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About Malacca
Where it all began .....No historian has been able up
to now to pin-point the year Malacca was founded.
Going by the State government's celebration of the
600th anniversary of the founding in August 1990, it could be deduced that
Malacca was founded in 1390.
However, some historians had placed the founding at
between 1376 and 1400.
That s Sumatran prince, named parameswara, was
credited with the founding of the city and naming it Melaka in not disputed.
A popular account puts the Prince as out hunting one
day and while resting under a tree, one of his dogs cornered a mouse-deer or
'pelandok'.
The mouse-deer in its defence attacked the dog and
even forced it into the river-water. Parameswara was so taken up by the courage
of the mouse-deer that he decided on the spot to found a city on the ground he
was sitting on. Thus, Melaka or Malacca was born. Many claimed that the prince
took this name from the 'Melaka' tree that was shading him.
As time went on, Melaka grew bigger and bigger and
became more and more prosperous. Parameswara, incidentally, was the first Malay
prince to become a Muslim and inevitably, Islam became the religion of Malays
in the Peninsular (now
West Malaysia).
The prince known as Iskandar Shah died in 1424.
During his rule, Melaka progressed into a booming international trading post,
luring over Javanese, Indian, Arab and Chinese sea-merchants.
Under Sultan Mansur Shah (1456 - 1477), Melaka's fame
and wealth not long after caught the attention of the expansionist Europeans
with the Portuguese becoming the first to arrive and eventually going on to
conquer the land. They were led by Alfonso d'Albuquerque.
The Portuguese occupiers stayed on far 130 years and
their King benefited immensely from this. After the Dutch captured Melaka from
the Portuguese in 1641, theycontinued to use Batavia, now Jakarta, as their
head quarters.
Source : "You'll Love Malacca Guide &
Information" by Wee Hock Chye.

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