Jump to content

Puteri Saadong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2402:1980:2e0:41d7::1 (talk) at 18:19, 20 August 2020 (Details of how did she make a return to her homeland). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Puteri Saadong or Mariam (died after 1667), was the queen regnant of Kelantan from 1663 until 1667. She was the adopted daughter of Siti Wan Kembang (Che Siti), the legendary Queen of Kelantan. Her full title is Tuan Puteri Saadong binti Raja Loyor, Puteri Vijaya Mala, Raja of Jembal, daughter of Raja Loyor bin Raja Sakti, Raja of Jembal

Life

Puteri Saadong was brought up in Bukit Marak by Che Siti, after her mother died.[1][2] She succeeded her father as Raja of Jembal in 1663, and was later installed as Raja of Kelantan in 1667.

Che Siti gave Puteri Saadong's hand in marriage to her cousin, Raja Abdullah bin al-Marhum Sultan Samiruddin, Raja of Kelantan-Selatan (Jembal) when the princess was only 15 years old.

She was captured by the Siamese and forced to become a concubine of King Narai of Siam (now Thailand) in order to spare her husband's life. Raja Abdullah vowed to wait for her return and never to remarry. However, after several years Raja Abdullah gave up and remarried.

When Puteri Saadong returned to Bukit Marak after she managed to heal the King Narai of Siam who promised her freedom if she can heal his disease, she found Raja Abdullah remarried with a princess who used to envy her marital status with Raja Abdullah before, a quarrel ensued. It was believed that Puteri Saadong, overwhelmed with rage, killed Raja Abdullah with her hair pin.

After the incident, Puteri Saadong left Bukit Marak and subsequently disappeared. Raja Abdullah's tomb can still be seen at Padang Halban, Melor in the district of Bachok, Kelantan.

References

  1. ^ Azhar, Syed (2009-08-05), "Residents erasing Bukit Marak history", The Star, retrieved 2010-03-18
  2. ^ Azhar, Syed (2009-08-10), "Museum wants Bukit Marak saved", The Star, archived from the original on 2012-10-17, retrieved 2011-03-18