A number of startling events took place in Maluku during the time of Mudafar Syah. These included the genocidal
Dutch conquest of the Banda Islands, a traditional vassal of Ternate, in 1621, which secured VOC exploitation of the valuable
nutmeg that grew on the islands. Furthermore, the Dutch strengthened their grip on
Ambon, parts of which were also Ternatan dependencies, through the equally notorious
Amboyna massacre that eliminated English influence. Though Mudafar Syah presided over a formally independent realm, the Dutch and Spanish regarded their respective Ternatan and Tidorese allies as mere auxiliaries whose wishes were subordinated to those of the Europeans. Mudafar was, moreover, no forceful figure and was far from popular with the Dutch. He was considered a lethargic youth sometimes capable of fits of cruelty. His first wife was a daughter of the
Sangaji (sub-ruler) of Sahu in Halmahera, but she somehow displeased him, and he killed her with his
kris and had her body thrown into the sea. He also asked for the daughter of the Tidorese crown prince
Ngarolamo in marriage, but this was opposed by his kinsman Kapita Laut Ali, who wanted her for himself. Kapita Laut Ali was the Ternatan sea lord and was remembered by historical tradition as a forceful figure who maintained the wide influence of the Ternate kingdom. Mudafar Syah eventually fell sick and died on 16 June 1627, only 32 years old. Though he left a number of sons, his successor was
Hamza, a cousin of his father. ==Family==