats by other tribes. One of the ways to achieve this goal was to seek Chinese support and recognition. The relationship between Boni and Sulu was a case in point. In early Ming Hongwu period (1368 M - 1398 M), Sulu invaded Boni and expanded its sphere of influence to trading ports on the northeast coast of present-day Borneo, which ports were crucial for controlling the China-Spice Island trade. The Sulu expedition forces withdrew from Boni only after the powerful Java state of Majaphati had intervened at the request of the Boni ruler.
The ruler of Boni decided to seek help from China by organizing a mission to the Ming court. He hoped that Chinese support would deter his Sulu rivals from launching another military campaign against him. In 1405, the ruler, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters, relatives, and his major supporters visited China. During a court audience, they prostrated themselves in front of the Ming emperor and told him that they wanted to be his subjects and consorts. Pleased with their show of loyalty, the emperor upgraded the receptions for the ruler of Boni ruler, treating him not as a Chinese prince, but as a duke and a marquise."
Ha jaman makusug pa in kolonial Kastila' iban Milikan 1500's - 1900's: Naawun in bunu' Bud Dahu iban bunu' ha Bud Bagsak Tausug vs Milikan.
James Dunnigan:
"The people in the Sulu islands (Jolo and Basilan being the largest) have a long and enthusiastic history of tribal wars, raiding, slaving and piracy. Think of them as tropical Vikings. The Sulu islands, in particular, lie astride trade routes between the islands that are now Indonesia to the south, and the main islands of the Philippines to the north. The Sulu tribes and pirates either extracted protection payments from passing merchants, or simply stole whatever they could catch."
"Unlike the Vikings, the Moros (as the Moslems of the southern Philippines came to be called) did not conquer distant lands and set up colonies. This was mainly because the Moros preferred endless feuds with other clans and tribes, rather than empire building."
Krishna K. Godhania:
"A note about the Tausug-The Sultanate of Jolo had once covered present day Sabah, parts of Sulawesi, and various islands all the way to Flores in the Indonesian Archipelago aside from Tawi-Tawi, Basilan, and Zamboanga in the Philippines by virtue of armed conquest. They are still viewed in much the same way as the Gurkas are by Britons, in the Philippines today."
Tausug North Borneo ha masa bunu' Jipun 1943-1944.
The Kinabalu Guerrillas movement ended when the Japanese massacred Kwok, Panglima Ali and its members on 21 January 1944. The Japanese also enacted wholesale slaughters of the Suluks and Bajau civilian populations to the point of wiping the entire Suluk population out after finding out they participated in the uprising. (The Petagas War Memorial was later erected at this site. The exploits of the guerrillas are described in the book Kinabalu Guerrillas by Maxwell Hall.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_occupation_of_British_BorneoYhf
Maas Pusung
7/4/2016