In this Malay name, there is no surname or family name. The name Abdul Kahar Jalilul Alam is a patronymic, and the person should be referred to by their given name, Saiful Rijal Nurul Alam. The word "bin" or "binti"/"binte" means 'son of' or 'daughter of', respectively.
Its as during his reign, when the Castilian War occurred between the empires of the Brunei and Spain. In addition to the Philippines, he was also renowned for spreading Islamic teachings throughout Borneo.[3] According to folk tales about his palace being located on King's Island (Pulau Raja) in Jerudong.[4] The sultan was also known as SultanLixar,[5] and Sultan Nula Alan by the Spaniards.[6]
Reign
Ascension
Pengiran Muda Saiful Rijal was the eldest son of Sultan Abdul Kahar,[7] therefore making him the successor to the throne after his father's abdication in 1530.[8] A significant statement from the Boxer Codex, likely written by a Tagalog merchant who lived in Brunei, describes Saiful Rijal as a cheerful and stout man, noting that he was fifty-eight years old in 1589. This suggests that Saiful Rijal was born in 1531. Given the timeline, a direct father-to-son succession between 1514/15 and 1531 is genetically implausible. Therefore, if these dates are accurate and considering the four sultans from Sharif Ali to Abdul Kahar, it indicates that there must have been a succession of brothers at some point in the royal lineage. There is no information of when Saiful Rijal began to govern, but he was co-regnant with his father, Abdul Kahar, in 1578.[9]
Exchanges between the Bornean port cities and the Spaniards who had taken control of the Philippine islands by seizing Manila in 1571 and Cebu in 1565. Manila charged Brunei of conducting Muslim missionary activities in the Philippines because of the Spaniards' zealous proselytising efforts to convert the entire archipelago to Christianity. In a letter dated 13 April 1578, to Brunei's Sultan Saiful Rijal, the Spanish Governor of the Philippines, Francisco de Sande, made the following accusation and gave the following order.[10]
…it has been rumoured that you have tried and are trying to do us harm, and to make war upon us: that you have tried to induce and have solicited the natives of Lucon [Luzon and other districts to rebel and revolt against us, that you have sent spies to Cebu and other districts: that you have left your residence for this purpose of warring against us with a fleet of ships. ...that you shall send no preachers of the sect of Mahoma[d] to any part of these islands, nor to the heathen among the Tingues [hill-people], nor into other parts of your own island.
Brunei disregarded the order as well as the accusations.[10] In revenge, the Spaniards attacked and took control of Brunei in the same month in 1578.[11] Additionally with the assistance of two defectors, Pengiran Seri Lela and Pengiran Seri Ratna.[12][13] When the Spaniards captured the capital, he chose to move the country's capital to Saragua, further emphasizing the importance of Sarawak.[14] He also had to retreat to Piragong, in Ulu Sungai Brunei to strengthen the Brunei army.[15] Moreover, to demonstrates the significant impact Brunei had on the nearby areas at the time, the Sultan ordered the reconstruction of their capital city when the Spaniards left Brunei probably in late July 1578.[16]
Death
Sultan Saiful Rijal reportedly became ill near Bintala, but he later reportedly recovered and went back to Brunei. He resided in Istana Mazagong in Sungai Kedayan, where he allegedly died.[17] He is buried at Kianggeh Muslim Cemetery.[18] The author of the Boxer Codex met him in 1589 at the age of 58, but there is no indication of when he died. It must have been in the 1590s, though, as his eldest son, Shah Brunei, succeeded him and must have died in or around 1600. He most likely died in 1595.[9]
^Borneo Bulletin Brunei Yearbook. Brunei Press Sdn. Bhd. in collaboration with Integrated Information Pte. Limited. 2007. pp. E-89.
^Umar (Haji.), Awang Mohd Jamil al-Sufri bin Awang; Awang.), Mohd Jamil Al-Sufri (Pehin Orang Kaya Amar Diraja Dato Seri Utama Haji (1971). Chatatan sejarah perwira2 dan pembesar2 Brunei (in Malay). Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka. p. 18.
^Awang.), Mohd Jamil Al-Sufri (Pehin Orang Kaya Amar Diraja Dato Seri Utama Haji (1997). Tarsilah Brunei: Zaman kegemilangan dan kemasyhuran (in Malay). Jabatan Pusat Sejarah, Kementerian Kebudayaan Belia dan Sukan. p. 98.
^Hussein (Datuk), Ismail; Deraman, Aziz; Ahmadi, Abd Rahman al (1989). Tamadun Melayu (in Malay). Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, Kementerian Pendidikan Malaysia. p. 232. ISBN978-983-62-0958-0.
^Umar (Haji.), Awang Mohd Jamil al-Sufri bin Awang; Awang.), Mohd Jamil Al-Sufri (Pehin Orang Kaya Amar Diraja Dato Seri Utama Haji (1995). Sultan Tengah: sultan Sarawak pertama dan terakhir (in Malay). Jabatan Pusat Sejarah, Kementerian Kebudayaan Belia dan Sukan. p. 4.
^Daulat (in Malay). Jabatan Pusat Sejarah, Kementerian Kebudayaan Belia dan Sukan. 1992. p. 50.