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  2. Demak Sultanate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demak_Sultanate

    Demak and nearby ports, with approximate coastline when Muria and Java were still separated. Demak derived its income from trade, importing spices and exporting rice to Malacca and the Maluku Islands. It was a busy port located at the end of a then navigable channel separating Java and Muria Island.

  3. Kingdom of Pajang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Pajang

    v. t. e. The Kingdom of Pajang or Sultanate of Pajang ( كسلطانن ڤاجڠ ‎; 1586–1568) was a short-lived Muslim state in Java. It was established by Hadiwijaya or Jaka Tingkir, Lord of Boyolali, after a civil war and was a successor to Sultanate of Demak. Hadiwijaya claimed to be a descendant of Brawijaya V, the last king of the ...

  4. Sultanate of Banjar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sultanate_of_Banjar

    Banjar at first paid tribute to the Sultanate of Demak. That state met its demise in the mid-16th century, however, and Banjar was not required to send tribute to the new power in Java, the Sultanate of Pajang. [citation needed] Banjar rose in the first decades of the 17th century as a producer and trader of pepper. Soon, virtually all of the ...

  5. Conquest of Sunda Kelapa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conquest_of_Sunda_Kelapa

    They assembled troops and rejected the authority of the Sundanese kings. The Demak sultan, Trenggana, was hostile to any Portuguese settlements in Java and decided to prevent them at all costs, so he had his commander, Fatahillah, lead 2,000 men to conquer Banten. The city was easily captured in 1526. Sunda Kelapa was left exposed to Demak ...

  6. Banten Sultanate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banten_Sultanate

    The Banten Sultanate ( Sundanese: كسلطانن بنتن ,ᮊᮞᮥᮜ᮪ᮒᮔᮔ᮪ ᮘᮔ᮪ᮒᮨᮔ᮪, romanized: Kasultanan Banten) was a Bantenese Islamic trading kingdom founded in the 16th century and centred in Banten, a port city on the northwest coast of Java; the contemporary English name of both was Bantam.

  7. Raden Patah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raden_Patah

    Raden Patah, also known as Jin Bun ( Javanese: ꦫꦢꦺꦤ꧀ꦦꦠꦃ; Chinese: 靳文; pinyin: Jìn wén) [ 1] (1455 in Jepara – 1518 in Demak) was the first sultan of the Demak Sultanate. Ascending to the throne in 1475, he remained a vassal of the Majapahit Empire until 1478. Raden Patah took the title Panembahan Jimbun after ...

  8. Blambangan Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blambangan_Kingdom

    Blambangan Kingdom. The Blambangan Kingdom was the last Javanese Hindu kingdom that flourished between the 13th and 18th centuries, based in the eastern corner of Java. [ 1] The capital was at Banyuwangi. [ 2] It had a long history of its own, developing contemporaneously with the largest Hindu kingdom in Java, Majapahit (1293–1527).

  9. Sultanate of Cirebon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sultanate_of_Cirebon

    It was one of the earliest Islamic states established in Java, along with the Sultanate of Demak. The sultanate's capital lay around the modern-day city of Cirebon on Java's northern coast. Throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, the sultanate thrived and became a major regional centre of trade and commerce, as well as a prominent centre of ...